- Correction to “An Intersectional Critique of Nursing’s Efforts at Organizing”
- Transgressive Acts: Michel Foucault’s Lessons on Resistance for Nurses
- To Our Nurse Friends: An Ode to Resistance
- Social justice as nursing resistance: a foucauldian discourse analysis within emergency departments
- On Being Open in Closed Places: Vulnerability and Violence in Inpatient Psychiatric Settings
- Applying the Concept of Epistemic Injustice as a Philosophical Window to Examine Discrimination Experiences of LGBTQIA+ Migrants With Nurses
- Seduction and Fidelity: Cunning and Power Relationships an Ethnographic Exploration in an Intensive Care Unit During the Covid‐19 Crisis
- Deconstructing Professionalism as Code for White (Power): Authenticity as Resistance in Nursing
- Unravelling Uncertainty Inception: When We Really Know That We Don’t Know?
- Correction to “‘Ain’t I a Nurse,’ implementing a digital illustration of resistance when challenging anti‐Black racism in nursing education”
- Nursing in the Capitalocene: An anarchistic approach to governmentality and pastoral care
- Guest editor’s closing of the annual special collection, 27th International Nursing Philosophy Conference proceedings in association with IPONS: Reimagining a nursing ecosystem in an uncertain world
- Drawing from the insights of biology, sustainable healthcare systems should prioritise robustness over optimisation
- Conceptualising constructive resistance as a thriving strategy for men in nursing
- An intersectional critique of nursing’s efforts at organizing
- Nursing effectiveness reconsidered: Some fundamental reflections on the nature of nursing
- Exploring health inequities through the actor‐network theory lens
- ‘Ain’t I a Nurse’, implementing a digital illustration of resistance when challenging anti‐Black racism in nursing education
- Accepted poster abstracts for the 26th International Nursing Philosophy Conference in association with IPONS: Re‐imagining a nursing ecosystem in an uncertain world
- Accepted podium abstracts for the 26th International Nursing Philosophy Conference in association with IPONS: Re‐imagining a nursing ecosystem in an uncertain world
- Revisiting the philosophy of technology and nursing: Time to move beyond romancing resistance or resisting romance
- Reimagining a nursing ecosystem in an uncertain world
- Reframing covenant for nursing: From individual commitments to covenant with society
- A philosophical exploration of rural health and nursing based on an undergraduate United States‐Australian collaboration through the lens of ‘positionality’
- Building a Pluriverse of Nursologies: A paradigm for decolonial theory and knowledge development in nursing
- Occupational Health Nursing models and theories: A critical analysis in the scope of the unitary‐transformative perspective
- Opening of the annual special collection: 26th International Nursing Philosophy Conference proceedings in association with IPONS: Re‐imagining a nursing ecosystem in an uncertain world
- Quiet quitting: Obedience a minima as a form of nursing resistance
- Care biography: A concept analysis
- Conceptualising personhood in nursing care for people with altered consciousness, cognition and behaviours: A discussion paper
- A perpetual process of abjection: An examination of nurses’ experiences in caring COVID‐19 patients in Wuhan
- A facilitator’s reflection on the democratizing potential of emancipatory practice development
- Deconstructing nursing’s paradoxical relationship with the concept of complexity
- Assembling packs: Outreach nurses, disaffiliated persons, and sorcerers
- Self‐appropriation in nurse engagement: Facilitating the development of expert nurses using Benner and Lonergan
- Subjectivity through the lens of Guattari: A key concept for nursing
- The ecology of human flourishing embodying the changes we want to see in the world
- Another nursing is possible: Ethics, political economies, and possibility in an uncertain world
- Echoes of silence
- Well‐being and dignity in innovative digitally‐led healthcare for aged adults
- Nursing’s professional character: A chimera?
- Defining dignity in higher education as an alternative to requiring ‘Trigger Warnings’
- From informed to empowered consent
- Emily’s struggle for dignity: An idiographic case study of a woman with multiple sclerosis
- African philosophy and nursing: A potential twain that shall meet?
- A visionary platform for decolonization: The Red Deal
- The place of philosophy in nursing
- Mongolian philosophical underpinnings of well‐being: Mythology, shamanism and Mongolian Buddhism (before the development of modern nursing)
- Gender influences on caring, dignity and well‐being in older person care: A systematic literature review and thematic synthesis
- Can philosophy benefit nurses and/or nursing? Heidegger and Strauss, problems of knowledge and context
- Older, self‐identifying gay men’s conceptualisations of psychological well‐being (PWB): A Canadian perspective
- The machine of caring: A book review of Philosophy of Care By Boris Groys, London, New York: Verso Books. 2022. pp. 112. $22.95 AUD. ISBN: 9781839764929
- A response to Michael Clinton’s On Bender’s orientation to models: Towards a philosophical debate on covering laws, theory, emergence and mechanisms in nursing science
- A response to michael clinton. on bender’s orientation to models: Towards a philosophical debate on covering laws, theory, emergence and mechanisms in nursing science
- Is it true that all human beings have dignity?
- Editorial preface: The role of subjectivity, intersubjectivity, and power relations in the delivery of humane nursing care
- Exploring tacit knowledge based on an expert nurse’s practice for stroke patients
- Nursing as total institution
- What has philosophy ever done for nursing: A discursive shift from margins to mainstream
- From ‘if‐then’ to ‘what if?’ Rethinking healthcare algorithmics with posthuman speculative ethics
- Podium abstract presentations
- Virtual poster presentations
- Special issue guest editorial: The thoughts we think with—As philosophers, as nurses—Matter
- Mattering: Per/forming nursing philosophy in the Chthulucene
- Nursing in deathworlds: Necropolitics of the life, dying and death of an unhoused person in the United States healthcare industrial complex
- Farewell to humanism? Considerations for nursing philosophy and research in posthuman times
- Editor’s introduction to the special issue on the 25th international nursing philosophy conference associated with the International Philosophy of Nursing Society
- A Gadamerian approach to nursing: Merging philosophy with practice
- Reflections on an interactive posthumanist panel: A model for future nursing philosophy conference engagement?
- Care in nursing as a contested concept? A Bergsonian perspective
- Telling a different story: Historiography, ethics, and possibility for nursing
- Whither nursing philosophy: Past, present and future
- Pain cannot (just) be whatever the person says: A critique of a dogma
- Examining the role of nurse executives in homecare through the lens of the Sociology of Ignorance and Critical Management Studies
- What nursing chooses not to know: Practices of epistemic silence/silencing
- On Bender’s orientation to models: Towards a philosophical debate on covering laws, theory, emergence and mechanisms in nursing science
- Poststructuralism and the construction of subjectivities in forensic mental health: Opportunities for resistance
- Diagrams, images and conceptual maps in nursing education
- Reflections on the relational ontology of medical assistance in dying
- What can anarchism do for nursing?
- Decolonization the what, why and how: A treaties on Indigenous nursing knowledge
- Person‐centred conversations in nursing and health: A theoretical analysis based on perspectives on communication
- Decolonize the history of nursing by magnifying the contributions of nurses of colour
- Decolonizing research with Black youths
- Editor’s introduction to the invited special issue on decolonizing nursing
- Dismantling racist ideologies in nursing academia to enhance the success of students identifying as Black, Indigenous and students of colour
- Introduction to decolonizing nursing
- Towards a new (or rearticulated) philosophy of mental health nursing: A dialogue‐on‐dialogue
- Decolonizing health policy and practice: Vaccine hesitancy in the United States
- Breaking the chains: Decolonizing the language of NursologyRompiendo las cadenas: Descolonizando el lenguaje de la NursologíaQuebrando as cadeias: Descolonização da linguagem da Nursología
- A reflection on the decolonization discourse in nursing
- Beyond loss: An essay about presence and sparkling moments based on observations from life coexisting with a person living with dementia
- Creating theory: Encouragement for using creativity and deduction in qualitative nursing research
- Promoting moral imagination in nursing education: Imagining and performing
- What nurses of color want from nursing philosophers
- Decolonizing nursing through the lens of Black maternal health
- The biological paradigm of psychosis in crisis: A Kuhnian analysis
- Lefebvre’s production of space: Implications for nursing
- Re‐examining the relationship between moral distress and moral agency in nursing
- Corrigendum to Time for different stories: Reflections on IPONS panel addressing current debates in nursing theory, education, and practice
- Positionality
- Philosophical underpinnings of intersubjectivity and its significance to phenomenological research: A discussion paper
- Implications of philosophical pragmatism for nursing: Comparison of different pragmatists
- Decolonizing nursing knowledge
- Time for different stories: Reflections on IPONS panel addressing current debates in nursing theory, education and practice
- Philosophy in dialogue with contemporary nursing realities
- Reflections on the nursing theory movement
- Letter from the editors
- Complexity and ambition in nurse education
- Overcoming Descartes’ representational view of the mind in nursing pedagogies, curricula and testing
- Nursing for the Chthulucene: Abolition, affirmation, antifascism
- Philosophy and politics in contemporary nursing discourse (Dr. Barbara Pesut)
- Bring me my alcohol!—On the continuum of pleasure and pain
- The following article for this Special Issue was published in a different issue
- Competency frameworks, nursing perspectives, and interdisciplinary collaborations for good patient care: Delineating boundaries
- What does person‐centred care mean, if you weren’t considered a person anyway: An engagement with person‐centred care and Black, queer, feminist, and posthuman approaches
- Personhood: Philosophies, applications and critiques in healthcare
- Empathy, caring and compassion: Toward a Freudian critique of nursing work
- Using Ricoeur’s notions on narrative interpretation as a resource in supporting person‐centredness in health and social care
- Beyond continental and African philosophies of personhood, healthcare and difference
- Relating person‐centredness to quality‐of‐life assessments and patient‐reported outcomes in healthcare: A critical theoretical discussion
- Using Foucault to (re)think localisation in chronic disease care: Insights for nursing practice
- The trouble with personhood and person‐centred care
- Clinical reasoning as midwifery: A Socratic model for shared decision making in person‐centred care
- Adiaphorisation and the digital nursing gaze: Liquid surveillance in long‐term care
- Understanding and formation—A process of becoming a nurse
- What makes us human? Exploring the significance of ricoeur’s ethical configuration of personhood between naturalism and phenomenology in health care
- Reflections of the collaborative care planning as a person‐centred practice
- Contemplating the spirituality of scholarship
- Some thoughts about the future of nursing and/in philosophy
- ‘Sono solo parole’: Facing challenges entailed in developing and applying terminologies to document nursing care
- Practising the ethics of person‐centred care balancing ethical conviction and moral obligations
- Exploring the uses of virtues in woman‐centred care: A quest, synthesis and reflection
- Hospitals as total institutions
- Persuasive discourses in editorials published by the top‐five nursing journals: Findings from a 5‐year analysis
- Making things work: Using Bourdieu’s theory of practice to uncover an ontology of everyday nursing in practice
- Assembling bodies‐without‐organs: A poststructuralist analysis of group sex between men
- Gilles Deleuze’s societies of control: Implications for mental health nursing and coercive community care
- Existential phenomenology as a unifying philosophy of science for a mixed method study
- A radical imagination for nursing: Generative insurrection, creative resistance
- Rethinking dementia as a queer way of life and as ‘crip possibility’: A critique of the concept of person in person‐centredness
- Assemblages of excess and pleasures: The sociosexual uses of online and chemical technologies among men who have sex with men
- Radical responsibility beyond empathy: Interreligious resources against liberal distortions of nursing care
- Helpful factors in a healthcare professional intervention for low‐back pain: Unveiled by Heidegger’s philosophy
- Mental health nursing and conscientious objection to forced pharmaceutical intervention
- A genealogy of what nurses know about ‘the good death’: A socio‐materialist perspective
- In search of scientific objectivity: Is there such a property for paediatric concussion?
- ‘The pine tree, my good friend’: The other as more‐than‐human
- Publisher’s note
- The role of philosophy in the development and practice of nursing: Past, present and future
- Harnessing the power to bridge different worlds: An introduction to posthumanism as a philosophical perspective for the discipline
- A philosophical analysis of anti‐intellectualism in nursing: Newman’s view of a university education
- Humility in health care: A model
- Can patients’ narratives in nursing enhance the healing process?
- Divinity in nursing: The complexities of adopting a spiritual basis for care
- Thinking about the idea of consent in data science genomics: How ‘informed’ is it?
- Dilthey’s philosophy and methodology of hermeneutics: An approach and contribution to nursing science
- Resisting the muddy notion of the ‘Inclusionary Other’: A re/turn to the philosophical underpinnings of Othering’s construction
- The discursive transformation of grief throughout history
- Treatise on the influence of theism, transhumanism, and posthumanism on nursing and rehabilitation healthcare practice
- Disclosing and discussing the role of spirituality in the transition theory of Afaf Meleis
- Governing families that care for a sick relative: the contributions of donzelot’s theory for nursing
- Governing families that care for a sick relative: the contributions of Donzelot’s theory for nursing
- What makes a nurse today? A debate on the nursing professional identity and its need for change
- Philosophy at the intersection of thinking and doing in nursing
- Integrating the Arts and Humanities into Nursing
- Four philosophical images of man and nursing from Krąpiec’s perspective
- Nursing, masks, COVID‐19 and change
- The movement of virtue from ethos to action
- Examining progression and degeneration of nursing science using Imre Lakatos’s methodology of scientific research programs
- Phenomenology and hermeneutics as a basis for sensitivity within health care
- Moral reasoning as a catalyst for cultural competence and culturally responsive care
- A career open to the talents—Nurses’ doing and focus during the history
- A new conceptualization of the nurse–patient relationship construct as caring interaction
- The 6S‐model for person‐centred palliative care: A theoretical framework
- Kasulis’ intimacy/integrity heuristic and epistemological pluralism in nursing
- Critical thinking in nursing clinical practice, education and research: From attitudes to virtue
- Moral luck in team‐based health care
- Reflections on vital sign measurement in nursing practice
- Guardians of humanity? The challenges of nursing practice in the digital age
- Editorial: Preparing for a Refresh
- The theory of caritative caring: Katie Eriksson’s theory of caritative caring presented from a human science point of view
- Giving a voice to patient experiences through the insights of pragmatism
- What is the problem of dependency? Dependency work reconsidered
- Ideas of caring in nursing practice
- Bowen Family Systems Theory: Mapping a framework to support critical care nurses’ well‐being and care quality
- Relating Mori’s Uncanny Valley in generating conversations with artificial affective communication and natural language processing
- Morality, normativity and measuring moral distress
- Humanitarian reason and the movement for overdose prevention sites: The NGOization of the Opioid “Crisis”
- Operationalist and inferentialist pragmatism: Implications for nursing knowledge development and practice
- From discipline to control in nursing practice: A poststructuralist reflection
- Editorial: Privilege and the call of the appeal
- Steve Edwards 1957–2020
- COVID‐19, the year of the nurse and the ethics of witnessing
- The state of the nursing profession in the International Year of the Nurse and Midwife 2020 during COVID‐19: A Nursing Standpoint
- The relevance of Xenophon’s Anabasis and Plato’s Meno to nursing
- Intelligent humanoid robots expressing artificial humanlike empathy in nursing situations
- Violence versus gratitude: Courses of recognition in caring situations
- Influences of the culture of science on nursing knowledge development: Using conceptual frameworks as nursing philosophy in critical care nursing
- Artificial Intelligence and Robotics in Nursing: Ethics of Caring as a Guide to Dividing Tasks Between AI and Humans
- Heideggerian phenomenological hermeneutics: Working with the data
- Rethinking Carper’s personal knowing for 21st century nursing
- Is feyerabendian philosophy relevant for scientific knowledge development in nursing?
- Advancing nursing practice for improved health outcomes using the principles of perceptual control theory
- A critique of Paulo Freire’s perspective on human nature to inform the construction of theoretical underpinnings for research
- Editorial paper
- Reconciling economic concepts and person‐centred care of the older person with cognitive impairment in the acute care setting
- Towards a relational conceptualization of empathy
- To dwell within: Bridging the theory–practice gap
- Self‐care as care left undone? The ethics of the self‐care agenda in contemporary healthcare policy
- Missed care, care left undone: Organization ethics and the appropriate use of the nursing resource
- Getting into it in the wrong way: Interpretative phenomenological analysis and the hermeneutic circle
- Psychiatry, risk and vulnerability: The significance of Robert Castel’s work for nursing
- Habermas and the therapeutic function of language
- Exploring a hermeneutic perspective of nursing through revisiting nursing health history
- Albert Mieczysław Krąpiec’s theory of the person for professional nursing practice
- The use of photography in perceiving a sense in life: A phenomenological and existential approach in Mental Health Care
- The case for “structural missingness:” A critical discourse of missed care
- Politics and nursing
- Equality as an ethical concept within the context of nursing care rationing
- The gap between macroeconomic and microeconomic health resources allocation decisions: The case of nurses
- Medical assistance in dying: A political issue for nurses and nursing in Canada
- Complicating nursing’s views on religion and politics in healthcare
- Phenomenology as a political position within maternity care
- The practice of phenomenology: The case of Max van Manen
- The social utility of community treatment orders: Applying Girard’s mimetic theory to community‐based mandated mental health care
- Rationing of nursing care, a deviation from holistic nursing: A systematic review
- But it’s legal, isn’t it? Law and ethics in nursing practice related to medical assistance in dying
- Vital and enchanted: Jane Bennett and new materialism for nursing philosophy and practice
- The Political Matters: Exploring material feminist theories for understanding the political in health, inequalities and nursing
- “What a nurse suffers”: Care left undone in seventeenth‐century Madrid
- Reading Heidegger
- Research paradigms and the politics of nursing knowledge: A reflective discussion
- Why nurses should be Marxists
- “Ought implies can” & missed care
- Twenty years of Nursing Philosophy (and a fond farewell)
- Philosophical inquiry and nursing advocacy
- The fictionalist paradigm: A commentary
- Problems we do not fully understand
- Revisiting “Intelligent Nursing”: Olga Petrovskaya in conversation with Mary Ellen Purkis and Kristin Bjornsdottir
- Nursing, spirituality, and the work of Paley and Pesut
- Carry on thinking: Nurse education in the Corporate University
- Political discourse in the hospital heterotopia
- Autonomy and caring: Towards a Marxist understanding of nursing work
- Politics in the classroom
- If she is conscious, what is she?
- Reading concept analysis: Why Draper has a point
- Authentic intention: Tempering the dehumanizing aspects of technology on behalf of good nursing care
- Hermeneutics, nursing and a pedagogy of the encounter
- John Paley’s “cognition and the compassion deficit: The social psychology of helping behaviour in nursing”: An Aristotelian response
- A personal retrospective
- Nurses’ attitudes to euthanasia eleven years on: Has anything changed?
- Niven and Scott (2003): Sixteen years of hindsight
- Needs and closeness—Defending a reasonable partiality in nursing care
- Ricoeur’s narrative philosophy: A source of inspiration in critical hermeneutic health research
- Robert Nozick and Axel Honneth: An attempt to shed light on mental health service in Norway through two diametrical philosophers
- Using Ockham’s razor to redefine “nursing science”
- Locating the lived body in client–nurse interactions: Embodiment, intersubjectivity and intercorporeality
- Healing activities construct the objects of therapy: Medicine’s way of seeking truth, organizing forms of reality, regulating patients’ bodies, illness and culture?
- I am a settler now … and a Treaty 6 person
- Putting Socrates back in Socratic method: Theory‐based debriefing in the nursing classroom
- Electronic health record as a panopticon: A disciplinary apparatus in nursing practice
- Invisible but sensible aesthetic aspects of excellence in nursing
- Beyond the absent body—A phenomenological contribution to the understanding of body awareness in health and illness
- Patient involvement and institutional logics: A discussion paper
- On writers and their biases
- Bearing witness in nursing practice: More than a moral obligation?
- Perspectives on phronesis in professional nursing practice
- The redundancy of positivism as a paradigm for nursing research
- Understanding human enhancement technologies through critical phenomenology
- The central question and the scope of nursing research
- Unitary caring science: The philosophy and praxis of nursing Jean Watson University Press of Colorado, Louisville, CO, 2018, $34.95 (paperback), 204 pages. ISBN 978‐1‐60732‐775‐4.
- Middle‐range theories as models: New criteria for analysis and evaluation
- From expert to novice: Shocking transitions in nursing
- Recognition Theory in Nurse/Patient Relationships: The contribution of Gillian Rose
- Living the intensive order: Common sense and schizophrenia in Deleuze and Guattari
- Nursing and music: Considerations of Nightingale’s environmental philosophy and phenomenology
- Governing through lifestyle—Lalonde and the biopolitical management of public health in Canada
- Embracing the wild profusion: A Foucauldian analysis of the impact of healthcare standardization on nursing knowledge and practice
- Grade point average, inequity and nursing education
- Heeding humanity in an age of electronic health records: Heidegger, Levinas, and Healthcare
- Phenomenology and qualitative research: Amedeo Giorgi’s hermetic epistemology
- Meaning, lived experience, empathy and boredom: Max van Manen on phenomenology and Heidegger
- Nursing knowledge: A middle ground exploration
- In praise of open-mindedness
- Phenomenology of illnessHavi, CarelFirst Edition, Oxford University Press. US $50, 272 pages. ISBN-13:978-0199669653.
- Nursing Ethics and Professional Responsibility in Advanced Practice Pamela J. Grace PhD, MSN, RN Burlington, Massachusetts:, 2018. 3rd edition, 447 pages, including glossary and index. $72.92 soft cover. ISBN 9781284107333.
- Paper 1: “Nursing as concrete philosophy, Part I: Risjord on nursing knowledge”
- Revisiting the roots of nursing philosophy and critical theory: Past, present and future
- Ivan Illich’s Medical Nemesis and the ‘age of the show’: On the Expropriation of Death
- Attending a conference: Students’ experience
- Nursing as concrete philosophy, Part II: Engaging with reality
- Rancière’s writings applied to nursing: A radical and emancipatory political theory
- Critical consciousness-raising, popular education and liberation in community health nursing: Let’s start the debate
- Power, discourse, and resistance: Poststructuralist influences in nursing
- The subversion of Mill and the ultimate aim of nursing
- Theoretical development in the context of nursing—The hidden epistemology of nursing theory
- Models versus theories as a primary carrier of nursing knowledge: A philosophical argument
- Genealogies of recovery: The framing of therapeutic ambitions
- Reconciling conceptualizations of ethical conduct and person-centred care of older people with cognitive impairment in acute care settings
- Public money spent in pursuit of public money: Does it add up?
- Profits and prophets: Derrida on linguistic bereavement and (Im)possibility in nursing
- Refining moral agency: Insights from moral psychology and moral philosophy
- New ways for nursing inspired by the works of Michel de Certeau
- The Anthropocene Project: Virtue in the age of climate change Byron Williston Oxford University Press. Hardcover. ISBN 9780198746713
- Phenomenology as qualitative research: A critical analysis of meaning attribution John Paley(2016), Routledge, ISBN-13: 978-1138652811
- Internalized Oppression: The Psychology of Marginalized Groups By E. J. R. DavidSpringer Publishing Company, New York, 69 $ USD, 2014, 328 pages. ISBN 9780826199256
- Nursing, recycling and the environment
- Rhetoric versus reality: The role of research in deconstructing concepts of caring
- Nursing Philosophy 2016, response to Peter Allmark’s article, “Aristotle for Nursing”
- Person-centred care dialectics—Inquired in the context of palliative care
- Fake news, truth and ideology: Galileo, censorship and nursing
- Subjective from the start: A critique of transformative criticism
- Will nurse researchers and educationalists rise to the challenge thrown out by John Paley?
- Can nursing epistemology embrace p-values?
- Representation, archaeology and genealogy: Three “spatial metaphors” for inquiring into nursing phenomena with Foucauldian discourse analysis
- Reconciling conceptualizations of relationships and person-centred care for older people with cognitive impairment in acute care settings
- An exploration of caregiver choice through the lens of Sartrean existentialism
- Jürgen Habermas and the dilemmas of experience of disability
- Pierre Bourdieu: Expanding the scope of nursing research and practice
- Contract theories and partnership in health care. A philosophical inquiry to the philosophy of John Rawls and Seyla Benhabib
- The emotion of compassion and the likelihood of its expression in nursing practice
- Reconciling conceptualisations of the body and person-centred care of the older person with cognitive impairment in the acute care setting
- A critical analysis of the failure of nurses to raise concerns about poor patient care
- Does the emphasis on caring within nursing contribute to nurses’ silence about practice issues?
- Against compassion: in defence of a “hybrid” concept of empathy
- Evaluating realist evaluation: a response to Pawson’s reply
- Geographical thinking in nursing inquiry, part two: performance, possibility, and non-representational theory
- Reconciling concepts of space and person-centred care of the older person with cognitive impairment in the acute care setting
- Aristotle for nursing
- Spiritual care as a response to an exaptation: how evolutionary psychology informs the debate
- Bringing critical realism to nursing practice: Roy Bhaskar’s contribution
- Between exclusion and emancipation: Foucault’s ethics and disability
- Nursing knowledge: hints from the placebo effect
- The Humanbecoming theory as a reinterpretation of the symbolic interactionism: a critique of its specific nature and scientific underpinnings