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  1. “Health” and “illness” in the music: A problematic field.Dorothea Redepenning - 2018 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 7 (2):492-508.
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  • L’Amour morbide: how a transient mental illness became defunct.Alison M. Moore - 2019 - Intellectual History Review 29 (2):291-312.
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  • Degeneracy at Multiple Levels of Complexity.Paul H. Mason - 2010 - Biological Theory 5 (3):277-288.
    Degeneracy is a poorly understood process, essential to natural selection. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the concept of degeneracy was commandeered by the colonial imagination. A rigid understanding of species, race, and culture grew to dominate the normative thinking that persisted well into the burgeoning new industrial age. A 20th-century reconfiguration of the concept by George Gamow highlighted a form of intraorganismic variation that is still underexplored. Degeneracy exists in a population of variants where structurally different components perform a (...)
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  • Food, nerves, and fertility. Variations on the moral economy of the body, 1700–1920.Antonello La Vergata - 2019 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 41 (4):1-30.
    In the literature investigating the long history of appeals to ‘nature’, in its multiple meanings, for rules of conduct or justification of social order, little attention has been paid to a long-standing tradition in which medical and physiological arguments merged into moral and social ones. A host of medical authors, biologists, social writers and philosophers assumed that nature spoke its moral language not only in its general economy, but also within and through the body. This is why, for instance, many (...)
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  • Food, nerves, and fertility. Variations on the moral economy of the body, 1700–1920.Antonello La Vergata - 2019 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 41 (4):1-30.
    In the literature investigating the long history of appeals to ‘nature’, in its multiple meanings, for rules of conduct or justification of social order, little attention has been paid to a long-standing tradition in which medical and physiological arguments merged into moral and social ones. A host of medical authors, biologists, social writers and philosophers assumed that nature spoke its moral language not only in its general economy, but also within and through the body. This is why, for instance, many (...)
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  • Food, nerves, and fertility. Variations on the moral economy of the body, 1700–1920.Antonello La Vergata - 2019 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 41 (4):1-30.
    In the literature investigating the long history of appeals to ‘nature’, in its multiple meanings, for rules of conduct or justification of social order, little attention has been paid to a long-standing tradition in which medical and physiological arguments merged into moral and social ones. A host of medical authors, biologists, social writers and philosophers assumed that nature spoke its moral language not only in its general economy, but also within and through the body. This is why, for instance, many (...)
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