Search results for 'James T. McHugh' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. James T. McHugh (1994). Health Care Reform and Abortion: A Catholic Moral Perspective. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (5):491-500.score: 290.0
    The Catholic Church in the United States provides extensive health care service through its more than 600 health facilities. The Church, on the basis of its moral teaching, sees health care as a basic human right and supports universal coverage. At the same time, the Church considers abortion morally wrong and opposes coverage of abortion as a health service in a national health plan. Mandated coverage of abortion would violate the moral commitments of Catholic hospitals and the consciences of Catholics (...)
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  2. Conor McHugh (2010). What Assertion Doesn't Show. European Journal of Philosophy 20 (3):407-429.score: 120.0
    Abstract: Some recent arguments against the classical invariantist account of knowledge exploit the idea that there is a ‘knowledge norm’ for assertion. It is claimed that, given the existence of this norm, certain intuitions about assertability support contextualism, or contrastivism, over classical invariantism. In this paper I show that, even if we accept the existence of a knowledge norm, these assertability-based arguments fail. The classical invariantist can accommodate and explain the relevant intuitions about assertability, in a way that retains the (...)
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  3. Peter Mchugh (1996). Insomnia and the (T)Error of Lost Foundation in Postmodernism. Human Studies 19 (1):17 - 42.score: 120.0
    Certain familiar theoretic claims of both popular and academic postmodernism are examined for their implications as to the necessary and desirable limits of social life. Taken to the end, these claims promote errancy as a means of freeing conduct from the constraints of foundation. But this kind of freedom, one which treats all limitation as pernicious, generates social action that is mechanical, scattered, and without substance—it is a pyrrhic emancipation which trades content for self-sufficiency and thus constitutes an empty life (...)
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  4. B. J. T. McHugh (2001). Building a Culture of Life: A Catholic Perspective. Christian Bioethics 7 (3):441-452.score: 120.0
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  5. F. P. McHugh (1988). Book Review : William Temple and Christian Social Ethics Today. By Alan Suggate. Edinburgh: T & T Clark Ltd., 1988. Xviii + 286pp. 17.50. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 1 (1):71-74.score: 120.0
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