-
Michael Davis, The Autobiography of Philosophy: Rousseau's Reveries of The Solitary Walker Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 19 (6): 398-401. 1999.
-
261How do patients know?Hastings Center Report 37 (5): 27-35. 2007.: The way patients make health care decisions is much more complicated than is often recognized. Patient autonomy allows both that patients will sometimes defer to clinicians and that they should sometimes be active inquirers, ready to question their clinicians and do some independent research. At the same time, patients' active inquiry requires clinicians' support
-
39Editorial NoteKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 24 (1). 2014.In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Editorial NoteRebecca Kukla, PhD, Editor in ChiefThis spring is an exciting time at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal. We are rolling out our new series of online reviews of books in bioethics, practical ethics, and the ethical, social, and legal dimensions of science and medicine. These in-depth reviews will be written by leading figures in the discipline, and will be published in online issue supplements, with pre-publication…Read more
-
181
-
80Studying Human Behavior: How Scientists Investigate Aggression and Sexuality by Helen Longino (review)Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 24 (1): 97-103. 2014.In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Studying Human Behavior: How Scientists Investigate Aggression and Sexuality by Helen LonginoRebecca KuklaReview: Helen Longino, Studying Human Behavior: How Scientists Investigate Aggression and Sexuality, University of Chicago Press, 2013In Studying Human Behavior: How Scientists Investigate Aggression and Sexuality, Helen Longino meticulously examines a wide variety of research programs devoted to studying human behavi…Read more
-
104Book ReviewJoseph Rouse, How Scientific Practices Matter: Reclaiming Philosophical Naturalism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press , 336 pp., $49.00 (review)Philosophy of Science 71 (2): 216-219. 2004.
-
369Naturalizing objectivityPerspectives on Science 16 (3). 2008.We can understand objectivity, in the broadest sense of the term, as epistemic accountability to the real. Since at least the 1986 publication of Sandra Harding’s The Science Question in Feminism, so-called standpoint epistemologists have sought to build an understanding of such objectivity that does not essentially anchor it to a dislocated, ‘view from nowhere’ stance on the part of the judging subject. Instead, these theorists have argued that a proper understanding of objectivity must recogni…Read more
-
374A paramount narrative: Exploring space on the starship enterpriseJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (2): 177-191. 1999.
-
100Editorial NoteKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 27 (1). 2017.How can we conceptualize and promote agential choices in a complicated social world—one in which institutional, cultural, and marketing pressures convey values and norms that may not be in the best interest of individual patients? In this issue of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, Eric Racine and his colleagues explore this difficult question in the context of “preclinical” Alzheimer’s disease and complementary and alternative medicines. This is an especially murky and vexed context in wh…Read more
-
83Editorial NoteKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 25 (3). 2015.This season’s issue includes two articles on a quickly expanding topic in bioethics: the ethics of enhancement. There are many kinds of enhancement both actual and imagined: we can enhance people’s physical, aesthetic, cognitive, or moral capacities, for instance; individuals might choose particular enhancements, parents might choose them for their future children, or states might institute them at the widespread population level; the enhancements might be technologically complex or take the for…Read more
-
1Conformity, Creativity and the Social Constitution of the SubjectDissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 1995.This work seeks to take seriously the common philosophical claim that individual subjects are constituted by their social world. A detailed understanding this claim requires an analysis of what is involved in being a subject, of the nature of 'the social', and of the possible constitutive relationships between these. I begin with a critical history of the idea that subjects are norm-followers, and that social groups constitute individuals by demanding their conformity to norms. I trace this 'con…Read more
-
63Review of Slavoj iek, Rex Butler (ed.), Scott Stephens (ed.), Interrogating the Real (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (4). 2006.
Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America