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  1.  61
    Wisdom in clinical reasoning and medical practice.Ricca Edmondson, Jane Pearce & Markus H. Woerner - 2009 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 30 (3):231-247.
    Exploring informal components of clinical reasoning, we argue that they need to be understood via the analysis of professional wisdom. Wise decisions are needed where action or insight is vital, but neither everyday nor expert knowledge provides solutions. Wisdom combines experiential, intellectual, ethical, emotional and practical capacities; we contend that it is also more strongly social than is usually appreciated. But many accounts of reasoning specifically rule out such features as irrational. Seeking to illuminate how wisdom operates, we therefore build (...)
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  2.  3
    Politics of Practical Reasoning: Integrating Action, Discourse, and Argument.Ricca Edmondson & Karlheinz Hülser (eds.) - 2012 - Lexington Books.
    This book treats practical and political reasoning as an active engagement with the world and other people; it cannot be understood as exclusively cognitive and this is seen as a virtue rather than a deficiency. Informal, emotional, characterological, aesthetic and interactional aspects of thought can be constituents of reasonable arguing. The work examines key capacities connected with argumentation, in a variety of fields from professional and medical ethics to work organization and the practice of art.
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  3. Reasoning in the Social World: Prolegomenon to a Sociology of Argument.Ricca Edmondson - 1995 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 164:267-267.
  4.  43
    Russell Keat, cultural goods and the limits of the market.Ricca Edmondson - 2004 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 7 (3):333-335.
  5. Towards a Taxonomy of Types of Wisdom.Markus Woerner & Ricca Edmondson - 2008 - Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society.
     
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  6.  20
    The practice of health care: Wisdom as a model. [REVIEW]Ricca Edmondson & Jane Pearce - 2006 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 10 (3):233-244.
    Reasoning and judgement in health care entail complex responses to problems whose demands typically derive from several areas of specialism at once. We argue that current evidence- or value-based models of health care reasoning, despite their virtues, are insufficient to account for responses to such problems exhaustively. At the same time, we offer reasons for contending that health professionals in fact engage in forms of reasoning of a kind described for millennia under the concept of wisdom. Wisdom traditions refer to (...)
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