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202Vulnerability, health, and illnessInternational Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 5 (2): 147-161. 2012.Although it is intuitively obvious that having health problems makes people vulnerable, neither bioethics nor the philosophy of medicine has paid much attention to the relationship between vulnerability and health or illness. In this paper, I draw on work by Erinn Gilson on the nature of vulnerability in order to address this lack, showing that attending to vulnerability illuminates the relationship between health and illness.
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154Marcum, James A., An introductory philosophy of medicine: humanizing modern medicine: Springer, New York, 2008, 376 pp., $149, 1-40-2067968Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 31 (5): 391-393. 2010.
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174Beyond the Basics: The Evolution and Development of Human EmotionsCanadian 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
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