Results for ' HERMAPHRODITES'

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  1.  54
    'Hermaphroditical mixtures': Margaret Cavendish on nature and art.Susan James - 2018 - In Emily Thomas (ed.), Early Modern Women on Metaphysics. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    Cavendish is critical of two of the experimental sciences of her day: chemistry and microscopy. Rather than creating new things, as their practitioners claim, they produce 'hermaphroditical mixtures'. I trace this startling metaphor to the alchemical tradition and suggest how its origins can help us to understand Cavendish's position. In her view, the chemists and microscopists exaggerate their own power and creativity, and fail to recognise that human creativity belongs primarily to imagination. I show how this theme is worked out (...)
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  2. Borderline Hermaphrodites: Higher-order Vagueness by Example.R. Sorensen - 2010 - Mind 119 (474):393-408.
    The Pyrrhonian sceptic Favorinus of Arelata personified indeterminacy, cultivating his (or her) borderline status to undermine dogmatism. Inspired by the techniques of Favorinus, I show, by example, that ‘vague’ has borderline cases. These concrete steps lead to a more abstract argument that ‘vague’ has borderline borderline cases and borderline borderline borderline cases. My specimens are intended supplement earlier non-constructive proofs of the vagueness of ‘vague’.
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  3.  5
    Hermaphrodite Patients: In Vitro Fertilization and the Transformation of Male Infertility.Irma Van der Ploeg - 1995 - Science, Technology and Human Values 20 (4):460-481.
    In the medical-technological practice of in vitro fertilization, it is increasingly the couple, rather than an individual patient, that is considered the unit of treatment. This article traces some mechanisms involved in the construction of medical interventions on female bodies as appropriate and effective therapeutic solutions to problems and diagnoses pertaining to male bodies. It traces the transformation of male infertility through shifts in localization and definition of the problem, concomitant reconceptualizations of the techniques involved, redistributions of properties, and specific (...)
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  4. Hermaphrodites in Love.Alice D. Deedgee - 1997 - In Vernon A. Rosario (ed.), Science and Homosexualities. Routledge. pp. 46.
     
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  5.  10
    Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex. Alice Domurat Dreger.Katharine Park - 2000 - Isis 91 (3):615-616.
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  6.  17
    L'hermaphrodite et la bisexualité à l'épreuve du droit dans l'antiquité.Eva Cantarella - 2004 - Diogène 208 (4):3-15.
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  7.  14
    Hermaphrodites in Love.Alice D. Dreger - 1997 - In Vernon A. Rosario (ed.), Science and Homosexualities. Routledge. pp. 46--66.
  8.  14
    Hermaphroditism; or, ‘the Erection of a New Doctrine’: theories of female sexuality in eighteenth-century England.Cath Sharrock - 1994 - Paragraph 17 (1):38-48.
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  9.  14
    Botanical Smuts and Hermaphrodites: Lydia Becker, Darwin's Botany, and Education Reform.Tina Gianquitto - 2013 - Isis 104 (2):250-277.
    ABSTRACT In 1868, Lydia Becker (1827–1890), the renowned Manchester suffragist, announced in a talk before the British Association for the Advancement of Science that the mind had no sex. A year later, she presented original botanical research at the BAAS, contending that a parasitic fungus forced normally single-sex female flowers of Lychnis diurna to develop stamens and become hermaphroditic. This essay uncovers the complex relationship between Lydia Becker's botanical research and her stance on women's rights by investigating how her interest (...)
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  10. Baconian Science: A Hermaphroditic Birth.Evelyn Fox Keller - 1980 - Philosophical Forum 11 (3):299.
  11.  6
    Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex by Alice Domurat Dreger. [REVIEW]Katharine Park - 2000 - Isis 91:615-616.
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  12.  24
    The Jesus Hermaphrodite: Science and Sex Difference in Premodern Europe.Leah DeVun - 2008 - Journal of the History of Ideas 69 (2):193-219.
    This article traces the development of the hermaphrodite symbol in alchemical literature from the high Middle Ages to the early modern period. It argues that alchemical writers used themetaphor of hermaphroditism to describe the "philosophers' stone," a chemical agent believed to be a combination of contradictory elemental qualities. Such writers extended the hermaphrodite metaphor to Jesus, whome they conflated with the philosophers' stone, and whom they viewed as a combination of masculine and feminine, as well as human and divine, attributes. (...)
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  13.  12
    Anatomical Expertise and the Hermaphroditic Body.Palmira Fontes da Costa - 2007 - Spontaneous Generations 1 (1):78.
    In his influential work, A social history of truth, Steven Shapin has argued for the central role of social status in the assessment of experimental knowledge. In his view, in seventeenth-century England, gentlemen were considered the right kind of persons to trust because of their freedom of action, codes of virtue and honour. These characteristics ensured credibility and, hence, compelled assent. However, Shapin does not put sufficient emphasis on the relevance of the testifier’s competence in the validation of knowledge. When (...)
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  14. Slavoj Žižek’s Passion (for the Real) and Flannery O'Connor's Hermaphrodite.George Piggford - 2016 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 10 (3).
    Žižek has argued in his books on Christianity and modernity that institutional Catholic Christianity has placed its members in a double bind by insisting on belief in a nonexistent God of Being. The laws of this God of the Symbolic are perverse in that they impose impossible requirements on all believers. By the mid-twentieth century, however, Catholicism was experiencing the revolutionary reforms of the Second Vatican Council. Dogmatic Law at this time gave way to a renewed emphasis on the community (...)
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  15.  9
    Antonio Beccadelli: The Hermaphrodite (review).Regina Höschele - 2012 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 106 (1):142-144.
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  16.  8
    Evolution of Sex Determination in Amniotes: Did Stress and Sequential Hermaphroditism Produce Environmental Determination?Barbora Straková, Michail Rovatsos, Lukáš Kubička & Lukáš Kratochvíl - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (10):2000050.
    Frequent independent origins of environmental sex determination (ESD) are assumed within amniotes. However, the phylogenetic distribution of sex‐determining modes suggests that ESD is likely very ancient and may be homologous across ESD groups. Sex chromosomes are demonstrated to be old and stable in endothermic (mammals and birds) and many ectothermic (non‐avian reptiles) lineages, but they are mostly non‐homologous between individual amniote lineages. The phylogenetic pattern may be explained by ancestral ESD with multiple transitions to later evolutionary stable genotypic sex determination. (...)
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  17.  21
    In the shadows of the hermaphrodite: men and women in families in 19th-century France.Gabrielle Houbre - 2011 - Clio 34:85-104.
    L’article s’intéresse aux hommes et aux femmes passés dans l’histoire à l’ombre de la figure « hermaphrodite ». Pour ce faire, il s’intéresse à eux dans le cadre familial, en cessant de les réduire à leurs particularités corporelles et génitales pour les replacer dans une perspective sociale. L’état hermaphrodite permet en effet d’interroger doublement la famille : d’une part parce qu’il brouille le jeu des projections identitaires habituellement à l’œuvre entre parents et enfants et entre membres de la fratrie, de (...)
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  18.  12
    Viability Analysis of Fisheries Management on Hermaphrodite Population.A. Ferchichi, M. Jerry & S. Ben Miled - 2014 - Acta Biotheoretica 62 (3):355-369.
    We study the viability domains of bio-economic constraints for fishing model of hermaphrodite population, displaying three stages, juvenile, female and male. The dynamic of this model is subject to two constraints: an ecological constraint ensuring the stock perennity, and an economic constraint ensuring a minimum revenue for fishermen. Using viability kernel, we find out a viability domain which simultaneously guarantees a minimum stock level and a minimum income for fleets.
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  19.  5
    Kathleen P. Long. Hermaphrodites in Renaissance Europe. x + 268 pp., figs., bibl., index. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2006. $94.95. [REVIEW]Susan Broomhall - 2008 - Isis 99 (2):397-398.
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  20.  26
    Book Review: Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex. Alice Domurat Dreger. (1998). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 268 pp. (hardcover). [REVIEW]Meegan Kennedy - 2001 - Journal of Medical Humanities 22 (2):167-169.
  21.  48
    Subjectivities in Transition: Gender and Sexual Identities in Cases of ‘Sex Change’ and ‘Hermaphroditism’ in Spain, C. 1500–1800.Francisco Vázquez García & Richard Cleminson - 2010 - History of Science 48 (1):1-38.
  22. Words, Desires and Ideas: Freud, Foucault and the Hermaphroditic Roots of Bisexuality.Sharon Cowan & Stuart Elden - 2002 - Pli 13:79-99.
     
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  23. Words, Desires and Ideas: Freud, Foucault and the Hermaphroditic Roots of Bisexuality.Sharon Cowan & Stuart Elden - 2002 - Pli 13:79-99.
     
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  24.  23
    (J.I.) Porter Ed. Constructions of the Classical Body. Ann Arbor: U. of Michigan P., 2001. Pp. viii + 397, illus. £42.50. 0472087797.(L.) Brisson Sexual Ambivalence. Androgyny and Hermaphroditism in Graeco-Roman Antiquity, trans, from the French by Janet Lloyd. Berkeley and Los Angeles: U. of California P., 2002. Pp. 195. $29.95. 0520223918. [REVIEW]Ian Ruffell - 2004 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 124:204-205.
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  25.  13
    Review of J. Porter (ed.), Constructions of the Classical Body, and L. Brisson, Sexual Ambivalence: Androgyny and Hermaphroditism in Graeco-Roman Antiquity. [REVIEW]Ian Ruffell - 2004 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 124:204-205.
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  26.  22
    David Rollo, Kiss My Relics: Hermaphroditic Fictions of the Middle Ages. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011. Pp. vii, 240; 1 b&w fig. $35. ISBN: 9780226724614. [REVIEW]Winthrop Wetherbee - 2013 - Speculum 88 (2):575-576.
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  27.  3
    Book Review: Doubting Sex: Inscriptions, Bodies and Selves in Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite Case Histories. [REVIEW]Heike Bauer - 2014 - Feminist Review 107 (1):e4-e5.
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  28.  17
    Geertje Mak. Doubting Sex: Inscriptions, Bodies, and Selves in Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite Case Histories. viii + 284 pp., tables, bibl., index. Manchester/New York: Manchester University Press, 2012. $70. [REVIEW]Georgiann Davis - 2013 - Isis 104 (2):410-411.
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  29.  24
    The “Normalization” of Intersex Bodies and “Othering” of Intersex Identities in Australia.Morgan Carpenter - 2018 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 15 (4):487-495.
    Once described as hermaphrodites and later as intersex people, individuals born with intersex variations are routinely subject to so-called “normalizing” medical interventions, often in childhood. Opposition to such practices has been met by attempts to discredit critics and reasserted clinical authority over the bodies of women and men with “disorders of sex development.” However, claims of clinical consensus have been selectively constructed and applied and lack evidence. Limited transparency and lack of access to justice have helped to perpetuate forced (...)
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  30. What are biological sexes?Paul E. Griffiths - manuscript
    Biological sexes (male, female, hermaphrodite) are defined by different gametic strategies for reproduction. Sexes are regions of phenotypic space which implement those gametic reproductive strategies. Individual organisms pass in and out of these regions – sexes - one or more times during their lives. Importantly, sexes are life-history stages rather than applying to organisms over their entire lifespan. This fact has been obscured by concentrating on humans, and ignoring species which regularly change sex, as well as those with non-genetic or (...)
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  31. Should Human Beings Have Sex? Sexual Dimorphism and Human Enhancement.Robert Sparrow - 2010 - American Journal of Bioethics 10 (7):3-12.
    Since the first sex reassignment operations were performed, individual sex has come to be, to some extent at least, a technological artifact. The existence of sperm sorting technology, and of prenatal determination of fetal sex via ultrasound along with the option of termination, means that we now have the power to choose the sex of our children. An influential contemporary line of thought about medical ethics suggests that we should use technology to serve the welfare of individuals and to remove (...)
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  32.  17
    Altered Conditions: Disease, Medicine, and Storytelling.Julia Epstein - 1995
    Altered Conditions provides a bold new intervention into existing theories of the human body and its meanings in a variety of cultural contexts. By exploring the history of medical narratives, especially medical case histories, as well as the exciting work that has been done in feminist and lesbian and gay studies, Julia Epstein poses a number of provocative questions about the relations between bodies, selves, and identities. Epstein focuses on a number of diagnoses that shed light on what is at (...)
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  33.  73
    Medical management of infant intersex: The juridico‐ethical dilemma of contemporary islamic legal response.Sayed Sikandar Shah Haneef & Mahmood Zuhdi Haji Abd Majid - 2015 - Zygon 50 (4):809-829.
    Technological advances in the field of medicine and health sciences not only manipulate the normal human body and sex but also provide for surgical and hormonal management of hermaphroditism. Consequently, sex assignment surgery has not only become a standard care for babies born with genital abnormalities in the West but even in some Muslim states. On the positive side, it goes a long way in saving children born with abnormal genitalia from numerous legal interdictions of the pre-sex corrective surgery. Nevertheless, (...)
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  34.  25
    The Female in Aristotle's Biology: Reason or Rationalization (review).Anthony Preus - 2005 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 43 (1):109-110.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Female in Aristotle’s Biology: Reason or RationalizationTony PreusRobert Mayhew. The Female in Aristotle’s Biology: Reason or Rationalization. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. Pp. xi +136. Cloth, $28.00.Aristotle's views on the ethical, social, and political roles of women have repeatedly drawn the attention of scholars. Often, the central focus of the discussion is Politics I.13, 1260 a13, where Aristotle says that although women have a deliberative faculty, (...)
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  35.  23
    The molecular basis of allorecognition in ascidians.Rachel Ben-Shlomo - 2008 - Bioessays 30 (11-12):1048-1051.
    The process of allorecognition consists of an ability to discriminate self from non‐self. This discrimination is used either to identify non‐self cells and reject them (“non‐self histocompatibility”) or to identify self cells and reject them (as in the avoidance of self‐fertilization by hermaphrodites (“self incompatibility”). The molecular basis governing these two distinct systems has been studied recently in hermaphroditic ascidian urochordates. Harada et al.1 postulated two highly polymorphic self‐incompatibility loci, Themis (A and B), that are transcribed from both strands, (...)
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  36.  19
    A Vitalist Shoal in the Mechanist Tide: Art, Nature, and 17th-Century Science.Jonathan L. Shaheen - 2022 - Philosophies 7 (5):111.
    This paper reconstructs Margaret Cavendish’s theory of the metaphysics of artifacts. It situates her anti-mechanist account of artifactual production and the art-nature distinction against a background of Aristotelian, Scholastic, and mechanist theories. Within this broad context, it considers what Cavendish thinks artisans can actually do, grounding her terminological stipulation that there is no genuine generation in nature in a commitment to natural and artistic production as the mere rearrangement of bodies. Bodies themselves are identified, in a conceptually Ockhamist manner, with (...)
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  37.  38
    Meanings of Sex Difference in the Middle Ages: Medicine, Science, and Culture.Joan Cadden - 1993 - Cambridge University Press.
    In describing and explaining the sexes, medicine and science participated in the delineation of what was "feminine" and what was "masculine" in the Middle Ages. Hildegard of Bingen and Albertus Magnus, among others, writing about gynecology, the human constitution, fetal development, or the naturalistic dimensions of divine Creation, became increasingly interested in issues surrounding reproduction and sexuality. Did women as well as men produce procreative seed? How did the physiology of the sexes influence their healthy states and their susceptibility to (...)
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  38.  12
    Galileo's middle finger: heretics, activists, and the search for justice in science.Alice Domurat Dreger - 2015 - New York: Penguin Press.
    An investigation of some of the most contentious debates of our time, Galileo's Middle Finger describes Alice Dreger's experiences on the front lines of scientific controversy, where for two decades she has worked as an advocate for victims of unethical research while also defending the right of scientists to pursue challenging research into human identities. Dreger's own attempts to reconcile academic freedom with the pursuit of justice grew out of her research into the treatment of people born intersex (formerly called (...)
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  39.  10
    Evolution of sex‐determination in dioecious plants: From active Y to X/A balance?Yusuke Kazama, Taiki Kobayashi & Dmitry A. Filatov - 2023 - Bioessays 45 (11):2300111.
    Sex chromosomes in plants have been known for a century, but only recently have we begun to understand the mechanisms behind sex determination in dioecious plants. Here, we discuss evolution of sex determination, focusing on Silene latifolia, where evolution of separate sexes is consistent with the classic “two mutations” model—a loss of function male sterility mutation and a gain of function gynoecium suppression mutation, which turned an ancestral hermaphroditic population into separate males and females. Interestingly, the gynoecium suppression function in (...)
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  40.  10
    Did doubly uniparental inheritance (DUI) of mtDNA originate as a cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) system?Sophie Breton, Donald T. Stewart, Julie Brémaud, Justin C. Havird, Chase H. Smith & Walter R. Hoeh - 2022 - Bioessays 44 (4):2100283.
    Animal and plant species exhibit an astonishing diversity of sexual systems, including environmental and genetic determinants of sex, with the latter including genetic material in the mitochondrial genome. In several hermaphroditic plants for example, sex is determined by an interaction between mitochondrial cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) genes and nuclear restorer genes. Specifically, CMS involves aberrant mitochondrial genes that prevent pollen development and specific nuclear genes that restore it, leading to a mixture of female (male‐sterile) and hermaphroditic individuals in the population (...)
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  41.  12
    The ovotestis: an underdeveloped organ of evolution.Angus Davison - 2006 - Bioessays 28 (6):642-650.
    In animals that have separate sexes (gonochorists), many sperm are produced to fertilise a few eggs. As the male germline undergoes more mitoses, so the accumulated mutation frequency is elevated in sperm compared with ova, and evolution is ‘male‐driven’. In contrast, in many hermaphroditic animals, a single organ—the ovotestis—produces both ova and sperm. Since self‐renewing cells in the ovotestis may give rise to both cell types throughout life, ova in hermaphrodites could in theory have undergone as many cell divisions (...)
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  42.  72
    The Androgynous and Bisexuality in Ancient Legal Codes.Eva Cantarella - 2005 - Diogenes 52 (4):5-14.
    The word 'bisexuality', unknown to the ancients, is used here in two senses to indicate an individual with male and female sex organs or who copulates with people of both sexes. The phenomenon of bisexuality is then analysed with reference to the Greek myth of Hermaphrodite, a 'bisexual' being, born of a nymph's love for a young man of divine descent: in the guise of a fable, the myth recounts the birth of a 'monster', who raises a question-mark over the (...)
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  43.  35
    Libidinal Symptomatology in Deleuze's Masochism – Coldness and Cruelty.Erika Gaudlitz - 2015 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 9 (1):1-24.
    In taking up Deleuze's differential diagnosis by observing Masoch's literary practice and extracting his libidinal principles of imperatives, contracts, fetishism and rituals, I demonstrate Deleuzian libidinal symptomatology as a specific semiotics in the service of schizoanalysis. I shall argue that in Masoch the schizoanalytic curettage of the unconscious is executed as schizoid waiting where the fleeting outer symptoms of pain–pleasure reveal the masochist's desired inner splitting of the senses.Several critical-clinical inroads to the schizoanalytic project can be envisaged. Initially, Masoch's visionary (...)
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  44.  12
    Gender strategies and political leadership.N. V. Khamitov & D. D. Dandekar - 2019 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 15:40-48.
    Purpose. The purpose of the article is to understand the issue of gender strategies of political leadership. Theoretical basis. The works of Ukrainian and foreign scholars helped to find out the specifics of male and female leadership. The article applied the latest methodology of androgyny-analysis. According to this methodology, sex has not only a biological, psychological and social, but also an existential dimension. So, the existential dimension of gender is soulfulness as an existential femininity and spirituality as an existential masculinity. (...)
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  45.  10
    The Female in Aristotle's Biology: Reason or Rationalization (review).Tony Preus - 2005 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 43 (1):109-110.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Female in Aristotle’s Biology: Reason or RationalizationTony PreusRobert Mayhew. The Female in Aristotle’s Biology: Reason or Rationalization. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. Pp. xi +136. Cloth, $28.00.Aristotle's views on the ethical, social, and political roles of women have repeatedly drawn the attention of scholars. Often, the central focus of the discussion is Politics I.13, 1260 a13, where Aristotle says that although women have a deliberative faculty, (...)
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  46.  21
    Les états asexués et la sexualité au point de vue biométrique (binomien).Jan Wilczyński - 1942 - Acta Biotheoretica 6 (3):153-164.
    Auf die im Jahre 1938 entwickelte allgemeine Gleichung derMendel Gesetze bezugnehmend, die die Vererbung als Ausdruck desNewtonschen Binoms hält, sucht der Verfasser dieselbe auf die Geschlechtsvererbung anzuwenden, indem er, sich des transformiertenPascal'schen arithmetischen Dreiecks bedienend, zum Schluss kommt, dass die ungeschlechtliche Vermehrung, vom rein biometrischen Standpunkt aus betrachtet, als Beispiel der Zero-Potenz in dem Kreuzungsrange angesehen werden könnte, d.h. eine komplette Konsolidierung und Homozygotie, bei alledem vielleicht sekundär aus der früher durchgemachten geschlechtlichen Vermehrung entstanden, darstellte.Die geschlechtliche Vermehrung müsste sodann etwa (...)
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  47.  17
    Control and integration of cell signaling pathways during C. Elegans vulval development.Meera Sundaram & Min Han - 1996 - Bioessays 18 (6):473-480.
    Vulval development in the Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodite represents a simple, genetically tractable system for studying how cell signaling events control cell fata decisions. Current models suggest that proper specification of vulval cell fates relies on the integration of multiple signaling systems, including one that involves a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)→Ras→mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade and one that involves a LIN‐12/Notch family receptor. In this review, we first discuss how genetic strategies are being used to identify and analyze components that (...)
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  48.  13
    Sexology, sexual development, and hormone treatments in Southern Europe and Latin America, c.1920–40.Chiara Beccalossi - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (5):94-121.
    Displacing the physiological model that had held sway in 19th-century medical thinking, early 20th-century medical scientists working on hormones promoted a new understanding of the body, psychological reactions, and the sexual instinct, arguing that each were fundamentally malleable. Hormones came to be understood as the chemical messengers that regulated an individual's growth and sexual development, and sexologists interested in this area focused primarily on children and adolescents. Hormone research also promoted a view of the body in which ‘hermaphroditism’, homosexuality, and (...)
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  49.  9
    Finding My Compass.Laura Inter - 2015 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 5 (2):95-98.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Finding My Compass*Laura Inter+I was born in the 1980s, and much to my parents surprise, the doctors could not say whether I was a boy or a girl because my body had ambiguous genitalia. They then conducted a chromosome test and the result was XX chromosomes. I was assigned female and only later was diagnosed with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). Fortunately for me the endocrinologist who treated me did (...)
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  50.  15
    “Normalizing” Intersex Didn’t Feel Normal or Honest to Me.Karen A. Walsh - 2015 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 5 (2):119-122.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Normalizing” Intersex Didn’t Feel Normal or Honest to Me.Karen A. WalshI am an intersex woman with Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (CAIS). My 57–year history with this has its own trajectory—mostly driven by medical events, and how I and my parents reacted. Most of my treatment by physicians has not been positive. It didn’t make me “normal” at all. I was born normal and didn’t require medical interventions. And by (...)
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