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  1. Pain Sensitivity: An Unnatural History from 1800 to 1965.Joanna Bourke - 2014 - Journal of Medical Humanities 35 (3):301-319.
    Who was truly capable of experiencing pain? In this article, I explore ideas about the distribution of bodily sensitivity in patients from the early nineteenth century to 1965 in Anglo-American societies. While certain patients were regarded as “truly hurting,” other patients’ distress could be disparaged or not even registered as being “real pain.” Such judgments had major effects on regimes of pain-alleviation. Indeed, it took until the late twentieth century for the routine underestimation of the sufferings of certain groups of (...)
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  • The “Psychiatric Masquerade”: The Mental Health Exception in New Zealand Abortion Law. [REVIEW]Charlotte Leslie - 2010 - Feminist Legal Studies 18 (1):1-23.
    Although nearly 99% of abortions in New Zealand are permitted in order to prevent danger or injury to a woman’s mental health (the ‘mental health exception’), the reasons why mental health considerations should effectively control access to abortion are not altogether clear. This article analyses abortion case law, statutes and debates from New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States to attempt to explain the legal connection between mental health considerations and access to abortion. The article argues that the (...)
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  • The Public and Its Affective Problems.Lynn Clarke - 2012 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 45 (4):376-405.
    Dewey emphasizes the perception of “indirect consequences” of transactions as the basis of responsible public identity and organization. These consequences are external; they appear in the scientifically observable world and are susceptible to technical control. But transactions may have indirect affective consequences that are part of a culturally influenced inner reality, pose obstacles to speech and communication, and fund an irresponsible public identity-cum-organization. Rhetorical theory that builds on Dewey's “public” ignores these consequences at considerable cost. This claim is supported by (...)
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