Results for 'H. T. Englehardt'

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  1. The Principles of Bioethcs.H. T. Englehardt - forthcoming - The Foundations of Bioethics.
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  2.  52
    Ethics Across the Curriculum—Pedagogical Perspectives.Elaine E. Englehardt, Michael S. Pritchard, Robert Baker, Michael D. Burroughs, José A. Cruz-Cruz, Randall Curren, Michael Davis, Aine Donovan, Deni Elliott, Karin D. Ellison, Challie Facemire, William J. Frey, Joseph R. Herkert, Karlana June, Robert F. Ladenson, Christopher Meyers, Glen Miller, Deborah S. Mower, Lisa H. Newton, David T. Ozar, Alan A. Preti, Wade L. Robison, Brian Schrag, Alan Tomhave, Phyllis Vandenberg, Mark Vopat, Sandy Woodson, Daniel E. Wueste & Qin Zhu - 2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    Late in 1990, the Center for the Study of Ethics in the Professions at Illinois Institute of Technology (lIT) received a grant of more than $200,000 from the National Science Foundation to try a campus-wide approach to integrating professional ethics into its technical curriculum.! Enough has now been accomplished to draw some tentative conclusions. I am the grant's principal investigator. In this paper, I shall describe what we at lIT did, what we learned, and what others, especially philosophers, can learn (...)
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  3. Rights to health care.H. Tristram Englehardt - forthcoming - The Foundations of Bioethics, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
    A basic human right to the delivery of health care, even to the delivery of a decent minimum of health care, does not exist. The difficult with talking of such rights should be apparent. It is difficult if not impossible both to respect the freedom of all and to achieve their long-range best interests. -/- Rights to health care constitute claims against others for either their services or their goods. Unlike rights to forbearance, which require others to refrain from interfering, (...)
     
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  4.  15
    Hegel, A Non-Metaphysician? A Polemic: Review Of H T Englehardt And T Pinkard Eds., Hegel Reconsidered: Beyond Metaphysics And The Authoritarian State. [REVIEW]F. Beiser - 1995 - Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 32:1-13.
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  5.  15
    Ontology and ontogeny.H. Tristram Englehardt Jr - 1977 - The Monist 60 (1):16 - 28.
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  6. The Foundations of Bioethics.H. T. Engelhardt - 1986 - Ethics 98 (2):402-405.
     
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  7.  23
    Unesco's Ethics Education Programme.H. T. Have - 2008 - Journal of Medical Ethics 34 (1):57-59.
    Unesco initiated the Ethics Education Programme in 2004 at the request of member states to reinforce and increase the capacities in the area of ethics teaching. The programme is focused on providing detailed information about existing teaching programmes. It also develops and promotes teaching through proposals for core curricula, through a training course for ethics teachers and by distributing educational resources to support programmes.
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  8.  45
    The Recent History of Christian Bioethics Critically Reassessed.H. T. Engelhardt - 2014 - Christian Bioethics 20 (2):146-167.
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  9.  65
    Confronting Moral Pluralism in Posttraditional Western Societies: Bioethics Critically Reassessed.H. T. Engelhardt - 2011 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 36 (3):243-260.
    In the face of the moral pluralism that results from the death of God and the abandonment of a God's eye perspective in secular philosophy, bioethics arose in a context that renders it essentially incapable of giving answers to substantive moral questions, such as concerning the permissibility of abortion, human embryonic stem cell research, euthanasia, etc. Indeed, it is only when bioethics understands its own limitations and those of secular moral philosophy in general can it better appreciate those tasks that (...)
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  10.  75
    Beyond the Best Interests of Children: Four Views of the Family and of Foundational Disagreements Regarding Pediatric Decision Making.H. T. Engelhardt - 2010 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (5):499-517.
    This paper presents four different understandings of the family and their concomitant views of the authority of the family in pediatric medical decision making. These different views are grounded in robustly developed, and conflicting, worldviews supported by disparate basic premises about the nature of morality. The traditional worldviews are often found within religious communities that embrace foundational metaphysical premises at odds with the commitments of the liberal account of the family dominant in the secular culture of the West. These disputes (...)
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  11.  20
    Marx's critical/dialectical procedure.H. T. Wilson - 1991 - New York: Routledge.
    Marx's critique of political economy as a problem-posing framework Political economy and its critique Writing in the late, Friedrich Engels drew attention ...
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  12. Information exchange between client and the outside world from the NLP perspective.H. T. W. Hoenderdos & L. K. J. Van Romunde - 1995 - Communication and Cognition. Monographies 28 (2-3):347-349.
     
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  13.  57
    Gregory Claeys, Thomas Paine, Social and Political Thought, London, Unwin Hyman, 1989, pp. xiv + 257.H. T. Dickinson - 1991 - Utilitas 3 (1):145.
  14.  17
    The SCM press a–z of patristic theology, second edition. By John Anthony mcguckin.T. H. - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (1):169–170.
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  15.  25
    The Date of Anon. In Theaetetum.H. T. Arrant - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (1):161.
    A re-examination of the anonymous Commentary on the Theaetetus, henceforth abbreviated K, is overdue. It may yet prove to be the most important document we possess for plotting the course of pre-Plotinian Platonism, and is by far the largest surviving portion of a pre-Plotinian commentary on a complete work of Plato. It offers us insights into the issues of the first century B.C. which are unparalleled in other extant Middle Platonist works, either because of the subject of the work and (...)
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  16.  15
    ‘Adequacy’ as a Goal in Social Research Practice: Classical Formulations and Contemporary Issues.H. T. Wilson - 2021 - Human Studies 44 (3):473-489.
    This essay provides evidence to support a promising conceptual and potentially practical set of ideas at once both principled and effective found in the work of Max Weber and Alfred Schutz addressed to the issue of ‘adequacy’ as a goal in social research. Efforts to achieve adequacy beyond the epistemological conditions required by Weber’s demand that evidence meet both causal adequacy and adequacy on the level of meaning were significantly refocused by Schutz’s later concern, responding specifically to Weber, that the (...)
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  17. Small-scale societies exhibit fundamental variation in the role of intentions in moral judgment.H. Clark Barrett, Alexander Bolyanatz, Alyssa N. Crittenden, Daniel M. T. Fessler, Simon Fitzpatrick, Michael Gurven, Joseph Henrich, Martin Kanovsky, Geoff Kushnick, Anne Pisor, Brooke A. Scelza, Stephen Stich, Chris von Rueden, Wanying Zhao & Stephen Laurence - 2016 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 (17):4688–4693.
    Intent and mitigating circumstances play a central role in moral and legal assessments in large-scale industrialized societies. Al- though these features of moral assessment are widely assumed to be universal, to date, they have only been studied in a narrow range of societies. We show that there is substantial cross-cultural variation among eight traditional small-scale societies (ranging from hunter-gatherer to pastoralist to horticulturalist) and two Western societies (one urban, one rural) in the extent to which intent and mitigating circumstances influence (...)
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  18.  55
    Long-Term Care: The Family, Post-Modernity, and Conflicting Moral Life-Worlds.H. T. Engelhardt - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (5):519-536.
    Long-term care is controversial because it involves foundational disputes. Some are moral-economic, bearing on whether the individual, the family, or the state is primarily responsible for long-term care, as well as on how one can establish a morally and financially sustainable long-term-care policy, given the moral hazard of people over-using entitlements once established, the political hazard of media democracies promising unfundable entitlements, the demographic hazard of relatively fewer workers to support those in need of long-term care, the moral hazard to (...)
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  19. Every Day, Thoughts on the G.F.S. Ruler of Life [by E. Welby, Ed by E.H.T.].Ella Welby & H. T. E. - 1895
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  20.  18
    The Theory of Knowledge and ExistenceW. T. Stace.H. T. Davis - 1934 - Isis 20 (2):485-488.
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  21.  39
    A New Theological Framework for Roman Catholic Bioethics: Pope Francis Makes a Significant Change in the Moral Framework for Bioethics.H. T. Engelhardt - 2015 - Christian Bioethics 21 (1):130-134.
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  22.  23
    The poverty of sociology: 'Society' as concept and object in sociological theory.H. T. Wilson - 1978 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 8 (2):187-204.
  23.  13
    The Causality of Freedom: Max Weber and the Practical Activation of Schutz’s Postulate of Adequacy.H. T. Wilson - forthcoming - Human Studies:1-19.
    This essay argues that Johannes von Kries analysis of the status in the criminal law of the rationally intending subject and the doctrine of _mens rea_ so closely associated with it (cf. Kries, 1886 ; 1888 ) was well known to Max Weber, who had initially trained in law, and highly significant both for the development of his sociology of subjective understanding and his parallel view that the social sciences must be jointly committed to combining a generalizing objective with an (...)
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  24. Aristotle on reason, desire, and virtue.T. H. Irwin - 1975 - Journal of Philosophy 72 (17):567-578.
  25.  30
    An international war chest.H. T. Weeks - 1918 - International Journal of Ethics 29 (1):26-28.
  26.  14
    Against epistemology.H. T. Wilson - 1987 - History of European Ideas 8 (2):245-246.
  27.  20
    Creative marginality. Innovation at the intersection of the social sciences.H. T. Wilson - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (5):670-672.
  28.  8
    Critical theory's critique of social science: Episodes in a changing problematic from Adorno to Habermas, Part II.H. T. Wilson - 1986 - History of European Ideas 7 (3):287-302.
  29.  12
    Critical theory's critique of social science: Episodes in a changing problematic from adorno to habermas, part I.H. T. Wilson - 1986 - History of European Ideas 7 (2):127-147.
  30. Quentin Skinner, ed., The Return of Grand Theory in the Human Sciences Reviewed by.H. T. Wilson - 1987 - Philosophy in Review 7 (1):31-33.
     
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  31.  8
    Review symposium : The paradox of liberalism.H. T. Wilson - 1980 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 10 (2):215-226.
  32.  13
    Space and place as convergent sources of political identity.H. T. Wilson - 1995 - History of European Ideas 21 (4):499-504.
  33.  18
    The counter revolutionary function of the social sciences in advanced industrial societies: A post revolutionary analysis and a revolutionary alternative.H. T. Wilson - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):467-477.
  34.  36
    The challenge to participatory democracy in an emerging supranational Europe.H. T. Wilson - 1998 - The European Legacy 3 (4):86-95.
  35.  10
    The fin de siécle legacy.H. T. Wilson - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (1):101-104.
  36.  19
    The impact of nationalist ideology on political philosophy: The case of max weber and wilhelmine Germany.H. T. Wilson - 1993 - History of European Ideas 16 (4-6):545-550.
  37.  14
    Personality Studies of Three-Year-Olds.H. T. Woolley - 1922 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 5 (6):381.
  38.  13
    Performance Tests for Three-, Four-, and Five-Year-Old Children.H. T. Woolley & E. Cleveland - 1923 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 6 (1):58.
  39.  12
    Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders. Etiology, Pathogenesis, and Therapeutics.H. T. Wright - 2000 - Bioessays 22 (7):682-683.
  40. Moral Pluralism, the Crisis of Secular Bioethics, and the Divisive Character of Christian Bioethics: Taking the Culture Wars Seriously.H. T. Engelhardt - 2009 - Christian Bioethics 15 (3):234-253.
    Moral pluralism is a reality. It is grounded, in part, in the intractable pluralism of secular morality and bioethics. There is a wide gulf that separates secular bioethics from Christian bioethics. Christian bioethics, unlike secular bioethics, understand that morality is about coming into a relationship with God. Orthodox Christian bioethics, moreover, understands that the impersonal set of moral principles and goals in secular morality gives a distorted account of the moral life. Therefore, Traditional Christian bioethics is separated from bioethics by (...)
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  41.  46
    Hierarchy: Perspectives for Ecological Complexity.T. F. H. Allen & Thomas B. Starr - 1984 - Philosophy of Science 51 (2):359-361.
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  42.  53
    Christian bioethics in a post-Christian world: Facing the challenges.H. T. Engelhardt - 2012 - Christian Bioethics 18 (1):93-114.
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  43.  8
    Correction to: The Causality of Freedom: Max Weber and the Practical Activation of Schutz’s Postulate of Adequacy.H. T. Wilson - forthcoming - Human Studies:1-1.
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  44. The Moral Rationale of Miracle.H. T. Knight - 1925 - Hibbert Journal 24:645.
     
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  45.  17
    Performance management using health outcomes: in search of instrumentality.H. T. Davies - 1998 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 4 (4):359-362.
  46.  6
    Popper’s Conception of Scientific Discovery and Its Relation to the Community of Science.H. T. Wilson - 2018 - In Raphael Sassower & Nathaniel Laor (eds.), The Impact of Critical Rationalism: Expanding the Popperian Legacy Through the Works of Ian C. Jarvie. Springer Verlag. pp. 273-287.
    Popper’s view of scientific activity appears to take its social and communitarian features largely for granted. Rather than making this inter-subjectivity the basic problematic in his work, he wanted to move beyond language without, however, foreclosing the possibility that communication may often be a source of confusion in research and related scientific activity. Popper feared that the study of science, no less than scientific activity itself, may be led astray by an overly reflexive approach and focus. There are aspects of (...)
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  47. "Studies in the Theory of Ideology" by John B. Thompson.H. T. Wilson - 1988 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 18 (1):134.
     
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  48.  44
    The vocation of reason: studies in critical theory and social science in the age of Max Weber.H. T. Wilson - 2004 - Boston: Brill.
    This book addresses, and at the same time reflects, the impact of Max Weber on both the social sciences and on critical theory's critique of the social sciences ...
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  49.  53
    Moral Content, Tradition, and Grace: Rethinking the Possibility of a Christian Bioethics.H. T. Engelhardt - 1995 - Christian Bioethics 1 (1):29-47.
    Birth, suffering, disability, disease and death were by medicine's successes placed within a context of seemingly novel challenges that cried out for new responses. Secular bioethics rose in response to the demands of these new biomedical technologies in the context of a culture fragmented in moral pluralism. While secular bioethics promised to unite persons separated by diverse religious and moral assumption, this is a promise that could not be fulfilled. Reason alone cannot provide canonical, content-full moral guidance or justify a (...)
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  50.  47
    Courage: Facing and Living with Moral Diversity.H. T. Engelhardt - forthcoming - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 40 (3):278-280.
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