Results for 'Laurie Zoloth'

930 found
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  1.  62
    Don't be chicken: Bioethics and avian flu.Laurie Zoloth & Stephen Zoloth - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (1):5 – 8.
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  2. A Winter's Tale: Bioethics Confronts Avian Flu.Laurie Zoloth & Stephen Zoloth - 2006 - Advances in Bioethics 9:247-253.
     
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  3.  7
    Second texts and second opinions: essays towards a Jewish bioethics.Laurie Zoloth - 2022 - New York, NY, United States of Ameria: Oxford University Press.
    This is a book about writing and thinking about bioethics of a particular sort, a feminism of a particular sort, and a Jewish philosophy of a particular sort. It is about all of these things-feminist thought, Judaism, and the practice of bioethics-as I have written about them in a distinctive moment in the field and from the moral location from which I worked, which was as an academic in the disciplines of Jewish Studies and moral philosophy who also worked as (...)
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  4.  29
    Stem Cell Research: A Target Article Collection Part I - Jordan's Banks, A View from the First Years of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research.Laurie Zoloth - 2002 - American Journal of Bioethics 2 (1):3-11.
    This essay will address the ethical issues that have emerged in the first considerations of the newly emerging stem cell technology. Many of us in the field of bioethics were deliberating related issues as we first learned of the new science and confronted the ethical issues it raised. In this essay, I will draw on the work of colleagues who were asked to reflect on early stages of the research as the field debated the issues of consent, moral status, use (...)
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  5. Like an open book: Reliability, intersubjectivity, and textuality in bioethics.Laurie Zoloth & Rita Charon - 2002 - In Rita Charon & Martha Montello (eds.), Stories Matter: The Role of Narrative in Medical Ethics. Routledge. pp. 21--36.
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  6.  30
    Keeping Company: Ethics and the Talk in the Commons.Laurie Zoloth - 2002 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (1):52-60.
    The field of bioethics is by definition based on the presupposition that questioning, arguing, interruption, and response are the means by which we evaluate the truth claims of medicine and healthcare policy. The field began with the premise that another voice, one of at least critique, if not dissension, was just what was needed in any arena in which hegemonic expertise held sway. The field of the humanities is similarly based on the idea that both the literary and cultural canonare (...)
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  7. The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science.Laurie Zoloth - forthcoming - Ethics.
     
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  8.  19
    The Patient as Commodity: Managed Care and the Question of Ethics.Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman & Susan Rubin - 1995 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 6 (4):339-357.
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  9.  10
    Heroic Measures: Just Bioethics in an Unjust World.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (6):34-40.
    In its excitement over the quandries posed by biotechnology, bioethics is in danger of neglecting basic health care needs. What is needed is an understanding of ethics that emphasizes responsibility to others rather than rights.
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  10.  16
    Seeing the duties to all.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (2):15-19.
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  11.  23
    Waiting to be born: The ethical implications of the generation of “nuborn” and “nuage” mice from pre-pubertal ovarian tissue.Laurie Zoloth, Leilah Backhus & Teresa Woodruff - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (6):21 – 29.
    Oncofertility is one of the 9 NIH Roadmap Initiatives, federal grants intended to explore previously intractable questions, and it describes a new field that exists in the liminal space between cancer treatment and its sequelae, IVF clinics and their yearning, and basic research in cell growth, biomaterials, and reproductive science and its tempting promises. Cancer diagnoses, which were once thought universally fatal, now often entail management of a chronic disease. Yet the therapies are rigorous, must start immediately, and in many (...)
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  12.  32
    The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy.Suzanne Holland, Karen Lebacqz & Laurie Zoloth (eds.) - 2001 - MIT Press.
    Discusses the ethical issues involved in the use of human embryonic stem cells in regenerative medicine.
  13.  13
    Face to Face, Not Eye to Eye: Further Conversations on Jewish Medical Ethics.Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1995 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 6 (3):222-231.
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  14.  34
    Limiting Access to Medical Treatment in an Age of Medical Progress: Developing a Catholic Consensus: A Response from Jewish Tradition.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - Christian Bioethics 7 (2):193-201.
    Laurie Zoloth; Limiting Access to Medical Treatment in an Age of Medical Progress: Developing a Catholic Consensus: A Response from Jewish Tradition, Christian.
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  15.  28
    Go and Tend the Earth: A Jewish View on an Enhanced World.Laurie Zoloth - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (1):10-25.
    In this essay, the author considers how one particular faith community, contemporary Judaism, in all its internal diversity, has reflected on the issue of how far the project of genetic intervention ought to go when the subject of the future - embodied, willful, and vulnerable - is at stake. Knowing, naming, and acting to change is not only a narrative of faith traditions; it is a narrative of biological science as well.
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  16.  3
    Citizenship: Bioethics and the Duties of Teachers.Laurie Zoloth - 2015 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 40 (3):281-283.
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  17. Navigators and captains: Expertise in clinical ethics consultation.Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman & Susan B. Rubin - 1997 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 18 (4).
    The debate about what constitutes the discipline of ethics and who qualifies as an ethics consultant is linked unavoidably to a debate that is potentiated by the reality of a rapidly changing and high-stakes health care consultation marketplace. Who we are and what we can offer to the moral gesture that is medicine is shaped by our fundamental understanding of the place of expert knowledge in the transformation of social reality. The struggle for self-definition is particularly freighted since clinical ethics (...)
     
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  18.  65
    Stem cell research: A target article collection part I - Jordan's Banks, a view from the first years of human embryonic stem cell research.Laurie Zoloth - 2002 - American Journal of Bioethics 2 (1):3 – 11.
    This essay will address the ethical issues that have emerged in the first considerations of the newly emerging stem cell technology. Many of us in the field of bioethics were deliberating related issues as we first learned of the new science and confronted the ethical issues it raised. In this essay, I will draw on the work of colleagues who were asked to reflect on early stages of the research (members of the IRBs, the Geron Ethicist Advisory Board, and the (...)
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  19.  13
    Audience and Authority: The Story in Front of the Story.Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1996 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 7 (4):355-361.
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  20. An ethics of encounter: Public choices and private acts.Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1995 - In Elliot N. Dorff & Louis E. Newman (eds.), Contemporary Jewish Ethics and Morality: A Reader. Oxford University Press. pp. 219--245.
  21. Author Squares Jewish and Medical Ethics.Laurie Zoloth - forthcoming - Ethics.
     
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  22. Being in the world: neuroscience and the ethical agent.Laurie Zoloth - 2005 - In Judy Illes (ed.), Neuroethics: Defining the Issues in Theory, Practice, and Policy. Oxford University Press.
     
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  23. Crossing the borderlands at nightfall : new issues in moral philosophy and faith at the end of life.Laurie Zoloth - 2010 - In Kenneth W. Goodman (ed.), The Case of Terri Schiavo: Ethics, Politics, and Death in the 21st Century. Oxford University Press.
     
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  24.  15
    Her Work Sings Her Praise.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - Spiritual Goods 2001:381-401.
    Jewish ethics provides resources not only for exotic cases, but also for the practical necessities of everyday business practice, such as sustaining non-profit health care. Non-profit health care presents tough choices for justice because it is motivated by community compassion but must meet the pressures of the marketplace. Feminist ethics offers an "ethics of care" to guide our actions in such conflicts. This article argues that an ethics derived from both ferrlinism and Jewish sources calls for a different approach, one (...)
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  25. I want you : notes toward a theory of hospitality.Laurie Zoloth - 2007 - In Lisa A. Eckenwiler & Felicia Cohn (eds.), The Ethics of Bioethics: Mapping the Moral Landscape. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  26.  15
    Justice as cardiovascular therapy.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - American Journal of Bioethics 1 (2):24 – 25.
  27. Justice that you must pursue : A progressive american bioethics.Laurie Zoloth - 2010 - In Jonathan D. Moreno & Sam Berger (eds.), Progress in Bioethics: Science, Policy, and Politics. MIT Press.
  28.  55
    Like/as: Metaphor and meaning in bioethics narrative.Laurie Zoloth, Leilah Backhus, Teresa Woodruff, Alyssa Henning & Michal Raucher - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (6):W3 – W5.
    Oncofertility is one of the 9 NIH Roadmap Initiatives, federal grants intended to explore previously intractable questions, and it describes a new field that exists in the liminal space between cancer treatment and its sequelae, IVF clinics and their yearning, and basic research in cell growth, biomaterials, and reproductive science and its tempting promises. Cancer diagnoses, which were once thought universally fatal, now often entail management of a chronic disease. Yet the therapies are rigorous, must start immediately, and in many (...)
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  29.  20
    Making the Things of the World: Narrative Construction and the Project of Bioethics.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - American Journal of Bioethics 1 (1):59-61.
    (2001). Making the Things of the World: Narrative Construction and the Project of Bioethics. The American Journal of Bioethics: Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 59-61.
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  30.  2
    Nursing Fathers and Nursing Mothers.Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics 21:325-337.
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  31.  7
    One of These Mornings I’m Going to Rise Up Singing: The Necessity of the Prophetic Voice in Jewish Bioethics.Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1994 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 5 (4):348-353.
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  32.  47
    Reasonable magic and the nature of alchemy: Jewish reflections on human embryonic stem cell research.Laurie Zoloth - 2002 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 12 (1):65-93.
    : The controversy about research on human embryonic stem cells both divides and defines us, raising fundamental ethical and religious questions about the nature of the self and the limits of science. This article uses Jewish sources to articulate fundamental concerns about the forbiddenness of knowledge in general and of knowledge thought of as magical creation. Alchemy, and the turning of elements into gold and into substances for longevity, and magic used for the creation of living beings was at stake (...)
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  33. Suffering : reflections from the Jewish tradition.Laurie Zoloth - 2014 - In Ronald Michael Green & Nathan J. Palpant (eds.), Suffering and Bioethics. Oup Usa.
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  34.  34
    The best laid plans: Resistant community and the intrepid vision in the history of managed care medicine.Laurie Zoloth - 1999 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 24 (5):461 – 491.
    In the move to critique managed care, the essential principles that first made it a reasonable alternative to fee-for-service medicine can easily be lost. Careful reflection on the history of early grassroots movements that created managed care, and on selected textual narratives of the founders of the managed care organizations at their inception, offers us insight into which of the critical premises and goals of that effort might be reclaimed as we analyze the current managed care environment.
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  35.  33
    Yearning for the long lost home: The lemba and the jewish narrative of genetic return.Laurie Zoloth - 2003 - Developing World Bioethics 3 (2):127–132.
    ABSTRACTThis commentary examines the relationship between genetics and Jewish identity. It focuses especially on the use of Y‐chromosome testing to map the genealogies of the Lemba in southern Africa.
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  36.  10
    Yearning for the Long Lost Home: The Lemba and the Jewish Narrative of Genetic Return.Laurie Zoloth - 2003 - Developing World Bioethics 3 (2):127-132.
    This commentary examines the relationship between genetics and Jewish identity. It focuses especially on the use of Y‐chromosome testing to map the genealogies of the Lemba in southern Africa.
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  37.  10
    Navigators and Captains: Expertise in Clinical Ethics Consultation.Susan B. Rubin & Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1997 - Theoretical Medicine 18 (4):421-432.
    The debate about what constitutes the discipline of ethics and who qualifies as an ethics consultant is linked unavoidably to a debate that is potentiated by the reality of a rapidly changing and high-stakes health care consultation marketplace. Who we are and what we can offer to the moral gesture that is medicine is shaped by our fundamental understanding of the place of expert knowledge in the transformation of social reality. The struggle for self-definition is particularly freighted since clinical ethics (...)
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  38.  8
    Clinical Ethics and the Road Less Taken: Mapping the Future by Tracking the Past.Susan B. Rubin & Laurie Zoloth - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2):218-225.
    Clinical ethics, like the broader field of bioethics from which it emerged, is at a critical crossroads in its development, with conflicting paths ahead. It can either claim its distinctive place in the clinical arena, insisting unapologetically on certain minimal standards of professional training, practice and competence, addressing head on debates about various models of and methodological approaches to consultation, and establishing a shared vision of the purpose and meaning of the enterprise of clinical ethics itself. Or, it can devolve (...)
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  39.  20
    Clinical Ethics and the Road Less Taken: Mapping the Future by Tracking the Past.Susan B. Rubin & Laurie Zoloth - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2):218-225.
    Clinical ethics, like the broader field of bioethics from which it emerged, is at a critical crossroads in its development, with conflicting paths ahead. It can either claim its distinctive place in the clinical arena, insisting unapologetically on certain minimal standards of professional training, practice and competence, addressing head on debates about various models of and methodological approaches to consultation, and establishing a shared vision of the purpose and meaning of the enterprise of clinical ethics itself. Or, it can devolve (...)
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  40.  14
    She Said/he Said: Ethics Consultation and the Gendered Discourse.Susan Rubin & Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1996 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 7 (4):321-332.
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  41.  16
    First-Person Plural: Community and Method in Ethics Consultation.Susan Rubin & Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman - 1994 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 5 (1):49-54.
  42.  25
    A Jewish Response to the Vatican?Alyssa Henning, Michal Raucher & Laurie Zoloth - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (11):37-39.
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  43.  11
    [Book review] health care and the ethics of encounter, a jewish discussion of social justice. [REVIEW]Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (3):44-46.
  44.  26
    Insider trading: Conscience and critique in bioethics. [REVIEW]Laurie Zoloth-Dorfman & Susan B. Rubin - 1998 - HEC Forum 10 (1):24-33.
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  45.  36
    The Task Force Responds.Baruch Brody, Nancy Dubler, Jeff Blustein, Arthur Caplan, Jeffrey P. Kahn, Nancy Kass, Bernard Lo, Jonathan Moreno, Jeremy Sugarman & Laurie Zoloth - 2002 - Hastings Center Report 32 (3):22-23.
  46.  8
    The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy.Andrew Lustig, Ronald M. Green, Suzanne Holland, Karen Lebacqz & Laurie Zoloth - 2002 - Hastings Center Report 32 (5):41.
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  47.  19
    Margin of Error: The Ethics of Mistakes in the Practice of Medicine.Edmund D. Pellegrino, Susan B. Rubin & Laurie Zoloth - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (4):48.
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  48.  97
    The Bodily Incorporation of Mechanical Devices: Ethical and Religious Issues.Courtney S. Campbell, Lauren A. Clark, David Loy, James F. Keenan, Kathleen Matthews, Terry Winograd & Laurie Zoloth - 2007 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 16 (2):229-239.
    A substantial portion of the developed world's population is increasingly dependent on machines to make their way in the everyday world. For certain privileged groups, computers, cell phones, PDAs, Blackberries, and IPODs, all permitting the faster processing of information, are commonplace. In these populations, even exercise can be automated as persons try to achieve good physical fitness by riding stationary bikes, running on treadmills, and working out on cross-trainers that send information about performance and heart rate.
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  49.  80
    The Bodily Incorporation of Mechanical Devices: Ethical and Religious Issues.Courtney S. Campbell, Lauren A. Clark, David Loy, James F. Keenan, Kathleen Matthews, Terry Winograd & Laurie Zoloth - 2007 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 16 (3):268-280.
    Mechanical devices implanted in the body present implications for broad themes in religious thought and experience, including the nature and destiny of the human person, the significance of a person's embodied experience, including the experiences of pain and suffering, the person's relationship to ultimate reality, the divine or the sacred, and the vocation of medicine. Community-constituting convictions and narratives inform the method and content of reasoning about such conceptual questions as whether a moral line should be drawn between therapeutic or (...)
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  50. Research with Human Embryonic Stem Cells: Ethical Considerations.Karen Lebacqz, Michael M. Mendiola, Ted Peters, Ernlé W. D. Young & Laurie Zoloth‐Dorfman - 1999 - Hastings Center Report 29 (2):31-36.
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