Results for 'Shmuel Lederman'

322 found
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  1.  17
    Making the Desert Bloom: Hannah Arendt and Zionist Discourse.Shmuel Lederman - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (4):393-407.
    This article discusses an aspect of Hannah Arendt’s treatment of the conflict between the Zionists and the Palestinians that has thus far been overlooked in scholarship: her justification of Zionism through the achievements of the Jewish pioneers in cultivating the land, in contrast to the Palestinians’ failure to do so. The inability of natives to cultivate their land was a familiar argument in the history of colonialism, used to legitimize the colonialists’ right to settle a land and often to displace (...)
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  2.  5
    Hannah Arendt and Participatory Democracy: A People’s Utopia.Shmuel Lederman - 2019 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book centers on a relatively neglected theme in the scholarly literature on Hannah Arendt's political thought: her support for a new form of government in which citizen councils would replace contemporary representative democracy and allow citizens to participate directly in decision-making in the public sphere. The main argument of the book is that the council system, or more broadly the vision of participatory democracy was far more important to Arendt than is commonly understood. Seeking to demonstrate the close links (...)
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  3.  6
    Agonism and Deliberation in Arendt.Shmuel Lederman - 2014 - Constellations 21 (3):327-337.
  4.  6
    The actor does not judge: Hannah Arendt’s theory of judgement.Shmuel Lederman - 2016 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (7):727-741.
    Hannah Arendt’s conceptualization of political judgement has been a source of much scholarly investigation and debate in recent decades. Underlying the debate is the assumption that at least in her early writings, Arendt had an actor’s theory of judgement. In this article I challenge this common assumption. As I attempt to demonstrate, it relies on a misunderstanding, not only of Arendt’s conception of judgement, but also of her conception of agents in the public realm. Once we discard the assumption of (...)
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  5.  12
    The land of no milk and no honey: force feeding in Israel.Zohar Lederman & Shmuel Lederman - 2017 - Monash Bioethics Review 34 (3-4):158-188.
    In 2015, the Israeli Knesset passed the force-feeding act that permits the director of the Israeli prison authority to appeal to the district court with a request to force-feed a prisoner against his expressed will. A recent position paper by top Israeli clinicians and bioethicists, published in Hebrew, advocates for force-feeding by medical professionals and presents several arguments that this would be appropriate. Here, we first posit three interrelated questions: 1. Do prisoners have a right to hunger-strike? 2. Should governing (...)
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  6.  6
    The responsibility of bioethicists: The case study of Yemen.Zohar Lederman & Shmuel Lederman - forthcoming - Bioethics.
    In this article, we describe in detail the health and general living conditions resulting from the ongoing armed conflict in Yemen, including the historical and geopolitical underpinnings. In addition to mere reporting, we use Yemen as a case study to examine the responsibility of bioethicists in general. We find it unacceptable that bioethics neglects the largest humanitarian crisis taking place in the world at the moment as well as the largest Cholera outbreak in history. We argue that bioethicists should do (...)
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  7.  11
    Making a Case for Appropriate and Humane Treatment of Hamas Belligerents in Israel.Zohar Lederman, Nadav Davidovitch & Shmuel Lederman - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (2):8-10.
    Three thousand belligerents, mostly belonging to the military arm of Hamas, stormed Southern Israel on October 7th, 2023. Along with 3,000 rockets fired at Israel from Gaza, these belligerents inva...
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  8.  7
    Responsibility and vaccine nationalism in the Israeli‐Palestinian conflict.Zohar Lederman, Ghada Majadli & Shmuel Lederman - 2022 - Developing World Bioethics 23 (1):15-22.
    In this article we articulate a case from moral responsibility to assist Palestinians living in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). We contextualize this responsibility by focusing on access to healthcare and the provision of vaccines against COVID-19. We specifically present two arguments from responsibility, one that is global or cosmopolitan, and one that is country-specific. For the latter, we focus on Israel.
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  9.  3
    Arendt and Blücher.Shmuel Lederman - 2017 - Arendt Studies 1:87-110.
    The importance of Hannah Arendt’s intellectual dialogue with her husband, Heinrich Blücher is widely acknowledged, yet it has rarely been systematically studied. In this paper, I use Blücher’s lectures to highlight the way some of his reflections and insights shed new light on Arendt’s political thought. Blücher, I seek to show, offers through the figure of Socrates an alternative under­standing of the meaning of philosophy and its relation to politics. His reflections help us see that Arendt worked with two conceptions (...)
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  10.  8
    A call from justice to support the people in Gaza.Zohar Lederman, Shmuel Lederman & Emily Shepp Daniels - 2019 - Developing World Bioethics 19 (2):116-122.
    Using Madison Powers and Ruth Faden's definition of ‘well‐being,’ the authors argue that Israel, the international community and public health practitioners have a justice‐based obligation to assist the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Focusing on Palestinians in Gaza, the authors first outline a normative framework of justice, as articulated by Powers and Faden. Following Powers and Faden's assumption that empirical assessments of justice can be made using the six dimensions of well‐being, the authors next present current data on (...)
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  11.  10
    Is Israel Its Brother’s Keeper? Responsibility and Solidarity in the Israeli–Palestinian Conflict.Zohar Lederman, Emily Shepp & Shmuel Lederman - 2018 - Public Health Ethics 11 (1):103-120.
    This article examines the Israeli government’s role in supporting living conditions conducive to health in the occupied Palestinian territories. Limiting the discussion to public health, the authors argue that—whether justified in its overall political policy—the Israeli government and people are legally and ethically obligated to care for the well-being of the Palestinian people. The authors first review the current situation in the OPT and compare health statistics with Israel. Next, the authors make three arguments as to why the Israeli government (...)
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  12.  1
    Parting Ways Too Soon: Arendt contra Butler on Zionism.Shmuel Lederman - 2020 - The European Legacy 25 (3):248-265.
    In this article, I discuss the way Judith Butler builds on Hannah Arendt’s political thought for her critique of Zionism. While her critique is valuable in many ways, I argue that it also obscures...
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  13.  10
    Responsibility and vaccine nationalism in the Israeli‐Palestinian conflict.Zohar Lederman, Ghada Majadli & Shmuel Lederman - 2022 - Developing World Bioethics 23 (1):15-22.
    In this article we articulate a case from moral responsibility to assist Palestinians living in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). We contextualize this responsibility by focusing on access to healthcare and the provision of vaccines against COVID-19. We specifically present two arguments from responsibility, one that is global or cosmopolitan, and one that is country-specific. For the latter, we focus on Israel.
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  14.  11
    Responsibility and vaccine nationalism in the Israeli‐Palestinian conflict.Zohar Lederman, Ghada Majadli & Shmuel Lederman - 2022 - Developing World Bioethics 23 (1):15-22.
    In this article we articulate a case from moral responsibility to assist Palestinians living in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). We contextualize this responsibility by focusing on access to healthcare and the provision of vaccines against COVID-19. We specifically present two arguments from responsibility, one that is global or cosmopolitan, and one that is country-specific. For the latter, we focus on Israel.
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  15.  7
    Recovering the Public Sphere. [REVIEW]Shmuel Lederman - 2023 - The European Legacy 29 (1):88-93.
    Recent political developments in the West, particularly the emergence of right-wing populist leaders, have led quite a few political theorists to rethink the social and political conditions conduci...
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  16.  9
    Arendt on Freedom, Liberation, and Revolution.Kei Hiruta (ed.) - 2019 - London, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This edited volume focuses on what Hannah Arendt famously called “the raison d’être of politics”: freedom. The unique collection of essays clarifies her flagship idea of political freedom in relation to other key Arendtian themes such as liberation, revolution, civil disobedience, and the right to have rights. -/- In addressing these, contributors to this volume juxtapose Arendt with a number of thinkers from Isaiah Berlin, John Rawls and Philip Pettit to Karl Marx, Frantz Fanon and Geoffroy de Lagasnerie. They also (...)
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  17. People with Common Priors Can Agree to Disagree.Harvey Lederman - 2015 - Review of Symbolic Logic 8 (1):11-45.
    Robert Aumann presents his Agreement Theorem as the key conditional: “if two people have the same priors and their posteriors for an event A are common knowledge, then these posteriors are equal” (Aumann, 1976, p. 1236). This paper focuses on four assumptions which are used in Aumann’s proof but are not explicit in the key conditional: (1) that agents commonly know, of some prior μ, that it is the common prior; (2) that agents commonly know that each of them updates (...)
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  18. Are Language Models More Like Libraries or Like Librarians? Bibliotechnism, the Novel Reference Problem, and the Attitudes of LLMs.Harvey Lederman & Kyle Mahowald - forthcoming - Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics.
    Are LLMs cultural technologies like photocopiers or printing presses, which transmit information but cannot create new content? A challenge for this idea, which we call bibliotechnism, is that LLMs generate novel text. We begin with a defense of bibliotechnism, showing how even novel text may inherit its meaning from original human-generated text. We then argue that bibliotechnism faces an independent challenge from examples in which LLMs generate novel reference, using new names to refer to new entities. Such examples could be (...)
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  19.  10
    Teaching Nature of Scientific Knowledge to Kindergarten Through University Students.Norman G. Lederman, Fouad Abd-El-Khalick & Mike U. Smith - 2019 - Science & Education 28 (3):197-203.
  20. Of marbles and matchsticks.Harvey Lederman - forthcoming - In Tamar Szabó Gendler, John Hawthorne, Julianne Chung & Alex Worsnip (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology, Vol. 8. Oxford University Press.
    I present a new puzzle about choice under uncertainty for agents whose preferences are sensitive to multiple dimensions of outcomes in such a way as to be incomplete. In response, I develop a new theory of choice under uncertainty for incomplete preferences. I connect the puzzle to central questions in epistemology about the nature of rational requirements, and ask whether it shows that preferences are rationally required to be complete.
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  21.  2
    Nancy S. Jecker, Zohar Lederman, and Anita Ho reply.Nancy S. Jecker, Zohar Lederman & Anita Ho - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (3):59-60.
    This letter replies to the letter “Colonial and Neocolonial Barriers to Companion Digital Humans in Africa,” by Luís Cordeiro‐Rodrigues, in the same, May‐June 2024, issue of the Hastings Center Report.
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  22. The Gender and Science Reader.Muriel Lederman, Ingrid Barsch & Hugh Lacey - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (1):280-291.
  23. Darkhe noʻam: ʻinyene ʻavodat H.: ṭalele orah ṿe-orḥot ḥayim le-maʻlah la-maśkil be-darkhe ha-ʻavodah ṿeha-Ḥasidut la-ḥazot be-noʻam H.Shmuel Brozovosky - 2014 - Betar ʻIlit: Maʻarekhet Darkhe noʻam.
     
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  24.  18
    Towards the Dehumanization of the World?Shmuel Trigano & Alain Caillé - 2002 - Diogenes 49 (195):3-4.
    Is it only yesterday's humanism, whether religious or secular in origin, that is dying - and is it really dying? - or is it more profoundly the very paradigm of humanity? At least it is worth asking the question. Do we not hear on every side today that everything is ‘constructed’ and ‘formated’? No inherited moral standard now seems acceptable, nor any reference to any sort of human nature or naturality. The only idea that henceforth finds acceptance is that of (...)
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  25.  5
    A legend of humility and leadership: Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu, Rishon LeZion, Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel.Shmuel Eliyahu - 2021 - Lakewood, NJ : Israel Bookshop Publications,: Edited by Yehuda Azoulay.
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  26.  8
    Basic concepts in algorithms.Shmuel T. Klein - 2021 - Hoboken: World Scientific.
    This book is the result of several decades of teaching experience in data structures and algorithms. It is self-contained but does assume some prior knowledge of data structures, and a grasp of basic programming and mathematics tools. Basic Concepts in Algorithms focuses on more advanced paradigms and methods combining basic programming constructs as building blocks and their usefulness in the derivation of algorithms. Its coverage includes the algorithms' design process and an analysis of their performance. It is primarily intended as (...)
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  27.  3
    The Uneasy Case of Multiple Injurers’ Liability.Shmuel Leshem & Ehud Guttel - 2014 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 15 (2):261-292.
    When harm is caused by multiple injurers, damages are allocated among the responsible injurers in proportion to their relative responsibility for harm. This Article shows that a proportional allocation of liability between strictly-liable injurers distorts incentives to take precautions. The effects of this distortion depend on the nature of the injurers’ precautions. If precautions are complements, injurers compete for lower liability shares, which results in excessive care-taking. If precautions are substitutes, injurers are afflicted by moral hazard, which gives rise to (...)
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  28. Trying without fail.Ben Holguín & Harvey Lederman - manuscript
    An action is agentially perfect if and only if, if a person tries to perform it, they succeed, and, if a person performs it, they try to. We argue that trying itself is agentially perfect: if a person tries to try to do something, they try to do it; and, if a person tries to do something, they try to try to do it. We show how this claim sheds new light on the logical structure of intentional action, on the (...)
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  29.  4
    Bedtime stories of Jewish values.Shmuel Blitz - 1998 - [Brooklyn, NY]: Mesorah Publications. Edited by Liʾat Binyamini Ariʾel.
    Timeless lessons are retold here with reverence and charm. The values that we all want our children to absorb - faith, kindness, forgiveness, charity - are made clear through traditional, biblical stories coupled with examples, and charming illustrations by Tova Katz. Shmuel Blitz, the author of five other successful children's books, goes back to the greatest source of all - the Torah and the Prophets. Do your children and grandchildren (and yourself) a favor and get them this fine new (...)
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  30. Perspectivism.Jeremy Goodman & Harvey Lederman - 2021 - Noûs 55 (3):623-648.
    Consider the sentence “Lois knows that Superman flies, but she doesn’t know that Clark flies”. In this paper we defend a Millian contextualist semantics for propositional attitude ascriptions, according to which ordinary uses of this sentence are true but involve a mid-sentence shift in context. Absent any constraints on the relevant parameters of context sensitivity, such a semantics would be untenable: it would undermine the good standing of systematic theorizing about the propositional attitudes, trivializing many of the central questions of (...)
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  31.  13
    One Health and Culling as a Public Health Measure.Zohar Lederman - 2016 - Public Health Ethics 9 (1):5-23.
    One of most pertinent and acute risks that the world is now facing is emerging or re-emerging zoonotic diseases. This article focuses on culling as a measure for zoonotic disease control, specifically the culling of 11,000 badgers as part of the Randomized Badger Culling Trial in the UK and the culling exercises in Singapore. The independent expert panel that devised the UK study concluded that reactive culling was ineffective in reducing the cases of bovine tuberculosis in cattle. The panel also (...)
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  32.  5
    The Civilizational Dimension of Modernity.Shmuel N. Eisenstadt - 2004 - In Said Amir Arjomand & Edward A. Tiryakian (eds.), Rethinking Civilizational Analysis. Sage Publications. pp. 48--66.
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  33. Share the Sugar.Christian Tarsney, Harvey Lederman & Dean Spears - manuscript
    We provide a general argument against value incomparability, based on a new style of impossibility result. In particular, we show that, against plausible background assumptions, value incomparability creates an incompatibility between two very plausible principles for ranking lotteries: a weak "negative dominance" principle (to the effect that Lottery 1 can be better than Lottery 2 only if some possible outcome of Lottery 1 is better than some possible outcome of Lottery 2) and a weak form of ex ante Pareto (to (...)
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  34.  12
    OVATOOMB: Other viruses and the origins of molecular biology.Muriel Lederman & Sue A. Tolin - 1993 - Journal of the History of Biology 26 (2):239-254.
  35.  2
    The Search for the Stones.Shmuel Blitz - 2009 - Mesorah Publications. Edited by Marc Lumer & Miriam Stark Zakon.
    "Ilana and Ari Goldreich set out on an unforettable quest through time ... and learn ... Jewish values in order to save the world from deadly peril" -- p. 4 of cover.
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  36.  3
    Seductive Science and the Emergence of the Secular Jewish Intellectual.Shmuel Feiner - 2002 - Science in Context 15 (1).
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  37. Sefer ʻAyin lo raʼatah: pirḳe ʻiyun ṿe-hitbonenut be-mahut nisayon ha-dor shel ha-'inṭerneṭ': yesodot bi-shemirah neʼemanah bi-fene ha-nisayon, hagdarat darkhe pituye ha-yetser ṿe-tsurat ha-hitmodedut ʻimo, ṿe-leḳeṭ takhsise milḥamah la-tset mi-paḥ rishto.Shmuel Heller - 2019 - [Lakewood, N.J.]: ha-Makhon le-ḥizuḳ da-dat she-ʻa. y. TAG.
     
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  38. The Literature of the Sages.Shmuel Safrai - 1987
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  39. Revisionist reporting.Kyle Blumberg & Harvey Lederman - 2020 - Philosophical Studies 178 (3):755-783.
    Several theorists have observed that attitude reports have what we call “revisionist” uses. For example, even if Pete has never met Ann and has no idea that she exists, Jane can still say to Jim ‘Pete believes Ann can learn to play tennis in ten lessons’ if Pete believes all 6-year-olds can learn to play tennis in ten lessons and it is part of Jane and Jim’s background knowledge that Ann is a 6-year-old. Jane’s assertion seems acceptable because the claim (...)
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  40.  4
    Customary Trade and the Complications of Consent.Shmuel Nili - 2017 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 34 (3):315-330.
    Global justice theorists have given much attention to corporations' purchases of state-owned natural resources controlled by dictators. These resources, the common argument goes, belong to the people rather than to those who exercise effective political power. Dictators who rely on violence to secure their political power and who sell state-owned natural resources without authorisation from their people, or from their people's elected delegates, are therefore violating their peoples' property rights. But many dictatorships also distribute natural resource revenue to the population, (...)
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  41. Extended Preferences and Interpersonal Comparisons of Well‐being.Hilary Greaves & Harvey Lederman - 2016 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 96 (3):636-667.
    An important objection to preference-satisfaction theories of well-being is that these theories cannot make sense of interpersonal comparisons of well-being. A tradition dating back to Harsanyi () attempts to respond to this objection by appeal to so-called extended preferences: very roughly, preferences over situations whose description includes agents’ preferences. This paper examines the prospects for defending the preference-satisfaction theory via this extended preferences program. We argue that making conceptual sense of extended preferences is less problematic than others have supposed, but (...)
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  42.  13
    From Charlottesville to the Nobel: Political Leaders and the Morality of Political Honors.Shmuel Nili - 2020 - Ethics 130 (3):415-445.
    Political honors are ubiquitous in public life, whether in the form of public monuments, street names, or national holidays. Yet such honors have received scant attention from normative political theorists. Tackling this gap, I begin by criticizing a desert-based approach to political honors. I then argue that morally appropriate honors are best understood as marking and reinforcing the moral commitments of the collective in whose name they are being awarded. I show how this thesis clarifies and organizes core intuitions regarding (...)
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  43.  4
    Rigorist cosmopolitanism.Shmuel Nili - 2013 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 12 (3):260-287.
    What counts as global ‘harm’? This article explores this question through critical engagement with Thomas Pogge’s conception of negative duties not to harm. My purpose here is to show that while Pogge is right to orient global moral claims around negative duties not to harm, he is mistaken in departing from the standard understanding of these duties. Pogge ties negative duties to global institutions, but I argue that truly negative duties cannot apply to such institutions. In order to retain the (...)
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  44. Aggregating extended preferences.Hilary Greaves & Harvey Lederman - 2017 - Philosophical Studies 174 (5):1163-1190.
    An important objection to preference-satisfaction theories of well-being is that they cannot make sense of interpersonal comparisons. A tradition dating back to Harsanyi :434, 1953) attempts to solve this problem by appeal to people’s so-called extended preferences. This paper presents a new problem for the extended preferences program, related to Arrow’s celebrated impossibility theorem. We consider three ways in which the extended-preference theorist might avoid this problem, and recommend that she pursue one: developing aggregation rules that violate Arrow’s Independence of (...)
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  45.  6
    La nouvelle idéologie dominante: le post-modernisme.Shmuel Trigano - 2012 - Paris: Hermann.
    Et si la domination n'etait pas la ou on la croit? Et si la facon dont nous nous representons aujourd'hui l'identite, l'humain, les genres, la nature, mais aussi la democratie, le rapport a l'etranger, le contenu meme du savoir, la finalite du droit, si tout cela ne relevait pas en realite d'un savoir objectif mais d'une - ideologie - qui projette de changer l'ordre social et politique mais surtout l'humain? C'est le propre de toute epoque que de trouver dans un (...)
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  46.  9
    ‘Judaism as illness’: Antisemitic stereotype and self-image1.Shmuel Almog - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (6):793-804.
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  47.  3
    Modernity as a Distinct Civilization.Shmuel N. Eisenstadt - 2004 - In Said Amir Arjomand & Edward A. Tiryakian (eds.), Rethinking Civilizational Analysis. Sage Publications. pp. 48.
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  48. Martin Buber in the postmodern age: Utopia, community, and education in the contemporary era.Shmuel N. Eisenstadt - 2002 - In Paul R. Mendes-Flohr (ed.), Martin Buber: a contemporary perspective. Jerusalem: The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities. pp. 174--183.
     
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  49.  11
    Thrasymachus's Justice.Shmuel Harlap - 1979 - Political Theory 7 (3):347-370.
  50.  1
    Social and Gendered Readings of Illness Narratives.Muriel Lederman - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (3):275-288.
    This essay recognizes that the interactions that define medical care are problematic and that narrative is invoked to overcome these strains. Being grounded in science, medicine, too, might be influenced by a particular world-view that arose in the natural philosophy of the Scientific Revolution. If narrative responds to this sort of medicine, it may retain traces of this mindset. A feminist approach responds to this viewpoint and may used beneficially to analyze both the story of medicine and the stories within (...)
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