Results for 'Keisha N. Blain'

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  1.  7
    Keisha N. Blain, Set the World on Fire: Black nationalist women and the global struggle for freedom | Keisha N. Blain, Tiffany M. [REVIEW]Olivier Maheo - 2023 - Clio 57:316-318.
    Depuis la fin de la guerre froide, les recherches sur la gauche américaine se sont multipliées, parmi lesquelles différents ouvrages consacrés aux militantes africaines-américaines, qui démontrent combien le rôle qu’elles ont joué au sein du mouvement noir de libération américain a été trop longtemps passé sous silence. Keisha N. Blain, professeure d’histoire et d’Africana Studies à Brown University est l’auteure de Set the World on Fire: Black nationalist women and the global struggle for fr...
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  2. Identity integration in an individual with a spinal cord injury: Case study of a veteran.Keisha N. Brooks & Barbara Mullins Nelson - 2010 - In Giselle Walker & E. S. Leedham-Green (eds.), Identity. Cambridge University Press. pp. 16-33.
     
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  3.  99
    Simulations in Cyber-Security: A Review of Cognitive Modeling of Network Attackers, Defenders, and Users. [REVIEW]Vladislav D. Veksler, Norbou Buchler, Blaine E. Hoffman, Daniel N. Cassenti, Char Sample & Shridat Sugrim - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  4.  23
    Variability in emotion regulation strategy use is negatively associated with depressive symptoms.Xiaoqin Wang, Scott D. Blain, Jie Meng, Yuan Liu & Jiang Qiu - 2021 - Cognition and Emotion 35 (2):324-340.
    Variability in the emotion regulation (ER) strategies one uses throughout daily life has been suggested to reflect adaptive ER ability and to act as a protective factor in mental health. Moreover, psychological inflexibility and persistent negative affect (or affective inertia) are key features of depression and other forms of mental illness and are often further exacerbated by rigid or overly passive regulatory behaviours. The current study investigated the hypothesis that ER variability might serve as a protective factor against depressive symptoms (...)
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  5.  64
    Do Publics Share Experts’ Concerns about Brain–Computer Interfaces? A Trinational Survey on the Ethics of Neural Technology.Matthew Sample, Sebastian Sattler, David Rodriguez-Arias, Stefanie Blain-Moraes & Eric Racine - 2019 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 2019 (6):1242-1270.
    Since the 1960s, scientists, engineers, and healthcare professionals have developed brain–computer interface (BCI) technologies, connecting the user’s brain activity to communication or motor devices. This new technology has also captured the imagination of publics, industry, and ethicists. Academic ethics has highlighted the ethical challenges of BCIs, although these conclusions often rely on speculative or conceptual methods rather than empirical evidence or public engagement. From a social science or empirical ethics perspective, this tendency could be considered problematic and even technocratic because (...)
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  6.  14
    Nine Worlds of SEID‐MAGIC: Ecstasy and Neo‐Shamanism in North European Paganism.Evajane N. Fridman - 2003 - Anthropology of Consciousness 14 (2):94-96.
    Nine Worlds of SEID‐MAGIC: Ecstasy and Neo‐Shamanism in North European Paganism. Jenny Blain. London and New York: Routledge, 2001. 192 pages $20.95 Paperback.
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  7.  19
    Narrating the Black Body in “Under the Skin” - Review of Linda Villarosa, 2022. Under the Skin: The Hidden Toll of Racism on American Lives and on the Health of Our Nation. Doubleday.Keisha Ray - 2024 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 33 (2):275-279.
    Poor health is not inherently a part of Black Americans’ bodies; poor health is not in our DNA. But as Linda Villarosa says in Under the Skin “something about being Black has led to the documented poor health of Black Americans.”1 Like many other scholars of Black health have said, Villarosa proposes, and evidence supports, that “the something is racism.”2 Villarosa attributes Black people’s generally inferior health outcomes in areas like pregnancy and birth, pain care, and cardiology to racism and (...)
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  8.  6
    The evolution of ethics: human sociality and the emergence of ethical mindedness.Blaine J. Fowers - 2015 - New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The profound reinterpretation of human nature wrought by evolutionary theory deeply challenges standard approaches to ethics. In this ground-breaking book, Aristotelian and evolutionary understandings of human social nature are brought together to provide an integrative, psychological account of human ethics. Fowers explores seven domains of sociality—attachment, intersubjectivity, imitation, cooperation, social norms, group membership, and social hierarchy—moving on to identify and elaborate a set of natural human goods that are inherent in these social domains, such as friendship, justice, belonging, and social (...)
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  9.  25
    The Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown on Eating, Body Image, and Social Media Habits Among Women With and Without Symptoms of Orthorexia Nervosa.Keisha C. Gobin, Jennifer S. Mills & Sarah E. McComb - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The COVID-19 pandemic is negatively impacting people’s mental health worldwide. The current study examined the effects of COVID-19 lockdown on adult women’s eating, body image, and social media habits. Furthermore, we compared individuals with and without signs of orthorexia nervosa, a proposed eating disorder. Participants were 143 women, aged 17–73 years, recruited during a COVID-19 lockdown in Canada from May-June 2020. Participants completed self-report questionnaires on their eating, body image, and social media habits during the pandemic. The Eating Habits Questionnaire (...)
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  10.  20
    Report of the Discussion on Seminary Curriculum.Lionel Blain, Roy Effler, James A. Weisheipl, Thomas W. Connolly & Joseph Casey - 1968 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 42:234-234.
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  11. Does trait interpersonal fairness moderate situational influence on fairness behavior?Blaine Fowers, Bradford Cokelet & 5 Other Authors in Psychology - 2022 - Personality and Individual Differences 193 (July 2022).
    Although fairness is a key moral trait, limited research focuses on participants' observed fairness behavior because moral traits are generally measured through self-report. This experiment focused on day-to-day interpersonal fairness rather than impersonal justice, and fairness was assessed as observed behavior. The experiment investigated whether a self-reported fairness trait would moderate a situational influence on observed fairness behavior, such that individuals with a stronger fairness trait would be less affected by a situational influence than those with a weaker fairness trait. (...)
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  12.  24
    Caribbean Male: An Endangered Species?Keisha Lindsay - 2002 - In Patricia Mohammed (ed.), Gendered Realities: Essays in Caribbean Feminist Thought. Centre for Gender and Development Studies. pp. 56--82.
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  13.  6
    Foraging and feeding in operant simulations.Blaine F. Peden - 1985 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (2):345-346.
  14.  34
    The Bioethics of Environmental Injustice: Ethical, Legal, and Clinical Implications of Unhealthy Environments.Keisha Ray & Jane Fallis Cooper - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (3):9-17.
    Environmental health remains a niche topic in bioethics, despite being a prominent social determinant of health. In this paper we argue that if bioethicists are to take the project of health justice as a serious one, then we have to address environmental injustices and the threats they pose to our bioethics principles, health equity, and clinical care. To do this, we lay out three arguments supporting prioritizing environmental health in bioethics based on bioethics principles including a commitment to vulnerable populations (...)
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  15. The Emerging Science of Virtue.Blaine Fowers, Bradford Cokelet, Jason Carroll & Nathan Leonhardt - 2020 - Perspectives on Psychological Science 1:1-30.
    Abstract: Numerous scholars have claimed that positive ethical traits such as virtues are important in human psychology and behavior. Psychologists have begun to test these claims. The scores of studies on virtue do not yet constitute a mature science of virtue because of unresolved theoretical and methods challenges. In this article, we addressed those challenges by clarifying how virtue research relates to prosocial behavior, positive psychology, and personality psychology and does not run afoul of the fact–value distinction. We propose the (...)
     
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  16.  16
    Shadow of HIV exceptionalism 40 years later.Michela Blain, Stephaun E. Wallace & Courtney Tuegel - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (11):727-728.
    During the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s, it was crucial that providers take steps to protect patients by managing HIV with the perspective of ‘HIV exceptionalism’. However, in 2020, the social and historical barriers erected by this concept, as demonstrated in this patient’s case, are considerably impeding progress to end the epidemic. With significant medical advances in HIV treatment and prevention, the policies informed by HIV exceptionalism now paradoxically perpetuate stigma and inequities, particularly for people of colour. To improve overall (...)
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  17.  11
    A Translation of the Prolegomena to Żiyāʾ al-Dīn Baranī’s Tārīkh-i Fīrūzshāhī.Blain Auer - 2016 - In Alireza Korangy, Wheeler M. Thackston, Roy P. Mottahedeh & William Granara (eds.), Essays in Islamic Philology, History, and Philosophy. De Gruyter. pp. 400-418.
  18.  26
    Bioethics Must Exemplify a Clear Path toward Justice: A Call to Action.Keisha Ray, Folasade C. Lapite, Shameka Poetry Thomas & Faith Fletcher - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (1):14-16.
    Fabi and Goldberg raised important considerations regarding both research and funding priorities in the field of bioethics and, in particular, the field’s misalignment with social justice. W...
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  19.  17
    Courage, Justice, and Practical Wisdom as Key Virtues in the Era of COVID-19.Blaine J. Fowers, Lukas F. Novak, Alexander J. Calder & Robert K. Sommer - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Fowers et al. recently made a general argument for virtues as the characteristics necessary for individuals to flourish, given inherent human limitations. For example, people can flourish by developing the virtue of friendship as they navigate the inherent human dependency on others. This general argument also illuminates a pathway to flourishing during the COVID-19 pandemic, the risks of which have induced powerful fears, exacerbated injustices, and rendered life and death decisions far more common. Contexts of risk and fear call for (...)
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  20.  11
    Political Advice, Translation, and Empire in South Asia.Blain Auer - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 138 (1):29.
    Works in Sanskrit that deal with governance and ethics are an important repository for moral precepts of kingship. Classic examples of this form of political advice literature, recounted through the fables of animals, are the Pañcatantra and the Hitopadeśa. In various recensions and myriad translations, these works spread throughout Asia. Authors writing in Arabic and Persian displayed a fascination for these texts, beginning significantly with the work of Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ and his famous translation, Kalīla wa-Dimna. This article treats the transmission (...)
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  21. The Theme of Recompense in Matthew's Gospel.Blaine Charette - 1992
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  22.  37
    Addressing Anti‐Black Racism in Bioethics: Responding to the Call.Faith E. Fletcher, Keisha S. Ray, Virginia A. Brown & Patrick T. Smith - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (S1):3-11.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue S1, Page S3-S11, March‐April 2022.
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  23.  45
    It’s Time for a Black Bioethics.Keisha Shantel Ray - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):38-40.
    There are some long-standing social issues that imperil Black Americans’ relationship with health and healthcare. These issues include racial disparities in health outcomes, provider bi...
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  24.  56
    Not Just “Study Drugs” for the Rich: Stimulants as Moral Tools for Creating Opportunities for Socially Disadvantaged Students.Keisha Shantel Ray - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (6):29-38.
    An argument in the cognitive enhancement literature is that using stimulants in populations of healthy but socially disadvantaged individuals mistakenly attributes pathology to nonpathological individuals who experience social inequalities. As the argument goes, using stimulants as cognitive-enhancing drugs to solve the social problem of poorly educated students in inadequate schools misattributes the problem as an individual medical problem, when it is really a collective sociopolitical problem. I challenge this argument on the grounds that not all types of enhancement have to (...)
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  25.  36
    Public Reason and Political Autonomy: Realizing the Ideal of a Civic People.Blain Neufeld - 2022 - London, UK: Routledge.
    This book advances a novel justification for the idea of "public reason": citizens within diverse societies can realize the ideal of shared political autonomy, despite their adherence to different religious and philosophical views, by deciding fundamental political questions with "public reasons." Public reasons draw upon or are derived from ecumenical political ideas, such as toleration and equal citizenship, and mutually acceptable forms of reasoning, like those of the sciences. This book explains that if citizens share equal political autonomy—and thereby constitute (...)
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  26. Shared intentions, public reason, and political autonomy.Blain Neufeld - 2019 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 49 (6):776-804.
    John Rawls claims that public reasoning is the reasoning of ‘equal citizens who as a corporate body impose rules on one another backed by sanctions of state power’. Drawing on an amended version of Michael Bratman’s theory of shared intentions, I flesh out this claim by developing the ‘civic people’ account of public reason. Citizens realize ‘full’ political autonomy as members of a civic people. Full political autonomy, though, cannot be realised by citizens in societies governed by a ‘constrained proceduralist’ (...)
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  27.  16
    Phronesis as moral decathlon: contesting the redundancy thesis about phronesis.Kristján Kristjánsson & Blaine Fowers - forthcoming - Philosophical Psychology:1-20.
  28.  24
    Consciousness and Personhood in Medical Care.Stefanie Blain-Moraes, Eric Racine & George A. Mashour - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  29.  11
    Re-Envisioning Psychology: Moral Dimensions of Theory and Practice.Frank C. Richardson, Blaine J. Fowers & Charles B. Guignon - 1999 - Jossey-Bass.
    Does the practice of psychology make a significant and positive contribution to human welfare and the struggle for a good society? This book presents a reinvigorating look at psychology and its societal purpose, offering a bold new philosophical foundation from which professionals in the field can deeply examine their work.
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  30. The Post-Modern Transvaluation of Modernist Values.Blaine McBurney - 1985 - Thesis Eleven 12 (1):94-109.
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  31.  49
    Normal Brain Response to Propofol in Advance of Recovery from Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome.Stefanie Blain-Moraes, Rober Boshra, Heung Kan Ma, Richard Mah, Kyle Ruiter, Michael Avidan, John F. Connolly & George A. Mashour - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
  32.  21
    Black Bioethics in the Age of Black Lives Matter.Keisha Ray, Faith E. Fletcher, Daphne O. Martschenko & Jennifer E. James - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (2):251-267.
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  33.  24
    Going Beyond the Data: Using Testimonies to Humanize Pedagogy on Black Health.Keisha S. Ray - 2021 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (4):725-735.
    When health professions learners’ primary pedagogical experience of Black people and how they become patients is through statistics, it becomes very easy for learners to think of Black people as data points rather than as individuals whose health is often at the mercy of racist institutions. When the human dimension of Black people’s health is ignored, specifically the ways that poor health affects individual wellbeing, one of the barriers to proper health for Black patients is how to be seen and (...)
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  34.  68
    An Aristotelian framework for the human good.Blaine J. Fowers - 2012 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 32 (1):10-23.
    A robust critical literature argues that psychology is animated by powerful, but unacknowledged commitments to a culturally based vision of the human good in spite of its ideal of value neutrality. Inasmuch as such commitments seem ineliminable, it seems preferable to address questions of the good directly rather than by tacitly absorbing cultural views. This article explores the human good directly and explicitly within an Aristotelian framework to foster a critical conversation on the good life in psychology. The framework takes (...)
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  35.  50
    Power, war, and melodrama in the discourses of political movements.Michael Blain - 1994 - Theory and Society 23 (6):805-837.
  36.  14
    Civic Respect, Civic Education, and the Family.Gordon Davis Blain Neufeld - 2010 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 42 (1):94-111.
    We formulate a distinctly ‘political liberal’ conception of mutual respect, which we call ‘civic respect’, appropriate for governing the public political relations of citizens in pluralist democratic societies. A political liberal account of education should aim at ensuring that students, as future citizens, learn to interact with other citizens on the basis of civic respect. While children should be required to attend educational institutions that will inculcate in them the skills and concepts necessary for them to be free and equal (...)
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  37.  4
    Introduction. Hommages à Merleau-Ponty.Morgane Blain & Mathias Goy - 2021 - Chiasmi International 23:23-28.
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  38.  2
    Introduction. Tributes to Merleau-Ponty.Morgane Blain & Mathias Goy - 2021 - Chiasmi International 23:29-35.
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  39.  35
    Stimulus control of behavior induced by a periodic schedule of food presentation in pigeons.Carol Blaine, Nancy K. Innis & J. E. R. Staddon - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 16 (2):131-134.
  40.  24
    In the Name of Racial Justice: Why Bioethics Should Care about Environmental Toxins.Keisha Ray - 2021 - Hastings Center Report 51 (3):23-26.
    Facilities that emit hazardous toxins, such as toxic landfills, oil refineries, and chemical plants, are disproportionately located in predominantly Black, Latinx, and Indigenous neighborhoods. Environmental injustices like these threaten just distribution of health itself, including access to health that is not dependent on having the right skin color, living in the right neighborhood, or making the right amount of money. Facilities that emit environmental toxins wrongly make people's race, ethnicity, income, and neighborhood essential to who is allowed to breathe clean (...)
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  41. Political activism, egalitarian justice, and public reason.Blain Neufeld - forthcoming - Journal of Social Philosophy.
  42. The Tyranny -- or the Democracy -- of the Ideal?Blain Neufeld & Lori Watson - 2018 - Cosmos + Taxis 5 (2):47-61.
  43.  81
    Moral Bioenhancement, Social Biases, and the Regulation of Empathy.Keisha Ray & Lori Gallegos de Castillo - 2019 - Topoi 38 (1):125-133.
    Some proponents of moral bioenhancement propose that people should utilize biomedical practices to enhance the faculties and traits that are associated with moral agency, such as empathy and a sense of justice. The hope is that doing so will improve our ability to meet the moral challenges that have emerged in our contemporary, globalized world. In this paper, we caution against this view by arguing that biomedically inducing more empathy may, in fact, diminish moral agency. We argue that this type (...)
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  44. Political Liberalism, Ethos Justice, and Gender Equality.Blain Neufeld & Chad Van Schoelandt - 2014 - Law and Philosophy 33 (1):75-104.
    Susan Okin criticizes John Rawls’s ‘political liberalism’ because it does not apply principles of justice directly to gender relations within households. We explain how one can be a ‘political liberal feminist’ by distinguishing between two kinds of justice: the first we call ‘legitimacy justice’, conceptions of which apply to the ‘legally coercive structure’ of society; the second we call ‘ethos justice’, conceptions of which apply to citizens’ ‘non-coercive’ relations. We agree with Okin that a society in which most persons act (...)
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  45.  14
    Correction to: Black Bioethics in the Age of Black Lives Matter.Keisha Ray, Faith E. Fletcher, Daphne O. Martschenko & Jennifer E. James - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (2):287-289.
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  46.  27
    Holding Them Accountable: Organizational Commitments to Ending Systemic Anti‐Black Racism in Medicine and Public Health.Keisha S. Ray - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (S1):46-49.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue S1, Page S46-S49, March‐April 2022.
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  47. Why Public Reasoning Involves Ideal Theorizing.Blain Neufeld - 2017 - In Kevin Vallier & Michael Weber (eds.), Political Utopias: Contemporary Debates. New York, USA: Oup Usa. pp. 73-93.
    Some theorists—including Elizabeth Anderson, Gerald Gaus, and Amartya Sen—endorse versions of 'public reason' as the appropriate way to justify political decisions while rejecting 'ideal theory'. This chapter proposes that these ideas are not easily separated. The idea of public reason expresses a form of mutual 'civic' respect for citizens. Public reason justifications for political proposals are addressed to citizens who would find acceptable those justifications, and consequently would comply freely with those proposals should they become law. Hence public reasoning involves (...)
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  48.  13
    When People of Color Are Left out of Research, Science and the Public Loses.Keisha Shantel Ray - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 11 (4):238-240.
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  49.  33
    We Are Not Okay: Moral Injury and a World on Fire.Keisha S. Ray - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (4):11-12.
    After giving the name “burnout” to the experience of being overworked and undervalued and the physician and patient suffering that comes from it, many clinicians have sought to elucidate further wh...
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  50.  66
    Placing virtue and the human good in psychology.Blaine J. Fowers - 2012 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 32 (1):1-9.
    This article contextualizes and critiques the recent increase in interest in virtue ethics and the good life in psychology. Theoretically, psychologists' interests in virtue and eudaimonia have followed the philosophical revival of these topics, but this work has been subject to persistent, disguised commitments to the ideologies of individualism and instrumentalism. Moreover, psychologists' tendency to separate the topics of virtue and eudaimonia is described and critiqued as theoretically misguided, particularly because Aristotle, the originator of these concepts, saw them as mutually (...)
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