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Edward M. Hundert [8]Edward J. Hundert [1]Edward Hundert [1]
  1.  42
    Microethics: The Ethics of Everyday Clinical Practice.Robert D. Truog, Stephen D. Brown, David Browning, Edward M. Hundert, Elizabeth A. Rider, Sigall K. Bell & Elaine C. Meyer - 2015 - Hastings Center Report 45 (1):11-17.
    Over the past several decades, medical ethics has gained a solid foothold in medical education and is now a required course in most medical schools. Although the field of medical ethics is by nature eclectic, moral philosophy has played a dominant role in defining both the content of what is taught and the methodology for reasoning about ethical dilemmas. Most educators largely rely on the case‐based method for teaching ethics, grounding the ethical reasoning in an amalgam of theories drawn from (...)
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  2. Philosophy, Psychiatry and Neuroscience: Three Approaches to the Mind.Edward M. HUNDERT - 1989
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  3.  18
    Bernard Mandeville and the enlightenment's Maxims of modernity.Edward J. Hundert - 1995 - Journal of the History of Ideas 56 (4):577-593.
  4.  11
    Medical education reform at the University of Rochester and the biopsychosocial tradition.Elaine F. Dannefer, Edward M. Hundert & Lindsey C. Henson - 2003 - In Richard M. Frankel, Timothy E. Quill & Susan H. McDaniel (eds.), The Biopsychosocial Approach: Past, Present, and Future. University of Rochester Press. pp. 135--147.
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  5. Accounting for context: Future directions in bioethics theory and research.Darleen Douglas-Steele & Edward M. Hundert - 1996 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 17 (2).
    Many physicians have found that the traditional approach to bioethics fails to account for important aspects of their moral experience in practice. New approaches to bioethics theory are challenging the traditional application of universal moral principles based in liberal moral theory. At the same time, a shift in both the goals and methods of bioethics education has accompanied its coming of age in the medical school curriculum. Taken together, these changes challenge both bioethics educators and theorists to come closer to (...)
     
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  6.  8
    Autonomy, Informed Consent, and Psychosurgery.Edward M. Hundert - 1994 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 5 (3):264-266.
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  7.  20
    D'Alembert's dream and the utility of the humanities.Edward Hundert - 2003 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 15 (3-4):459-472.
    D'Alembert's Preliminary Discourse, a once‐influential eighteenth‐century consideration of the utility of the humanities, is relevant to contemporary concerns about the declining importance of humanistic education. A sympathetic appraisal of d'Alembert's critique of humanistic erudition as largely useless can serve as a starting point for reconceiving of the humanities as studies that help train the professionals who administer the institutions of modern society to better understand their own commitments.
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  8.  29
    Lessons from an optical illusion: on nature and nurture, knowledge and values.Edward M. Hundert - 1995 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    As Edward Hundert--a philosopher, psychiatrist, and award-winning educator--makes clear in this eloquent interdisciplinary work, the newly emerging model for ...
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  9.  30
    Philosophy, psychiatry, and neuroscience: three approaches to the mind: a synthetic analysis of the varieties of human experience.Edward M. Hundert - 1989 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In this book Hundert proposes a new, unified view of the mind, one that integrates the insights of philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists. Through a detailed discussion of major theories from these and related disciplines, he gradually reveals links between what were previously unconnected approaches to human thought and experience.
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  10. Thoughts and feelings and things: A new psychiatric epistemology.Edward M. Hundert - 1991 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 12 (1).
    Epistemology — the study of knowledge — is a philosophical discipline with close ties to psychiatry. When epistemologists address specific questions about how knowledge is actually realized by human beings, their philosophy must be informed by empirical studies of the sort psychiatrists now take up in a variety of forms. As this paper describes, psychiatrists can likewise improve their understanding of human psychology through a deeper appreciation of philosophical analysis in epistemology.The aim of this article is to introduce a unifying (...)
     
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