23 May 2022
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Legitimising values -
Should healthcare workers be prioritised during the COVID-19 pandemic? A view from Madrid and New York -
Framework for evaluation research on clinical ethical case interventions: the role of ethics consultants -
Trial by Triad: substituted judgment, mental illness and the right to die -
Developing a competency framework for health research ethics education and training -
Who commits the unnaturalistic fallacy? -
Value assessment frameworks: who is valuing the care in healthcare? -
Wrong question and the wrong standard of proof -
Abortion and the veil of ignorance: a response to Minehan -
No right answer: officials need discretion on whether to allow natural immunity exemptions -
Is the international regulation of medical complicity with torture largely window dressing? The case of Israel and the lessons of a 12-year medical ethical appeal -
What money cant buy: an argument against paying people to get vaccinated -
Rawlsian justice in healthcare: a response to Cox and Fritz -
Vaccine mandates need a clear rationale to identify which exemptions are appropriate -
In defence of our model for just healthcare systems: why an explicit philosophy is needed in addition to the law, and how Scanlon helps derive just policies -
Beyond individualisation: towards a more contextualised understanding of womens social egg freezing experiences -
The unnaturalistic fallacy: COVID-19 vaccine mandates should not discriminate against natural immunity -
Moral status of the fetus and the permissibility of abortion: a contractarian response to Thomsons violinist thought experiment -
The Climate Emergency Demands a New Kind of History: Pragmatic Approaches from Science and Technology Studies, Text Mining, and Affiliated Disciplines -
Joan Steigerwald. Experimenting at the Boundaries of Life: Organic Vitality in Germany around 1800. -
Kalle Kananoja. Healing Knowledge in Atlantic Africa: Medical Encounters, 1500–1850. -
From the History of Science to Geoanthropology -
Antarctic Krill and the Temporalities of Oceanic Abundance, 1930s–1960s -
Timothy M. Harrison. Coming To: Consciousness and Natality in Early Modern England. -
Hannah Marcus. Forbidden Knowledge: Medicine, Science, and Censorship in Early Modern Italy. -
Zachary Dorner. Merchants of Medicines: The Commerce and Coercion of Health in Britain’s Long Eighteenth Century. -
Export Furniture and Artisanal Translation in Eighteenth-Century Canton -
Steven Turner. The Science of James Smithson: Discoveries from the Smithsonian Founder. -
Stephen P. Weldon. The Scientific Spirit of American Humanism. -
We Need to See Things -
Philip Ball. The Elements: A Visual History of Their Discovery. -
Jacob Steere-Williams. The Filth Disease: Typhoid Fever and the Practices of Epidemiology in Victorian England. -
A Planetary Anthropocene? Views From Africa -
Pratik Chakrabarti. Inscriptions of Nature: Geology and the Naturalization of Antiquity. -
Bill Jenkins. Evolution before Darwin: Theories of the Transmutation of Species in Edinburgh, 1804–1834. -
Jeremy Zallen. American Lucifers: The Dark History of Artificial Light, 1750–1865. -
David Trippett; Benjamin Walton, eds. Nineteenth-Century Opera and the Scientific Imagination. -
Science in Glass: Material Pathologies in Laboratory Research, Glassware Standardization, and the (Un)Natural History of a Modern Material, 1900s–1930s -
Introduction: Rethinking History of Science in the Anthropocene -
Alisha Rankin. The Poison Trials: Wonder Drugs, Experiments, and the Battle for Authority in Renaissance Science. -
Mark Solovey. Social Science for What? Battles over Public Funding for the “Other Sciences” at the National Science Foundation. -
Giovanni Battimelli; Giovanni Ciccotti; Pietro Greco. Computer Meets Theoretical Physics: The New Frontier of Molecular Simulation. -
Between History and Earth System Science -
Christopher Byrne. Aristotle’s Science of Matter and Motion. -
John H. Evans. The Human Gene Editing Debate. -
David Pingree. Picatrix: A Medieval Treatise on Astral Magic. -
John Troyer. Technologies of the Human Corpse. -
Earth System Science, Anthropocene Historiography, and Three Forms of Human Agency -
Seb Falk. The Light Ages: The Surprising Story of Medieval Science. -
Rasmus Grønfeldt Winther. When Maps Become the World. -
Petros Bouras-Vallianatos. Innovation in Byzantine Medicine: The Writings of John Zacharias Aktouarios (c. 1275–c. 1330). -
Dark Degenerations: Life, Light, and Transformation beneath the Earth, 1840–circa 1900 -
Punch-Drunk Slugnuts: Violence and the Vernacular History of Disease -
Katherine McKittrick. Dear Science and Other Stories. -
Anna Reser; Leila McNeill. Forces of Nature: The Women Who Changed Science. -
Elizabeth Reis. Bodies in Doubt: An American History of Intersex. -
James Mussell; Graeme Gooday, eds. A Pioneer of Connection: Recovering the Life and Work of Oliver Lodge. -
Rob Boddice. Humane Professions: The Defense of Experimental Medicine, 1876–1914. -
Neeraja Sankaran. A Tale of Two Viruses: Parallels in the Research Trajectories of Tumor and Bacterial Viruses. -
United in Scholarship, Divided in Practice: (Re)Translating Smallpox and Measles for Seventeenth-Century Jews -
Xiaoping Fang. China and the Cholera Pandemic: Restructuring Society under Mao. -
Noah Tamarkin. Genetic Afterlives: Black Jewish Indigeneity in South Africa. -
Kelsen’s Metaethics -
Medicine and Shariah: A Dialogue in Islamic Bioethics Aasim I. Padela. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2021. 312 pp. ISBN‐13: 978‐0268108373; ISBN‐10: 0268108374 -
What the ‘greater good’ excludes: Patients left behind by pre‐operative COVID‐19 screening in an Ethiopian town -
Can you remember silence? Life in the aftermath of trauma -
Introduction: methodology and non-ideal theory in Christine Hobden’s Citizenship in a Globalised World -
Adopting a Companion Dog Helps Veterans with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in a Pilot Randomized Trial -
The logical problem of the incarnation: a new solution -
Curating duplicates: operationalizing similiarity in the Smithsonian Institution with Haida rattles, 1880–1926 -
Science by Nobel committee: decision making and norms of scientific practice in the early physics and chemistry prizes -
FRIENDSHIP AND THE WISHES OF THE DEAD -
Is medical science for sale? -
Arendt’s integrity -
Virtuous People and Moral Reasons -
Eric S. Nelson: Levinas, Adorno, and the Ethics of the Material Other -
Names vs nouns -
Bioethics: An International, Morally Diverse, and Often Political Endeavor -
Hegelian Reflections on Agency, Alienation, and Work: Toward an Expressivist Theory of the Firm -
Ethische Fragen im Gesundheitswesen als Gegenstand interprofessionellen Lernens: Überblick zur Situation in Deutschland und Projektbericht -
Happy Unhappiness (and Other Stratified Contradictions) -
An Ethical Exploration of Increased Average Number of Authors Per Publication -
Suicide Risk Assessments: A Scientific and Ethical Critique -
A Puzzle Concerning Gratitude and Accountability -
Status of the Wave Function of Quantum Mechanics, or, What is Quantum Mechanics Trying to Tell Us? -
Learning Science in Context: Integrating a Holistic Approach to Nature of Science in the Lower Secondary Classroom - Number of publications for this day: 86
22 May 2022
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Péter on Church’s Thesis, Constructivity and Computers -
Kalmár’s Argument Against the Plausibility of Church’s Thesis -
Gender-inclusive corporate boards and business performance in Pakistan - Number of publications for this day: 3
21 May 2022
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Kant’s pragmatic use of reason from a sociological point of view: Third way or methodological impasse? -
When the “realism of assumptions” mattered: Milton Friedman’s critique of the Phillips curve -
Centred worlds, personal identity and imagination -
Dis-ease and epidemics: Shock and modern-era perceptions of contagion -
Spacetime Emergence: Collapsing the Distinction Between Content and Context? -
A Bibliometric Analysis of the Cognitive Turn in Psychology -
Quantum gravity in a laboratory? -
Algebraic Propositional Logic -
Normal‐proper functions in the philosophy of mind -
Running it up the flagpole to see if anyone salutes – A response to Woodward on causal and explanatory asymmetries -
Bi-directionality in causal relationships