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  1. Sublimity and beauty.José Siles-González & Carmen Solano-Ruiz - 2016 - Nursing Ethics 23 (2):154-166.
    Background: Several authors have focused on the aesthetics of nursing care from diverse perspectives; however, there are few studies about the sublime and the beautiful in nursing. Aim: To identify beautiful and sublime moments in the context of the aesthetics of nursing care. Methods: A theoretical reflection has been contemplated about sublime and beautiful values in the context of the aesthetics of nursing care from the cultural history perspective. For that purpose, a revision of this issue has been completed. The (...)
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  • Marie-Francoise Colliere - nurse and ethnohistorian: a conversation about nursing and the invisibility of care.Marie-Francoise Colliere & Jocalyn Lawler - 1998 - Nursing Inquiry 5 (3):140-145.
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  • Sublimity and beauty.José Siles-González & Carmen Solano-Ruiz - 2016 - Nursing Ethics 23 (2):154-166.
    Background: Several authors have focused on the aesthetics of nursing care from diverse perspectives; however, there are few studies about the sublime and the beautiful in nursing. Aim: To identify beautiful and sublime moments in the context of the aesthetics of nursing care. Methods: A theoretical reflection has been contemplated about sublime and beautiful values in the context of the aesthetics of nursing care from the cultural history perspective. For that purpose, a revision of this issue has been completed. The (...)
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  • 39. Can Computers Think?: Alan Turing and John Searle.Nigel Warburton - 2011 - In A Little History of Philosophy. Yale University Press. pp. 234-238.
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  • Authentic intention: Tempering the dehumanizing aspects of technology on behalf of good nursing care.Catherine Cuchetti & Pamela J. Grace - 2020 - Nursing Philosophy 21 (1):e12255.
    The nursing profession has a responsibility to ensure that nursing goals and perspectives as these have developed over time remain the focus of its work. Explored in this paper is the potential problem for the nursing profession of recognizing both the promises and pitfalls of informational technologies so as to use them wisely in behalf of ethical patient care. We make a normative claim that maintaining a critical stance toward the use of informational technologies in practice and in influencing the (...)
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  • Re‐conceptualizing the nursing metaparadigm: Articulating the philosophical ontology of the nursing discipline that orients inquiry and practice.Miriam Bender - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (3):e12243.
    Jacqueline Fawcett's nursing metaparadigm—the domains of person, health, environment, and nursing—remains popular in nursing curricula, despite having been repeatedly challenged as a logical philosophy of nursing. Fawcett appropriated the word “metaparadigm” (indirectly) from Margaret Masterman and Thomas Kuhn as a devise that allowed her to organize then‐current areas of nursing interest into a philosophical “hierarchy of knowledge,” and thereby claim nursing inquiry and practice as rigorously “scientific.” Scholars have consistently rejected the logic of Fawcett's metaparadigm, but have not yet proposed (...)
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