Results for 'Jay Katz'

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  1. The silent world of doctor and patient.Jay Katz - 1984 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    In this eye-opening look at the doctor-patient decision-making process, physician and law professor Jay Katz examines the time-honored belief in the virtue of silent care and patient compliance. Historically, the doctor-patient relationship has been based on a one-way trust -- despite recent judicial attempts to give patients a greater voice through the doctrine of informed consent. Katz criticizes doctors for encouraging patients to relinquish their autonomy, and demonstrates the detrimental effect their silence has on good patient care. Seeing (...)
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  2.  20
    The Silent World of Doctor and Patient.Daniel Callahan & Jay Katz - 1984 - Hastings Center Report 14 (6):47.
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  3.  23
    Why Doctors Don't Disclose Uncertainty.Jay Katz - 1984 - Hastings Center Report 14 (1):35-44.
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  4.  35
    Image Ethics: The Moral Rights of Subjects in Photographs, Film, and Television.Larry P. Gross, John Stuart Katz & Jay Ruby (eds.) - 1988 - Oup Usa.
    This pathbreaking collection of thirteen original essays examines the moral rights of the subjects of documentary film, photography, and television.
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  5.  12
    “Ethics and Clinical Research” Revisited: A Tribute to Henry K. Beecher.Jay Katz - 1993 - Hastings Center Report 23 (5):31-39.
    The doctrine of informed consent, borrowed from the law of torts, cannot be readily transplanted into therapeutic settings. The broader, as yet unrealized, idea of informed consent, which suggests that parties must make decisions jointly, should guide interactions between physicians and patients or investigators and subjects.
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  6.  23
    The Regulation of Human Experimentation in the United States: A Personal Odyssey.Jay Katz - 1987 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 9 (1):1.
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  7.  20
    Image Ethics in the Digital Age.Larry P. Gross, John Stuart Katz & Jay Ruby - 2003 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    'Image Ethics in the Digital Age' brings together leading experts in the fields of journalism, media studies, & law to address the challenges presented by new technology & assess the implications for personal & societal values & behavior.
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  8.  9
    Catastrophic Diseases: Who Decides What?Jay Katz & Alexander Morgan Capron - 1975 - Russell Sage Foundation.
    People do not choose to suffer from catastrophic illnesses, but considerable human choice is involved in the ways in which the participants in the process treat and conduct research on these diseases. Catastrophic Diseases draws a powerful and humane portrait of the patients who suffer from these illnesses as well as of the physician-investigators who treat them, and describes the major pressures, conflicts, and decisions which confront all of them. By integrating a discussion of "facts" and "values," the authors highlight (...)
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  9.  14
    Blurring the Lines: Research, Therapy, and IRBs.Jay Katz - 1997 - Hastings Center Report 27 (1):9-11.
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  10.  14
    Do We Need Another Advisory Commission on Human Experimentation?Jay Katz - 1995 - Hastings Center Report 25 (1):29-31.
    Instead of another federal advisory panel to identify ethical principles governing human subjects research, it is time we had a national board with authority to regulate and review such research.
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  11.  4
    On Touching "The Happy Isles": Reflections about Past, Future, and Present.Jay Katz - 1989 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 17 (2):110-113.
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  12.  6
    On Touching "The Happy Isles": Reflections about Past, Future, and Present.Jay Katz - 1989 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 17 (2):110-113.
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  13.  29
    Reflections on Unethical Experiments and the Beginnings of Bioethics in the United States.Jay Katz - 1994 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 4 (2):85-92.
    The author offers personal reflections on the development of research ethics in the United States, primarily during the 1960s. He explores the efforts of the pioneers in the field of human experimentation ethics to raise and discuss issues such as the value conflict between the acquisition of knowledge and respect for the autonomy of research subjects and the crucial importance of disclosure in the informed consent process.
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  14.  15
    Some Basic Questions About Human Research.Jay Katz, Alexander M. Capron & Eleanor Swift Glass - 1972 - Hastings Center Report 2 (6):1-3.
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  15.  31
    Scientific observers with a human taint.Michael Jay Katz - 1994 - World Futures 39 (4):243-247.
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  16.  2
    The Senate's Definition of Voluntary and Informed Consent: Another View.Jay Katz - 1980 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 2 (6):5.
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  17.  15
    Talking with Patients. [REVIEW]Jay Katz & Eric J. Cassell - 1986 - Hastings Center Report 16 (3):41.
    Book reviewed in this article: Talking with Patients. By Eric J. Cassell.
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  18. Review. [REVIEW]Barry Kātz - 1985 - History and Theory 24:336-347.
    Marxism and Totality. The Adventures of a Concept from Lukács to Habermas. by Martin Jay Adorno by Martin Jay Permanent Exiles. Essays on the Intellectual Migration from Germany to America by Martin Jay.
     
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  19.  12
    Permanent exiles, essays on the intellectual migration from germany to America-Jay, M.Bm Katz - 1985 - History and Theory 24 (3):336-347.
  20.  14
    Martin Jay, "permanent exiles". [REVIEW]Barry Katz - 1985 - History and Theory 24 (3):336.
  21.  6
    Jay Katz: Preface to a Celebration.Alexander Morgan Capron - 1988 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 16 (3-4):153-156.
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  22.  3
    Jay Katz: Preface to a Celebration.Alexander Morgan Capron - 1988 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 16 (3-4):153-156.
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  23. Jay Katz, The Silent World of Doctor and Patient Reviewed by.Barry Hoffmaster - 1985 - Philosophy in Review 5 (10):452-454.
     
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  24.  7
    Jay Katz and Law and Medicine at Yale.Guido Calabresi - 1988 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 16 (3-4):159-159.
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  25.  4
    Jay Katz and Law and Medicine at Yale.Guido Calabresi - 1988 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 16 (3-4):159-159.
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  26.  18
    Henry Knowles Beecher, Jay Katz, and the Transformation of Research with Human Beings.Alexander Morgan Capron - 2016 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 59 (1):55-77.
    The modern history of experimentation with human beings is notable for its ethical lacunae. In 1865, in his great work, An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine, Dr. Claude Bernard, the French physician who first established the use of the scientific method in medicine, echoed the earlier injunctions of physician-moralist Moses Maimonides in counseling his fellow physicians not to treat their patients solely as a means of advancing knowledge. Yet such cautions had no apparent effect on the physicians who, (...)
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  27. Jay Katz, The Silent World of Doctor and Patient. [REVIEW]Barry Hoffmaster - 1985 - Philosophy in Review 5:452-454.
     
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  28.  5
    Uncertainty and Medical Authority in the World of Jay Katz.Robert A. Burt - 1988 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 16 (3-4):190-196.
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  29.  6
    Uncertainty and Medical Authority in the World of Jay Katz.Robert A. Burt - 1988 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 16 (3-4):190-196.
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  30.  17
    Visual Attention and Consciousness.Jay Friedenberg - 2013 - New York: Psychology Press.
    Examines the philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience behind visual experience. Chapters on attention, illusions, aftereffects, binocular rivalry, hemispheric differences, attentional blink, agnosias and other disorders. Particular attention paid to consciouseness. The systematic review of key topics and the multitude of perspectives make this book an ideal primary or ancillary text for graduate courses in perception, vision, consciousness, or philosophy of mind.
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  31. Language, epistemology, and mysticism.Steven T. Katz - 1978 - In Mysticism and philosophical analysis. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 22--74.
     
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  32.  11
    Relational Conceptions of Retribution.Leora Dahan Katz - 2022 - In Matthew C. Altman (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook on the Philosophy of Punishment. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 101-123.
    In this chapter, Dahan Katz defends relational conceptions of retribution and desert. She clarifies the ways in which such relational conceptions avoid major worries associated with retributive theory, while addressing further worries that arise distinctively with respect to such an approach. In doing so, Dahan Katz provides further defense of the response-retributive theory of punishment that she has proposed elsewhere, while defending a wider set of views within the retributive tradition.
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  33.  20
    Intersecting Cultural Beliefs in Social Relations: Gender, Race, and Class Binds and Freedoms.Tamar Kricheli-Katz & Cecilia L. Ridgeway - 2013 - Gender and Society 27 (3):294-318.
    We develop an evidence-based theoretical account of how widely shared cultural beliefs about gender, race, and class intersect in interpersonal and other social relational contexts in the United States to create characteristic cultural “binds” and freedoms for actors in those contexts. We treat gender, race, and class as systems of inequality that are culturally constructed as distinct but implicitly overlap through their defining beliefs, which reflect the perspectives of dominant groups in society. We cite evidence for the contextually contingent interactional (...)
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  34. Philosophy without ambiguity: a logico-linguistic essay.Jay David Atlas - 1989 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book expounds and defends a new conception of the relation between truth and meaning. Atlas argues that the sense of a sense-general sentence radically underdetermines its truth-conditional content. He applies this linguistic analysis to illuminate old and new philosophical problems of meaning, truth, falsity, negation, existence, presupposition, and implicature. In particular, he demonstrates how the concept of ambiguity has been misused and confused with other concepts of meaning, and how the interface between semantics and pragmatics has been misunderstood. The (...)
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  35. Negation, ambiguity, and presupposition.Jay David Atlas - 1977 - Linguistics and Philosophy 1 (3):321 - 336.
    In this paper I argue for the Atlas-Kempson Thesis that sentences of the form The A is not B are not ambiguous but rather semantically general (Quine), non-specific (Zwicky and Sadock), or vague (G. Lakoff). This observation refutes the 1970 Davidson-Harman hypothesis that underlying structures, as full semantic representations, are logical forms. It undermines the conception of semantical presupposition, removes a support for the existence of truth-value gaps for presuppositional sentences (the remaining arguments for which are viciously circular), and lifts (...)
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  36.  56
    Response Retributivism: Defending the Duty to Punish.Leora Dahan Katz - 2020 - Law and Philosophy 40 (6):585-615.
    This paper offers a response retributive theory of punishment, taking the role of the punisher as well as the relations between the parties to punishment to be central to retributive justification. It proposes that punishment is justified in terms of the ethics of appropriate response, and more precisely, in terms of the duty agents have to dissociate from the devaluation inherent in the culpable wrongdoing of others. The paper demonstrates that on such account, while the harm and suffering involved in (...)
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  37. Logic, meaning, and conversation: semantical underdeterminacy, implicature, and their interface.Jay David Atlas - 2005 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This fresh look at the philosophy of language focuses on the interface between a theory of literal meaning and pragmatics--a philosophical examination of the relationship between meaning and language use and its contexts. Here, Atlas develops the contrast between verbal ambiguity and verbal generality, works out a detailed theory of conversational inference using the work of Paul Grice on Implicature as a starting point, and gives an account of their interface as an example of the relationship between Chomsky's Internalist Semantics (...)
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  38.  7
    On What Underlies Excuse.Leora Dahan Katz - forthcoming - Criminal Law and Philosophy:1-19.
    In this paper, I address the theory of excuse, or more precisely, exculpatory excuse, and the question of what it is that justifies the category of excuse. I address different potential grounds for the law of excuse, which are often run together in ways that confound rather than clarify, focusing on the role of blamelessness and unfairness of expectations in the theory of excuse.
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  39.  77
    Wilfrid Sellars: fusing the images.Jay F. Rosenberg - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This volume presents Rosenberg's previously published studies of the central elements and implications of Sellars' philosophy, along with three new essays that ...
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  40.  11
    The distribution of terms.Berndard D. Katz & A. P. Martinich - 1976 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 17 (2):279-283.
  41. The Unfinished Chomskyan Revolution.Jerrold J. Katz - 1996 - Mind and Language 11 (3):270-294.
    Chomsky's criticism of Bloomfieldian structuralism's conception of linguistic reality applies equally to his own conception of linguistic reality. There are too many sentences in a natural language for them to have either concrete acoustic reality or concrete psychological or neural reality. Sentences have to be types, which, by Peirce's generally accepted definition, means that they are abstract objects. Given that sentences are abstract objects, Chomsky's generativism as well as his psychologism have to be given up. Langendoen and Postal's argument in (...)
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  42. Herbert Marcuse and the Art of Liberation.Barry Kātz - 1984 - Studies in Soviet Thought 27 (2):181-183.
     
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  43.  24
    Doing ethics in media: theories and practical applications.Jay Black - 2011 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Chris Roberts.
    Providing an accessible examination of ethics, Doing Ethics in Media, introduces students to ethical theory and provides a grounded discussion of ethics in the context of today's media outlets. Emphasizing the understanding of ethics, the text will help readers 'do ethics' expeditiously, honestly, and efficiently when they enter the workplace and need to make critical ethical decisions on deadline. The text is organized around six decision-making questions, and cases demonstrate the application of these questions to real-world scenarios. Each chapter focuses (...)
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  44. Of Other Spaces.Jay Miskowiec - 1986 - Diacritics 16 (1):22.
  45. Conceptual foundations of radical behaviorism.Jay Moore - 2008 - Cornwall-on-Hudson, NY: Sloan.
    Conceptual Foundations of Radical Behaviorism is intended for advanced undergraduate or beginning graduate students in courses within behavior analytic curricula dealing with conceptual foundations and radical behaviorism as a philosophy. Each chapter of the text presents what radical behaviorism says about an important topic in a science of behavior, and then contrasts the radical behaviorist perspective with that of other forms of behaviorism, as well as other forms of psychology.
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  46.  78
    Effect of Ethical Climate on Turnover Intention: Linking Attitudinal- and Stress Theory.Jay P. Mulki, Jorge F. Jaramillo & William B. Locander - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 78 (4):559-574.
    Attitudinal- and stress theory are used to investigate the effect of ethical climate on job outcomes. Responses from 208 service employees who work for a country health department were used to test a structural model that examines the process through which ethical climate (EC) affects turnover intention (TI). This study shows that the EC–TI relationship is fully mediated by role stress (RC), interpersonal conflict (IC), emotional exhaustion (EE), trust in supervisor (TS), and job satisfaction (JS). Results show that EC reduces (...)
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  47.  60
    The Education of John Dewey: A Biography.Jay Martin - 2002 - Cambridge University Press.
    During John Dewey's lifetime, one public opinion poll after another revealed that he was esteemed to be one of the ten most important thinkers in American history. His body of thought, conventionally identified by the shorthand word "Pragmatism," has been the distinctive American philosophy of the last fifty years. His work on education is famous worldwide and is still influential today, anticipating as it did the ascendance in contemporary American pedagogy of multiculturalism and independent thinking. His University of Chicago Laboratory (...)
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  48.  40
    Common sense in semantics.Jerrold J. Katz - 1982 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 23 (2):174-218.
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  49.  91
    Critical Role of Leadership on Ethical Climate and Salesperson Behaviors.Jay P. Mulki, Jorge Fernando Jaramillo & William B. Locander - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 86 (2):125-141.
    Leaders play a critical role in setting the tone for ethical climate in organizations. In recent years, there has been an increased skepticism about the role played by corporate executives in developing and implementing ethics in business practices. Sales and marketing practices of businesses, particularly in the pharmaceutical industry, have come under increased scrutiny. This study identifies a type of leadership style that can help firms develop an ethical climate. Responses from 333 salespeople working for a North American subsidiary of (...)
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  50.  17
    Figurative Language and Thought.Albert N. Katz, Cristina Cacciari, Raymond W. Gibbs & Mark Turner - 1998 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Our understanding of the nature and processing of figurative language is central to several important issues in cognitive science, including the relationship of language and thought, how we process language, and how we comprehend abstract meaning. Over the past fifteen years, traditional approaches to these issues have been challenged by experimental psychologists, linguists, and other cognitive scientists interested in the structures of the mind and the processes that operate on them. In Figurative Language and Thought, internationally recognized experts in the (...)
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