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  1. Reason and value: making reasoning fit for practice.Michael Loughlin, Robyn Bluhm, Stephen Buetow, Ross E. G. Upshur, Maya J. Goldenberg, Kirstin Borgerson, Vikki Entwistle & Elselijn Kingma - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5):929-937.
    Editors' introduction to 3rd thematic issue on philosophy of medicine.
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  • Challenging the epistemological foundations of EBM: what kind of knowledge does clinical practice require?Katrina J. Hutchison & Wendy A. Rogers - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5):984-991.
    This paper raises questions about the epistemological foundations of evidence-based medicine . We argue that EBM is based upon reliabilist epistemological assumptions, and that this is appropriate - we should focus on identifying the most reliable processes for generating and collecting medical knowledge. However, we note that this should not be reduced to narrow questions about which research methodologies are the best for gathering evidence. Reliable processes for generating medical evidence might lie outside of formal research methods. We also question (...)
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  • Verbal reports as data.K. Anders Ericsson & Herbert A. Simon - 1980 - Psychological Review 87 (3):215-251.
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  • The practice of health care: Wisdom as a model. [REVIEW]Ricca Edmondson & Jane Pearce - 2006 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 10 (3):233-244.
    Reasoning and judgement in health care entail complex responses to problems whose demands typically derive from several areas of specialism at once. We argue that current evidence- or value-based models of health care reasoning, despite their virtues, are insufficient to account for responses to such problems exhaustively. At the same time, we offer reasons for contending that health professionals in fact engage in forms of reasoning of a kind described for millennia under the concept of wisdom. Wisdom traditions refer to (...)
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  • The knower, the knowing and the known: threads in the woven tapestry of knowledge.J. Higgs & Lee Andresen - 2001 - In Joy Higgs & Angie Titchen (eds.), Practice Knowledge and Expertise in the Health Professions. Butterworth-Heinemann.
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  • Professional expertise.Joy Higgs & Christine Bithell - 2001 - In Joy Higgs & Angie Titchen (eds.), Practice Knowledge and Expertise in the Health Professions. Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 59--68.
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