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87Access to Healthcare and the Pharmaceutical SectorCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (2): 309-325. 2011.Health is higher on the international agenda than ever before, and improving the health of poor people is a central issue in development. Poor people suffer from far higher levels of ill health, mortality, and malnutrition than do those better off, and their inadequate health is one of the factors keeping them poor or for their being poor in the first place. Health is a crucially important economic asset, particularly for poor people. Their livelihoods depend on it. When poor people become ill o…Read more
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76Corporate Responsibilities for Access to MedicinesJournal of Business Ethics 85 (S1). 2009.Today there is a growing wave of demands being placed upon the pharmaceutical industry to contribute to improved access to medicines for poor patients in the developing countries. 1 This article aims to contribute to the development of a systematic approach and broad consensus about shared benchmarks for good corporate practices in this area. A consensus corridor on what constitutes an appropriate portfolio of corporate responsibilities for access to medicines -especially under conditions of 'fa…Read more
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70The Corporate Social Responsibility of The Pharmaceutical IndustryBusiness Ethics Quarterly 15 (4): 577-594. 2005.In recent years society has come to expect more from the “socially-responsible” company and the global HIV/AIDS pandemic in particular has resulted in some critics saying that the “Big Pharma” companies have not been living up to their social responsibilities. Corporate social responsibility can be understood as the socio-economic product of the organizational division of labor in complex modern society. Global poverty and poor health conditions are in the main the responsibilities of the world’…Read more
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64Professional Organizations and Healthcare Industry Support: Ethical Conflict?Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 3 (2): 236. 1994.A good deal of attention has been recently focused on the presumed advertising excesses of the healthcare industry in its promotion techniques to healthcare professionals, whether through offering gratuities such as gifts, honoraria, or travel support2-6 or through deception. Two basic concerns have been expressed: Does the acceptance of gratuities bias the recipient, tainting his or her responsibilities as the patient's agent? Does acceptance of the gratuity by the healthcare professional contr…Read more
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51Life context of pharmacological academic performance enhancement among university students – a qualitative approachBMC Medical Ethics 15 (1): 23. 2014.Academic performance enhancement or cognitive enhancement (CE) via stimulant drug use has received increasing attention. The question remains, however, whether CE solely represents the use of drugs for achieving better academic or workplace results or whether CE also serves various other purposes. The aim of this study was to put the phenomenon of pharmacological academic performance enhancement via prescription and illicit (psycho-) stimulant use (Amphetamines, Methylphenidate) among university…Read more
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50Das mongolische Weltreich: Al-'Umarī's Darstellung der mongolischen Reiche in seinem Werk Masālik alabsār fī mamālik al-amṣārDas mongolische Weltreich: Al-'Umari's Darstellung der mongolischen Reiche in seinem Werk Masalik alabsar fi mamalik al-amsarJournal of the American Oriental Society 92 (2): 357. 1972.
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47The Independence of Research—A Review of Disciplinary Perspectives and Outline of Interdisciplinary ProspectsMinerva 60 (1): 105-138. 2022.The independence of research is a key strategic issue of modern societies. Dealing with it appropriately poses legal, economic, political, social and cultural problems for society, which have been studied by the corresponding disciplines and are increasingly the subject of reflexive discourses of scientific communities. Unfortunately, problems of independence are usually framed in disciplinary contexts without due consideration of other perspectives’ relevance or possible contributions. To overc…Read more
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43Bad Medicine. The Prescription Drug Industry in the Third World. M. Silverman, M. Lydecker, Ph. R. Lee. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-8047-1669- (review)Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (3): 388. 1993.
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37Corporate Philanthropy: The “Top of the Pyramid”Business and Society Review 112 (3): 315-342. 2007.
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34Ductile–brittle transition in micropillar compression of GaAs at room temperaturePhilosophical Magazine 91 (7-9): 1190-1199. 2011.
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34Vergemeinschaftung and Vergesellschaftung in Max Weber: A reconstruction of his linguistic usageHistory of European Ideas 37 (4): 454-465. 2011.When Max Weber made use of the terms ?Vergemeinschaftung? and ?Vergesellschaftung? in the first chapter of ?Economy and Society?, he was among other things alluding to Ferdinand Tönnies' well- known usage of ?Gemeinschaft? and ?Gesellschaft?, as well as to related conceptions in the work of Georg Simmel. However, Weber's usage not only differed from the senses in which Tönnies and Simmel used these terms; he had himself altered his own usage since the early draft of this chapter, published in 19…Read more
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34Resilience beyond reductionism: ethical and social dimensions of an emerging concept in the neurosciencesMedicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (1): 55-63. 2020.Since a number of years, popular and scientific interest in resilience is rapidly increasing. More recently, also neuroscientific research in resilience and the associated neurobiological findings is gaining more attention. Some of these neuroscientific findings might open up new measures to foster personal resilience, ranging from magnetic stimulation to pharmaceutical interventions and awareness-based techniques. Therefore, bioethics should also take a closer look at resilience and resilience …Read more
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32Transparency of Conflicts of Interest: A Mixed Blessing? The Patients' PerspectiveAmerican Journal of Bioethics 17 (6): 27-29. 2017.
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30Puritanismus und Kapitalismus: Die Protestantische Ethik in der Max-Weber-GesamtausgabeZeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 69 (3): 279-284. 2017.
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30Intellectual Property and Access to Essential Medicines: A Tenuous Link?Asian Bioethics Review 5 (4): 376-382. 2013.
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30Scaffolded reaching experiences encourage grasping activity in infants at high risk for autismFrontiers in Psychology 5 80656. 2014.Recent findings suggest impaired motor skill development during infancy in children later diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). However, it remains unclear whether infants at high familial risk for ASD would benefit from early interventions targeting the motor domain. The current study investigated this issue by providing 3-month-old infants at high familial risk for ASD with training experiences aimed at facilitating independent reaching. A group of 17 high-risk (HR) infants received …Read more
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29An Analysis of the Conceptual Landscape of Corporate Responsibility in AcademiaBusiness and Professional Ethics Journal 34 (2): 165-193. 2015.
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29Is causal induction based on causal power? Critique of Cheng (1997)Psychological Review 107 (1): 195-212. 2000.
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28Poverty, Disease, and Medicines in Low- and Middle-Income CountriesBusiness and Professional Ethics Journal 31 (1): 135-185. 2012.Providing access to medicines and health care is one of the most challenging issues facing society today. In this paper the author highlights some of the complexities of the health value chain as well as the problems that the world’s poor have in terms of access to medical care and medicines. He then attempts to delineate the roles and responsibilities of all stakeholders in order to define the specific corporate responsibilities of pharmaceutical companies in the context of the entire responsib…Read more
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27Moral Education in JapanJournal of Moral Education 19 (3): 172-181. 1990.In spite of the officially secular character of public institutional life, including education, religion is a pervasive undercurrent which affects moral education, both at home and in school. In different ways Buddhism, Shinto, Confucian traditions and new religious movements are all influential. The nationalist emphasis, which became prominent in the period 1872-1945, was replaced by a deliberately secular social studies or citizenship in keeping with the spirit of the war settlement. Latterly …Read more
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26Most like it but some don't – attitudes of vocational trainees in general practice towards evidence‐based medicineJournal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (4): 615-620. 2011.
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26Bioethics Here and in Poor Countries: A CommentCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (1): 5. 1993.There has been a tremendous increase in interest in bioethics, which has come in direct response to the substantial advances in biomedical research and medical technology over the past 30 years. The more sophisticated medical science and technology becomes, the more sophisticated are questions that are raised: Who has the right to decide whether a medical treatment should be initiated, continued, or stopped? How much information are healthcare professionals required to give to patients? When sho…Read more
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24Causality or Interaction? Simmel, Weber and Interpretive SociologyTheory, Culture and Society 8 (3): 33-62. 1991.
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23The Global Economic Manifesto: A RetrospectiveBusiness and Professional Ethics Journal 34 (1): 121-126. 2015.This article responds to the review of Hemphill and Lillevik, “The Global Economic Manifesto: A Retrospective.” It aims to contribute to the worldwide discussion of global accepted norms and values of corporate behavior by addressing universal ethical principles and implementation strategies. A focus is set on the means of specifying values to serve the action orientation of an organization and its management. Since external normative expectations rise in context of the upcoming Post-2015 Develo…Read more
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23George Spencer Brown's "Design with the NOR": with related essays (edited book)Emerald Publishing. 2021.George Spencer Brown, a polymath and author of Laws of Form, brought together mathematics, electronics, engineering and philosophy to form an unlikely bond. This book investigates Design with the NOR, the title of the yet unpublished 1961 typescript by Spencer Brown. The typescript formed through the author's experiences as technical engineer and developer of a new form of switching algebra for Mullard Equipment LTD., a British manufacturer of electronic components. Related essays contextualise …Read more
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22“What” matters more than “Why” – Neonatal behaviors initiate social responsesBehavioral and Brain Sciences 40. 2017.
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22Acculturation and Anger Expression Among Iranian Migrants in GermanyFrontiers in Psychology 13. 2022.Cultural and biographical influences on the expression of emotions manifest themselves in so-called “display rules.” These rules determine the time, intensity, and situations in which an emotion is expressed. To date, only a small number of empirical studies deal with this transformation of how migrants, who are faced with a new culture, may change their emotional expression. The present, cross-sectional study focuses on changes in anger expression as part of a complex acculturation process amon…Read more
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22Dramatische Zeit und Szene des PhaidonHermes 146 (1): 2-22. 2018.Plato’s Phaidon, as generally held, is set in Phlius (northern Argolis), shortly after the death of Socrates: the scarcely twenty-year-old Phaidon (see 89b2), on his way from Athens to his home town of Elis, is visiting the Pythagorean Echecrates and his companions. In this article I will show that the established place and time neglect some special dynamics of the start of the meeting (Section I) and a series of ethopoietic effects in the course of the dialogue (Section II). Moreover, relevant …Read more
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21Sociology and the Diagnosis of the Times or: The Reflexivity of ModernityTheory, Culture and Society 12 (1): 25-52. 1995.