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Robyn Bluhm

Michigan State University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    63
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 More details
  • Michigan State University
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
Philosophy of Biology
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
General Philosophy of Science
  • All publications (63)
  •  154
    Marcum, James A., An introductory philosophy of medicine: humanizing modern medicine: Springer, New York, 2008, 376 pp., $149, 1-40-2067968
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 31 (5): 391-393. 2010.
  •  176
    Beyond the Basics: The Evolution and Development of Human Emotions
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 36 (sup1): 73-94. 2006.
    The suggestion that at least some emotions are modular captures a number of our intuitions about emotions: they are generally fast responses to a stimulus, they are involuntary, and they are easily distinguished from one another; we simply know that, for example, anger feels different than fear. Candidates for modular emotions are usually the so-called “basic” emotions - anger and fear are good examples of these. Defenders of emotion theories that focus on basic emotions, such as Paul Ekman in p…Read more
    The suggestion that at least some emotions are modular captures a number of our intuitions about emotions: they are generally fast responses to a stimulus, they are involuntary, and they are easily distinguished from one another; we simply know that, for example, anger feels different than fear. Candidates for modular emotions are usually the so-called “basic” emotions - anger and fear are good examples of these. Defenders of emotion theories that focus on basic emotions, such as Paul Ekman in psychology and Paul Griffiths in philosophy, emphasize the advantages of theories that stress the evolutionary continuity of emotional expression and link emotions to the activity of neural circuits that are similar in human beings and other animals.In this paper, however, I will examine arguments for the discontinuity of emotions in human beings, as compared with other animals. Owing to a combination of cultural practices and neuroanatomy, both our emotional “wiring” and our emotions are unique.
    EmotionsEvolution of PhenomenaSomatic and Feeling Theories of Emotion
  •  102
    The Canadian Assisted Human Reproduction Act: Protecting Women's Health While Potentially Allowing Human Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer into Non-Human Oocytes
    with Roxanne Mykitiuk and Jeff Nisker
    American Journal of Bioethics 7 (2): 71-73. 2007.
    No abstract
    Reproductive Ethics, Misc
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