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  1. Christine Pierce and Donald VanDeVeer, eds., AIDS: Ethics and Public Policy Reviewed by.Kathleen Marie Dixon - 1988 - Philosophy in Review 8 (10):412-414.
     
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  2.  4
    Death and Remembrance: Addressing the Costs of Learning Anatomy through the Memorialization of Donors.Kathleen Marie Dixon - 1999 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 10 (4):300-308.
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  3.  10
    Oppressive limits: Callahan's foundation myth.Kathleen Marie Dixon - 1994 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (6):613-637.
    Daniel Callahan has not simply proposed alterations of important features of the health economy. He has constructed a blue print for society drawing on concepts of what is natural and appropriate to human beings. He is, in effect, establishing a new social order. Like any social order, Callahan's system has its justificatory schemes or founding myths. This paper offers a feminist examination of the functions that these four myths – the concept of a whole of life; the stages of life; (...)
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    The Quality of Mercy: Reflections on Provider-Assisted Suicide.Kathleen Marie Dixon - 1997 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 8 (3):290-302.
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    The role of the hospital in the evolution of elite cultures of medicine.Kathleen Marie Dixon - 1993 - Journal of Medical Humanities 14 (4):179-201.
    Rosenberg argues that a culture of medicine articulates a unique medical vision reflecting scientific ideologies and perceptions, professional values and rewards, career patterns, and the work context of each generation of physicians (Rosenberg, 1987, p. 7) It might be more accurate, however, to recognize multiple cultures of medicine. This papers traces American hospitals' contributions to three specific aspects of certain elite cultures of medicine. Its first section introduces and explores these aspects transhistorically. They are: a stratified paradigm of the physician-patient (...)
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