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  1. Reimagining Health as a ‘Flow on Effect’ of Biomedical Innovation: Research Policy as a Site of State Activism.Georgia Miller, Declan Kuch & Matthew Kearnes - 2022 - Minerva 60 (2):235-256.
    As health care systems have been recast as innovation assets, commercial aims are increasingly prominent within states’ health and medical research policies. Despite this, the reformulation of notions of social and of scientific value and of long-standing relations between science and the state that is occurring in research policies remains comparatively unexamined. Addressing this lacuna, this article investigates the articulation of ‘actually existing neoliberalism' in research policy by examining a major Australian research policy and funding instrument, the Medical Research Future (...)
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  • Collaboration, toward an integrative philosophy of scientific practice.Melinda Fagan - unknown
    Philosophical understanding of experimental scientific practice is impeded by disciplinary differences, notably that between philosophy and sociology of science. Severing the two limits the stock of philosophical case studies to narrowly circumscribed experimental episodes, centered on individual scientists or technologies. The complex relations between scientists and society that permeate experimental research are left unexamined. In consequence, experimental fields rich in social interactions have received only patchy attention from philosophers of science. This paper sketches a remedy for both the symptom and (...)
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  • Life, Time, and the Organism: Temporal Registers in the Construction of Life Forms.Dominic J. Berry & Paolo Palladino - 2019 - Journal of the History of Biology 52 (2):223-243.
    In this paper we articulate how time and temporalities are involved in the making of living things. For these purposes, we draw on an instructive episode concerning Norfolk Horn sheep. We attend to historical debates over the nature of the breed, whether it is extinct or not, and whether presently living exemplars are faithful copies of those that came before. We argue that there are features to these debates that are important to understanding contemporary configurations of life, time, and the (...)
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  • Beyond the hype: ‘acceptable futures’ for AI and robotic technologies in healthcare.Giulia De Togni, S. Erikainen, S. Chan & S. Cunningham-Burley - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-10.
    AI and robotic technologies attract much hype, including utopian and dystopian future visions of technologically driven provision in the health and care sectors. Based on 30 interviews with scientists, clinicians and other stakeholders in the UK, Europe, USA, Australia, and New Zealand, this paper interrogates how those engaged in developing and using AI and robotic applications in health and care characterize their future promise, potential and challenges. We explore the ways in which these professionals articulate and navigate a range of (...)
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  • How genetics came to the unborn: 1960–2000.Ilana Löwy - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 47:154-162.
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  • Squaring the Curve: The Anatomo-Politics of Ageing, Life and Death.Tiago Moreira & Paolo Palladino - 2008 - Body and Society 14 (3):21-47.
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  • ‘I am a very happy, lucky lady, and I am full of Vitality!’ Analysis of promotional strategies on the websites of probiotic yoghurt producers.Nelya Koteyko - 2009 - Critical Discourse Studies 6 (2):111-125.
    This article studies the Internet advertising of food and drinks containing probiotics – potentially beneficial bacteria marketed as a means to strengthen the body's ‘defence mechanisms’. Using the framework of critical genre analysis, I describe discursive and semiotic means by which probiotics emerge as a credible ‘tool’ for building the ‘inner armour’ of immunity and as a locus of interlinked discourses on biomedicine, science, nutrition and the body. In my analysis, I examine the multitude of strategies with the help of (...)
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