Results for 'damage dilution'

988 found
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  1.  16
    A study of neutron irradiation damage in copper and a dilute copper-boron alloy.D. E. Barry & B. L. Eyre - 1970 - Philosophical Magazine 22 (178):717-737.
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  2.  16
    On the cause of aging and control of lifespan.Vadim N. Gladyshev - 2012 - Bioessays 34 (11):925-929.
    What the causes of aging are and which factors define lifespan are key questions in the understanding of aging. Here, it is argued that cellular life involves (i) inevitable accumulation of damage resulting from imperfectness and heterogeneity of every cellular process, and (ii) dilution of damage when cells divide. While severe damage is cleared by protective systems, milder damage can only be diluted. This is due to the high cost of accuracy, the greater number of (...)
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  3. Collateral Damage and the Principle of Due Care.Anne Schwenkenbecher - 2014 - Journal of Military Ethics 13 (1):94-105.
    This article focuses on the ethical implications of so-called ‘collateral damage’. It develops a moral typology of collateral harm to innocents, which occurs as a side effect of military or quasi-military action. Distinguishing between accidental and incidental collateral damage, it introduces four categories of such damage: negligent, oblivious, knowing and reckless collateral damage. Objecting mainstream versions of the doctrine of double effect, the article argues that in order for any collateral damage to be morally permissible, (...)
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  4. damage, flourishing, and two sides of morality.Adam Morton - forthcoming - Eshare: An Iranian Journal of Philosophy 1 (1).
    I explore how considerations about psychological damage connect with moral theories.
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  5.  4
    Overlooking damage: art, display, and loss in a time of crisis.Jonah Siegel - 2022 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    What does it mean to look? How does looking relate to damage? These are the fundamental questions addressed in Overlooking Damage. From the Roman triumph to the iconoclasm of ISIS and the Taliban to the aerial views of looted landscapes and destroyed temples visible on Google, the relationship between beauty and violence is far more intimate than we sometimes acknowledge. Jonah Siegel makes the daring argument that a thoughtful reaction to images of damage need not stop at (...)
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  6. Damage to the prefrontal cortex increases utilitarian moral judgements.Michael Koenigs, Liane Young, Ralph Adolphs, Daniel Tranel, Fiery Cushman, Marc Hauser & Antonio Damasio - 2007 - Nature 446 (7138):908-911.
    The psychological and neurobiological processes underlying moral judgement have been the focus of many recent empirical studies1–11. Of central interest is whether emotions play a causal role in moral judgement, and, in parallel, how emotion-related areas of the brain contribute to moral judgement. Here we show that six patients with focal bilateral damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPC), a brain region necessary for the normal generation of emotions and, in particular, social emotions12–14, produce an abnor- mally ‘utilitarian’ pattern (...)
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  7.  9
    The dilution of academic power in Canada.Harry G. Johnson - 1972 - Minerva 10 (3):486-490.
  8.  20
    Risk Dilution: Or, How to Run a Minimal‐Risk HIV Challenge Trial.Robert Steel - 2023 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 40 (1):133-149.
    Bioethicists broadly agree that there is a limit to the level of net risk that biomedical research may permissibly impose on participants, even in cases where the potential of that research to improve the health of the population health would be great. Although some may permissibly volunteer to take on some degree of pro‐social risk, no one, not even a willing volunteer, may ever be outright sacrificed for others. One might think this perspective, if correct, makes it effectively impossible to (...)
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  9.  19
    A dilution effect without dilution: When missing evidence, not non-diagnostic evidence, is judged inaccurately.Adam N. Sanborn, Takao Noguchi, James Tripp & Neil Stewart - 2020 - Cognition 196 (C):104110.
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  10.  62
    Broadening consent--and diluting ethics?B. Hofmann - 2009 - Journal of Medical Ethics 35 (2):125-129.
    Biobank research is potentially fruitful. It is argued that broad consent is acceptable for future research on biological material because a) the benefit is high, b) it pays respect to people’s autonomy, c) it is consistent with current practices and d) because the risk is low. Furthermore, broad consent should be allowed if information is handled safely, people can withdraw and expanded research should be approved by an ethics review board. However, these arguments are flawed and the criteria for broad (...)
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  11.  18
    Dilution as a model of long-term forgetting.Mark Lansdale & Thom Baguley - 2008 - Psychological Review 115 (4):864-892.
  12.  78
    Brain damage and the moral significance of consciousness.Julian Savulescu - 2009 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 34 (1):6-26.
    Neuroimaging studies of brain-damaged patients diagnosed as in the vegetative state suggest that the patients might be conscious. This might seem to raise no new ethical questions given that in related disputes both sides agree that evidence for consciousness gives strong reason to preserve life. We question this assumption. We clarify the widely held but obscure principle that consciousness is morally significant. It is hard to apply this principle to difficult cases given that philosophers of mind distinguish between a range (...)
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  13. Environmental Damage and the Puzzle of the Self-Torturer.Chrisoula Andreou - 2005 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 34 (1):95-108.
    I show, building on Warren Quinn's puzzle of the self-torturer, that destructive conduct with respect to the environment can flourish even in the absence of interpersonal conflicts. As Quinn's puzzle makes apparent, in cases where individually negligible effects are involved, an agent, whether it be an individual or a unified collective, can be led down a course of destruction simply as a result of following its informed and perfectly understandable but intransitive preferences. This is relevant with respect to environmental ethics, (...)
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  14.  20
    Semantic dilution of inequality: a smoke-screen for philanthrocapitalism.Prabhir Vishnu Poruthiyil - 2019 - Critical Discourse Studies 17 (3):308-326.
    A recent trend in policy responses the rising public resentments with inequality is to prod the wealthy into spending a fraction of their profits on projects that promote social welfare. Legitimati...
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  15. Brain damage and the moral significance of consciousness.Guy Kahane & Julian Savulescu - 2009 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 34 (1):6-26.
    Neuroimaging studies of brain-damaged patients diagnosed as in the vegetative state suggest that the patients might be conscious. This might seem to raise no new ethical questions given that in related disputes both sides agree that evidence for consciousness gives strong reason to preserve life. We question this assumption. We clarify the widely held but obscure principle that consciousness is morally significant. It is hard to apply this principle to difficult cases given that philosophers of mind distinguish between a range (...)
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  16.  8
    Family Resource Dilution in Expanded Families and the Empowerment of Married Only Daughters: Evidence From the Educational Investment in Children in Urban China.Xiaotao Wang & Xiaotian Feng - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The One-Child Policy dramatically changed the Chinese family structure, and the literature indicates that only children may have an advantage in terms of family resource dilution. Moreover, as Chinese families traditionally prioritize investing in sons, only daughters are found to have been empowered by the policy because they did not need to compete with their brothers for parental investment. However, the literature is limited to only teenage children when they were still living in their parents' homes. It is unclear (...)
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  17.  15
    Dilution of Oarcrews with Prisoners of War.J. S. Morrison - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (01):251-.
    At 10.17.6–16 Polybius relates how Scipio seized the opportunity offered by his capture of New Carthage in 209 B.C. to increase his fleet of quinqueremes by half as much again. There is a briefer passage on the same subject in Livy 26.47.1–3. Polybius says that the total number of prisoners taken was nearly ten thousand, from whom Scipio separated two groups: first citizens, men and women with their young children, and secondly craftsmen. He freed the former, and made the latter, (...)
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  18.  4
    Dilution of Oarcrews with Prisoners of War.J. S. Morrison - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (1):251-253.
    At 10.17.6–16 Polybius relates how Scipio seized the opportunity offered by his capture of New Carthage in 209 B.C. to increase his fleet of quinqueremes by half as much again. There is a briefer passage on the same subject in Livy 26.47.1–3. Polybius says that the total number of prisoners taken was nearly ten thousand, from whom Scipio separated two groups: first citizens, men and women with their young children, and secondly craftsmen. He freed the former, and made the latter, (...)
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  19.  11
    Diluted magnetic semiconductors: effects of positional disorder.Mona Berciu - 2006 - Philosophical Magazine 86 (13-14):1947-1972.
  20.  8
    The dilution of academic power in Canada.Claude T. Bissell - 1973 - Minerva 11 (1):130-133.
  21.  15
    Bond diluted Levy spin-glass model and a new finite-size scaling method to determine a phase transition.L. Leuzzi, G. Parisi, F. Ricci-Tersenghi & J. J. Ruiz-Lorenzo - 2011 - Philosophical Magazine 91 (13-15):1917-1925.
  22.  2
    Les dilutions perdues: profil d’une exigence écologique.Daniel Schulthess - forthcoming - Schweizerische Zeitschrift Für Philosophie.
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  23.  28
    Damage to ventromedial prefrontal cortex impairs judgment of harmful intent.Liane Young, Antoine Bechara, Daniel Tranel, Hanna Damasio, Marc Hauser & Antonio Damasio - 2010 - Neuron 65 (6):845-851.
    Moral judgments, whether delivered in ordinary experience or in the courtroom, depend on our ability to infer intentions. We forgive unintentional or accidental harms and condemn failed attempts to harm. Prior work demonstrates that patients with damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex deliver abnormal judgments in response to moral dilemmas and that these patients are especially impaired in triggering emotional responses to inferred or abstract events, as opposed to real or actual outcomes. We therefore predicted that VMPC patients would (...)
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  24.  3
    Science for loss and damage : findings and propositions.Reinhard Mechler, Elisa Calliari, Laurens M. Bouwer, Thomas Schinko, Swenja Surminski, JoAnne Linnerooth-Bayer, Christian Huggel & Ivo Https://Orcidorg Wallimann-Helmer - 2019 - In .
    The debate on “Loss and Damage” (L&D) has gained traction over the last few years. Supported by growing scientific evidence of anthropogenic climate change amplifying frequency, intensity and duration of climate-related hazards as well as observed increases in climate-related impacts and risks in many regions, the “Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage” was established in 2013 and further supported through the Paris Agreement in 2015. Despite advances, the debate currently is broad, diffuse and somewhat confusing, while concepts, (...)
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  25.  10
    Dilution of Ferromagnets via a Random Graph-Based Strategy.Marco Alberto Javarone & Daniele Marinazzo - 2018 - Complexity 2018:1-11.
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  26.  77
    Damaged identities, narrative repair.Hilde Lindemann - 2001 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    Hilde Lindemann Nelson focuses on the stories of groups of people--including Gypsies, mothers, nurses, and transsexuals--whose identities have been defined by those with the power to speak for them and to constrain the scope of their actions. By placing their stories side by side with narratives about the groups in question, Nelson arrives at some important insights regarding the nature of identity. She regards personal identity as consisting not only of how people view themselves but also of how others view (...)
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  27.  20
    Moral Damage to Health Care Professionals and Trainees: Legalism and other Consequences for Patients and Colleagues.C. A. Rentmeester - 2008 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 33 (1):27-43.
    Health care professionals’ and trainees’ conceptions of their responsibilities to patients can change over time for a number of reasons: evolving career goals, desires to serve different patient populations, and changing family obligations, for example. Some changes in conceptions of responsibility are healthy, but others express moral damage. Clinicians’ changes in their conceptions of what they are responsible for express moral damage when their responses to others express a meager, rather than robust, sense of what they owe others. (...)
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  28. damage and imagination.Adam Morton - 2017 - The Junkyard (Blog).
    Many morally important facts about the way we affect one another, in particular the psychological damage we can inflict, are hard to imagine .
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  29.  27
    Solvent self-diffusion in dilute b.c.c. solid solutions.M. J. Jones & A. D. Le Claire - 1972 - Philosophical Magazine 26 (5):1191-1204.
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  30. Equitable damages.The Honourable Justice Edelman - 2023 - In Ben McFarlane & Steven Elliot (eds.), Equity today: 150 years after the judicature reforms. New York: Hart.
     
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  31.  38
    Damaging events: The perceived need for forgiveness.E. D. Scobie & G. E. W. Scobie - 1998 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 28 (4):373–402.
    Four models of forgiveness are identified; the health model, the philosophical model, the Christian model and the prosocial model. All define the term ‘forgiveness’ in a way which is consistent with their particular perspective. The authors offer a definition of forgiveness and propose an integrated model of forgiveness which seeks to incorporate contributions from all four areas, but is not biased towards any one model. Four levels of transgression are identified and categorized according to the degree of perceived damage. (...)
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  32.  21
    Genome damage in induced pluripotent stem cells: Assessing the mechanisms and their consequences.Samer Mi Hussein, Judith Elbaz & Andras A. Nagy - 2013 - Bioessays 35 (3):152-162.
    In 2006, Shinya Yamanaka and colleagues discovered how to reprogram terminally differentiated somatic cells to a pluripotent stem cell state. The resulting induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) made a paradigm shift in the field, further nailing down the disproval of the long‐held dogma that differentiation is unidirectional. The prospect of using iPSCs for patient‐specific cell‐based therapies has been enticing. This promise, however, has been questioned in the last two years as several studies demonstrated intrinsic epigenetic and genomic anomalies in these (...)
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  33.  15
    The influence of a dilute magnesium addition on the growth ant shrinkage of dislocation loops in aluminium.S. Kritzinger, P. S. Dobson & R. E. Smallman - 1967 - Philosophical Magazine 16 (140):217-229.
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  34. Collateral Damage: Changing the Conversation about Firearms and Faith.[author unknown] - 2019
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  35.  24
    ‘Damages Without Loss’: Can Hohfeld Help?Kit Barker - 2014 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 34 (4):631-658.
    This article addresses a still unsolved puzzle in private law regarding the proper explanation of cases in which courts make substantial awards of damages to claimants whose rights have been infringed, but who appear to have suffered no factual loss in consequence of the infringement. The paradigm examples tend to involve awards of ‘user’, license fee or ‘hypothetical bargain’ damages in cases involving interference with property rights. It suggests that existing explanations of such cases are all unsatisfactory in one or (...)
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  36.  14
    Damage Detection of Refractory Based on Principle Component Analysis and Gaussian Mixture Model.Changming Liu, Zhigang di ZhouWang, Dan Yang & Gangbing Song - 2018 - Complexity 2018:1-9.
    Acoustic emission technique is a common approach to identify the damage of the refractories; however, there is a complex problem since there are as many as fifteen involved parameters, which calls for effective data processing and classification algorithms to reduce the level of complexity. In this paper, experiments involving three-point bending tests of refractories were conducted and AE signals were collected. A new data processing method of merging the similar parameters in the description of the damage and reducing (...)
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  37.  10
    Restitutionary Damages as Corrective Justice.Ernest J. Weinrib - 2000 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 1 (1).
    For corrective justice, liability is the consequence of the parties' being correlatively situated as the doer and sufferer of an injustice, and the remedy is seen as undoing that injustice to the extent possible. Combining consideration of legal doctrine and private law theory, this article applies the framework of corrective justice to gain-based damages for torts. Within this framework, restitutionary damages ought to be available only insofar as they correspond to a constituent element in the injustice that the defendant has (...)
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  38.  30
    Damage compounded: Disparities, distrust, and disparate impact in end-of-life conflict resolution policies.Mary Ellen Wojtasiewicz - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (5):8 – 12.
    For a little more than a decade, professional organizations and healthcare institutions have attempted to develop guidelines and policies to deal with seemingly intractable conflicts that arise between clinicians and patients (or their proxies) over appropriate use of aggressive life-sustaining therapies in the face of low expectations of medical benefit. This article suggests that, although such efforts at conflict resolution are commendable on many levels, inadequate attention has been given to their potential negative effects upon particular groups of patients/proxies. Based (...)
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  39. Should damage to the machinery for social perception damage perception.Peter Carruthers & Vincent Picciuto - 2011 - Cognitive Neuroscience 2 (2):116-17.
    We argue that Graziano and Kastner are mistaken to claim that neglect favors their self-directed social perception account of consciousness. For the latter should not predict that neglect would result from damage to mechanisms of social perception. Neglect is better explained in terms of damage to attentional mechanisms.
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  40. the damage project.Adam Morton - manuscript
    describes connections between a series of related papers.
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  41.  17
    Neutron damage in MgO.G. W. Groves & A. Kelly - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (93):1437-1454.
  42.  91
    Collateral Damage: How High-Stakes Testing Corrupts America's Schools.Sharon L. Nichols, David C. Berliner & Nel Noddings - 2007 - Harvard Education Press.
    Drawing on their extensive research, Nichols and Berliner document and categorize the ways that high-stakes testing threatens the purposes and ideals of the American education system. For more than a decade, the debate over high-stakes testing has dominated the field of education. This passionate and provocative book provides a fresh perspective on the issue and powerful ammunition for opponents of high-stakes tests. Their analysis is grounded in the application of Campbell’s Law, which posits that the greater the social consequences associated (...)
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  43.  11
    Electronic structure in dilute alloys.D. A. Rigney & C. P. Flynn - 1967 - Philosophical Magazine 15 (138):1213-1232.
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  44.  35
    “Damaged humanity”: The call for a patient-centered medical ethic in the managed care era.Larry R. Churchill - 1997 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 18 (1-2):113-126.
    Edmund Pellegrino claims that medical ethics must be derived from a perception of the patient's damaged humanity, rather than from the self-imposed duties of professionals. This essay explores the meaning and examines the challenges to this patient-centered ethic. Social scientific and bioethical interpretations of medicine constitute one kind of challenge. A more pervasive challenge is the ascendancy of managed care, and especially investor-owned, for-profit managed care. A list of questions addressed to patients, physicians and organizations is offered as one means (...)
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  45.  17
    Solvent self-diffusion in dilute b.c.c. solid solutions.A. D. Le Claire - 1970 - Philosophical Magazine 21 (172):819-832.
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  46.  27
    Exemplary Damages in Equity: A Law and Economics Perspective.Anthony Duggan - 2006 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 26 (2):303-326.
    In Harris v Digital Pulse Pty Ltd (2003) 56 NSWLR 298, the New South Wales Court of Appeal held that exemplary (or punitive) damages are not available for breach of fiduciary duty or other equitable obligation. The decision runs counter to authorities in Canada, New Zealand and some U.S. states. Punitive (exemplary) damages is a hotly debated topic in the United States and it has attracted considerable interest among law and economics scholars, particularly in the tort litigation context. This article (...)
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  47.  57
    Damaged Bodies, Damaged Identities.Hilde Lindemann Nelson - 2004 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 11 (1):7-11.
    In this essay I examine Margaret Edson’s Pulitzer prizewinning play, Wit, to explore the numerous connections drawn there between damage to bodies and damage to identities. In the course of this exploration I aim to get clearer about the kinds of illness, injury, or medical interventions that damage patients’ identities; how the damage is inflicted; and what might be done to repair identities that have been damaged in these ways. I argue that just as bodily illness (...)
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  48.  12
    Asymmetric damage segregation at cell division via protein aggregate fusion and attachment to organelles.Miguel Coelho & Iva M. Tolić - 2015 - Bioessays 37 (7):740-747.
    The segregation of damaged components at cell division determines the survival and aging of cells. In cells that divide asymmetrically, such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae, aggregated proteins are retained by the mother cell. Yet, where and how aggregation occurs is not known. Recent work by Zhou and collaborators shows that the birth of protein aggregates, under specific stress conditions, requires active translation, and occurs mainly at the endoplasmic reticulum. Later, aggregates move to the mitochondrial surface through fis1‐dependent association. During replicative aging, (...)
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  49.  10
    Collateral Damage: A Patient, a New Procedure, and the Learning Curve: Dan Walter, 2010, self-published.John Devereux - 2014 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (4):563-564.
    This article is a review of the 2010 book Collateral Damage by Dan Walter.
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  50.  29
    Damaged Life as Exuberant Vitality in America: Adorno, Alienation, and the Psychic Economy.Shannon Mariotti - 2009 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2009 (149):169-190.
    In the aphorism “The Health Unto Death,” in Minima Moralia: Reflections from Damaged Life, Adorno issues a provocation and a challenge: “If such a thing as a psycho-analysis of today's prototypical culture were possible,” it would need to “show the sickness proper to the time to consist precisely in normality.”1 Investigating this unique form of illness would require questioning the traditional markers of health: “unruffled calm,” an “unhampered capacity for happiness,” “exuberant vitality,” and even the “champagne jollity” of “the regular (...)
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