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173Adaptive Preferences in Medicine: A Subjectivity-First AccountJournal of Medical Ethics. forthcoming.In this paper, I argue for a subjectivity-first account of health-related adaptive preferences (HRAPs). Rather than evaluating preferences in isolation, this approach shifts normative attention to how a subject’s lived orientation and the world they inhabit mutually shape one another long before a clinical encounter. On this view, the normative task is to understand how HRAPs become intelligible to a subject under non-ideal conditions by focusing on two dimensions of subject formation: the ecosy…Read more
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678Education as a Thick Epistemic Concept (ETEC) is a thick epistemology project that highlights the role of education in both epistemic virtues acquirement and motivation. In this paper, I argue that ETEC is not satisfactory because it relies on a version of Virtue Responsibilism (VR) that is also not plausible, in so far as it relies on the premise that both the motivation and the action-guidedness of epistemic and moral virtues are unified. By rejecting this unification premise, I show that an e…Read more
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860Toward a Feminist Model for Women's Healthcare: The Problem of False Consciousness and the Moral Status of Female Genital Cosmetic SurgeryInternational Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 17 (2): 28-54. 2024.This article is concerned with "all-or-nothing" approaches to female genital cosmetic surgeries, those that overemphasize either women's autonomy to defend total accessibility or the oppressive social context affecting women to defend the total banning of the procedures. By contrast, the author takes both phenomena into consideration. The author argues identifying patterns of false consciousness and weighing those against harm done to a patient provides a moral basis for a doctor to possibly den…Read more
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2320From Gender Segregation to Epistemic Segregation: A Case Study of The School System in IranJournal of Philosophy of Education 57 (4-5): 901-922. 2023.In this paper, I show that there is a bidirectional relationship between gender-based social norms and gender-segregated education policies that excludes girls from knowledge production within the Iranian school system. I argue that gender segregation in education reproduces hermeneutic inequality through the reinforcement of epistemic segregation as a form of epistemic injustice. In particular, I focus on gender-based instructional epistemic injustice, which refers to a set of epistemic practic…Read more
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401Review of The Ethics of Inclusive Education: Presenting a New Theoretical Framework (review)Philosophical Inquiry in Education 30 (1): 85-88. 2023.
Shadi "Sophie" Heidarifar
Roseman University College of Medicine (RUCOM)
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Roseman University College of Medicine (RUCOM)Assistant Professor
APA Eastern Division
Las Vegas, NV, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Biomedical Ethics |
Areas of Interest
| Feminist Philosophy |