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  1. In response: What's it really all about? [REVIEW]Richard M. Zaner - 1998 - Human Studies 21 (1):63-70.
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  • Kurt H. Wolff: A brief biography. [REVIEW]George Psathas - 2003 - Human Studies 26 (3):285-291.
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  • Surrender-catch: The contribution of Kurt H. Wolff to the epistemology of qualitative analysis.Consuelo Corradi - 1987 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 12 (1):31-50.
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  • Modernity and Evil: Kurt H. Wolff’s Sociology and the Diagnosis of Our Time.Consuelo Corradi - 2016 - Human Studies 39 (3):465-480.
    Can sociology comprehend evil? The contemporary relevance of Kurt H. Wolff’s sociology is his lucid, critical vision of modernity which does not shy away from understanding what evil is. This is accompanied not by pessimism, but by trust in human beings and their positive ability to appeal to the moral conscience. Read today, Wolff’s pages must be placed in the category of a new understanding of the human subject and the diagnosis of our time, the request for which threads in (...)
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  • Richard Zaner’s “Troubled” Voice In Troubled Voices: Poseur, Posing, Possibilizing?Mark J. Bliton - 2004 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26 (1):25-53.
    This essay considers Richard Zaners storytelling in Troubled Voices as a form of possibilizing which uses the stories to exemplify important moral themes such as contingency and freedom. Distinguishing between activities of moral discovery through the telling of a story and posing in the sense of writing to tell the moral of the story, I suggest that something crucial goes on for Zaner in his own tellings. Several of the more insistent implications Zaner reveals about the moral relationships encountered in (...)
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