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  1. In response: What's it really all about? [REVIEW]Richard M. Zaner - 1998 - Human Studies 21 (1):63-70.
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  • Power and hope in the clinical encounter: A meditation on vulnerability.Richard M. Zaner - 2000 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 3 (3):263-273.
    A specific clinical encounter in which the author was an ethics consultant, after a brief summary, provides the basis for a phenomenological delineation and explication of the key ingredients of such encounters. A brief historical reflection on the myths of Gyges and Aesculapius suggests that several of these ingredients are essential to clinical encounters and help constitute their specific moral aspects and challenges. Understood as an interpersonal relationship framed by critical issues of illness experiences, the clinical encounter makes prominent such (...)
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  • Ecofeminism and Nonhumans: Continuity, Difference, Dualism, and Domination.Ronnie Zoe Hawkins - 1998 - Hypatia 13 (1):158 - 197.
    The dualistic structures permeating western culture emphasize radical discontinuity between humans and nonhumans, but receptive attention to nonhuman others discloses both continuity and difference prevailing between other forms of life and our own. Recognizing that agency and subjectivity abound within nature alerts us to our potential for dominating and oppressing nonhuman others, as individuals and as groups. Reciprocally, seeing ourselves as biological beings may facilitate reconstructing our social reality to undo such destructive relationships.
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  • O terceiro mundo como um problema filosófico.Gabriel Almeida Assumpção - 2013 - Griot : Revista de Filosofia 8 (2):239-265.
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