CINXE.COM

Kathryn Tabb | Bard College - Academia.edu

<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en" xmlns:fb="http://www.facebook.com/2008/fbml" class="wf-loading"> <head prefix="og: https://ogp.me/ns# fb: https://ogp.me/ns/fb# academia: https://ogp.me/ns/fb/academia#"> <meta charset="utf-8"> <meta name=viewport content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> <meta rel="search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" href="/open_search.xml" title="Academia.edu"> <title>Kathryn Tabb | Bard College - Academia.edu</title> <!-- _ _ _ | | (_) | | __ _ ___ __ _ __| | ___ _ __ ___ _ __ _ ___ __| |_ _ / _` |/ __/ _` |/ _` |/ _ \ '_ ` _ \| |/ _` | / _ \/ _` | | | | | (_| | (_| (_| | (_| | __/ | | | | | | (_| || __/ (_| | |_| | \__,_|\___\__,_|\__,_|\___|_| |_| |_|_|\__,_(_)___|\__,_|\__,_| We're hiring! See https://www.academia.edu/hiring --> <link href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/favicon-production.ico" rel="shortcut icon" type="image/vnd.microsoft.icon"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="57x57" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-57x57.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="60x60" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-60x60.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="72x72" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-72x72.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="76x76" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-76x76.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="114x114" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-114x114.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="120x120" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-120x120.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="144x144" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-144x144.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="152x152" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-152x152.png"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="180x180" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/apple-touch-icon-180x180.png"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/favicon-32x32.png" sizes="32x32"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/favicon-194x194.png" sizes="194x194"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/favicon-96x96.png" sizes="96x96"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/android-chrome-192x192.png" sizes="192x192"> <link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/favicon-16x16.png" sizes="16x16"> <link rel="manifest" href="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/manifest.json"> <meta name="msapplication-TileColor" content="#2b5797"> <meta name="msapplication-TileImage" content="//a.academia-assets.com/images/favicons/mstile-144x144.png"> <meta name="theme-color" content="#ffffff"> <script> window.performance && window.performance.measure && window.performance.measure("Time To First Byte", "requestStart", "responseStart"); </script> <script> (function() { if (!window.URLSearchParams || !window.history || !window.history.replaceState) { return; } var searchParams = new URLSearchParams(window.location.search); var paramsToDelete = [ 'fs', 'sm', 'swp', 'iid', 'nbs', 'rcc', // related content category 'rcpos', // related content carousel position 'rcpg', // related carousel page 'rchid', // related content hit id 'f_ri', // research interest id, for SEO tracking 'f_fri', // featured research interest, for SEO tracking (param key without value) 'f_rid', // from research interest directory for SEO tracking 'f_loswp', // from research interest pills on LOSWP sidebar for SEO tracking 'rhid', // referrring hit id ]; if (paramsToDelete.every((key) => searchParams.get(key) === null)) { return; } paramsToDelete.forEach((key) => { searchParams.delete(key); }); var cleanUrl = new URL(window.location.href); cleanUrl.search = searchParams.toString(); history.replaceState({}, document.title, cleanUrl); })(); </script> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-5VKX33P2DS"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-5VKX33P2DS', { cookie_domain: 'academia.edu', send_page_view: false, }); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'controller': "profiles/works", 'action': "summary", 'controller_action': 'profiles/works#summary', 'logged_in': 'false', 'edge': 'unknown', // Send nil if there is no A/B test bucket, in case some records get logged // with missing data - that way we can distinguish between the two cases. // ab_test_bucket should be of the form <ab_test_name>:<bucket> 'ab_test_bucket': null, }) </script> <script type="text/javascript"> window.sendUserTiming = function(timingName) { if (!(window.performance && window.performance.measure)) return; var entries = window.performance.getEntriesByName(timingName, "measure"); if (entries.length !== 1) return; var timingValue = Math.round(entries[0].duration); gtag('event', 'timing_complete', { name: timingName, value: timingValue, event_category: 'User-centric', }); }; window.sendUserTiming("Time To First Byte"); </script> <meta name="csrf-param" content="authenticity_token" /> <meta name="csrf-token" content="1Sleuet8JWc5DGnzeHZU2BW9r1RKXQh7zOBKhVBFVpI4F07kq87SyxlVLVieAhMDBsRWbTw3asmrLunewj0zPA==" /> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow-3d36c19b4875b226bfed0fcba1dcea3f2fe61148383d97c0465c016b8c969290.css" /><link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/social/home-9e8218e1301001388038e3fc3427ed00d079a4760ff7745d1ec1b2d59103170a.css" /><link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/design_system/heading-b2b823dd904da60a48fd1bfa1defd840610c2ff414d3f39ed3af46277ab8df3b.css" /><link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/design_system/button-3cea6e0ad4715ed965c49bfb15dedfc632787b32ff6d8c3a474182b231146ab7.css" /><link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/design_system/body-8d679e925718b5e8e4b18e9a4fab37f7eaa99e43386459376559080ac8f2856a.css" /><link crossorigin="" href="https://fonts.gstatic.com/" rel="preconnect" /><link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=DM+Sans:ital,opsz,wght@0,9..40,100..1000;1,9..40,100..1000&amp;family=Gupter:wght@400;500;700&amp;family=IBM+Plex+Mono:wght@300;400&amp;family=Material+Symbols+Outlined:opsz,wght,FILL,GRAD@20,400,0,0&amp;display=swap" rel="stylesheet" /><link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/design_system/common-2b6f90dbd75f5941bc38f4ad716615f3ac449e7398313bb3bc225fba451cd9fa.css" /> <meta name="author" content="kathryn tabb" /> <meta name="description" content="Kathryn Tabb, Bard College: 705 Followers, 318 Following, 85 Research papers. Research interests: 17th Century &amp; Early Modern Philosophy, Philosophy of…" /> <meta name="google-site-verification" content="bKJMBZA7E43xhDOopFZkssMMkBRjvYERV-NaN4R6mrs" /> <script> var $controller_name = 'works'; var $action_name = "summary"; var $rails_env = 'production'; var $app_rev = '29a421d93b72e25784b87b5d059257c5f1f6c6ba'; var $domain = 'academia.edu'; var $app_host = "academia.edu"; var $asset_host = "academia-assets.com"; var $start_time = new Date().getTime(); var $recaptcha_key = "6LdxlRMTAAAAADnu_zyLhLg0YF9uACwz78shpjJB"; var $recaptcha_invisible_key = "6Lf3KHUUAAAAACggoMpmGJdQDtiyrjVlvGJ6BbAj"; var $disableClientRecordHit = false; </script> <script> window.Aedu = { hit_data: null }; window.Aedu.SiteStats = {"premium_universities_count":15332,"monthly_visitors":"115 million","monthly_visitor_count":115204048,"monthly_visitor_count_in_millions":115,"user_count":280130078,"paper_count":55203019,"paper_count_in_millions":55,"page_count":432000000,"page_count_in_millions":432,"pdf_count":16500000,"pdf_count_in_millions":16}; window.Aedu.serverRenderTime = new Date(1736406195000); window.Aedu.timeDifference = new Date().getTime() - 1736406195000; window.Aedu.isUsingCssV1 = false; window.Aedu.enableLocalization = true; window.Aedu.activateFullstory = false; window.Aedu.serviceAvailability = { status: {"attention_db":"on","bibliography_db":"on","contacts_db":"on","email_db":"on","indexability_db":"on","mentions_db":"on","news_db":"on","notifications_db":"on","offsite_mentions_db":"on","redshift":"on","redshift_exports_db":"on","related_works_db":"on","ring_db":"on","user_tests_db":"on"}, serviceEnabled: function(service) { return this.status[service] === "on"; }, readEnabled: function(service) { return this.serviceEnabled(service) || this.status[service] === "read_only"; }, }; window.Aedu.viewApmTrace = function() { // Check if x-apm-trace-id meta tag is set, and open the trace in APM // in a new window if it is. var apmTraceId = document.head.querySelector('meta[name="x-apm-trace-id"]'); if (apmTraceId) { var traceId = apmTraceId.content; // Use trace ID to construct URL, an example URL looks like: // https://app.datadoghq.com/apm/traces?query=trace_id%31298410148923562634 var apmUrl = 'https://app.datadoghq.com/apm/traces?query=trace_id%3A' + traceId; window.open(apmUrl, '_blank'); } }; </script> <!--[if lt IE 9]> <script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/html5shiv/3.7.2/html5shiv.min.js"></script> <![endif]--> <link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto:100,100i,300,300i,400,400i,500,500i,700,700i,900,900i" rel="stylesheet"> <link href="//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/font-awesome/4.3.0/css/font-awesome.min.css" rel="stylesheet"> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/libraries-a9675dcb01ec4ef6aa807ba772c7a5a00c1820d3ff661c1038a20f80d06bb4e4.css" /> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/academia-0fb6fc03c471832908791ad7ddba619b6165b3ccf7ae0f65cf933f34b0b660a7.css" /> <link rel="stylesheet" media="all" href="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/design_system_legacy-056a9113b9a0f5343d013b29ee1929d5a18be35fdcdceb616600b4db8bd20054.css" /> <script src="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/webpack_bundles/runtime-bundle-005434038af4252ca37c527588411a3d6a0eabb5f727fac83f8bbe7fd88d93bb.js"></script> <script src="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/webpack_bundles/webpack_libraries_and_infrequently_changed.wjs-bundle-c52479a706a9de3094c7141830e059984e2981800c34be41f9c523bc719f431a.js"></script> <script src="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/webpack_bundles/core_webpack.wjs-bundle-c768d537c8646208f2853c2082cf4472552bc6a0691700f68d600b9fd0fa9bcd.js"></script> <script src="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/webpack_bundles/sentry.wjs-bundle-5fe03fddca915c8ba0f7edbe64c194308e8ce5abaed7bffe1255ff37549c4808.js"></script> <script> jade = window.jade || {}; jade.helpers = window.$h; jade._ = window._; </script> <!-- Google Tag Manager --> <script id="tag-manager-head-root">(function(w,d,s,l,i){w[l]=w[l]||[];w[l].push({'gtm.start': new Date().getTime(),event:'gtm.js'});var f=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0], j=d.createElement(s),dl=l!='dataLayer'?'&l='+l:'';j.async=true;j.src= 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtm.js?id='+i+dl;f.parentNode.insertBefore(j,f); })(window,document,'script','dataLayer_old','GTM-5G9JF7Z');</script> <!-- End Google Tag Manager --> <script> window.gptadslots = []; window.googletag = window.googletag || {}; window.googletag.cmd = window.googletag.cmd || []; </script> <script type="text/javascript"> // TODO(jacob): This should be defined, may be rare load order problem. // Checking if null is just a quick fix, will default to en if unset. // Better fix is to run this immedietely after I18n is set. if (window.I18n != null) { I18n.defaultLocale = "en"; I18n.locale = "en"; I18n.fallbacks = true; } </script> <link rel="canonical" href="https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb" /> </head> <!--[if gte IE 9 ]> <body class='ie ie9 c-profiles/works a-summary logged_out'> <![endif]--> <!--[if !(IE) ]><!--> <body class='c-profiles/works a-summary logged_out'> <!--<![endif]--> <div id="fb-root"></div><script>window.fbAsyncInit = function() { FB.init({ appId: "2369844204", version: "v8.0", status: true, cookie: true, xfbml: true }); // Additional initialization code. if (window.InitFacebook) { // facebook.ts already loaded, set it up. window.InitFacebook(); } else { // Set a flag for facebook.ts to find when it loads. window.academiaAuthReadyFacebook = true; } };</script><script>window.fbAsyncLoad = function() { // Protection against double calling of this function if (window.FB) { return; } (function(d, s, id){ var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) {return;} js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk')); } if (!window.defer_facebook) { // Autoload if not deferred window.fbAsyncLoad(); } else { // Defer loading by 5 seconds setTimeout(function() { window.fbAsyncLoad(); }, 5000); }</script> <div id="google-root"></div><script>window.loadGoogle = function() { if (window.InitGoogle) { // google.ts already loaded, set it up. window.InitGoogle("331998490334-rsn3chp12mbkiqhl6e7lu2q0mlbu0f1b"); } else { // Set a flag for google.ts to use when it loads. window.GoogleClientID = "331998490334-rsn3chp12mbkiqhl6e7lu2q0mlbu0f1b"; } };</script><script>window.googleAsyncLoad = function() { // Protection against double calling of this function (function(d) { var js; var id = 'google-jssdk'; var ref = d.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) { return; } js = d.createElement('script'); js.id = id; js.async = true; js.onload = loadGoogle; js.src = "https://accounts.google.com/gsi/client" ref.parentNode.insertBefore(js, ref); }(document)); } if (!window.defer_google) { // Autoload if not deferred window.googleAsyncLoad(); } else { // Defer loading by 5 seconds setTimeout(function() { window.googleAsyncLoad(); }, 5000); }</script> <div id="tag-manager-body-root"> <!-- Google Tag Manager (noscript) --> <noscript><iframe src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/ns.html?id=GTM-5G9JF7Z" height="0" width="0" style="display:none;visibility:hidden"></iframe></noscript> <!-- End Google Tag Manager (noscript) --> <!-- Event listeners for analytics --> <script> window.addEventListener('load', function() { if (document.querySelector('input[name="commit"]')) { document.querySelector('input[name="commit"]').addEventListener('click', function() { gtag('event', 'click', { event_category: 'button', event_label: 'Log In' }) }) } }); </script> </div> <script>var _comscore = _comscore || []; _comscore.push({ c1: "2", c2: "26766707" }); (function() { var s = document.createElement("script"), el = document.getElementsByTagName("script")[0]; s.async = true; s.src = (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js"; el.parentNode.insertBefore(s, el); })();</script><img src="https://sb.scorecardresearch.com/p?c1=2&amp;c2=26766707&amp;cv=2.0&amp;cj=1" style="position: absolute; visibility: hidden" /> <div id='react-modal'></div> <div class='DesignSystem'> <a class='u-showOnFocus' href='#site'> Skip to main content </a> </div> <div id="upgrade_ie_banner" style="display: none;"><p>Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.</p><p>To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to&nbsp;<a href="https://www.academia.edu/upgrade-browser">upgrade your browser</a>.</p></div><script>// Show this banner for all versions of IE if (!!window.MSInputMethodContext || /(MSIE)/.test(navigator.userAgent)) { document.getElementById('upgrade_ie_banner').style.display = 'block'; }</script> <div class="DesignSystem bootstrap ShrinkableNav"><div class="navbar navbar-default main-header"><div class="container-wrapper" id="main-header-container"><div class="container"><div class="navbar-header"><div class="nav-left-wrapper u-mt0x"><div class="nav-logo"><a data-main-header-link-target="logo_home" href="https://www.academia.edu/"><img class="visible-xs-inline-block" style="height: 24px;" alt="Academia.edu" src="//a.academia-assets.com/images/academia-logo-redesign-2015-A.svg" width="24" height="24" /><img width="145.2" height="18" class="hidden-xs" style="height: 24px;" alt="Academia.edu" src="//a.academia-assets.com/images/academia-logo-redesign-2015.svg" /></a></div><div class="nav-search"><div class="SiteSearch-wrapper select2-no-default-pills"><form class="js-SiteSearch-form DesignSystem" action="https://www.academia.edu/search" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="get"><input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="&#x2713;" autocomplete="off" /><i class="SiteSearch-icon fa fa-search u-fw700 u-positionAbsolute u-tcGrayDark"></i><input class="js-SiteSearch-form-input SiteSearch-form-input form-control" data-main-header-click-target="search_input" name="q" placeholder="Search" type="text" value="" /></form></div></div></div><div class="nav-right-wrapper pull-right"><ul class="NavLinks js-main-nav list-unstyled"><li class="NavLinks-link"><a class="js-header-login-url Button Button--inverseGray Button--sm u-mb4x" id="nav_log_in" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/login">Log In</a></li><li class="NavLinks-link u-p0x"><a class="Button Button--inverseGray Button--sm u-mb4x" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/signup">Sign Up</a></li></ul><button class="hidden-lg hidden-md hidden-sm u-ml4x navbar-toggle collapsed" data-target=".js-mobile-header-links" data-toggle="collapse" type="button"><span class="icon-bar"></span><span class="icon-bar"></span><span class="icon-bar"></span></button></div></div><div class="collapse navbar-collapse js-mobile-header-links"><ul class="nav navbar-nav"><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/login">Log In</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/signup">Sign Up</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1 js-mobile-nav-expand-trigger"><a href="#">more&nbsp<span class="caret"></span></a></li><li><ul class="js-mobile-nav-expand-section nav navbar-nav u-m0x collapse"><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="false" href="https://www.academia.edu/about">About</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/press">Press</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="false" href="https://www.academia.edu/documents">Papers</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/terms">Terms</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/privacy">Privacy</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/copyright">Copyright</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/hiring"><i class="fa fa-briefcase"></i>&nbsp;We're Hiring!</a></li><li class="u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.academia.edu/"><i class="fa fa-question-circle"></i>&nbsp;Help Center</a></li><li class="js-mobile-nav-collapse-trigger u-borderColorGrayLight u-borderBottom1 dropup" style="display:none"><a href="#">less&nbsp<span class="caret"></span></a></li></ul></li></ul></div></div></div><script>(function(){ var $moreLink = $(".js-mobile-nav-expand-trigger"); var $lessLink = $(".js-mobile-nav-collapse-trigger"); var $section = $('.js-mobile-nav-expand-section'); $moreLink.click(function(ev){ ev.preventDefault(); $moreLink.hide(); $lessLink.show(); $section.collapse('show'); }); $lessLink.click(function(ev){ ev.preventDefault(); $moreLink.show(); $lessLink.hide(); $section.collapse('hide'); }); })() if ($a.is_logged_in() || false) { new Aedu.NavigationController({ el: '.js-main-nav', showHighlightedNotification: false }); } else { $(".js-header-login-url").attr("href", $a.loginUrlWithRedirect()); } Aedu.autocompleteSearch = new AutocompleteSearch({el: '.js-SiteSearch-form'});</script></div></div> <div id='site' class='fixed'> <div id="content" class="clearfix"> <script>document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function(){ var $dismissible = $(".dismissible_banner"); $dismissible.click(function(ev) { $dismissible.hide(); }); });</script> <script src="//a.academia-assets.com/assets/webpack_bundles/profile.wjs-bundle-710da0bd463954b7fa5c876f73f33dff28c2e07f00ea54458ef366e205677828.js" defer="defer"></script><script>Aedu.rankings = { showPaperRankingsLink: false } $viewedUser = Aedu.User.set_viewed( {"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb","photo":"https://0.academia-photos.com/3280875/1088433/10778891/s65_kathryn.tabb.jpg","has_photo":true,"department":{"id":127317,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/Departments/Philosophy/Documents","university":{"id":3213,"name":"Bard College","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/"}},"position":"Faculty Member","position_id":1,"is_analytics_public":false,"interests":[{"id":911,"name":"17th Century \u0026 Early Modern Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/17th_Century_and_Early_Modern_Philosophy"},{"id":4440,"name":"Philosophy of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Medicine"},{"id":5703,"name":"History of Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Philosophy_of_Science"},{"id":1414,"name":"Bioethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Bioethics"},{"id":15812,"name":"Early Modern Intellectual History","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Early_Modern_Intellectual_History"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":6182,"name":"History of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":27854,"name":"Darwin","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Darwin"},{"id":15446,"name":"Animals and Animality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Animals_and_Animality"},{"id":133059,"name":"Associationism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Associationism"},{"id":893,"name":"Pragmatism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Pragmatism"},{"id":3723,"name":"History of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Science"},{"id":821,"name":"Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Science"},{"id":620285,"name":"History of Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Philosophy"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":2621,"name":"Higher Education","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Higher_Education"},{"id":252,"name":"Developmental Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Developmental_Psychology"},{"id":806,"name":"Philosophy of Mind","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Mind"},{"id":18130,"name":"John Locke","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/John_Locke"},{"id":104593,"name":"Psychiatric Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatric_Ethics"},{"id":8724,"name":"17th-Century Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/17th-Century_Studies"},{"id":1727,"name":"Early Modern History","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Early_Modern_History"},{"id":38772,"name":"Early Modern Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Early_Modern_Philosophy"},{"id":19940,"name":"History Of Modern Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_Of_Modern_Philosophy"},{"id":1266728,"name":"History and Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_and_Philosophy_of_Science-21"},{"id":38385,"name":"Delusions","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Delusions"},{"id":14414,"name":"Philosophy of Psychopathology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychopathology"},{"id":52867,"name":"Rationality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rationality"},{"id":13229,"name":"History Of Madness And Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_Of_Madness_And_Psychiatry"},{"id":2273,"name":"History of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Medicine"},{"id":10240,"name":"18th Century Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/18th_Century_Philosophy"},{"id":19942,"name":"David Hume","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/David_Hume"},{"id":247822,"name":"Miranda Fricker","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Miranda_Fricker"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"},{"id":305155,"name":"DSM problems","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/DSM_problems"}]} ); if ($a.is_logged_in() && $viewedUser.is_current_user()) { $('body').addClass('profile-viewed-by-owner'); } $socialProfiles = [{"id":3763172,"link":"http://www.kathryntabb.com","name":"Homepage","link_domain":"www.kathryntabb.com","icon":"//www.google.com/s2/u/0/favicons?domain=www.kathryntabb.com"}]</script><div id="js-react-on-rails-context" style="display:none" data-rails-context="{&quot;inMailer&quot;:false,&quot;i18nLocale&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;i18nDefaultLocale&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;href&quot;:&quot;https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb&quot;,&quot;location&quot;:&quot;/KathrynTabb&quot;,&quot;scheme&quot;:&quot;https&quot;,&quot;host&quot;:&quot;bard.academia.edu&quot;,&quot;port&quot;:null,&quot;pathname&quot;:&quot;/KathrynTabb&quot;,&quot;search&quot;:null,&quot;httpAcceptLanguage&quot;:null,&quot;serverSide&quot;:false}"></div> <div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="ProfileCheckPaperUpdate" data-props="{}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="ProfileCheckPaperUpdate-react-component-c695759b-f7c9-44c6-8470-856fb4c2d087"></div> <div id="ProfileCheckPaperUpdate-react-component-c695759b-f7c9-44c6-8470-856fb4c2d087"></div> <div class="DesignSystem"><div class="onsite-ping" id="onsite-ping"></div></div><div class="profile-user-info DesignSystem"><div class="social-profile-container"><div class="left-panel-container"><div class="user-info-component-wrapper"><div class="user-summary-cta-container"><div class="user-summary-container"><div class="social-profile-avatar-container"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Kathryn Tabb" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/3280875/1088433/10778891/s200_kathryn.tabb.jpg" /></div><div class="title-container"><h1 class="ds2-5-heading-sans-serif-sm">Kathryn Tabb</h1><div class="affiliations-container fake-truncate js-profile-affiliations"><div><a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://bard.academia.edu/">Bard College</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://bard.academia.edu/Departments/Philosophy/Documents">Philosophy</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Faculty Member</span></div><div><a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://chicago.academia.edu/">University of Chicago</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://chicago.academia.edu/Departments/Conceptual_and_Historical_Studies_of_Science/Documents">Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Alumna</span></div><div><a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://cambridge.academia.edu/">University of Cambridge</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://cambridge.academia.edu/Departments/History_and_Philosophy_of_Science/Documents">History and Philosophy of Science</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Alumna</span></div><div><a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://pitt.academia.edu/">University of Pittsburgh</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://pitt.academia.edu/Departments/History_and_Philosophy_of_Science/Documents">History and Philosophy of Science</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Alumna</span></div><div><a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://columbia.academia.edu/">Columbia University</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://columbia.academia.edu/Departments/Philosophy/Documents">Philosophy</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Faculty Member</span></div></div></div></div><div class="sidebar-cta-container"><button class="ds2-5-button hidden profile-cta-button grow js-profile-follow-button" data-broccoli-component="user-info.follow-button" data-click-track="profile-user-info-follow-button" data-follow-user-fname="Kathryn" data-follow-user-id="3280875" data-follow-user-source="profile_button" data-has-google="false"><span class="material-symbols-outlined" style="font-size: 20px" translate="no">add</span>Follow</button><button class="ds2-5-button hidden profile-cta-button grow js-profile-unfollow-button" data-broccoli-component="user-info.unfollow-button" data-click-track="profile-user-info-unfollow-button" data-unfollow-user-id="3280875"><span class="material-symbols-outlined" style="font-size: 20px" translate="no">done</span>Following</button></div></div><div class="user-stats-container"><a><div class="stat-container js-profile-followers"><p class="label">Followers</p><p class="data">705</p></div></a><a><div class="stat-container js-profile-followees" data-broccoli-component="user-info.followees-count" data-click-track="profile-expand-user-info-following"><p class="label">Following</p><p class="data">318</p></div></a><a><div class="stat-container js-profile-coauthors" data-broccoli-component="user-info.coauthors-count" data-click-track="profile-expand-user-info-coauthors"><p class="label">Co-authors</p><p class="data">8</p></div></a><span><div class="stat-container"><p class="label"><span class="js-profile-total-view-text">Public Views</span></p><p class="data"><span class="js-profile-view-count"></span></p></div></span></div><div class="suggested-academics-container"><div class="suggested-academics--header"><p class="ds2-5-body-md-bold">Related Authors</p></div><ul class="suggested-user-card-list"><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://kcl.academia.edu/GabbySamuel"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Gabby Samuel" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/5189325/12913308/14295380/s200_gabby.samuel.jpg" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://kcl.academia.edu/GabbySamuel">Gabby Samuel</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">King&#39;s College London</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://uu.academia.edu/KarolinaKudlek"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Karolina Kudlek" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/15734442/6581795/38958486/s200_karolina.kudlek.jpg" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://uu.academia.edu/KarolinaKudlek">Karolina Kudlek</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">Utrecht University</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://csic.academia.edu/JonRuedaEtxebarria"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Jon Rueda Etxebarria" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/33848356/10787272/148610603/s200_jon.rueda_etxebarria.jpeg" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://csic.academia.edu/JonRuedaEtxebarria">Jon Rueda Etxebarria</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">CSIC (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-Spanish National Research Council)</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://independent.academia.edu/TrudoLemmens"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" border="0" alt="" src="//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://independent.academia.edu/TrudoLemmens">Trudo Lemmens</a></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://edinburgh.academia.edu/CristinaRichie"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Cristina Richie" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/3266278/1081066/116395995/s200_cristina.richie.jpg" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://edinburgh.academia.edu/CristinaRichie">Cristina Richie</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">University of Edinburgh</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://oxford.academia.edu/ninaHallowell"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" border="0" alt="" src="//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://oxford.academia.edu/ninaHallowell">nina Hallowell</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">University of Oxford</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://independent.academia.edu/DouglasDiekema"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" border="0" alt="" src="//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://independent.academia.edu/DouglasDiekema">Douglas Diekema</a></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://washington.academia.edu/NancyJecker"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Nancy Jecker" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/39084387/18631324/18593659/s200_nancy.jecker.jpg" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://washington.academia.edu/NancyJecker">Nancy Jecker</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">University of Washington</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://utu.academia.edu/JoonaR%C3%A4s%C3%A4nen"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" alt="Joona Räsänen" border="0" onerror="if (this.src != &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;) this.src = &#39;//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png&#39;;" width="200" height="200" src="https://0.academia-photos.com/50771438/20059156/19828011/s200_joona.r_s_nen.jpg" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://utu.academia.edu/JoonaR%C3%A4s%C3%A4nen">Joona Räsänen</a><p class="suggested-user-card__user-info__subheader ds2-5-body-xs">University of Turku</p></div></div><div class="suggested-user-card"><div class="suggested-user-card__avatar social-profile-avatar-container"><a href="https://independent.academia.edu/AnnaSmajdor2"><img class="profile-avatar u-positionAbsolute" border="0" alt="" src="//a.academia-assets.com/images/s200_no_pic.png" /></a></div><div class="suggested-user-card__user-info"><a class="suggested-user-card__user-info__header ds2-5-body-sm-bold ds2-5-body-link" href="https://independent.academia.edu/AnnaSmajdor2">Anna Smajdor</a></div></div></ul></div><div class="ri-section"><div class="ri-section-header"><span>Interests</span><a class="ri-more-link js-profile-ri-list-card" data-click-track="profile-user-info-primary-research-interest" data-has-card-for-ri-list="3280875">View All (35)</a></div><div class="ri-tags-container"><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="3280875" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/17th_Century_and_Early_Modern_Philosophy"><div id="js-react-on-rails-context" style="display:none" data-rails-context="{&quot;inMailer&quot;:false,&quot;i18nLocale&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;i18nDefaultLocale&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;href&quot;:&quot;https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb&quot;,&quot;location&quot;:&quot;/KathrynTabb&quot;,&quot;scheme&quot;:&quot;https&quot;,&quot;host&quot;:&quot;bard.academia.edu&quot;,&quot;port&quot;:null,&quot;pathname&quot;:&quot;/KathrynTabb&quot;,&quot;search&quot;:null,&quot;httpAcceptLanguage&quot;:null,&quot;serverSide&quot;:false}"></div> <div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{&quot;color&quot;:&quot;gray&quot;,&quot;children&quot;:[&quot;17th Century \u0026 Early Modern Philosophy&quot;]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-2915da0b-6aaf-4b8c-82fd-2950cc284a8a"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-2915da0b-6aaf-4b8c-82fd-2950cc284a8a"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="3280875" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Medicine"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{&quot;color&quot;:&quot;gray&quot;,&quot;children&quot;:[&quot;Philosophy of Medicine&quot;]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-35425299-89ca-4a6d-b855-262a19523bb8"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-35425299-89ca-4a6d-b855-262a19523bb8"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="3280875" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Philosophy_of_Science"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{&quot;color&quot;:&quot;gray&quot;,&quot;children&quot;:[&quot;History of Philosophy of Science&quot;]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-a577972f-1293-41e6-be3e-118fc7476f1a"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-a577972f-1293-41e6-be3e-118fc7476f1a"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="3280875" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Bioethics"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{&quot;color&quot;:&quot;gray&quot;,&quot;children&quot;:[&quot;Bioethics&quot;]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-3803dca9-7048-42ca-8434-ad83e7835cb1"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-3803dca9-7048-42ca-8434-ad83e7835cb1"></div> </a><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="3280875" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Early_Modern_Intellectual_History"><div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="Pill" data-props="{&quot;color&quot;:&quot;gray&quot;,&quot;children&quot;:[&quot;Early Modern Intellectual History&quot;]}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="Pill-react-component-45f14565-4e70-4d29-8aaa-8338343076b5"></div> <div id="Pill-react-component-45f14565-4e70-4d29-8aaa-8338343076b5"></div> </a></div></div><div class="external-links-container"><ul class="profile-links new-profile js-UserInfo-social"><li class="profile-profiles js-social-profiles-container"><i class="fa fa-spin fa-spinner"></i></li></ul></div></div></div><div class="right-panel-container"><div class="user-content-wrapper"><div class="uploads-container" id="social-redesign-work-container"><div class="upload-header"><h2 class="ds2-5-heading-sans-serif-xs">Uploads</h2></div><div class="nav-container backbone-profile-documents-nav hidden-xs"><ul class="nav-tablist" role="tablist"><li class="nav-chip active" role="presentation"><a data-section-name="" data-toggle="tab" href="#all" role="tab">all</a></li><li class="nav-chip" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-docs-nav-section u-textTruncate" data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Papers" data-toggle="tab" href="#papers" role="tab" title="Papers"><span>71</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Papers</span></a></li><li class="nav-chip" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-docs-nav-section u-textTruncate" data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Co-Authored-Papers" data-toggle="tab" href="#coauthoredpapers" role="tab" title="Co-Authored Papers"><span>8</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Co-Authored Papers</span></a></li><li class="nav-chip" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-docs-nav-section u-textTruncate" data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Book-Reviews" data-toggle="tab" href="#bookreviews" role="tab" title="Book Reviews"><span>4</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Book Reviews</span></a></li><li class="nav-chip more-tab" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-documents-more-tab link-unstyled u-textTruncate" data-toggle="dropdown" role="tab">More&nbsp;&nbsp;<i class="fa fa-chevron-down"></i></a><ul class="js-profile-documents-more-dropdown dropdown-menu dropdown-menu-right profile-documents-more-dropdown" role="menu"><li role="presentation"><a data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Works-in-Progress" data-toggle="tab" href="#worksinprogress" role="tab" style="border: none;"><span>1</span>&nbsp;Works in Progress</a></li><li role="presentation"><a data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Academic-Articles" data-toggle="tab" href="#academicarticles" role="tab" style="border: none;"><span>1</span>&nbsp;Academic Articles</a></li></ul></li></ul></div><div class="divider ds-divider-16" style="margin: 0px;"></div><div class="documents-container backbone-social-profile-documents" style="width: 100%;"><div class="u-taCenter"></div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane active" id="all"><div class="profile--tab_heading_container js-section-heading" data-section="Papers" id="Papers"><h3 class="profile--tab_heading_container">Papers by Kathryn Tabb</h3></div><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777147"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777147/Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric Causal Attributions to Environmental Influences for Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777147/Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior">Asymmetric Causal Attributions to Environmental Influences for Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Social Cognition</span><span>, Jun 1, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ beha...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person&amp;#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777147"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777147"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777147; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777147]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777147]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777147; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777147']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777147, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777147]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777147,"title":"Asymmetric Causal Attributions to Environmental Influences for Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person\u0026#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.","publisher":"Guilford Press","publication_date":{"day":1,"month":6,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Social Cognition"},"translated_abstract":"Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person\u0026#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777147/Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:24:33.538-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person\u0026#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":237,"name":"Cognitive Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Science"},{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":252,"name":"Developmental Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Developmental_Psychology"},{"id":4626,"name":"Social Cognition","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Cognition"},{"id":32199,"name":"Prosocial Behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Prosocial_Behavior"},{"id":125342,"name":"Attribution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Attribution"}],"urls":[{"id":43371313,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1521/soco.2023.41.3.303"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777146"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777146/Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Doctrines of the Association of Ideas in Early Modern Thought" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777146/Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought">Doctrines of the Association of Ideas in Early Modern Thought</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Springer eBooks</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777146"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777146"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777146; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777146]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777146]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777146; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777146']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777146, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777146]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777146,"title":"Doctrines of the Association of Ideas in Early Modern Thought","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Springer Nature","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Springer eBooks"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777146/Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:24:33.291-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":815,"name":"Epistemology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Epistemology"},{"id":913,"name":"Empiricism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Empiricism"},{"id":413536,"name":"Doctrine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Doctrine"},{"id":3647879,"name":"Springer Ebooks","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Springer_Ebooks"}],"urls":[{"id":43371312,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31069-5_187"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777145"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777145/Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Habit and the Association of Ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777145/Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment">Habit and the Association of Ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Oxford University Press eBooks</span><span>, Jul 20, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777145"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777145"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777145; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777145]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777145]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777145; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777145']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777145, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777145]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777145,"title":"Habit and the Association of Ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_date":{"day":20,"month":7,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Oxford University Press eBooks"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777145/Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:24:33.046-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":815,"name":"Epistemology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Epistemology"},{"id":6027,"name":"Enlightenment","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Enlightenment"},{"id":7675,"name":"Scottish Enlightenment","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Scottish_Enlightenment"},{"id":83952,"name":"Morality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Morality"},{"id":86151,"name":"Habit","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Habit"}],"urls":[{"id":43371311,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807940.003.0007"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109961439"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109961439/John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of John Locke&#39;s Account of Madness: Its Skeptical Origins and Outcomes" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107927196/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109961439/John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes">John Locke&#39;s Account of Madness: Its Skeptical Origins and Outcomes</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Studi Lockiani</span><span>, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of hi...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke&#39;s account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="bb1a05bbe627e0601c5efdc7671f13d6" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107927196,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109961439,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107927196/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109961439"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109961439"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109961439; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109961439]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109961439]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109961439; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109961439']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109961439, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "bb1a05bbe627e0601c5efdc7671f13d6" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109961439]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109961439,"title":"John Locke's Account of Madness: Its Skeptical Origins and Outcomes","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke's account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Studi Lockiani"},"translated_abstract":"John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke's account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109961439/John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T08:40:17.262-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107927196,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107927196/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"7_Tabb_21_11.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107927196/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107927196/7_Tabb_21_11-libre.pdf?1701106448=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DJohn_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=YflLQapvCZNvLHuzwfS5ZwLoyW9m968Zk4RsXFpmS6W3NXacoP5D1TdYmxqgWqv2VVfsJ-woM9vViCDZSXG2~gnXAuPvYjPni8zLNrIqxvntoqgdNaKR9Is1Gir3O4jn~8p6HZa6KC~NX6yR362c6ZyISpITH-pqS-XDtGJetFwlNZGs0OWP4A6JgbGRnTcWguarrdj8GEf8-dP2j0QpQ7sF0575L57PfxS5pGBjwR2DPCNSG13whvQFZ1w~MIK4Z2cD8k63Mwj06f9plvqxKpvPJhVwyXz2hxZvf1plWLcsG23bbkxscRvzVqYPhR90aH7S8z1vzCCOkVXA8UGmQA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes","translated_slug":"","page_count":22,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke's account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107927196,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107927196/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"7_Tabb_21_11.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107927196/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107927196/7_Tabb_21_11-libre.pdf?1701106448=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DJohn_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=YflLQapvCZNvLHuzwfS5ZwLoyW9m968Zk4RsXFpmS6W3NXacoP5D1TdYmxqgWqv2VVfsJ-woM9vViCDZSXG2~gnXAuPvYjPni8zLNrIqxvntoqgdNaKR9Is1Gir3O4jn~8p6HZa6KC~NX6yR362c6ZyISpITH-pqS-XDtGJetFwlNZGs0OWP4A6JgbGRnTcWguarrdj8GEf8-dP2j0QpQ7sF0575L57PfxS5pGBjwR2DPCNSG13whvQFZ1w~MIK4Z2cD8k63Mwj06f9plvqxKpvPJhVwyXz2hxZvf1plWLcsG23bbkxscRvzVqYPhR90aH7S8z1vzCCOkVXA8UGmQA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":2273,"name":"History of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Medicine"},{"id":6182,"name":"History of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":13229,"name":"History Of Madness And Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_Of_Madness_And_Psychiatry"},{"id":18130,"name":"John Locke","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/John_Locke"},{"id":23947,"name":"History and Philosophy of the Human Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_and_Philosophy_of_the_Human_Sciences"},{"id":51419,"name":"Pyrrhonism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Pyrrhonism"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109954474"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954474/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Divine intersubjectivity? On Lenz on Locke" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922642/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954474/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke">Divine intersubjectivity? On Lenz on Locke</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="edf9baae0a995eef9ca6fc36b4bcf630" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107922642,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109954474,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922642/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109954474"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109954474"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954474; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954474]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954474]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954474; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109954474']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109954474, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "edf9baae0a995eef9ca6fc36b4bcf630" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109954474]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109954474,"title":"Divine intersubjectivity? On Lenz on Locke","translated_title":"","metadata":{},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109954474/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:14:50.447-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107922642,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922642/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922642/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922642/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke-libre.pdf?1701098414=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DDivine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=hSbYGVQdxOSPXs3w0on~pfvnICNgPzeZZkn4usbMejUr5rqXjkp-1uByOnGRQq4hmvccmFyQOAyFHmyMJdsoBp54iAzRDKQ5hwbXog5RPgtGnbUrs1P9fjrH4AXKRs6XWYDp4PNj1BxbhOQEYp~mzGieJVn6oBIlRn77gB6-g4tGPaEHbl8GoGBcVxc21JrKULc~syIGv762JCTEECBTk8DcJdXNWpDl670zShPExNKc48iaRKvrX~k2gQ-4K69R4SS5GbC0CQhmxMF8gKP1g6Y-Ci1wv9X15QORAEo9jgKroBOWo5UiWZ3a0j5RDBj1RWIbs-okiPRvDs0E2DXyRg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke","translated_slug":"","page_count":10,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107922642,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922642/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922642/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922642/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke-libre.pdf?1701098414=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DDivine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=hSbYGVQdxOSPXs3w0on~pfvnICNgPzeZZkn4usbMejUr5rqXjkp-1uByOnGRQq4hmvccmFyQOAyFHmyMJdsoBp54iAzRDKQ5hwbXog5RPgtGnbUrs1P9fjrH4AXKRs6XWYDp4PNj1BxbhOQEYp~mzGieJVn6oBIlRn77gB6-g4tGPaEHbl8GoGBcVxc21JrKULc~syIGv762JCTEECBTk8DcJdXNWpDl670zShPExNKc48iaRKvrX~k2gQ-4K69R4SS5GbC0CQhmxMF8gKP1g6Y-Ci1wv9X15QORAEo9jgKroBOWo5UiWZ3a0j5RDBj1RWIbs-okiPRvDs0E2DXyRg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109954101"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954101/Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Keywords in Health Humanities: Precision" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922407/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954101/Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision">Keywords in Health Humanities: Precision</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1e80eb12d8f0658bebd215c15d7c5f43" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107922407,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109954101,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922407/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109954101"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109954101"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954101; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954101]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954101]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954101; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109954101']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109954101, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1e80eb12d8f0658bebd215c15d7c5f43" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109954101]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109954101,"title":"Keywords in Health Humanities: Precision","translated_title":"","metadata":{},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109954101/Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:10:23.916-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107922407,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922407/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922407/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922407/Health_Humanities_Precision-libre.pdf?1701114267=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DKeywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=GVz4JsvcOQHVwplnSiPYaISODA47u66pbH~1uqO7ExDbc5EBbpLJ1GN-zDZcooxsRDwmKbOt-ajyykpk2FfnYRPxbl6T1fM06BZLs75AMsYrzEjMnwYmR4zh-~8LJOkc5kajIwa8KZUotMtN62Enrr8CTrxuTywGAoYCLfmEYTqsmg2210hOLPwe2pwN5KEwmQVJPTkHW5qWiJtECxM2r66dG05ssiIIR--XlyB8kE4WjkCrOVJDaWGK7DwdKQ2XmAkCpY67NUjsw3cI~cnQb4Fu3vNdkYl27i8mQCypN16X5ugIuR92wFh8kZgKCsXZyRlFYB8QyCi-Ytte5EUhcQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107922407,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922407/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922407/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922407/Health_Humanities_Precision-libre.pdf?1701114267=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DKeywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=GVz4JsvcOQHVwplnSiPYaISODA47u66pbH~1uqO7ExDbc5EBbpLJ1GN-zDZcooxsRDwmKbOt-ajyykpk2FfnYRPxbl6T1fM06BZLs75AMsYrzEjMnwYmR4zh-~8LJOkc5kajIwa8KZUotMtN62Enrr8CTrxuTywGAoYCLfmEYTqsmg2210hOLPwe2pwN5KEwmQVJPTkHW5qWiJtECxM2r66dG05ssiIIR--XlyB8kE4WjkCrOVJDaWGK7DwdKQ2XmAkCpY67NUjsw3cI~cnQb4Fu3vNdkYl27i8mQCypN16X5ugIuR92wFh8kZgKCsXZyRlFYB8QyCi-Ytte5EUhcQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":509085,"name":"Health Humanities","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Health_Humanities"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"},{"id":2280417,"name":"Precision Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Psychiatry"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953420"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953420/Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Centrifugal and Centripetal Thinking About the Biopsychosocial Model in Psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921983/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953420/Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry">Centrifugal and Centripetal Thinking About the Biopsychosocial Model in Psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)</span><span>, 2021</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction by George L. Engel in 1977, has recently made a comeback. Derek Bolton and Grant Gillett have argued that Engel&#39;s original formulation offered a promising general framework for thinking about health and disease, but that this promise requires new empirical and philosophical tools in order to be realized. In particular, Bolton and Gillett offer an original analysis of the ontological relations between Engel&#39;s biological, social, and psychological levels of analysis. I argue that Bolton and Gillett&#39;s updated model, while providing an intriguing new metaphysical framework for medicine, cannot resolve some of the most vexing problems facing psychiatry, which have to do with how to prioritize different sorts of research. These problems are fundamentally ethical, rather than ontological. Without the right prudential motivation, in other words, the unification of psychiatry under a single conceptual framework seems doubtful, no matter how compelling the model. An updated biopsychosocial model should include explicit normative commitments about the aims of medicine that can give guidance about the sorts of causal connections to be prioritized as research and clinical targets.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="247ca03926da4819946749f8967663b8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107921983,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109953420,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921983/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953420"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953420"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953420; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953420]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953420]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953420; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953420']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953420, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "247ca03926da4819946749f8967663b8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953420]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953420,"title":"Centrifugal and Centripetal Thinking About the Biopsychosocial Model in Psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals","grobid_abstract":"The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction by George L. Engel in 1977, has recently made a comeback. Derek Bolton and Grant Gillett have argued that Engel's original formulation offered a promising general framework for thinking about health and disease, but that this promise requires new empirical and philosophical tools in order to be realized. In particular, Bolton and Gillett offer an original analysis of the ontological relations between Engel's biological, social, and psychological levels of analysis. I argue that Bolton and Gillett's updated model, while providing an intriguing new metaphysical framework for medicine, cannot resolve some of the most vexing problems facing psychiatry, which have to do with how to prioritize different sorts of research. These problems are fundamentally ethical, rather than ontological. Without the right prudential motivation, in other words, the unification of psychiatry under a single conceptual framework seems doubtful, no matter how compelling the model. An updated biopsychosocial model should include explicit normative commitments about the aims of medicine that can give guidance about the sorts of causal connections to be prioritized as research and clinical targets.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2021,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":107921983},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953420/Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:36.788-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107921983,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921983/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"384681.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921983/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107921983/384681-libre.pdf?1701114329=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCentrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=aflJWdVnuZ0WSZM0kk7CLHpWeDe4x7bC2WbrPM01Qo0Y6iRdkePVGGAISFxHpa4Hu45OD785jWw8ZRUr~MvdzwyrlP2xsl8jt7oVMgG09HrZWKCHGI54WYv1Xe1ZwwEyvgownuSkEbGrg9clo-b0-FetnovogxtH8GoGFwhKLr10tw8ZBzuQXK1K31HdCPe1HZYJa~ummOhDl0apsuocOsgFaMM6DligjMcGTesH~feIOPxxY1Utq9emvtCXDikk8YATBPsc-50ObnCu9jH5Mt7j4-57kGO8j23gc4r4uVtu6Vkrak-0D1zFIgGnmKegmEHro7c-HYbH6Y7XNVrYqg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":24,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction by George L. Engel in 1977, has recently made a comeback. Derek Bolton and Grant Gillett have argued that Engel's original formulation offered a promising general framework for thinking about health and disease, but that this promise requires new empirical and philosophical tools in order to be realized. In particular, Bolton and Gillett offer an original analysis of the ontological relations between Engel's biological, social, and psychological levels of analysis. I argue that Bolton and Gillett's updated model, while providing an intriguing new metaphysical framework for medicine, cannot resolve some of the most vexing problems facing psychiatry, which have to do with how to prioritize different sorts of research. These problems are fundamentally ethical, rather than ontological. Without the right prudential motivation, in other words, the unification of psychiatry under a single conceptual framework seems doubtful, no matter how compelling the model. An updated biopsychosocial model should include explicit normative commitments about the aims of medicine that can give guidance about the sorts of causal connections to be prioritized as research and clinical targets.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107921983,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921983/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"384681.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921983/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107921983/384681-libre.pdf?1701114329=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCentrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=aflJWdVnuZ0WSZM0kk7CLHpWeDe4x7bC2WbrPM01Qo0Y6iRdkePVGGAISFxHpa4Hu45OD785jWw8ZRUr~MvdzwyrlP2xsl8jt7oVMgG09HrZWKCHGI54WYv1Xe1ZwwEyvgownuSkEbGrg9clo-b0-FetnovogxtH8GoGFwhKLr10tw8ZBzuQXK1K31HdCPe1HZYJa~ummOhDl0apsuocOsgFaMM6DligjMcGTesH~feIOPxxY1Utq9emvtCXDikk8YATBPsc-50ObnCu9jH5Mt7j4-57kGO8j23gc4r4uVtu6Vkrak-0D1zFIgGnmKegmEHro7c-HYbH6Y7XNVrYqg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"},{"id":107921982,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921982/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"384681.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921982/download_file","bulk_download_file_name":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107921982/384681-libre.pdf?1701114326=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCentrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=g4u2q6Ko~njkYq36y4c9cb6Hwux4MqXPQyAqRdcj591vdwRPGwBR0lmIHGjCn9~K7icDhTI1FZdGshLZ25WCLH-Q3oEDvNf1V6eG~bl2maiejTPRvk3rEgDRHOzseT3SpLrL3x8hfd~kksJTVts7ivnjLRl0M3SS1SnGysVSIOAmxLR0JXx~Z0t9GFSlqDj3NQbeQl6Mk4SS6Pe0w6PULn-uxuH5ilj~zJaExcC3tGt9bTHUVcv6OWE6C2RHknoRLizWaIMrq8Ert6cTPEs351RhA-xbR687nAoxxwYdN2GY1pEK9YVuJoQrQ5rEVTQ4UeW93tyyP~~rcwUPfhc5rw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":815,"name":"Epistemology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Epistemology"},{"id":138943,"name":"Normative","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Normative"},{"id":200829,"name":"Unification","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Unification"},{"id":619644,"name":"Biopsychosocial model","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biopsychosocial_model"},{"id":4134252,"name":"centripetal force","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/centripetal_force"}],"urls":[{"id":35972434,"url":"https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/384681"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953419"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953419/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric genetic attributions for one’s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953419/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior">Asymmetric genetic attributions for one’s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of Social Psychology</span><span>, Mar 31, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;#39;s...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one&amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people&amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953419"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953419"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953419; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953419]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953419]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953419; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953419']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953419, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953419]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953419,"title":"Asymmetric genetic attributions for one’s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","publisher":"Taylor \u0026 Francis","publication_date":{"day":31,"month":3,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Journal of Social Psychology"},"translated_abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953419/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:36.393-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":252,"name":"Developmental Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Developmental_Psychology"},{"id":866,"name":"Experimental philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Experimental_philosophy"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":10174,"name":"Mediation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mediation"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":32199,"name":"Prosocial Behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Prosocial_Behavior"},{"id":40475,"name":"Helping Behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Helping_Behavior"},{"id":125342,"name":"Attribution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Attribution"},{"id":129917,"name":"Human Behavioral Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Human_Behavioral_Genetics"}],"urls":[{"id":35972433,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1080/00224545.2022.2058906"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953416"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953416/Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Individualized interventions for rare genetic conditions and the research-treatment spectrum: Stakeholder perspectives" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953416/Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives">Individualized interventions for rare genetic conditions and the research-treatment spectrum: Stakeholder perspectives</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Genetics in Medicine</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953416"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953416"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953416; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953416]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953416]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953416; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953416']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953416, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953416]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953416,"title":"Individualized interventions for rare genetic conditions and the research-treatment spectrum: Stakeholder perspectives","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Elsevier BV","publication_name":"Genetics in Medicine"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953416/Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:35.678-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":156,"name":"Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genetics"},{"id":12135,"name":"Qualitative Research","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Qualitative_Research"},{"id":116278,"name":"Psychological Intervention","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychological_Intervention"},{"id":158214,"name":"Generalizability Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Generalizability_Theory"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":449559,"name":"Stakeholder","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Stakeholder"}],"urls":[{"id":35972430,"url":"https://api.elsevier.com/content/article/PII:S1098360023008456?httpAccept=text/xml"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953411"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953411/Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetrical genetic attributions for the presence and absence of health problems" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953411/Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems">Asymmetrical genetic attributions for the presence and absence of health problems</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Psychology &amp;amp; Health</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953411"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953411"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953411; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953411]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953411]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953411; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953411']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953411, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953411]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953411,"title":"Asymmetrical genetic attributions for the presence and absence of health problems","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Informa UK Limited","publication_name":"Psychology \u0026amp; Health"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953411/Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.847-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":260,"name":"Health Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Health_Psychology"},{"id":125342,"name":"Attribution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Attribution"},{"id":508371,"name":"Curriculum and Pedagogy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Curriculum_and_Pedagogy"},{"id":4178099,"name":"Vignette","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Vignette-1"}],"urls":[{"id":35972428,"url":"https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/08870446.2022.2119236"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953408"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953408/Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Ethics of Care and Space: Thursday, June 18th Z-Panel | 3:00PM EDT" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953408/Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT">Ethics of Care and Space: Thursday, June 18th Z-Panel | 3:00PM EDT</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE i...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email <a href="mailto:disability@columbia.edu" rel="nofollow">disability@columbia.edu</a> to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953408"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953408"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953408; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953408]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953408]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953408; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953408']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953408, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953408]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953408,"title":"Ethics of Care and Space: Thursday, June 18th Z-Panel | 3:00PM EDT","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953408/Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.577-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":184,"name":"Sociology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sociology"},{"id":93996,"name":"Notice","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Notice"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953406"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953406/Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Care for the Polis: Ethics of Care and Space (6.18.20)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953406/Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_">Care for the Polis: Ethics of Care and Space (6.18.20)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space d...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953406"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953406"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953406; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953406]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953406]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953406; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953406']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953406, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953406]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953406,"title":"Care for the Polis: Ethics of Care and Space (6.18.20)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953406/Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.340-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":184,"name":"Sociology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sociology"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":1372,"name":"Architecture","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Architecture"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":47307,"name":"City planning","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/City_planning"},{"id":135107,"name":"Social distance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_distance"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953405"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953405/Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Should Psychiatry Be Precise? Reduction, Big Data, and Nosological Revision in Mental Health Research" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922055/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953405/Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research">Should Psychiatry Be Precise? Reduction, Big Data, and Nosological Revision in Mental Health Research</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Levels of Analysis in Psychopathology</span><span>, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">, the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million peopl...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">, the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million people in order to &quot;accelerate our understanding of individual variability and its effect on disease onset, progression, prevention, and treatment.&quot; 1 Along with a burst of public funding for cancer genomics, the Initiative was part of a national embrace of precision medicine, which the National Research Council defines as &quot;the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient&quot; (2011); the National Cancer Institute describes it as &quot;an approach to patient care that allows doctors to select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.&quot; 2 One immediate effect of the growing interest in precision medicine has been a reallocation of resources toward genetics and other basic sciences that promise to generate the sort of discoveries that will transform clinical diagnostics in these ways. The author thanks Maël Lemoine, Scott Lilienfeld, Jan-Willem Romeijn, Jim Tabery, and Hanna M. Van Loo for discussions about these themes and feedback on this chapter.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="f5407f2738deac1e7ae04cb048d98913" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107922055,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109953405,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922055/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953405"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953405"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953405; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953405]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953405]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953405; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953405']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953405, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "f5407f2738deac1e7ae04cb048d98913" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953405]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953405,"title":"Should Psychiatry Be Precise? Reduction, Big Data, and Nosological Revision in Mental Health Research","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","grobid_abstract":", the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million people in order to \"accelerate our understanding of individual variability and its effect on disease onset, progression, prevention, and treatment.\" 1 Along with a burst of public funding for cancer genomics, the Initiative was part of a national embrace of precision medicine, which the National Research Council defines as \"the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient\" (2011); the National Cancer Institute describes it as \"an approach to patient care that allows doctors to select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.\" 2 One immediate effect of the growing interest in precision medicine has been a reallocation of resources toward genetics and other basic sciences that promise to generate the sort of discoveries that will transform clinical diagnostics in these ways. The author thanks Maël Lemoine, Scott Lilienfeld, Jan-Willem Romeijn, Jim Tabery, and Hanna M. Van Loo for discussions about these themes and feedback on this chapter.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Levels of Analysis in Psychopathology","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":107922055},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953405/Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.097-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107922055,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922055/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922055/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922055/Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise-libre.pdf?1701114526=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShould_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=EKDPiquj-~~z0cm-JbOzc73TNFfjrZluEupvjEwOFHSO1HF-h8srk6RzanH~~N~yWzAIuXVLPRdEembVw5AIYa3V6XMbtSwKMvbxjNHUmWwkQ862JvQ7x7kiqI54JnW73EnsRJ3labpGg86aS3A4OQJcwFtrhHM-Os6ZBdbcyGChMQOQigvnD6H9vGpfrFf-ayiAxsm1CUmnO6kAyc4DhtW8e9TnAGL1wHe7QYGw6dxnMVxYYsdjdq9DbI1dfS7A-3Y~AzBdMjmOXYQuJar7986Ti03yYUkpciiy4hZs81v2Api~iK0I0XHLLavyDXh6d2rm375NVVLXg5nSNMNqXg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research","translated_slug":"","page_count":27,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":", the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million people in order to \"accelerate our understanding of individual variability and its effect on disease onset, progression, prevention, and treatment.\" 1 Along with a burst of public funding for cancer genomics, the Initiative was part of a national embrace of precision medicine, which the National Research Council defines as \"the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient\" (2011); the National Cancer Institute describes it as \"an approach to patient care that allows doctors to select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.\" 2 One immediate effect of the growing interest in precision medicine has been a reallocation of resources toward genetics and other basic sciences that promise to generate the sort of discoveries that will transform clinical diagnostics in these ways. The author thanks Maël Lemoine, Scott Lilienfeld, Jan-Willem Romeijn, Jim Tabery, and Hanna M. Van Loo for discussions about these themes and feedback on this chapter.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107922055,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922055/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922055/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922055/Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise-libre.pdf?1701114526=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShould_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=EKDPiquj-~~z0cm-JbOzc73TNFfjrZluEupvjEwOFHSO1HF-h8srk6RzanH~~N~yWzAIuXVLPRdEembVw5AIYa3V6XMbtSwKMvbxjNHUmWwkQ862JvQ7x7kiqI54JnW73EnsRJ3labpGg86aS3A4OQJcwFtrhHM-Os6ZBdbcyGChMQOQigvnD6H9vGpfrFf-ayiAxsm1CUmnO6kAyc4DhtW8e9TnAGL1wHe7QYGw6dxnMVxYYsdjdq9DbI1dfS7A-3Y~AzBdMjmOXYQuJar7986Ti03yYUkpciiy4hZs81v2Api~iK0I0XHLLavyDXh6d2rm375NVVLXg5nSNMNqXg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":2827,"name":"Mental Health","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mental_Health"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801889"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801889/Psychiatry_and_biomarkers"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Psychiatry and biomarkers" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054993/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801889/Psychiatry_and_biomarkers">Psychiatry and biomarkers</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Metascience</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="69275c37c64984d46eccc02433089ae4" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:100054993,&quot;asset_id&quot;:98801889,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054993/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801889"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801889"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801889; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801889]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801889]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801889; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801889']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801889, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "69275c37c64984d46eccc02433089ae4" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801889]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801889,"title":"Psychiatry and biomarkers","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Springer Science and Business Media LLC","ai_abstract":"This paper discusses Jonathan Y. Tsou's philosophy of psychiatry, particularly his argument that psychiatric diagnoses should be understood as biological kinds with harmful consequences rather than simply classifications of mental dysfunction. It critiques Tsou's stipulative definition of psychiatric kinds, noting that it may be overly restrictive or too broad and highlights the role of social mechanisms in shaping the expression of mental disorders. Ultimately, it posits that psychiatry, despite striving for a hard science status, may be more akin to a social science due to the complexities and limitations of its classifications.","publication_name":"Metascience"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801889/Psychiatry_and_biomarkers","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:31.019-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":100054993,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054993/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tsou_review.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054993/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Psychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054993/Tsou_review-libre.pdf?1679265194=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPsychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=F41x~~Xyf8Ht21x1huNw-89TMaSIDsx9w2bUlYtCE~wVKDYiggnrRnRNwP2Q7keX0iQui6FvBKGTH8GBsvXc6Uz1WPSZfh-DJVL1pD3ZzFzATKyqZ7k7oY8iQpx69mSe9gXlbqyq5E5IdFRnpWnKMd~AQl1pmB~PhOxqsokGHKhNe~4cWd--rm1P8zDDLUBj-~HDfzI0uwQEzVYnXga-RyEHrUvsU8CXQqW2IK0C2WsJNPxDYB18EPLeUnerbPJOkiD8ynCofmzS3ADAQN~BC8kAhWiOo149G-6lvizJiG9UZHRZPNak3hxcEFKKIls7znTtoGBAbsz26-MA8wrDRw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Psychiatry_and_biomarkers","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":100054993,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054993/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tsou_review.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054993/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Psychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054993/Tsou_review-libre.pdf?1679265194=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPsychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=F41x~~Xyf8Ht21x1huNw-89TMaSIDsx9w2bUlYtCE~wVKDYiggnrRnRNwP2Q7keX0iQui6FvBKGTH8GBsvXc6Uz1WPSZfh-DJVL1pD3ZzFzATKyqZ7k7oY8iQpx69mSe9gXlbqyq5E5IdFRnpWnKMd~AQl1pmB~PhOxqsokGHKhNe~4cWd--rm1P8zDDLUBj-~HDfzI0uwQEzVYnXga-RyEHrUvsU8CXQqW2IK0C2WsJNPxDYB18EPLeUnerbPJOkiD8ynCofmzS3ADAQN~BC8kAhWiOo149G-6lvizJiG9UZHRZPNak3hxcEFKKIls7znTtoGBAbsz26-MA8wrDRw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":821,"name":"Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Science"},{"id":823,"name":"Philosophy of Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Biology"},{"id":855,"name":"Philosophy of Technology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Technology"},{"id":1777631,"name":"Metascience","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Metascience"}],"urls":[{"id":29924519,"url":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11016-022-00804-x.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801888"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801888/Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Hempel as a critic of Bridgman’s operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801888/Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science">Hempel as a critic of Bridgman’s operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Oxford Medicine Online</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the str...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801888"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801888"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801888; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801888]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801888]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801888; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801888']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801888, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801888]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801888,"title":"Hempel as a critic of Bridgman’s operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.","publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_name":"Oxford Medicine Online"},"translated_abstract":"Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801888/Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.895-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":25616,"name":"Phenomenology of the Body (Philosophy)","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phenomenology_of_the_Body_Philosophy_"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801887"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801887/Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801887/Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry">Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Oxford Medicine Online</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801887"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801887"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801887; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801887]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801887]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801887; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801887']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801887, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801887]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801887,"title":"Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.","publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_name":"Oxford Medicine Online"},"translated_abstract":"Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801887/Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.774-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":13801,"name":"Social Constructionism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Constructionism"},{"id":466993,"name":"Confusion","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Confusion"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801886"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801886/The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Emergence of Psychiatry: 1650–1850" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801886/The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850">The Emergence of Psychiatry: 1650–1850</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>American Journal of Psychiatry</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry&amp;#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801886"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801886"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801886; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801886]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801886]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801886; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801886']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801886, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801886]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801886,"title":"The Emergence of Psychiatry: 1650–1850","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry\u0026#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.","publisher":"American Psychiatric Association Publishing","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"American Journal of Psychiatry"},"translated_abstract":"Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry\u0026#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801886/The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.649-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry\u0026#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":6182,"name":"History of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":13229,"name":"History Of Madness And Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_Of_Madness_And_Psychiatry"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":65965,"name":"Insanity","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Insanity"},{"id":1218491,"name":"American J of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/American_J_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":2587767,"name":"Specialty","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Specialty"},{"id":2922956,"name":"Psychology and Cognitive Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology_and_Cognitive_Sciences"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801885"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801885/Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric Genetic Attributions for One&#39;s Own Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801885/Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior">Asymmetric Genetic Attributions for One&#39;s Own Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;amp;#...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one&amp;amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people&amp;amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801885"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801885"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801885; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801885]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801885]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801885; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801885']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801885, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801885]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801885,"title":"Asymmetric Genetic Attributions for One's Own Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","publisher":"Open Science Framework","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2021,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801885/Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.521-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":866,"name":"Experimental philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Experimental_philosophy"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":129917,"name":"Human Behavioral Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Human_Behavioral_Genetics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801884"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801884/The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The prospects of precision psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801884/The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry">The prospects of precision psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced t...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term &amp;quot;biomarker&amp;quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology &amp;quot;biomarker&amp;quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801884"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801884"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801884; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801884]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801884]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801884; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801884']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801884, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801884]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801884,"title":"The prospects of precision psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.","publisher":"Springer Science and Business Media LLC","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics"},"translated_abstract":"Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801884/The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.342-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":906,"name":"Applied Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Applied_Ethics"},{"id":4440,"name":"Philosophy of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Medicine"},{"id":6970,"name":"Biomarkers","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biomarkers"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":13897,"name":"Personalized Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Personalized_Medicine"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":58009,"name":"Psychiatric nosology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatric_nosology"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"},{"id":3011229,"name":"Philosophy of cancer","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_cancer"}],"urls":[{"id":29924518,"url":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11017-022-09558-3.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801883"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801883/Addiction_and_Agency"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Addiction and Agency" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054972/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801883/Addiction_and_Agency">Addiction and Agency</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Agency in Mental Disorder</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree acti...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="e3a344d4154996477fab476004e05563" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:100054972,&quot;asset_id&quot;:98801883,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054972/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801883"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801883"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801883; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801883]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801883]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801883; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801883']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801883, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "e3a344d4154996477fab476004e05563" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801883]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801883,"title":"Addiction and Agency","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.","publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Agency in Mental Disorder"},"translated_abstract":"Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801883/Addiction_and_Agency","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.214-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":100054972,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054972/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"390061414.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054972/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054972/390061414-libre.pdf?1679265213=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAddiction_and_Agency.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=Wh6S4NcTVPLx2lyxFH1xggzrhZUxt1gy2jp7sb0WAdkdaX9D9IeYP6s8u~LYLdXTSl6kvaMLOT5dwjcaHrZ1YKMWiO5rM4NVwu1iwxFN6wZ4E1l5L41Fi~48LnEvEjgsxDfdHu3e9oVkH38O4on1g7ndvd-ez4wdNvBpqQZkPDI5m2PSJsBMO6ADrVb7PV2041MT5fE120I3ahwlRGZ1RXrNAfJHHiUzKEqRr2GFXE9si5sRcnHbRlai1jNr7F7UFJibIRR-zhN68aw30VV55u8es22muze8fGpYQm1WKlXHneib~TNBBeN-ijjsRtdiJJrlkk1~YjTAkPINk0Xscg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Addiction_and_Agency","translated_slug":"","page_count":20,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":100054972,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054972/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"390061414.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054972/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054972/390061414-libre.pdf?1679265213=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAddiction_and_Agency.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=Wh6S4NcTVPLx2lyxFH1xggzrhZUxt1gy2jp7sb0WAdkdaX9D9IeYP6s8u~LYLdXTSl6kvaMLOT5dwjcaHrZ1YKMWiO5rM4NVwu1iwxFN6wZ4E1l5L41Fi~48LnEvEjgsxDfdHu3e9oVkH38O4on1g7ndvd-ez4wdNvBpqQZkPDI5m2PSJsBMO6ADrVb7PV2041MT5fE120I3ahwlRGZ1RXrNAfJHHiUzKEqRr2GFXE9si5sRcnHbRlai1jNr7F7UFJibIRR-zhN68aw30VV55u8es22muze8fGpYQm1WKlXHneib~TNBBeN-ijjsRtdiJJrlkk1~YjTAkPINk0Xscg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":817,"name":"Philosophy of Agency","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Agency"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":2483,"name":"Addiction","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Addiction"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":29711,"name":"Skepticism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Skepticism"},{"id":29777,"name":"Free Will and Moral Responsibility","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Free_Will_and_Moral_Responsibility"},{"id":186000,"name":"Blame","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Blame"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="1487603" id="papers"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777147"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777147/Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric Causal Attributions to Environmental Influences for Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777147/Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior">Asymmetric Causal Attributions to Environmental Influences for Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Social Cognition</span><span>, Jun 1, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ beha...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person&amp;#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777147"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777147"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777147; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777147]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777147]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777147; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777147']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777147, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777147]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777147,"title":"Asymmetric Causal Attributions to Environmental Influences for Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person\u0026#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.","publisher":"Guilford Press","publication_date":{"day":1,"month":6,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Social Cognition"},"translated_abstract":"Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person\u0026#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777147/Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:24:33.538-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetric_Causal_Attributions_to_Environmental_Influences_for_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Several recent studies have explored how people may favor different explanations for others’ behavior depending on the moral or evaluative valence of the behavior in question. This research tested whether people would be less willing to believe that a person\u0026#39;s environment played a role in causing them to exhibit antisocial (as compared to prosocial) behavior. In three experiments, participants read a description of a person engaging in either antisocial or prosocial behavior. Participants were less willing to endorse environmental causes of antisocial (vs. prosocial) behavior when the environmental influence in question was witnessing others behaving similarly, either during childhood (Experiment 1) or recently (Experiment 2), or being directly encouraged by others to engage in the behavior described (Experiment 3). These results could be relevant to understanding why people resist attributing wrongdoing to causes outside of individual control in some cases.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":237,"name":"Cognitive Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Science"},{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":252,"name":"Developmental Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Developmental_Psychology"},{"id":4626,"name":"Social Cognition","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Cognition"},{"id":32199,"name":"Prosocial Behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Prosocial_Behavior"},{"id":125342,"name":"Attribution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Attribution"}],"urls":[{"id":43371313,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1521/soco.2023.41.3.303"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777146"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777146/Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Doctrines of the Association of Ideas in Early Modern Thought" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777146/Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought">Doctrines of the Association of Ideas in Early Modern Thought</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Springer eBooks</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777146"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777146"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777146; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777146]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777146]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777146; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777146']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777146, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777146]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777146,"title":"Doctrines of the Association of Ideas in Early Modern Thought","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Springer Nature","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Springer eBooks"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777146/Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:24:33.291-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Doctrines_of_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_Early_Modern_Thought","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":815,"name":"Epistemology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Epistemology"},{"id":913,"name":"Empiricism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Empiricism"},{"id":413536,"name":"Doctrine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Doctrine"},{"id":3647879,"name":"Springer Ebooks","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Springer_Ebooks"}],"urls":[{"id":43371312,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31069-5_187"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777145"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777145/Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Habit and the Association of Ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777145/Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment">Habit and the Association of Ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Oxford University Press eBooks</span><span>, Jul 20, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777145"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777145"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777145; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777145]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777145]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777145; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777145']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777145, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777145]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777145,"title":"Habit and the Association of Ideas in the Scottish Enlightenment","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_date":{"day":20,"month":7,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Oxford University Press eBooks"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777145/Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:24:33.046-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Habit_and_the_Association_of_Ideas_in_the_Scottish_Enlightenment","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":815,"name":"Epistemology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Epistemology"},{"id":6027,"name":"Enlightenment","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Enlightenment"},{"id":7675,"name":"Scottish Enlightenment","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Scottish_Enlightenment"},{"id":83952,"name":"Morality","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Morality"},{"id":86151,"name":"Habit","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Habit"}],"urls":[{"id":43371311,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807940.003.0007"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109961439"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109961439/John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of John Locke&#39;s Account of Madness: Its Skeptical Origins and Outcomes" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107927196/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109961439/John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes">John Locke&#39;s Account of Madness: Its Skeptical Origins and Outcomes</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Studi Lockiani</span><span>, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of hi...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke&#39;s account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="bb1a05bbe627e0601c5efdc7671f13d6" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107927196,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109961439,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107927196/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109961439"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109961439"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109961439; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109961439]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109961439]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109961439; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109961439']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109961439, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "bb1a05bbe627e0601c5efdc7671f13d6" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109961439]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109961439,"title":"John Locke's Account of Madness: Its Skeptical Origins and Outcomes","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke's account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Studi Lockiani"},"translated_abstract":"John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke's account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109961439/John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T08:40:17.262-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107927196,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107927196/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"7_Tabb_21_11.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107927196/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107927196/7_Tabb_21_11-libre.pdf?1701106448=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DJohn_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=YflLQapvCZNvLHuzwfS5ZwLoyW9m968Zk4RsXFpmS6W3NXacoP5D1TdYmxqgWqv2VVfsJ-woM9vViCDZSXG2~gnXAuPvYjPni8zLNrIqxvntoqgdNaKR9Is1Gir3O4jn~8p6HZa6KC~NX6yR362c6ZyISpITH-pqS-XDtGJetFwlNZGs0OWP4A6JgbGRnTcWguarrdj8GEf8-dP2j0QpQ7sF0575L57PfxS5pGBjwR2DPCNSG13whvQFZ1w~MIK4Z2cD8k63Mwj06f9plvqxKpvPJhVwyXz2hxZvf1plWLcsG23bbkxscRvzVqYPhR90aH7S8z1vzCCOkVXA8UGmQA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skeptical_Origins_and_Outcomes","translated_slug":"","page_count":22,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"John Locke offers an unusual account of madness which, unlike the dominant medical theories of his time, explains it as a pathology of ideas rather than of mental faculties or of physiology. In madness, according to Locke, ideas become associated through a variety of mechanisms that occur outside the ambit of the understanding. Locke contrasts associated ideas with healthy ones, which are connected through the activity of mental operations like discernment, composition, and abstraction. After presenting Locke's account of madness as the association of ideas, this paper shows how its justification drew on his commitments to the tenets of ancient medical skepticism, which discouraged speculation and theorization in favor of observation and experience. It then discusses how Locke mobilized this account to further his philosophical projects-namely his case against nativism-using traditional Pyrrhonian strategies. Locke argued that associated ideas, when used to construct maxims, can lead to false beliefs that seem to have all the certainty and indubitability of inspiration. He used madness to explain the irreconcilable religious and political rifts that engulfed him, and to argue that skepticism about our beliefs, and about the origins of our ideas, is the best prophylactic against dogmatism and zealotry.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107927196,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107927196/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"7_Tabb_21_11.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107927196/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"John_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107927196/7_Tabb_21_11-libre.pdf?1701106448=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DJohn_Lockes_Account_of_Madness_Its_Skept.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=YflLQapvCZNvLHuzwfS5ZwLoyW9m968Zk4RsXFpmS6W3NXacoP5D1TdYmxqgWqv2VVfsJ-woM9vViCDZSXG2~gnXAuPvYjPni8zLNrIqxvntoqgdNaKR9Is1Gir3O4jn~8p6HZa6KC~NX6yR362c6ZyISpITH-pqS-XDtGJetFwlNZGs0OWP4A6JgbGRnTcWguarrdj8GEf8-dP2j0QpQ7sF0575L57PfxS5pGBjwR2DPCNSG13whvQFZ1w~MIK4Z2cD8k63Mwj06f9plvqxKpvPJhVwyXz2hxZvf1plWLcsG23bbkxscRvzVqYPhR90aH7S8z1vzCCOkVXA8UGmQA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":2273,"name":"History of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Medicine"},{"id":6182,"name":"History of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":13229,"name":"History Of Madness And Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_Of_Madness_And_Psychiatry"},{"id":18130,"name":"John Locke","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/John_Locke"},{"id":23947,"name":"History and Philosophy of the Human Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_and_Philosophy_of_the_Human_Sciences"},{"id":51419,"name":"Pyrrhonism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Pyrrhonism"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109954474"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954474/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Divine intersubjectivity? On Lenz on Locke" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922642/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954474/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke">Divine intersubjectivity? On Lenz on Locke</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="edf9baae0a995eef9ca6fc36b4bcf630" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107922642,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109954474,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922642/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109954474"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109954474"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954474; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954474]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954474]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954474; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109954474']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109954474, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "edf9baae0a995eef9ca6fc36b4bcf630" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109954474]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109954474,"title":"Divine intersubjectivity? On Lenz on Locke","translated_title":"","metadata":{},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109954474/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:14:50.447-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107922642,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922642/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922642/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922642/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke-libre.pdf?1701098414=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DDivine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=hSbYGVQdxOSPXs3w0on~pfvnICNgPzeZZkn4usbMejUr5rqXjkp-1uByOnGRQq4hmvccmFyQOAyFHmyMJdsoBp54iAzRDKQ5hwbXog5RPgtGnbUrs1P9fjrH4AXKRs6XWYDp4PNj1BxbhOQEYp~mzGieJVn6oBIlRn77gB6-g4tGPaEHbl8GoGBcVxc21JrKULc~syIGv762JCTEECBTk8DcJdXNWpDl670zShPExNKc48iaRKvrX~k2gQ-4K69R4SS5GbC0CQhmxMF8gKP1g6Y-Ci1wv9X15QORAEo9jgKroBOWo5UiWZ3a0j5RDBj1RWIbs-okiPRvDs0E2DXyRg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke","translated_slug":"","page_count":10,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107922642,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922642/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922642/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922642/Divine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Locke-libre.pdf?1701098414=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DDivine_intersubjectivity_On_Lenz_on_Lock.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=hSbYGVQdxOSPXs3w0on~pfvnICNgPzeZZkn4usbMejUr5rqXjkp-1uByOnGRQq4hmvccmFyQOAyFHmyMJdsoBp54iAzRDKQ5hwbXog5RPgtGnbUrs1P9fjrH4AXKRs6XWYDp4PNj1BxbhOQEYp~mzGieJVn6oBIlRn77gB6-g4tGPaEHbl8GoGBcVxc21JrKULc~syIGv762JCTEECBTk8DcJdXNWpDl670zShPExNKc48iaRKvrX~k2gQ-4K69R4SS5GbC0CQhmxMF8gKP1g6Y-Ci1wv9X15QORAEo9jgKroBOWo5UiWZ3a0j5RDBj1RWIbs-okiPRvDs0E2DXyRg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109954101"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954101/Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Keywords in Health Humanities: Precision" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922407/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109954101/Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision">Keywords in Health Humanities: Precision</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1e80eb12d8f0658bebd215c15d7c5f43" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107922407,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109954101,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922407/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109954101"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109954101"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954101; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954101]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109954101]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109954101; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109954101']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109954101, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1e80eb12d8f0658bebd215c15d7c5f43" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109954101]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109954101,"title":"Keywords in Health Humanities: Precision","translated_title":"","metadata":{},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109954101/Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:10:23.916-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107922407,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922407/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922407/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922407/Health_Humanities_Precision-libre.pdf?1701114267=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DKeywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=GVz4JsvcOQHVwplnSiPYaISODA47u66pbH~1uqO7ExDbc5EBbpLJ1GN-zDZcooxsRDwmKbOt-ajyykpk2FfnYRPxbl6T1fM06BZLs75AMsYrzEjMnwYmR4zh-~8LJOkc5kajIwa8KZUotMtN62Enrr8CTrxuTywGAoYCLfmEYTqsmg2210hOLPwe2pwN5KEwmQVJPTkHW5qWiJtECxM2r66dG05ssiIIR--XlyB8kE4WjkCrOVJDaWGK7DwdKQ2XmAkCpY67NUjsw3cI~cnQb4Fu3vNdkYl27i8mQCypN16X5ugIuR92wFh8kZgKCsXZyRlFYB8QyCi-Ytte5EUhcQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107922407,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922407/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922407/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Keywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922407/Health_Humanities_Precision-libre.pdf?1701114267=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DKeywords_in_Health_Humanities_Precision.pdf\u0026Expires=1735248803\u0026Signature=GVz4JsvcOQHVwplnSiPYaISODA47u66pbH~1uqO7ExDbc5EBbpLJ1GN-zDZcooxsRDwmKbOt-ajyykpk2FfnYRPxbl6T1fM06BZLs75AMsYrzEjMnwYmR4zh-~8LJOkc5kajIwa8KZUotMtN62Enrr8CTrxuTywGAoYCLfmEYTqsmg2210hOLPwe2pwN5KEwmQVJPTkHW5qWiJtECxM2r66dG05ssiIIR--XlyB8kE4WjkCrOVJDaWGK7DwdKQ2XmAkCpY67NUjsw3cI~cnQb4Fu3vNdkYl27i8mQCypN16X5ugIuR92wFh8kZgKCsXZyRlFYB8QyCi-Ytte5EUhcQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":509085,"name":"Health Humanities","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Health_Humanities"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"},{"id":2280417,"name":"Precision Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Psychiatry"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953420"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953420/Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Centrifugal and Centripetal Thinking About the Biopsychosocial Model in Psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921983/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953420/Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry">Centrifugal and Centripetal Thinking About the Biopsychosocial Model in Psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)</span><span>, 2021</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction by George L. Engel in 1977, has recently made a comeback. Derek Bolton and Grant Gillett have argued that Engel&#39;s original formulation offered a promising general framework for thinking about health and disease, but that this promise requires new empirical and philosophical tools in order to be realized. In particular, Bolton and Gillett offer an original analysis of the ontological relations between Engel&#39;s biological, social, and psychological levels of analysis. I argue that Bolton and Gillett&#39;s updated model, while providing an intriguing new metaphysical framework for medicine, cannot resolve some of the most vexing problems facing psychiatry, which have to do with how to prioritize different sorts of research. These problems are fundamentally ethical, rather than ontological. Without the right prudential motivation, in other words, the unification of psychiatry under a single conceptual framework seems doubtful, no matter how compelling the model. An updated biopsychosocial model should include explicit normative commitments about the aims of medicine that can give guidance about the sorts of causal connections to be prioritized as research and clinical targets.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="247ca03926da4819946749f8967663b8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107921983,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109953420,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921983/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953420"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953420"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953420; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953420]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953420]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953420; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953420']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953420, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "247ca03926da4819946749f8967663b8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953420]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953420,"title":"Centrifugal and Centripetal Thinking About the Biopsychosocial Model in Psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals","grobid_abstract":"The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction by George L. Engel in 1977, has recently made a comeback. Derek Bolton and Grant Gillett have argued that Engel's original formulation offered a promising general framework for thinking about health and disease, but that this promise requires new empirical and philosophical tools in order to be realized. In particular, Bolton and Gillett offer an original analysis of the ontological relations between Engel's biological, social, and psychological levels of analysis. I argue that Bolton and Gillett's updated model, while providing an intriguing new metaphysical framework for medicine, cannot resolve some of the most vexing problems facing psychiatry, which have to do with how to prioritize different sorts of research. These problems are fundamentally ethical, rather than ontological. Without the right prudential motivation, in other words, the unification of psychiatry under a single conceptual framework seems doubtful, no matter how compelling the model. An updated biopsychosocial model should include explicit normative commitments about the aims of medicine that can give guidance about the sorts of causal connections to be prioritized as research and clinical targets.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2021,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":107921983},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953420/Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:36.788-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107921983,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921983/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"384681.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921983/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107921983/384681-libre.pdf?1701114329=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCentrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=aflJWdVnuZ0WSZM0kk7CLHpWeDe4x7bC2WbrPM01Qo0Y6iRdkePVGGAISFxHpa4Hu45OD785jWw8ZRUr~MvdzwyrlP2xsl8jt7oVMgG09HrZWKCHGI54WYv1Xe1ZwwEyvgownuSkEbGrg9clo-b0-FetnovogxtH8GoGFwhKLr10tw8ZBzuQXK1K31HdCPe1HZYJa~ummOhDl0apsuocOsgFaMM6DligjMcGTesH~feIOPxxY1Utq9emvtCXDikk8YATBPsc-50ObnCu9jH5Mt7j4-57kGO8j23gc4r4uVtu6Vkrak-0D1zFIgGnmKegmEHro7c-HYbH6Y7XNVrYqg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_About_the_Biopsychosocial_Model_in_Psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":24,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"The biopsychosocial model, which was deeply influential on psychiatry following its introduction by George L. Engel in 1977, has recently made a comeback. Derek Bolton and Grant Gillett have argued that Engel's original formulation offered a promising general framework for thinking about health and disease, but that this promise requires new empirical and philosophical tools in order to be realized. In particular, Bolton and Gillett offer an original analysis of the ontological relations between Engel's biological, social, and psychological levels of analysis. I argue that Bolton and Gillett's updated model, while providing an intriguing new metaphysical framework for medicine, cannot resolve some of the most vexing problems facing psychiatry, which have to do with how to prioritize different sorts of research. These problems are fundamentally ethical, rather than ontological. Without the right prudential motivation, in other words, the unification of psychiatry under a single conceptual framework seems doubtful, no matter how compelling the model. An updated biopsychosocial model should include explicit normative commitments about the aims of medicine that can give guidance about the sorts of causal connections to be prioritized as research and clinical targets.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107921983,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921983/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"384681.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921983/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107921983/384681-libre.pdf?1701114329=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCentrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=aflJWdVnuZ0WSZM0kk7CLHpWeDe4x7bC2WbrPM01Qo0Y6iRdkePVGGAISFxHpa4Hu45OD785jWw8ZRUr~MvdzwyrlP2xsl8jt7oVMgG09HrZWKCHGI54WYv1Xe1ZwwEyvgownuSkEbGrg9clo-b0-FetnovogxtH8GoGFwhKLr10tw8ZBzuQXK1K31HdCPe1HZYJa~ummOhDl0apsuocOsgFaMM6DligjMcGTesH~feIOPxxY1Utq9emvtCXDikk8YATBPsc-50ObnCu9jH5Mt7j4-57kGO8j23gc4r4uVtu6Vkrak-0D1zFIgGnmKegmEHro7c-HYbH6Y7XNVrYqg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"},{"id":107921982,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107921982/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"384681.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107921982/download_file","bulk_download_file_name":"Centrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107921982/384681-libre.pdf?1701114326=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DCentrifugal_and_Centripetal_Thinking_Abo.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=g4u2q6Ko~njkYq36y4c9cb6Hwux4MqXPQyAqRdcj591vdwRPGwBR0lmIHGjCn9~K7icDhTI1FZdGshLZ25WCLH-Q3oEDvNf1V6eG~bl2maiejTPRvk3rEgDRHOzseT3SpLrL3x8hfd~kksJTVts7ivnjLRl0M3SS1SnGysVSIOAmxLR0JXx~Z0t9GFSlqDj3NQbeQl6Mk4SS6Pe0w6PULn-uxuH5ilj~zJaExcC3tGt9bTHUVcv6OWE6C2RHknoRLizWaIMrq8Ert6cTPEs351RhA-xbR687nAoxxwYdN2GY1pEK9YVuJoQrQ5rEVTQ4UeW93tyyP~~rcwUPfhc5rw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":815,"name":"Epistemology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Epistemology"},{"id":138943,"name":"Normative","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Normative"},{"id":200829,"name":"Unification","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Unification"},{"id":619644,"name":"Biopsychosocial model","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biopsychosocial_model"},{"id":4134252,"name":"centripetal force","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/centripetal_force"}],"urls":[{"id":35972434,"url":"https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/384681"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953419"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953419/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric genetic attributions for one’s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953419/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior">Asymmetric genetic attributions for one’s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of Social Psychology</span><span>, Mar 31, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;#39;s...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one&amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people&amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953419"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953419"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953419; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953419]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953419]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953419; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953419']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953419, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953419]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953419,"title":"Asymmetric genetic attributions for one’s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","publisher":"Taylor \u0026 Francis","publication_date":{"day":31,"month":3,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Journal of Social Psychology"},"translated_abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953419/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:36.393-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":252,"name":"Developmental Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Developmental_Psychology"},{"id":866,"name":"Experimental philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Experimental_philosophy"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":10174,"name":"Mediation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mediation"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":32199,"name":"Prosocial Behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Prosocial_Behavior"},{"id":40475,"name":"Helping Behavior","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Helping_Behavior"},{"id":125342,"name":"Attribution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Attribution"},{"id":129917,"name":"Human Behavioral Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Human_Behavioral_Genetics"}],"urls":[{"id":35972433,"url":"https://doi.org/10.1080/00224545.2022.2058906"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953416"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953416/Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Individualized interventions for rare genetic conditions and the research-treatment spectrum: Stakeholder perspectives" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953416/Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives">Individualized interventions for rare genetic conditions and the research-treatment spectrum: Stakeholder perspectives</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Genetics in Medicine</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953416"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953416"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953416; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953416]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953416]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953416; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953416']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953416, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953416]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953416,"title":"Individualized interventions for rare genetic conditions and the research-treatment spectrum: Stakeholder perspectives","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Elsevier BV","publication_name":"Genetics in Medicine"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953416/Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:35.678-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Individualized_interventions_for_rare_genetic_conditions_and_the_research_treatment_spectrum_Stakeholder_perspectives","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":156,"name":"Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genetics"},{"id":12135,"name":"Qualitative Research","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Qualitative_Research"},{"id":116278,"name":"Psychological Intervention","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychological_Intervention"},{"id":158214,"name":"Generalizability Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Generalizability_Theory"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":449559,"name":"Stakeholder","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Stakeholder"}],"urls":[{"id":35972430,"url":"https://api.elsevier.com/content/article/PII:S1098360023008456?httpAccept=text/xml"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953411"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953411/Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetrical genetic attributions for the presence and absence of health problems" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953411/Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems">Asymmetrical genetic attributions for the presence and absence of health problems</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Psychology &amp;amp; Health</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953411"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953411"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953411; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953411]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953411]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953411; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953411']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953411, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953411]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953411,"title":"Asymmetrical genetic attributions for the presence and absence of health problems","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Informa UK Limited","publication_name":"Psychology \u0026amp; Health"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953411/Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.847-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetrical_genetic_attributions_for_the_presence_and_absence_of_health_problems","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":260,"name":"Health Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Health_Psychology"},{"id":125342,"name":"Attribution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Attribution"},{"id":508371,"name":"Curriculum and Pedagogy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Curriculum_and_Pedagogy"},{"id":4178099,"name":"Vignette","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Vignette-1"}],"urls":[{"id":35972428,"url":"https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/08870446.2022.2119236"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953408"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953408/Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Ethics of Care and Space: Thursday, June 18th Z-Panel | 3:00PM EDT" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953408/Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT">Ethics of Care and Space: Thursday, June 18th Z-Panel | 3:00PM EDT</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE i...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email <a href="mailto:disability@columbia.edu" rel="nofollow">disability@columbia.edu</a> to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953408"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953408"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953408; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953408]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953408]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953408; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953408']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953408, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953408]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953408,"title":"Ethics of Care and Space: Thursday, June 18th Z-Panel | 3:00PM EDT","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953408/Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.577-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_Thursday_June_18th_Z_Panel_3_00PM_EDT","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"This event will take place as a public Zoom panel starting at 3:00 pm EDT. Please REGISTER HERE in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs. Event Video: Kathryn Tabb, Can Precision Medicine Care for the Polis?  A recent vogue in medicine has been for “precision”. This new paradigm for medicine, also referred to as “personalized” medicine, promises to particularize patient care to the sensitivities of each of our bodies, which we ourselves may or may not be aware of, by identifying rare genetic variants and other biomarkers of disease. While advocates of precision medicine often characterize it in opposition to traditional practices and methods that are vague, careless or nonspecific, I argue that the true opponent of precision medicine — that is, the sort of medicine ...","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":184,"name":"Sociology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sociology"},{"id":93996,"name":"Notice","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Notice"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953406"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953406/Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Care for the Polis: Ethics of Care and Space (6.18.20)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953406/Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_">Care for the Polis: Ethics of Care and Space (6.18.20)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space d...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953406"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953406"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953406; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953406]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953406]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953406; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953406']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953406, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953406]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953406,"title":"Care for the Polis: Ethics of Care and Space (6.18.20)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953406/Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.340-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Care_for_the_Polis_Ethics_of_Care_and_Space_6_18_20_","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Care for the Polis is a conversation that exists in a multi-temporal and virtual space, a space designed to reimagine how medical humanities and public humanities shape, and are shaped by, the city and its diverse publics. In a series of weekly Z-Panels, our invited speakers will discuss the effects of health on the conception of cities and publics—including, in the context of pandemic, the foreclosure of public space and what it means to become an online yet domestic-bound public. Together, we will address emerging concerns such as economic impact and recovery, domesticity and democracy, public care and public reconstruction.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":184,"name":"Sociology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sociology"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":1372,"name":"Architecture","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Architecture"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":47307,"name":"City planning","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/City_planning"},{"id":135107,"name":"Social distance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_distance"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="109953405"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953405/Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Should Psychiatry Be Precise? Reduction, Big Data, and Nosological Revision in Mental Health Research" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922055/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/109953405/Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research">Should Psychiatry Be Precise? Reduction, Big Data, and Nosological Revision in Mental Health Research</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Levels of Analysis in Psychopathology</span><span>, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">, the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million peopl...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">, the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million people in order to &quot;accelerate our understanding of individual variability and its effect on disease onset, progression, prevention, and treatment.&quot; 1 Along with a burst of public funding for cancer genomics, the Initiative was part of a national embrace of precision medicine, which the National Research Council defines as &quot;the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient&quot; (2011); the National Cancer Institute describes it as &quot;an approach to patient care that allows doctors to select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.&quot; 2 One immediate effect of the growing interest in precision medicine has been a reallocation of resources toward genetics and other basic sciences that promise to generate the sort of discoveries that will transform clinical diagnostics in these ways. The author thanks Maël Lemoine, Scott Lilienfeld, Jan-Willem Romeijn, Jim Tabery, and Hanna M. Van Loo for discussions about these themes and feedback on this chapter.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="f5407f2738deac1e7ae04cb048d98913" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:107922055,&quot;asset_id&quot;:109953405,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922055/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="109953405"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="109953405"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953405; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953405]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=109953405]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 109953405; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='109953405']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 109953405, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "f5407f2738deac1e7ae04cb048d98913" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=109953405]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":109953405,"title":"Should Psychiatry Be Precise? Reduction, Big Data, and Nosological Revision in Mental Health Research","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","grobid_abstract":", the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million people in order to \"accelerate our understanding of individual variability and its effect on disease onset, progression, prevention, and treatment.\" 1 Along with a burst of public funding for cancer genomics, the Initiative was part of a national embrace of precision medicine, which the National Research Council defines as \"the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient\" (2011); the National Cancer Institute describes it as \"an approach to patient care that allows doctors to select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.\" 2 One immediate effect of the growing interest in precision medicine has been a reallocation of resources toward genetics and other basic sciences that promise to generate the sort of discoveries that will transform clinical diagnostics in these ways. The author thanks Maël Lemoine, Scott Lilienfeld, Jan-Willem Romeijn, Jim Tabery, and Hanna M. Van Loo for discussions about these themes and feedback on this chapter.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2020,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Levels of Analysis in Psychopathology","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":107922055},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/109953405/Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-11-27T07:00:34.097-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":107922055,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922055/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922055/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922055/Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise-libre.pdf?1701114526=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShould_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=EKDPiquj-~~z0cm-JbOzc73TNFfjrZluEupvjEwOFHSO1HF-h8srk6RzanH~~N~yWzAIuXVLPRdEembVw5AIYa3V6XMbtSwKMvbxjNHUmWwkQ862JvQ7x7kiqI54JnW73EnsRJ3labpGg86aS3A4OQJcwFtrhHM-Os6ZBdbcyGChMQOQigvnD6H9vGpfrFf-ayiAxsm1CUmnO6kAyc4DhtW8e9TnAGL1wHe7QYGw6dxnMVxYYsdjdq9DbI1dfS7A-3Y~AzBdMjmOXYQuJar7986Ti03yYUkpciiy4hZs81v2Api~iK0I0XHLLavyDXh6d2rm375NVVLXg5nSNMNqXg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_Big_Data_and_Nosological_Revision_in_Mental_Health_Research","translated_slug":"","page_count":27,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":", the initiative aims to recruit a nationally representative research cohort of one million people in order to \"accelerate our understanding of individual variability and its effect on disease onset, progression, prevention, and treatment.\" 1 Along with a burst of public funding for cancer genomics, the Initiative was part of a national embrace of precision medicine, which the National Research Council defines as \"the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient\" (2011); the National Cancer Institute describes it as \"an approach to patient care that allows doctors to select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.\" 2 One immediate effect of the growing interest in precision medicine has been a reallocation of resources toward genetics and other basic sciences that promise to generate the sort of discoveries that will transform clinical diagnostics in these ways. The author thanks Maël Lemoine, Scott Lilienfeld, Jan-Willem Romeijn, Jim Tabery, and Hanna M. Van Loo for discussions about these themes and feedback on this chapter.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":107922055,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/107922055/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/107922055/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Should_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/107922055/Should_Psychiatry_be_Precise-libre.pdf?1701114526=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DShould_Psychiatry_Be_Precise_Reduction_B.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=EKDPiquj-~~z0cm-JbOzc73TNFfjrZluEupvjEwOFHSO1HF-h8srk6RzanH~~N~yWzAIuXVLPRdEembVw5AIYa3V6XMbtSwKMvbxjNHUmWwkQ862JvQ7x7kiqI54JnW73EnsRJ3labpGg86aS3A4OQJcwFtrhHM-Os6ZBdbcyGChMQOQigvnD6H9vGpfrFf-ayiAxsm1CUmnO6kAyc4DhtW8e9TnAGL1wHe7QYGw6dxnMVxYYsdjdq9DbI1dfS7A-3Y~AzBdMjmOXYQuJar7986Ti03yYUkpciiy4hZs81v2Api~iK0I0XHLLavyDXh6d2rm375NVVLXg5nSNMNqXg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":2827,"name":"Mental Health","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mental_Health"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801889"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801889/Psychiatry_and_biomarkers"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Psychiatry and biomarkers" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054993/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801889/Psychiatry_and_biomarkers">Psychiatry and biomarkers</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Metascience</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="69275c37c64984d46eccc02433089ae4" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:100054993,&quot;asset_id&quot;:98801889,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054993/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801889"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801889"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801889; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801889]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801889]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801889; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801889']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801889, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "69275c37c64984d46eccc02433089ae4" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801889]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801889,"title":"Psychiatry and biomarkers","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Springer Science and Business Media LLC","ai_abstract":"This paper discusses Jonathan Y. Tsou's philosophy of psychiatry, particularly his argument that psychiatric diagnoses should be understood as biological kinds with harmful consequences rather than simply classifications of mental dysfunction. It critiques Tsou's stipulative definition of psychiatric kinds, noting that it may be overly restrictive or too broad and highlights the role of social mechanisms in shaping the expression of mental disorders. Ultimately, it posits that psychiatry, despite striving for a hard science status, may be more akin to a social science due to the complexities and limitations of its classifications.","publication_name":"Metascience"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801889/Psychiatry_and_biomarkers","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:31.019-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":100054993,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054993/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tsou_review.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054993/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Psychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054993/Tsou_review-libre.pdf?1679265194=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPsychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=F41x~~Xyf8Ht21x1huNw-89TMaSIDsx9w2bUlYtCE~wVKDYiggnrRnRNwP2Q7keX0iQui6FvBKGTH8GBsvXc6Uz1WPSZfh-DJVL1pD3ZzFzATKyqZ7k7oY8iQpx69mSe9gXlbqyq5E5IdFRnpWnKMd~AQl1pmB~PhOxqsokGHKhNe~4cWd--rm1P8zDDLUBj-~HDfzI0uwQEzVYnXga-RyEHrUvsU8CXQqW2IK0C2WsJNPxDYB18EPLeUnerbPJOkiD8ynCofmzS3ADAQN~BC8kAhWiOo149G-6lvizJiG9UZHRZPNak3hxcEFKKIls7znTtoGBAbsz26-MA8wrDRw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Psychiatry_and_biomarkers","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":100054993,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054993/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Tsou_review.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054993/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Psychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054993/Tsou_review-libre.pdf?1679265194=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPsychiatry_and_biomarkers.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409794\u0026Signature=F41x~~Xyf8Ht21x1huNw-89TMaSIDsx9w2bUlYtCE~wVKDYiggnrRnRNwP2Q7keX0iQui6FvBKGTH8GBsvXc6Uz1WPSZfh-DJVL1pD3ZzFzATKyqZ7k7oY8iQpx69mSe9gXlbqyq5E5IdFRnpWnKMd~AQl1pmB~PhOxqsokGHKhNe~4cWd--rm1P8zDDLUBj-~HDfzI0uwQEzVYnXga-RyEHrUvsU8CXQqW2IK0C2WsJNPxDYB18EPLeUnerbPJOkiD8ynCofmzS3ADAQN~BC8kAhWiOo149G-6lvizJiG9UZHRZPNak3hxcEFKKIls7znTtoGBAbsz26-MA8wrDRw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":821,"name":"Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Science"},{"id":823,"name":"Philosophy of Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Biology"},{"id":855,"name":"Philosophy of Technology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Technology"},{"id":1777631,"name":"Metascience","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Metascience"}],"urls":[{"id":29924519,"url":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11016-022-00804-x.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801888"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801888/Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Hempel as a critic of Bridgman’s operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801888/Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science">Hempel as a critic of Bridgman’s operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Oxford Medicine Online</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the str...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801888"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801888"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801888; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801888]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801888]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801888; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801888']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801888, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801888]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801888,"title":"Hempel as a critic of Bridgman’s operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.","publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_name":"Oxford Medicine Online"},"translated_abstract":"Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801888/Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.895-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Hempel_as_a_critic_of_Bridgman_s_operationalism_lessons_for_psychiatry_from_the_history_of_science","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Chapter 24 is a commentary on Chapter 23, which covers operationalism, Bridgman, DSM-III, the structured interview, phenomenology, and the origins of this term, its historical permutations, and its current status in the diagnostic manuals.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":25616,"name":"Phenomenology of the Body (Philosophy)","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phenomenology_of_the_Body_Philosophy_"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801887"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801887/Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801887/Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry">Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Oxford Medicine Online</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801887"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801887"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801887; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801887]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801887]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801887; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801887']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801887, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801887]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801887,"title":"Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.","publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_name":"Oxford Medicine Online"},"translated_abstract":"Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801887/Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.774-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Varieties_of_social_constructionism_and_the_problem_of_progress_in_psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Chapter 11 discusses how the debates over the relationship between social factors and progress in psychiatry have been muddied by confusion over how the term “social construction” has been, and should be, used. It covers how one option is to move away from the language of social construction, like many in the literature have done since the 1990s. But this move risks obscuring the continued importance of attending to the role of the social in psychiatric progress. This chapter aims to clarify the different positions taken by social constructionists about psychiatric disorders and to advocate for what it calls “inclusionary social constructionism.” Through a comparison between the history of HIV/AIDS and the present state of schizophrenia in research and medical settings, the chapter illustrates and evaluates the space of possible characterizations of social construction by psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":13801,"name":"Social Constructionism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Constructionism"},{"id":466993,"name":"Confusion","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Confusion"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801886"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801886/The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Emergence of Psychiatry: 1650–1850" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801886/The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850">The Emergence of Psychiatry: 1650–1850</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>American Journal of Psychiatry</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry&amp;#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801886"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801886"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801886; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801886]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801886]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801886; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801886']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801886, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801886]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801886,"title":"The Emergence of Psychiatry: 1650–1850","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry\u0026#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.","publisher":"American Psychiatric Association Publishing","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"American Journal of Psychiatry"},"translated_abstract":"Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry\u0026#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801886/The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.649-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"The_Emergence_of_Psychiatry_1650_1850","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Western psychiatry emerged as a medical specialty caring for the mentally ill over the course of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This emergence was a contingent process, dependent on the co-occurrence of three historical developments that together shaped the young discipline. The first was the rise of the mind as an entity with numerous active faculties in the conceptual space between the body and the Christian soul. Only by the latter half of the 18th century was it common to conceptualize conditions like mania or melancholy as mental illnesses. The second advance critical to psychiatry\u0026#39;s proto-specialty status, with its increasing focus on a mechanistic understanding of disease, was the rejection of humoral theories of insanity in favor of the brain and nerves as the seat of madness. The third development was the rise of the asylum. Only in dedicated institutions could mad-doctors be exposed to large numbers of the insane, permitting the development of a specialized clinical vocabulary grounded in faculties of mind, which led to new nosologic systems. The decline of humoral medicine, with its purges, bleeding, and emetics, and the urgent clinical need for care produced, in early asylums, the first novel treatment from the young specialty: moral therapy. We tell this story focusing mainly on the work of five philosophers and physicians: Descartes, Willis, Locke, Boerhaave, de Sauvages, and Cullen. Throughout its history, psychiatry has struggled with its sometimes disconjugate goals of understanding both mind and brain, with alternating efforts to expel one of these tasks from the profession. A historical perspective demonstrates that psychiatry is a profession inextricably linked to these two contrasting projects-and, indeed, jointly constituted by them.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":6182,"name":"History of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":13229,"name":"History Of Madness And Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_Of_Madness_And_Psychiatry"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":65965,"name":"Insanity","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Insanity"},{"id":1218491,"name":"American J of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/American_J_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":2587767,"name":"Specialty","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Specialty"},{"id":2922956,"name":"Psychology and Cognitive Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology_and_Cognitive_Sciences"},{"id":3763225,"name":"Medical and Health Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_and_Health_Sciences"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801885"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801885/Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric Genetic Attributions for One&#39;s Own Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801885/Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior">Asymmetric Genetic Attributions for One&#39;s Own Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;amp;#...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&amp;amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one&amp;amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people&amp;amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801885"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801885"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801885; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801885]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801885]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801885; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801885']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801885, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801885]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801885,"title":"Asymmetric Genetic Attributions for One's Own Prosocial Versus Antisocial Behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","publisher":"Open Science Framework","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2021,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801885/Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.521-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Asymmetric_Genetic_Attributions_for_Ones_Own_Prosocial_Versus_Antisocial_Behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor\u0026amp;#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one\u0026amp;#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people\u0026amp;#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":866,"name":"Experimental philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Experimental_philosophy"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":129917,"name":"Human Behavioral Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Human_Behavioral_Genetics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801884"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801884/The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The prospects of precision psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801884/The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry">The prospects of precision psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced t...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term &amp;quot;biomarker&amp;quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology &amp;quot;biomarker&amp;quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801884"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801884"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801884; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801884]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801884]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801884; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801884']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801884, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801884]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801884,"title":"The prospects of precision psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.","publisher":"Springer Science and Business Media LLC","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics"},"translated_abstract":"Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801884/The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.342-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"The_prospects_of_precision_psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields like oncology, precision medicine has been understood as an attempt to improve medicine by casting out, rather than merely revising, traditional taxonomic tools. Second, in psychiatry the term \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; is often used in reference to signs or symptoms that allow patients to be classified and then matched with treatments; however, in oncology \u0026quot;biomarker\u0026quot; usually refers to a disease mechanism that is useful not only for diagnostics, but also for discovering causal pathways that drug therapies can target. Given these differences between how the precision medicine paradigm operates in psychiatry and in other medical fields like oncology, while precision psychiatry may offer successful rhetoric, it is not a promising paradigm.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":906,"name":"Applied Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Applied_Ethics"},{"id":4440,"name":"Philosophy of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Medicine"},{"id":6970,"name":"Biomarkers","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biomarkers"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":13897,"name":"Personalized Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Personalized_Medicine"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":58009,"name":"Psychiatric nosology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatric_nosology"},{"id":244814,"name":"Clinical Sciences","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Clinical_Sciences"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"},{"id":3011229,"name":"Philosophy of cancer","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_cancer"}],"urls":[{"id":29924518,"url":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11017-022-09558-3.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="98801883"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801883/Addiction_and_Agency"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Addiction and Agency" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054972/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/98801883/Addiction_and_Agency">Addiction and Agency</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Agency in Mental Disorder</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree acti...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="e3a344d4154996477fab476004e05563" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:100054972,&quot;asset_id&quot;:98801883,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054972/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="98801883"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="98801883"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801883; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801883]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=98801883]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 98801883; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='98801883']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 98801883, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "e3a344d4154996477fab476004e05563" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=98801883]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":98801883,"title":"Addiction and Agency","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.","publisher":"Oxford University Press","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Agency in Mental Disorder"},"translated_abstract":"Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/98801883/Addiction_and_Agency","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-03-19T14:54:30.214-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":100054972,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054972/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"390061414.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054972/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054972/390061414-libre.pdf?1679265213=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAddiction_and_Agency.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=Wh6S4NcTVPLx2lyxFH1xggzrhZUxt1gy2jp7sb0WAdkdaX9D9IeYP6s8u~LYLdXTSl6kvaMLOT5dwjcaHrZ1YKMWiO5rM4NVwu1iwxFN6wZ4E1l5L41Fi~48LnEvEjgsxDfdHu3e9oVkH38O4on1g7ndvd-ez4wdNvBpqQZkPDI5m2PSJsBMO6ADrVb7PV2041MT5fE120I3ahwlRGZ1RXrNAfJHHiUzKEqRr2GFXE9si5sRcnHbRlai1jNr7F7UFJibIRR-zhN68aw30VV55u8es22muze8fGpYQm1WKlXHneib~TNBBeN-ijjsRtdiJJrlkk1~YjTAkPINk0Xscg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Addiction_and_Agency","translated_slug":"","page_count":20,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Addicts are often portrayed as compelled by their addiction and thus as a paradigm of unfree action and mitigated blame. This chapter argues that our best scientific theories of addiction reveal that, psychologically, addicts are not categorically different from non-addicts. There is no pairing of contemporary accounts of addiction and of prominent theories of moral responsibility that can justify our intuitions about the mitigation of addicts but not non-addicts. Two conclusions are advanced. First, we should either treat addicts as we normally treat non-addicts (as fully culpable) or embrace the skeptical conclusion that everyone is less responsible than we thought—perhaps not responsible at all. Second, we should be doubtful that theorizing about responsibility will be advanced by focusing on particular kinds of psychopathologies.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":100054972,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/100054972/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"390061414.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/100054972/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/100054972/390061414-libre.pdf?1679265213=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAddiction_and_Agency.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=Wh6S4NcTVPLx2lyxFH1xggzrhZUxt1gy2jp7sb0WAdkdaX9D9IeYP6s8u~LYLdXTSl6kvaMLOT5dwjcaHrZ1YKMWiO5rM4NVwu1iwxFN6wZ4E1l5L41Fi~48LnEvEjgsxDfdHu3e9oVkH38O4on1g7ndvd-ez4wdNvBpqQZkPDI5m2PSJsBMO6ADrVb7PV2041MT5fE120I3ahwlRGZ1RXrNAfJHHiUzKEqRr2GFXE9si5sRcnHbRlai1jNr7F7UFJibIRR-zhN68aw30VV55u8es22muze8fGpYQm1WKlXHneib~TNBBeN-ijjsRtdiJJrlkk1~YjTAkPINk0Xscg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":817,"name":"Philosophy of Agency","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Agency"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":2483,"name":"Addiction","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Addiction"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":29711,"name":"Skepticism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Skepticism"},{"id":29777,"name":"Free Will and Moral Responsibility","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Free_Will_and_Moral_Responsibility"},{"id":186000,"name":"Blame","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Blame"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="1504695" id="coauthoredpapers"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="121777154"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777154/Understanding_individualised_genetic_interventions_as_research_treatment_hybrids"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Understanding individualised genetic interventions as research-treatment hybrids" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/116578433/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/121777154/Understanding_individualised_genetic_interventions_as_research_treatment_hybrids">Understanding individualised genetic interventions as research-treatment hybrids</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Until recently, medicine has had little to offer most of the millions of patients suffering from ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Until recently, medicine has had little to offer most of the millions of patients suffering from rare and ultrarare genetic conditions. But the development in 2019 of Milasen, the first genetic intervention developed for and administered to a single patient suffering from an ultrarare genetic disorder, has offered hope to patients and families. In addition, Milasen raised a series of conceptual and ethical questions about how individualised genetic interventions should be developed, assessed for safety and efficacy and financially supported. The answers to these questions depend in large part on whether individualised therapies are understood as human subjects research or clinical innovation, different domains of biomedicine that are regulated by different modes of oversight, funding and professional norms. In this article, with development and administration of the drug Milasen as our case study, we argue that at least some individualised genetic therapies are not, as some have argued, either research or treatment. Instead, they are research-treatment hybrids, a category that has both epistemological and pragmatic repercussions for funding, ethics oversight and regulation.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3808a2eec713bebac54c49203fa7d7c8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:116578433,&quot;asset_id&quot;:121777154,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/116578433/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="121777154"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="121777154"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777154; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777154]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=121777154]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 121777154; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='121777154']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 121777154, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3808a2eec713bebac54c49203fa7d7c8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=121777154]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":121777154,"title":"Understanding individualised genetic interventions as research-treatment hybrids","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Until recently, medicine has had little to offer most of the millions of patients suffering from rare and ultrarare genetic conditions. But the development in 2019 of Milasen, the first genetic intervention developed for and administered to a single patient suffering from an ultrarare genetic disorder, has offered hope to patients and families. In addition, Milasen raised a series of conceptual and ethical questions about how individualised genetic interventions should be developed, assessed for safety and efficacy and financially supported. The answers to these questions depend in large part on whether individualised therapies are understood as human subjects research or clinical innovation, different domains of biomedicine that are regulated by different modes of oversight, funding and professional norms. In this article, with development and administration of the drug Milasen as our case study, we argue that at least some individualised genetic therapies are not, as some have argued, either research or treatment. Instead, they are research-treatment hybrids, a category that has both epistemological and pragmatic repercussions for funding, ethics oversight and regulation."},"translated_abstract":"Until recently, medicine has had little to offer most of the millions of patients suffering from rare and ultrarare genetic conditions. But the development in 2019 of Milasen, the first genetic intervention developed for and administered to a single patient suffering from an ultrarare genetic disorder, has offered hope to patients and families. In addition, Milasen raised a series of conceptual and ethical questions about how individualised genetic interventions should be developed, assessed for safety and efficacy and financially supported. The answers to these questions depend in large part on whether individualised therapies are understood as human subjects research or clinical innovation, different domains of biomedicine that are regulated by different modes of oversight, funding and professional norms. In this article, with development and administration of the drug Milasen as our case study, we argue that at least some individualised genetic therapies are not, as some have argued, either research or treatment. Instead, they are research-treatment hybrids, a category that has both epistemological and pragmatic repercussions for funding, ethics oversight and regulation.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/121777154/Understanding_individualised_genetic_interventions_as_research_treatment_hybrids","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2024-07-04T08:25:25.228-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":42003668,"work_id":121777154,"tagging_user_id":3280875,"tagged_user_id":26185644,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"j***j@thehastingscenter.org","affiliation":"The Hastings Center","display_order":1,"name":"Josephine Johnston","title":"Understanding individualised genetic interventions as research-treatment hybrids"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":116578433,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/116578433/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Research_Treatment_Hybrids.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/116578433/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Understanding_individualised_genetic_int.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/116578433/Research_Treatment_Hybrids-libre.pdf?1720109846=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DUnderstanding_individualised_genetic_int.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=S8G7awGNNhMFrtd18xbJSq1L4yt8SN19eAXnfE1~jYQ4hjLrAcc-Ff73cKhpagZ8x4G5XIi7GtSUJkgGiuIzCaEIoQLDHHTStQdHbUv3Jt7VBs7oIh7e2TEKs2rRZaPdMJpmuISrz1QUfOJWlgXUs64FyVcVg3gR2WfebpX6~etzM-6MDlWmkjuFRQnkii9zCJZ64dlREYD-NLbiuRhjDOjstk1EQRjF4k4tH6h-7iL8fWsellRBEYGuyS~eaIEhlqyLva5B3X1r7AVCLz7KYc0mLoJ4qn-sirGe7JmXZw~NiR6sXbQH15lDKdKmWh7e7Uir21AlWJ3Hz0cYY9JEsQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Understanding_individualised_genetic_interventions_as_research_treatment_hybrids","translated_slug":"","page_count":5,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"Until recently, medicine has had little to offer most of the millions of patients suffering from rare and ultrarare genetic conditions. But the development in 2019 of Milasen, the first genetic intervention developed for and administered to a single patient suffering from an ultrarare genetic disorder, has offered hope to patients and families. In addition, Milasen raised a series of conceptual and ethical questions about how individualised genetic interventions should be developed, assessed for safety and efficacy and financially supported. The answers to these questions depend in large part on whether individualised therapies are understood as human subjects research or clinical innovation, different domains of biomedicine that are regulated by different modes of oversight, funding and professional norms. In this article, with development and administration of the drug Milasen as our case study, we argue that at least some individualised genetic therapies are not, as some have argued, either research or treatment. Instead, they are research-treatment hybrids, a category that has both epistemological and pragmatic repercussions for funding, ethics oversight and regulation.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":116578433,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/116578433/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Research_Treatment_Hybrids.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/116578433/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Understanding_individualised_genetic_int.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/116578433/Research_Treatment_Hybrids-libre.pdf?1720109846=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DUnderstanding_individualised_genetic_int.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=S8G7awGNNhMFrtd18xbJSq1L4yt8SN19eAXnfE1~jYQ4hjLrAcc-Ff73cKhpagZ8x4G5XIi7GtSUJkgGiuIzCaEIoQLDHHTStQdHbUv3Jt7VBs7oIh7e2TEKs2rRZaPdMJpmuISrz1QUfOJWlgXUs64FyVcVg3gR2WfebpX6~etzM-6MDlWmkjuFRQnkii9zCJZ64dlREYD-NLbiuRhjDOjstk1EQRjF4k4tH6h-7iL8fWsellRBEYGuyS~eaIEhlqyLva5B3X1r7AVCLz7KYc0mLoJ4qn-sirGe7JmXZw~NiR6sXbQH15lDKdKmWh7e7Uir21AlWJ3Hz0cYY9JEsQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":2568,"name":"Medical Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_Genetics"},{"id":46278,"name":"Biomedical Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biomedical_Ethics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="75233247"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/75233247/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Asymmetric genetic attributions for one&#39;s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/83085226/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/75233247/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior">Asymmetric genetic attributions for one&#39;s own prosocial versus antisocial behavior</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of Social Psychology </span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&#39;s gen...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor&#39;s genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one&#39;s true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people&#39;s reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="0690643aa7bebf756655550225d0e1a2" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:83085226,&quot;asset_id&quot;:75233247,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/83085226/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="75233247"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="75233247"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 75233247; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=75233247]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=75233247]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 75233247; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='75233247']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 75233247, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "0690643aa7bebf756655550225d0e1a2" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=75233247]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":75233247,"title":"Asymmetric genetic attributions for one's own prosocial versus antisocial behavior","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor's genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one's true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people's reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Journal of Social Psychology "},"translated_abstract":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor's genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one's true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people's reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/75233247/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2022-04-02T07:30:04.469-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":37958363,"work_id":75233247,"tagging_user_id":3280875,"tagged_user_id":88563784,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"m***7@cumc.columbia.edu","display_order":1,"name":"Matthew Lebowitz","title":"Asymmetric genetic attributions for one's own prosocial versus antisocial behavior"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":83085226,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/83085226/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior_2.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/83085226/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/83085226/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior_2-libre.pdf?1648910272=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAsymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=Qbf~pOnpGNnpdFT6m06FtEHjwj8WamPKOGLaV1CGc0YKlnFcrJWPBcfu1KeoUQDXkiHgvXlX5e8Lb3-KV1cYjhsfJGSnjrv4xypVL1jmAvbDyaiXyoJVRWC06fAMmH6p-e2p3pWbCx8kbc9iFqoSZdD-2CnMaPlp~WUjskWgL4zDj54o89eZKKDRJVHHbuc21C~VvqIxeEtgkiG9xVxOeGtMc6kK-ndW5Rb4FS2HtVWFiQCXvey3nbu-Wzwk2eO3DWpzXBaFoLjK-QByTH4OrnmhPFRU4JTpABK2e4zGkYEzNCY-smXyitlNNvzaL9YeUse9~DL6zDOI5vc8xtnjtw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior","translated_slug":"","page_count":7,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"People tend to rate prosocial or positive behavior as more strongly influenced by the actor's genes than antisocial or negative behavior. The current study tested whether people would show a similar asymmetry when rating the role of genes in their own behavior, and if so, what variables might mediate this difference. Participants were prompted to think about an example of their own behavior from the past year that was either prosocial or antisocial. Those in the prosocial condition rated the role of genetics in causing the behavior as significantly greater than did those in the antisocial condition. A mediation analysis suggested that this asymmetry could be accounted for by a tendency to view prosocial behavior as more natural and more aligned with one's true self than antisocial behavior. These findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that people's reasoning about genetics may be influenced by evaluative judgments.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":83085226,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/83085226/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior_2.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/83085226/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/83085226/Asymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_one_s_own_prosocial_versus_antisocial_behavior_2-libre.pdf?1648910272=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAsymmetric_genetic_attributions_for_ones.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=Qbf~pOnpGNnpdFT6m06FtEHjwj8WamPKOGLaV1CGc0YKlnFcrJWPBcfu1KeoUQDXkiHgvXlX5e8Lb3-KV1cYjhsfJGSnjrv4xypVL1jmAvbDyaiXyoJVRWC06fAMmH6p-e2p3pWbCx8kbc9iFqoSZdD-2CnMaPlp~WUjskWgL4zDj54o89eZKKDRJVHHbuc21C~VvqIxeEtgkiG9xVxOeGtMc6kK-ndW5Rb4FS2HtVWFiQCXvey3nbu-Wzwk2eO3DWpzXBaFoLjK-QByTH4OrnmhPFRU4JTpABK2e4zGkYEzNCY-smXyitlNNvzaL9YeUse9~DL6zDOI5vc8xtnjtw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":248,"name":"Social Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Psychology"},{"id":866,"name":"Experimental philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Experimental_philosophy"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":129917,"name":"Human Behavioral Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Human_Behavioral_Genetics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="45502794"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/45502794/Addiction_and_Agency"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Addiction and Agency" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/65995922/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/45502794/Addiction_and_Agency">Addiction and Agency</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb">Kathryn Tabb</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://columbia.academia.edu/JustinClarkeDoane">Justin Clarke-Doane</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Agency in Mental Disorder: Philosophical Dimensions (Matthew King and Joshua May, eds.)</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="babe034e70e8143e1b21fe6db03b5e0a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:65995922,&quot;asset_id&quot;:45502794,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/65995922/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="45502794"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="45502794"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 45502794; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=45502794]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=45502794]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 45502794; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='45502794']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 45502794, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "babe034e70e8143e1b21fe6db03b5e0a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=45502794]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":45502794,"title":"Addiction and Agency","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_name":"Agency in Mental Disorder: Philosophical Dimensions (Matthew King and Joshua May, eds.)"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/45502794/Addiction_and_Agency","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2021-03-13T05:52:20.586-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":36342486,"work_id":45502794,"tagging_user_id":3280875,"tagged_user_id":2118,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"j***5@columbia.edu","affiliation":"Columbia University","display_order":1,"name":"Justin Clarke-Doane","title":"Addiction and Agency"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":65995922,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/65995922/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/65995922/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/65995922/Addiction_and_Agency-libre.pdf?1615645730=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAddiction_and_Agency.pdf\u0026Expires=1736295053\u0026Signature=K5X9n13rY-7~RkwRveuS0a6F3SWxv4SG~1ctCLTbV~wX43r9J-2jtDhzCXWRoDtAjwrU7V9ebdhVTJaiCVMT1deK1ofZNzdF4iGWoDJPsyBnSAqz-zBsscXTmfdHbzHdmXXuVEpxgwFuhtciRIrQe40EPbLDIn1mOMyzYrgpDDEzl9~CWcscUxTPdDLBPRs4JVwVjDxvOAAQuAMjDgrj~W8yha7jPr5IC8eyU-nXUrjJQS2FRPxvPDf9jK1ykWzAdUhRJvOMnTF-YIL7Ca301poH63HQFd6Orlr-rMssN2aAv-MCmRX5pFAH0TrogTqhbrXmEaT2SW35UMfd7WU8iQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Addiction_and_Agency","translated_slug":"","page_count":19,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":65995922,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/65995922/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/65995922/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Addiction_and_Agency.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/65995922/Addiction_and_Agency-libre.pdf?1615645730=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAddiction_and_Agency.pdf\u0026Expires=1736295053\u0026Signature=K5X9n13rY-7~RkwRveuS0a6F3SWxv4SG~1ctCLTbV~wX43r9J-2jtDhzCXWRoDtAjwrU7V9ebdhVTJaiCVMT1deK1ofZNzdF4iGWoDJPsyBnSAqz-zBsscXTmfdHbzHdmXXuVEpxgwFuhtciRIrQe40EPbLDIn1mOMyzYrgpDDEzl9~CWcscUxTPdDLBPRs4JVwVjDxvOAAQuAMjDgrj~W8yha7jPr5IC8eyU-nXUrjJQS2FRPxvPDf9jK1ykWzAdUhRJvOMnTF-YIL7Ca301poH63HQFd6Orlr-rMssN2aAv-MCmRX5pFAH0TrogTqhbrXmEaT2SW35UMfd7WU8iQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":2483,"name":"Addiction","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Addiction"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":29777,"name":"Free Will and Moral Responsibility","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Free_Will_and_Moral_Responsibility"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="43096817"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/43096817/Psychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpersonal_Syndrome_Further_Reflections_and_Directions"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Psychopathology as an Emergent Interpersonal Syndrome: Further Reflections and Directions" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/63350728/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/43096817/Psychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpersonal_Syndrome_Further_Reflections_and_Directions">Psychopathology as an Emergent Interpersonal Syndrome: Further Reflections and Directions</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In our article (Lilienfeld et al., 2019), we hypothesized that psychopathy and some other persona...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In our article (Lilienfeld et al., 2019), we hypothesized that psychopathy and some other personality disorders are emergent interpersonal syndromes (EISs): interpersonally malignant configurations of distinct personality subdimensions. We respond to three commentaries by distinguished scholars who raise provocative challenges to our arguments and intriguing suggestions for future research. We clarify the role of folk concepts in our understanding of psychopathy, offer further suggestions for testing our interactional hypotheses, consider the role of boldness in motivational accounts of psychopathy, and discuss future directions for incorporating developmental considerations and the role of victims in our EIS account. We are optimistic that this account will prove to be of heuristic value, and should encourage researchers and theoreticians to explore alternative models of psychopathy and other personality disorders.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="50b24ad6f2f53e88c0178cdccf76584f" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:63350728,&quot;asset_id&quot;:43096817,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/63350728/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="43096817"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="43096817"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 43096817; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=43096817]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=43096817]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 43096817; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='43096817']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 43096817, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "50b24ad6f2f53e88c0178cdccf76584f" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=43096817]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":43096817,"title":"Psychopathology as an Emergent Interpersonal Syndrome: Further Reflections and Directions","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"In our article (Lilienfeld et al., 2019), we hypothesized that psychopathy and some other personality disorders are emergent interpersonal syndromes (EISs): interpersonally malignant configurations of distinct personality subdimensions. We respond to three commentaries by distinguished scholars who raise provocative challenges to our arguments and intriguing suggestions for future research. We clarify the role of folk concepts in our understanding of psychopathy, offer further suggestions for testing our interactional hypotheses, consider the role of boldness in motivational accounts of psychopathy, and discuss future directions for incorporating developmental considerations and the role of victims in our EIS account. We are optimistic that this account will prove to be of heuristic value, and should encourage researchers and theoreticians to explore alternative models of psychopathy and other personality disorders."},"translated_abstract":"In our article (Lilienfeld et al., 2019), we hypothesized that psychopathy and some other personality disorders are emergent interpersonal syndromes (EISs): interpersonally malignant configurations of distinct personality subdimensions. We respond to three commentaries by distinguished scholars who raise provocative challenges to our arguments and intriguing suggestions for future research. We clarify the role of folk concepts in our understanding of psychopathy, offer further suggestions for testing our interactional hypotheses, consider the role of boldness in motivational accounts of psychopathy, and discuss future directions for incorporating developmental considerations and the role of victims in our EIS account. We are optimistic that this account will prove to be of heuristic value, and should encourage researchers and theoreticians to explore alternative models of psychopathy and other personality disorders.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/43096817/Psychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpersonal_Syndrome_Further_Reflections_and_Directions","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2020-05-18T09:26:58.786-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":63350728,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/63350728/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"pedi.2019.33.5.64520200518-61663-1pat67p.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/63350728/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Psychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpers.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/63350728/pedi.2019.33.5.64520200518-61663-1pat67p-libre.pdf?1589819606=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPsychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpers.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=NKeb6ct7lkMUTTGt7hTIV3j2MChtDMqj5bI6CvopjmFCnDeg5lnsX6FwH4LmEvDz2-I3ghY-e5wmyxHlLsFmXiUsYhQBp2Dc80laK3dIYeb0k~brJs0uDakx1PthDsoEy-I~NA1k8Xixm1SufvsbhH9m5wxxXRNUVuVImRj6kzN86Y5VgVOmr-r33eI7s6vcgtqLMAabHrefteHDBJm89i4uB78mMD1AnaNjwsTZjl2ah1X7d~w7Zgh4nItdBYICgdiDQ6ugU-72sF-Sy1KlrDCLk-y7bLXbBN~tCxVSiuPSdRnfpPiv0yTT-FbjMvih7vXC0C1WMmGSz5rxQraX1Q__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Psychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpersonal_Syndrome_Further_Reflections_and_Directions","translated_slug":"","page_count":8,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"In our article (Lilienfeld et al., 2019), we hypothesized that psychopathy and some other personality disorders are emergent interpersonal syndromes (EISs): interpersonally malignant configurations of distinct personality subdimensions. We respond to three commentaries by distinguished scholars who raise provocative challenges to our arguments and intriguing suggestions for future research. We clarify the role of folk concepts in our understanding of psychopathy, offer further suggestions for testing our interactional hypotheses, consider the role of boldness in motivational accounts of psychopathy, and discuss future directions for incorporating developmental considerations and the role of victims in our EIS account. We are optimistic that this account will prove to be of heuristic value, and should encourage researchers and theoreticians to explore alternative models of psychopathy and other personality disorders.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":63350728,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/63350728/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"pedi.2019.33.5.64520200518-61663-1pat67p.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/63350728/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Psychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpers.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/63350728/pedi.2019.33.5.64520200518-61663-1pat67p-libre.pdf?1589819606=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPsychopathology_as_an_Emergent_Interpers.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=NKeb6ct7lkMUTTGt7hTIV3j2MChtDMqj5bI6CvopjmFCnDeg5lnsX6FwH4LmEvDz2-I3ghY-e5wmyxHlLsFmXiUsYhQBp2Dc80laK3dIYeb0k~brJs0uDakx1PthDsoEy-I~NA1k8Xixm1SufvsbhH9m5wxxXRNUVuVImRj6kzN86Y5VgVOmr-r33eI7s6vcgtqLMAabHrefteHDBJm89i4uB78mMD1AnaNjwsTZjl2ah1X7d~w7Zgh4nItdBYICgdiDQ6ugU-72sF-Sy1KlrDCLk-y7bLXbBN~tCxVSiuPSdRnfpPiv0yTT-FbjMvih7vXC0C1WMmGSz5rxQraX1Q__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38609275"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38609275/The_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_the_Age_of_Precision_Medicine"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Physician-Patient Relationship in the Age of Precision Medicine" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58685020/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38609275/The_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_the_Age_of_Precision_Medicine">The Physician-Patient Relationship in the Age of Precision Medicine</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">https://doi.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="a38701f994ea67fa5eb8b2bfc57042b4" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58685020,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38609275,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58685020/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38609275"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38609275"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38609275; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38609275]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38609275]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38609275; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38609275']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38609275, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "a38701f994ea67fa5eb8b2bfc57042b4" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38609275]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38609275,"title":"The Physician-Patient Relationship in the Age of Precision Medicine","translated_title":"","metadata":{"ai_title_tag":"Evolving Physician-Patient Dynamics in Precision Medicine","grobid_abstract":"https://doi.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2018,"errors":{}},"grobid_abstract_attachment_id":58685020},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38609275/The_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_the_Age_of_Precision_Medicine","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-22T15:03:22.725-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":32347384,"work_id":38609275,"tagging_user_id":3280875,"tagged_user_id":1177029,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"g***7@columbia.edu","affiliation":"Columbia University","display_order":1,"name":"Gil Eyal","title":"The Physician-Patient Relationship in the Age of Precision Medicine"},{"id":32347385,"work_id":38609275,"tagging_user_id":3280875,"tagged_user_id":14728206,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"p***1@columbia.edu","affiliation":"Columbia University","display_order":2,"name":"Paul Appelbaum","title":"The Physician-Patient Relationship in the Age of Precision Medicine"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":58685020,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58685020/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"s41436-018-0286-z.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58685020/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_th.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58685020/s41436-018-0286-z-libre.pdf?1553300020=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_th.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=MQZmvyRj0HTQ4hRwWAEnOx8AEGq2MQ8nc146Qn7GTYZsDXM4~pb-SABcUM11BU-Sbg2mJPA66IdVv56~ojxxT~m-QKlIz395G8j~RYl6f51AOeBJ0pvRY-rWhQzXfP526gSgdIHFWmiO0YG2WGSQ-6ADjCBwWcMcsIj87hycpjyDgZWH9z0E4JthAiUIeCAcNBfOpw3UO2vNugYldc82Jdh4S9cYUdN6T4LkxOXAT2B-gqQVf3~sfYjQVwUqw15gkAC3AHNxhdwEVmTchJNUUDWW-3gO7ZKVriJQ2RgCODcz627kjubSU9gQVOr3myOnFtTsO039lvBFoW43JrY3vg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_the_Age_of_Precision_Medicine","translated_slug":"","page_count":3,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"https://doi.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":58685020,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58685020/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"s41436-018-0286-z.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58685020/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_th.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58685020/s41436-018-0286-z-libre.pdf?1553300020=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Physician_Patient_Relationship_in_th.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=MQZmvyRj0HTQ4hRwWAEnOx8AEGq2MQ8nc146Qn7GTYZsDXM4~pb-SABcUM11BU-Sbg2mJPA66IdVv56~ojxxT~m-QKlIz395G8j~RYl6f51AOeBJ0pvRY-rWhQzXfP526gSgdIHFWmiO0YG2WGSQ-6ADjCBwWcMcsIj87hycpjyDgZWH9z0E4JthAiUIeCAcNBfOpw3UO2vNugYldc82Jdh4S9cYUdN6T4LkxOXAT2B-gqQVf3~sfYjQVwUqw15gkAC3AHNxhdwEVmTchJNUUDWW-3gO7ZKVriJQ2RgCODcz627kjubSU9gQVOr3myOnFtTsO039lvBFoW43JrY3vg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":74855,"name":"Physician-Patient Relationship","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Physician-Patient_Relationship"},{"id":144284,"name":"Physician Patient Communication","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Physician_Patient_Communication"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="25792133"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/25792133/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathways_Random_Walks_and_Tortuous_Paths_Moving_from_the_Descriptive_to_the_Etiological_in_Psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of (with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Causal Pathways, Random Walks and Tortuous Paths: Moving from the Descriptive to the Etiological in Psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/47052955/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/25792133/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathways_Random_Walks_and_Tortuous_Paths_Moving_from_the_Descriptive_to_the_Etiological_in_Psychiatry">(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Causal Pathways, Random Walks and Tortuous Paths: Moving from the Descriptive to the Etiological in Psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The majority position among philosophers of psychiatry as well as psychiatrists themselves is tha...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The majority position among philosophers of psychiatry as well as psychiatrists themselves is that instead of revising psychiatric categories, researchers should attempt to discover causal mechanisms that can explain these common clusters of signs and symptoms. The task is how to figure out what sorts of presumably multilevel causal explanations can realistically be hoped for given the profound complexity of psychopathological phenomena. Given that the sort of bottom-up reduction that is possible in the case some of closed physical systems is not a viable or appropriate aim for psychiatry, we argue here that instead of complete causal pathways, psychiatric nosologists should aim to construct categories that represent robust patterns in the data that emerge from our best theories about psychopathology. Our term robust pattern is a portmanteau that introduces two philosophical terms to psychiatric context: Daniel Dennett&#39;s real patterns, and William Wimsatt&#39;s theory of robustness. As opposed to natural kinds, robust patterns do not refer to a discrete sort of entity that exists in the world. Rather they are better seen heuristically-as categories that grow out our best empirical theories in response to our practical needs. Taking schizophrenia as a case study, we explore how a robust pattern approach might differ from a tradition diagnostic kind as formulated by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. We will conclude by considering the ontological status of diagnostic categories if they are viewed as robust patterns, and comparing it with a natural kinds approach.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="acc85af61f80daae9901471ec40a48d6" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:47052955,&quot;asset_id&quot;:25792133,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/47052955/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="25792133"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="25792133"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 25792133; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=25792133]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=25792133]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 25792133; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='25792133']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 25792133, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "acc85af61f80daae9901471ec40a48d6" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=25792133]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":25792133,"title":"(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Causal Pathways, Random Walks and Tortuous Paths: Moving from the Descriptive to the Etiological in Psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"The majority position among philosophers of psychiatry as well as psychiatrists themselves is that instead of revising psychiatric categories, researchers should attempt to discover causal mechanisms that can explain these common clusters of signs and symptoms. The task is how to figure out what sorts of presumably multilevel causal explanations can realistically be hoped for given the profound complexity of psychopathological phenomena. Given that the sort of bottom-up reduction that is possible in the case some of closed physical systems is not a viable or appropriate aim for psychiatry, we argue here that instead of complete causal pathways, psychiatric nosologists should aim to construct categories that represent robust patterns in the data that emerge from our best theories about psychopathology. Our term robust pattern is a portmanteau that introduces two philosophical terms to psychiatric context: Daniel Dennett's real patterns, and William Wimsatt's theory of robustness. As opposed to natural kinds, robust patterns do not refer to a discrete sort of entity that exists in the world. Rather they are better seen heuristically-as categories that grow out our best empirical theories in response to our practical needs. Taking schizophrenia as a case study, we explore how a robust pattern approach might differ from a tradition diagnostic kind as formulated by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. We will conclude by considering the ontological status of diagnostic categories if they are viewed as robust patterns, and comparing it with a natural kinds approach."},"translated_abstract":"The majority position among philosophers of psychiatry as well as psychiatrists themselves is that instead of revising psychiatric categories, researchers should attempt to discover causal mechanisms that can explain these common clusters of signs and symptoms. The task is how to figure out what sorts of presumably multilevel causal explanations can realistically be hoped for given the profound complexity of psychopathological phenomena. Given that the sort of bottom-up reduction that is possible in the case some of closed physical systems is not a viable or appropriate aim for psychiatry, we argue here that instead of complete causal pathways, psychiatric nosologists should aim to construct categories that represent robust patterns in the data that emerge from our best theories about psychopathology. Our term robust pattern is a portmanteau that introduces two philosophical terms to psychiatric context: Daniel Dennett's real patterns, and William Wimsatt's theory of robustness. As opposed to natural kinds, robust patterns do not refer to a discrete sort of entity that exists in the world. Rather they are better seen heuristically-as categories that grow out our best empirical theories in response to our practical needs. Taking schizophrenia as a case study, we explore how a robust pattern approach might differ from a tradition diagnostic kind as formulated by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. We will conclude by considering the ontological status of diagnostic categories if they are viewed as robust patterns, and comparing it with a natural kinds approach.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/25792133/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathways_Random_Walks_and_Tortuous_Paths_Moving_from_the_Descriptive_to_the_Etiological_in_Psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2016-06-01T23:42:19.745-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"draft","co_author_tags":[{"id":20866551,"work_id":25792133,"tagging_user_id":3280875,"tagged_user_id":31834575,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"k***3@gmail.com","affiliation":"University of Pittsburgh","display_order":0,"name":"Ken Schaffner","title":"(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Causal Pathways, Random Walks and Tortuous Paths: Moving from the Descriptive to the Etiological in Psychiatry"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":47052955,"title":"","file_type":"docx","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/47052955/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"CPIV_Main_Chapter.docx","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/47052955/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathway.docx","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/47052955/CPIV_Main_Chapter.docx?1467811208=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3Dwith_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathway.docx\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=D~CGtqHuwlnCpRaBSFQJ4ONA2JT8UeQK5pSuaxHrT7tqbczNPqP-cIS7eP4vZXpdpaBADNtEG17g2N08VTAjZNyhyfZy7aVCEM14je7AmqS7OxSkV5351sPr3U0GnIysJ9IiC2mPSBpBJqHvovf18aeQ3nvGWCvmJaCUMNA4rOnC6EDDw1J8YWvHOMaSYSqTRl~2d6JqeZ05BTAteFmMO2H8Ny4Cfs47IlGi8iAuKhqF416EnCENsA8SCU3ESqxlrcXzT4oayXc~AKb85rEuTLLBX679O4J2C5oDMf7C~wpeppsu-UxwypqzWvWA86wwo5zZMIkjOLYSCfC248zmOg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathways_Random_Walks_and_Tortuous_Paths_Moving_from_the_Descriptive_to_the_Etiological_in_Psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":40,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"The majority position among philosophers of psychiatry as well as psychiatrists themselves is that instead of revising psychiatric categories, researchers should attempt to discover causal mechanisms that can explain these common clusters of signs and symptoms. The task is how to figure out what sorts of presumably multilevel causal explanations can realistically be hoped for given the profound complexity of psychopathological phenomena. Given that the sort of bottom-up reduction that is possible in the case some of closed physical systems is not a viable or appropriate aim for psychiatry, we argue here that instead of complete causal pathways, psychiatric nosologists should aim to construct categories that represent robust patterns in the data that emerge from our best theories about psychopathology. Our term robust pattern is a portmanteau that introduces two philosophical terms to psychiatric context: Daniel Dennett's real patterns, and William Wimsatt's theory of robustness. As opposed to natural kinds, robust patterns do not refer to a discrete sort of entity that exists in the world. Rather they are better seen heuristically-as categories that grow out our best empirical theories in response to our practical needs. Taking schizophrenia as a case study, we explore how a robust pattern approach might differ from a tradition diagnostic kind as formulated by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. We will conclude by considering the ontological status of diagnostic categories if they are viewed as robust patterns, and comparing it with a natural kinds approach.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":47052955,"title":"","file_type":"docx","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/47052955/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"CPIV_Main_Chapter.docx","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/47052955/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathway.docx","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/47052955/CPIV_Main_Chapter.docx?1467811208=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3Dwith_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Causal_Pathway.docx\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=D~CGtqHuwlnCpRaBSFQJ4ONA2JT8UeQK5pSuaxHrT7tqbczNPqP-cIS7eP4vZXpdpaBADNtEG17g2N08VTAjZNyhyfZy7aVCEM14je7AmqS7OxSkV5351sPr3U0GnIysJ9IiC2mPSBpBJqHvovf18aeQ3nvGWCvmJaCUMNA4rOnC6EDDw1J8YWvHOMaSYSqTRl~2d6JqeZ05BTAteFmMO2H8Ny4Cfs47IlGi8iAuKhqF416EnCENsA8SCU3ESqxlrcXzT4oayXc~AKb85rEuTLLBX679O4J2C5oDMf7C~wpeppsu-UxwypqzWvWA86wwo5zZMIkjOLYSCfC248zmOg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":19117,"name":"Daniel Dennett","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Daniel_Dennett"},{"id":296691,"name":"Psychiatric Classification","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatric_Classification"}],"urls":[{"id":7185863,"url":"http://cfs.ku.dk/psychiatric-nosology-current-issues/presentations-and-comments/CP4_KT_KFS_Presentation.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7282947"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7282947/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_Social_Constructionism_and_the_Problem_of_Progress_in_Psychiatry"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of (with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Varieties of Social Constructionism and the Problem of Progress in Psychiatry" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33968750/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7282947/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_Social_Constructionism_and_the_Problem_of_Progress_in_Psychiatry">(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Varieties of Social Constructionism and the Problem of Progress in Psychiatry</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Philosophical Issues in Psychiatry III</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="ca8d0e4795abc8d03857df1a2b8c91cc" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33968750,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7282947,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33968750/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7282947"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7282947"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7282947; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7282947]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7282947]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7282947; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7282947']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7282947, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "ca8d0e4795abc8d03857df1a2b8c91cc" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7282947]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7282947,"title":"(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Varieties of Social Constructionism and the Problem of Progress in Psychiatry","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Oxford University Press","ai_abstract":"This paper explores the diversity of causal pathways leading to mental disorders as outlined in the DSM, arguing that both biological and social factors must be considered when understanding psychiatric conditions. It critiques the dominance of the biomedical paradigm while advocating for a nuanced view of social constructionism in psychiatry. By offering a taxonomy of social constructionist perspectives, the authors aim to establish a framework that recognizes the complexity of mental disorder classification and emphasizes the potential for progress within the field.","publication_name":"Philosophical Issues in Psychiatry III"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7282947/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_Social_Constructionism_and_the_Problem_of_Progress_in_Psychiatry","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-07T03:27:17.454-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":33968750,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33968750/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"CPIII_Chapter_11.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33968750/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_S.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33968750/CPIII_Chapter_11-libre.pdf?1402992159=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3Dwith_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_S.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=F-4dYmJcupex7nZCISezrfwDNnccR19pWy8cN2T2RantMumcghZRKfPKx-vVmoJuJHFG~2gRpW7ICV1tE~d1J0iMsG-vR8jRh~9rBXp~JOWi9326MX9iludp5pbWWZdOg82oSr~zUwfDpIamA8d2mE53CBDZdZYFOvHQfjxPru9ucGF4JbRRytHCK8dB8LRBI0tU0K~3TejBYYDdHvMUhqP~2DgoDFY1czUciBYWbA4M5XfIgTcoE1HZkKIcToTKNXOxHm6NvYuFYsM0YxshqGfhGs5z1-X5z0V~XS4c4hra6CuL47YzeusAdOjDl9ZZ8ddzOSppvwNQl5Ftmor4kA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_Social_Constructionism_and_the_Problem_of_Progress_in_Psychiatry","translated_slug":"","page_count":36,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":33968750,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33968750/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"CPIII_Chapter_11.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33968750/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_S.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33968750/CPIII_Chapter_11-libre.pdf?1402992159=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3Dwith_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Varieties_of_S.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=F-4dYmJcupex7nZCISezrfwDNnccR19pWy8cN2T2RantMumcghZRKfPKx-vVmoJuJHFG~2gRpW7ICV1tE~d1J0iMsG-vR8jRh~9rBXp~JOWi9326MX9iludp5pbWWZdOg82oSr~zUwfDpIamA8d2mE53CBDZdZYFOvHQfjxPru9ucGF4JbRRytHCK8dB8LRBI0tU0K~3TejBYYDdHvMUhqP~2DgoDFY1czUciBYWbA4M5XfIgTcoE1HZkKIcToTKNXOxHm6NvYuFYsM0YxshqGfhGs5z1-X5z0V~XS4c4hra6CuL47YzeusAdOjDl9ZZ8ddzOSppvwNQl5Ftmor4kA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":6182,"name":"History of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":17920,"name":"Social Constructionism/ Constructivism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Constructionism_Constructivism"},{"id":209848,"name":"Scientific Progress","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Scientific_Progress"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7282948"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7282948/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Critic_of_Bridgman_s_Operationalism_Lessons_for_Psychiatry_from_the_History_of_Science_a_Response_to_Bovet_and_Parnas_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of (with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Hempel as a Critic of Bridgman’s Operationalism: Lessons for Psychiatry from the History of Science (a Response to Bovet and Parnas)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33892266/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7282948/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Critic_of_Bridgman_s_Operationalism_Lessons_for_Psychiatry_from_the_History_of_Science_a_Response_to_Bovet_and_Parnas_">(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Hempel as a Critic of Bridgman’s Operationalism: Lessons for Psychiatry from the History of Science (a Response to Bovet and Parnas)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Philosophical Issues in Psychiatry III </span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">s insightful chapter provides a deeper look at the operationalist philosophy that so markedly inf...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">s insightful chapter provides a deeper look at the operationalist philosophy that so markedly influenced post-1980 psychiatry. Other scholars have framed discussions of contemporary psychiatry with a history of the philosophical antecedents of DSM-III by citing Hempel&#39;s 1959 paper-reprinted as (Hempel 1965b)-but Parnas and Bovet further examine the influence of Percy</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7d66bc60de28d72a90f2c4c029477f2a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33892266,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7282948,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33892266/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7282948"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7282948"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7282948; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7282948]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7282948]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7282948; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7282948']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7282948, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7d66bc60de28d72a90f2c4c029477f2a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7282948]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7282948,"title":"(with Kenneth F. Schaffner) Hempel as a Critic of Bridgman’s Operationalism: Lessons for Psychiatry from the History of Science (a Response to Bovet and Parnas)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publisher":"Oxford University Press","grobid_abstract":"s insightful chapter provides a deeper look at the operationalist philosophy that so markedly influenced post-1980 psychiatry. Other scholars have framed discussions of contemporary psychiatry with a history of the philosophical antecedents of DSM-III by citing Hempel's 1959 paper-reprinted as (Hempel 1965b)-but Parnas and Bovet further examine the influence of Percy","publication_name":"Philosophical Issues in Psychiatry III ","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":33892266},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7282948/_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Critic_of_Bridgman_s_Operationalism_Lessons_for_Psychiatry_from_the_History_of_Science_a_Response_to_Bovet_and_Parnas_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-07T03:27:17.578-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":33892266,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33892266/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"CPIII_Chapter_24.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33892266/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Cr.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33892266/CPIII_Chapter_24-libre.pdf?1402136531=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3Dwith_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Cr.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=FaBQrUfGLxsKe3zCZjQevjz1ldIre5~9yCt4TMR6lBpDss-JcBGl6l3Rn17V3-17fpeHId2aYlpaNNPu4SSH6BTNlM1whnO78qPh1cf6t2WZORY5q7E3-lqh0dKQmWPI3tn6KaC0tMvVhZOWl7UzDuQGnuc0JLdalw~-a19fT3WmgFYRpqAQKvBW2yu1k~pNJuM445nEj5hwZfwFGdHLB-jKqTaLDn~AXajuxlWa3SOQE4dn6LzdgktDjjAl3U-dB7YC7oiuLS69A4nAS~WE9URCDDZPR6hTVDAvUlspjY5g73VJoFH5~YafDiO1z-nllvypctuJKB5d523-XM6ryg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"_with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Critic_of_Bridgman_s_Operationalism_Lessons_for_Psychiatry_from_the_History_of_Science_a_Response_to_Bovet_and_Parnas_","translated_slug":"","page_count":13,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"s insightful chapter provides a deeper look at the operationalist philosophy that so markedly influenced post-1980 psychiatry. Other scholars have framed discussions of contemporary psychiatry with a history of the philosophical antecedents of DSM-III by citing Hempel's 1959 paper-reprinted as (Hempel 1965b)-but Parnas and Bovet further examine the influence of Percy","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":33892266,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33892266/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"CPIII_Chapter_24.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33892266/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"with_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Cr.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33892266/CPIII_Chapter_24-libre.pdf?1402136531=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3Dwith_Kenneth_F_Schaffner_Hempel_as_a_Cr.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=FaBQrUfGLxsKe3zCZjQevjz1ldIre5~9yCt4TMR6lBpDss-JcBGl6l3Rn17V3-17fpeHId2aYlpaNNPu4SSH6BTNlM1whnO78qPh1cf6t2WZORY5q7E3-lqh0dKQmWPI3tn6KaC0tMvVhZOWl7UzDuQGnuc0JLdalw~-a19fT3WmgFYRpqAQKvBW2yu1k~pNJuM445nEj5hwZfwFGdHLB-jKqTaLDn~AXajuxlWa3SOQE4dn6LzdgktDjjAl3U-dB7YC7oiuLS69A4nAS~WE9URCDDZPR6hTVDAvUlspjY5g73VJoFH5~YafDiO1z-nllvypctuJKB5d523-XM6ryg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":821,"name":"Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Science"},{"id":936,"name":"History of Analytic Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Analytic_Philosophy"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":109163,"name":"Hempel","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Hempel"},{"id":850350,"name":"Operationalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Operationalism"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="1487553" id="bookreviews"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="15209621"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/15209621/Beyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand_the_Interaction_of_Nature_and_Nurture_James_Tabery_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Beyond Versus: The Struggle to Understand the Interaction of Nature and Nurture (James Tabery)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/38583622/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/15209621/Beyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand_the_Interaction_of_Nature_and_Nurture_James_Tabery_">Beyond Versus: The Struggle to Understand the Interaction of Nature and Nurture (James Tabery)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="182ef117cc6533d6b4e083c4814f910c" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:38583622,&quot;asset_id&quot;:15209621,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/38583622/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="15209621"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="15209621"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 15209621; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=15209621]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=15209621]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 15209621; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='15209621']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 15209621, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "182ef117cc6533d6b4e083c4814f910c" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=15209621]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":15209621,"title":"Beyond Versus: The Struggle to Understand the Interaction of Nature and Nurture (James Tabery)","translated_title":"","metadata":{},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/15209621/Beyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand_the_Interaction_of_Nature_and_Nurture_James_Tabery_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2015-08-26T13:43:46.776-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"book_review","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":38583622,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/38583622/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"15265161.2015.1051669.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/38583622/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Beyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/38583622/15265161.2015.1051669-libre.pdf?1440646086=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DBeyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=DNTCQe4sQEnO2eC8g5i4LFTHAKU0F1jKE1CCDH0BIMDsLumXVSQDBSVZlOaLNjSg-eaO6TuAtc0jVtyljTpQ3a-tywsnOQJjyFvdBCnR7WFq8xIL~TVAlYbMAgeIid9G2k39JsIelLQFWAtSYGQQAz0tCmvaOhuo0bvL923sSO2tFmSqi7aw7DuL3n8CLX2Qfy1U7RLtZZe~3tKVtF8i1YZSMZrnrO2TV8fUOLNfjgq77JxUtn8InAw7pLxjFdo~gZFFO8dT7zuykuZaDPpoxZgxij1mhjT~jTSkf6hz5L7ikZPIZiabzQfSPhEtzId6W78QjOjAfR5zoXm2oIZrxg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Beyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand_the_Interaction_of_Nature_and_Nurture_James_Tabery_","translated_slug":"","page_count":2,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":38583622,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/38583622/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"15265161.2015.1051669.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/38583622/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Beyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/38583622/15265161.2015.1051669-libre.pdf?1440646086=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DBeyond_Versus_The_Struggle_to_Understand.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=DNTCQe4sQEnO2eC8g5i4LFTHAKU0F1jKE1CCDH0BIMDsLumXVSQDBSVZlOaLNjSg-eaO6TuAtc0jVtyljTpQ3a-tywsnOQJjyFvdBCnR7WFq8xIL~TVAlYbMAgeIid9G2k39JsIelLQFWAtSYGQQAz0tCmvaOhuo0bvL923sSO2tFmSqi7aw7DuL3n8CLX2Qfy1U7RLtZZe~3tKVtF8i1YZSMZrnrO2TV8fUOLNfjgq77JxUtn8InAw7pLxjFdo~gZFFO8dT7zuykuZaDPpoxZgxij1mhjT~jTSkf6hz5L7ikZPIZiabzQfSPhEtzId6W78QjOjAfR5zoXm2oIZrxg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":156,"name":"Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Genetics"},{"id":821,"name":"Philosophy of Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Science"},{"id":1414,"name":"Bioethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Bioethics"},{"id":3939,"name":"History and Philosophy of Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_and_Philosophy_of_Biology"},{"id":4440,"name":"Philosophy of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Medicine"},{"id":9435,"name":"Medical Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_Ethics"},{"id":57139,"name":"History of genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_genetics"},{"id":129917,"name":"Human Behavioral Genetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Human_Behavioral_Genetics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7226683"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7226683/The_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Psychiatry_K_W_M_Fulford_et_al_eds_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry (K. W. M. Fulford et al., eds.)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847741/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7226683/The_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Psychiatry_K_W_M_Fulford_et_al_eds_">The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry (K. W. M. Fulford et al., eds.)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Psychological Medicine</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="aa33a5bbd7439c389e5da50482456328" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33847741,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7226683,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847741/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7226683"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7226683"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7226683; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7226683]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7226683]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7226683; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7226683']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7226683, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "aa33a5bbd7439c389e5da50482456328" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7226683]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7226683,"title":"The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry (K. W. M. Fulford et al., eds.)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"ai_abstract":"The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry, edited by K. W. M. Fulford et al., presents a comprehensive exploration of the intersection of philosophy and psychiatry, addressing both traditional and contemporary topics, including neuroethics and the placebo effect. The editors advocate for a philosophy that is deeply integrated with clinical practice, emphasizing the importance of the therapeutic relationship while critiquing the dominant biomedical paradigm. The volume aims to support clinicians and philosophers in developing a nuanced understanding of psychiatric practice from a humanistic perspective.","publication_name":"Psychological Medicine"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7226683/The_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Psychiatry_K_W_M_Fulford_et_al_eds_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-01T19:44:34.204-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"book_review","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":33847741,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847741/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"S0033291714000907a-2.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847741/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Ps.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33847741/S0033291714000907a-2-libre.pdf?1401677087=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Ps.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=M2lZgNA5NJ-IquVjHjn~FvyZBjstn3dACIk7rfx5j1ZuQbOYosQ2Yy~kM3PGWf7EFFjqbaiN8Lo6J48v083jiDg3QgWYF9tRUWke8wbp-Ptc-q79XxeDC4nfhLmiBbagpCB7QyqWqInuJujiPXUgqRx4ydXMJRy63Z4vvNWMmnNM21ic9Eyb5zDKe7WRHAOsgcbrO7s~zLGODfE-X6oLrFoHlpq4pfTi93LkvsEo7SryKp4qgydnyoW5gSW6d7qExWCvMw8KPLrVKAU3fEu3Wsafx97CRzVifRjDi5TaLZI1rkw4tN3HPWxT3uXG5lVXCKf7EGOibD8D-Bhq4lUBDQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Psychiatry_K_W_M_Fulford_et_al_eds_","translated_slug":"","page_count":2,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":33847741,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847741/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"S0033291714000907a-2.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847741/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Ps.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33847741/S0033291714000907a-2-libre.pdf?1401677087=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Oxford_Handbook_of_Philosophy_and_Ps.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=M2lZgNA5NJ-IquVjHjn~FvyZBjstn3dACIk7rfx5j1ZuQbOYosQ2Yy~kM3PGWf7EFFjqbaiN8Lo6J48v083jiDg3QgWYF9tRUWke8wbp-Ptc-q79XxeDC4nfhLmiBbagpCB7QyqWqInuJujiPXUgqRx4ydXMJRy63Z4vvNWMmnNM21ic9Eyb5zDKe7WRHAOsgcbrO7s~zLGODfE-X6oLrFoHlpq4pfTi93LkvsEo7SryKp4qgydnyoW5gSW6d7qExWCvMw8KPLrVKAU3fEu3Wsafx97CRzVifRjDi5TaLZI1rkw4tN3HPWxT3uXG5lVXCKf7EGOibD8D-Bhq4lUBDQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":635,"name":"Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatry"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":8546,"name":"Philosophy of Psychiatry","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Psychiatry"},{"id":42137,"name":"Psychological Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychological_Medicine"},{"id":374147,"name":"Oxford Handbook","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Oxford_Handbook"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7226775"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7226775/The_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonathan_Hodge_and_Gregory_Radick_eds_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Cambridge Companion to Darwin (Jonathan Hodge and Gregory Radick, eds.)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847819/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7226775/The_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonathan_Hodge_and_Gregory_Radick_eds_">The Cambridge Companion to Darwin (Jonathan Hodge and Gregory Radick, eds.)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>HOPOS: Journal for the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, a...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact <a href="mailto:support@jstor.org" rel="nofollow">support@jstor.org</a>.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="246ebe82c2ad79b82d338545aba2d02c" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33847819,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7226775,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847819/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7226775"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7226775"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7226775; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7226775]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7226775]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7226775; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7226775']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7226775, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "246ebe82c2ad79b82d338545aba2d02c" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7226775]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7226775,"title":"The Cambridge Companion to Darwin (Jonathan Hodge and Gregory Radick, eds.)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"ai_title_tag":"The Cambridge Companion to Darwin: A Scholarly Resource","grobid_abstract":"JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.","publication_name":"HOPOS: Journal for the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":33847819},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7226775/The_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonathan_Hodge_and_Gregory_Radick_eds_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-01T19:57:08.463-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"book_review","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":33847819,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847819/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"HOPOS_The_Journal_of_the_International_Society_for_the_History_of_Philosophy_of_Science_2011_Tabb.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847819/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonath.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33847819/HOPOS_The_Journal_of_the_International_Society_for_the_History_of_Philosophy_of_Science_2011_Tabb-libre.pdf?1401677797=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonath.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=X7LEK7jKBu4aZwj0TK6Xe1AD4WzU0PFSomQglNtMIB-ZNWjUeYpI2zo8iAVi3JH~jzBqUrL-kCQWUiHZ1z7p3aWwPfcz4Kq2Af~nH8jtWxrig6I-9aDBpVGLKH7wMPU01iXHzkBti5qTePFgHiPtV5kUVC0c8iKhgwrBCiJYFwrJ4q48qZXy4-FFTBh6NF9pQOu8APzkM09jssuBRrIXXvwSlezE9S~ZD77zvujRE7Ag6qomc6soamGHmKalYLqmG6a6OD5kplRBeMNyeDlygYPuYEzZAsdxEu1qn~xuWYbxISyF80Exe0vbWl~i2bxNWFQgbF17lGJVtyHlXtVEUg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonathan_Hodge_and_Gregory_Radick_eds_","translated_slug":"","page_count":6,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":33847819,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847819/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"HOPOS_The_Journal_of_the_International_Society_for_the_History_of_Philosophy_of_Science_2011_Tabb.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847819/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonath.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33847819/HOPOS_The_Journal_of_the_International_Society_for_the_History_of_Philosophy_of_Science_2011_Tabb-libre.pdf?1401677797=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Cambridge_Companion_to_Darwin_Jonath.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=X7LEK7jKBu4aZwj0TK6Xe1AD4WzU0PFSomQglNtMIB-ZNWjUeYpI2zo8iAVi3JH~jzBqUrL-kCQWUiHZ1z7p3aWwPfcz4Kq2Af~nH8jtWxrig6I-9aDBpVGLKH7wMPU01iXHzkBti5qTePFgHiPtV5kUVC0c8iKhgwrBCiJYFwrJ4q48qZXy4-FFTBh6NF9pQOu8APzkM09jssuBRrIXXvwSlezE9S~ZD77zvujRE7Ag6qomc6soamGHmKalYLqmG6a6OD5kplRBeMNyeDlygYPuYEzZAsdxEu1qn~xuWYbxISyF80Exe0vbWl~i2bxNWFQgbF17lGJVtyHlXtVEUg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":3939,"name":"History and Philosophy of Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_and_Philosophy_of_Biology"},{"id":27854,"name":"Darwin","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Darwin"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7226763"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7226763/Darwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_Theory_1837_1874_Julia_Voss_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Darwin&#39;s Pictures: Views of Evolutionary Theory, 1837-1874 (Julia Voss)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847813/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7226763/Darwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_Theory_1837_1874_Julia_Voss_">Darwin&#39;s Pictures: Views of Evolutionary Theory, 1837-1874 (Julia Voss)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Evolution: Education and Outreach</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="aca3442d81f20850ff81ba6db90a1a6f" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33847813,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7226763,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847813/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7226763"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7226763"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7226763; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7226763]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7226763]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7226763; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7226763']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7226763, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "aca3442d81f20850ff81ba6db90a1a6f" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7226763]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7226763,"title":"Darwin's Pictures: Views of Evolutionary Theory, 1837-1874 (Julia Voss)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_name":"Evolution: Education and Outreach"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7226763/Darwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_Theory_1837_1874_Julia_Voss_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-01T19:55:14.517-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"book_review","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":33847813,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847813/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Evo_Edu_Outreach_2012_Tabb.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847813/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Darwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_T.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33847813/Evo_Edu_Outreach_2012_Tabb-libre.pdf?1401677677=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DDarwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_T.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=FfHLvLsx0mh2Ik8mc0wVQYaHcSdfjeODnxf83os37icON49JN10jU~SfJe4WwHtTqOJiZb5VuehT6IRwtFAqR2huKE4qNUQZq79dqvmDTJ6rSMJvPfMHxYqatdOklNeZm1bmb1q6RD1M6AnujxInpD2ZmBh2vBsLQ8PIsMN4S3jwJ1AaBwCbpxVHmm9~pDy67m92sbYVT2Ucbe6A~Hu-7VJ5mR~hK08MY4L5srYD~Lfod6-iQPiSEwBWwDEBsaZU0IQdgRPm8qJNA~aRunMVm5X0fxpUXMCxAAk4Du4LP1MuU1hlOIHwiGAuPxnR2R-9hf~Fr95WOFeY9FZ5D2GK8A__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Darwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_Theory_1837_1874_Julia_Voss_","translated_slug":"","page_count":3,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":null,"owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[{"id":33847813,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33847813/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Evo_Edu_Outreach_2012_Tabb.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33847813/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Darwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_T.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33847813/Evo_Edu_Outreach_2012_Tabb-libre.pdf?1401677677=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DDarwins_Pictures_Views_of_Evolutionary_T.pdf\u0026Expires=1736409795\u0026Signature=FfHLvLsx0mh2Ik8mc0wVQYaHcSdfjeODnxf83os37icON49JN10jU~SfJe4WwHtTqOJiZb5VuehT6IRwtFAqR2huKE4qNUQZq79dqvmDTJ6rSMJvPfMHxYqatdOklNeZm1bmb1q6RD1M6AnujxInpD2ZmBh2vBsLQ8PIsMN4S3jwJ1AaBwCbpxVHmm9~pDy67m92sbYVT2Ucbe6A~Hu-7VJ5mR~hK08MY4L5srYD~Lfod6-iQPiSEwBWwDEBsaZU0IQdgRPm8qJNA~aRunMVm5X0fxpUXMCxAAk4Du4LP1MuU1hlOIHwiGAuPxnR2R-9hf~Fr95WOFeY9FZ5D2GK8A__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":155,"name":"Evolutionary Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Evolutionary_Biology"},{"id":863,"name":"Visual Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Visual_Studies"},{"id":3939,"name":"History and Philosophy of Biology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_and_Philosophy_of_Biology"},{"id":10882,"name":"Evolution","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Evolution"},{"id":13966,"name":"History of Art","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_Art"},{"id":26558,"name":"Visual Arts","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Visual_Arts"},{"id":27854,"name":"Darwin","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Darwin"},{"id":33909,"name":"Visual Cultures of Science (Visual Studies)","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Visual_Cultures_of_Science_Visual_Studies_"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="7188835" id="worksinprogress"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="30486556"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/30486556/On_the_Ethics_of_Precision_Funding_Priorities_and_Diachronic_Justice_in_Psychiatric_Research"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of On the Ethics of Precision: Funding Priorities and Diachronic Justice in Psychiatric Research" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/30486556/On_the_Ethics_of_Precision_Funding_Priorities_and_Diachronic_Justice_in_Psychiatric_Research">On the Ethics of Precision: Funding Priorities and Diachronic Justice in Psychiatric Research</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">While issues of distributive justice in the clinical setting have received significant attention ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">While issues of distributive justice in the clinical setting have received significant attention from bioethicists, less attention has been paid to the distribution of resources in the research setting. This paper focuses on ethical tensions brought about between shifting funding priorities in psychiatric research over time, that is, questions of “diachronic justice.” It focuses on current adjustment to the National Institute of Mental Health’s budget, which reflect a growing interest in funding basic science research over clinical research in pursuit of the epistemic value of “precision.” Chapter 1 introduces the NIMH’s new vision for psychiatric progress, best captured in its framework for classifying research proposals, the Research Domain Criteria Project. Chapter 2 shows how this shift in vision can be described as a problem of diachronic justice. While there are numerous theoretical challenges involved in assessing diachronic justice, the present discussion focuses on empirical ones that are requisite to any analysis, here called “epistemic puzzles.” Chapter 3 discusses the epistemic puzzles most central to assessments of the ethics of precision psychiatry. Finally, a concluding chapter considers other ethical concerns that arise from the embrace of a precision medicine paradigm in psychiatry, and introduces two alternative frameworks for thinking about psychiatric research that avoid some of these pitfalls.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="30486556"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="30486556"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 30486556; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=30486556]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=30486556]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 30486556; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='30486556']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 30486556, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=30486556]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":30486556,"title":"On the Ethics of Precision: Funding Priorities and Diachronic Justice in Psychiatric Research","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"While issues of distributive justice in the clinical setting have received significant attention from bioethicists, less attention has been paid to the distribution of resources in the research setting. This paper focuses on ethical tensions brought about between shifting funding priorities in psychiatric research over time, that is, questions of “diachronic justice.” It focuses on current adjustment to the National Institute of Mental Health’s budget, which reflect a growing interest in funding basic science research over clinical research in pursuit of the epistemic value of “precision.” Chapter 1 introduces the NIMH’s new vision for psychiatric progress, best captured in its framework for classifying research proposals, the Research Domain Criteria Project. Chapter 2 shows how this shift in vision can be described as a problem of diachronic justice. While there are numerous theoretical challenges involved in assessing diachronic justice, the present discussion focuses on empirical ones that are requisite to any analysis, here called “epistemic puzzles.” Chapter 3 discusses the epistemic puzzles most central to assessments of the ethics of precision psychiatry. Finally, a concluding chapter considers other ethical concerns that arise from the embrace of a precision medicine paradigm in psychiatry, and introduces two alternative frameworks for thinking about psychiatric research that avoid some of these pitfalls. "},"translated_abstract":"While issues of distributive justice in the clinical setting have received significant attention from bioethicists, less attention has been paid to the distribution of resources in the research setting. This paper focuses on ethical tensions brought about between shifting funding priorities in psychiatric research over time, that is, questions of “diachronic justice.” It focuses on current adjustment to the National Institute of Mental Health’s budget, which reflect a growing interest in funding basic science research over clinical research in pursuit of the epistemic value of “precision.” Chapter 1 introduces the NIMH’s new vision for psychiatric progress, best captured in its framework for classifying research proposals, the Research Domain Criteria Project. Chapter 2 shows how this shift in vision can be described as a problem of diachronic justice. While there are numerous theoretical challenges involved in assessing diachronic justice, the present discussion focuses on empirical ones that are requisite to any analysis, here called “epistemic puzzles.” Chapter 3 discusses the epistemic puzzles most central to assessments of the ethics of precision psychiatry. Finally, a concluding chapter considers other ethical concerns that arise from the embrace of a precision medicine paradigm in psychiatry, and introduces two alternative frameworks for thinking about psychiatric research that avoid some of these pitfalls. ","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/30486556/On_the_Ethics_of_Precision_Funding_Priorities_and_Diachronic_Justice_in_Psychiatric_Research","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2016-12-16T12:38:07.323-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":3280875,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"On_the_Ethics_of_Precision_Funding_Priorities_and_Diachronic_Justice_in_Psychiatric_Research","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"While issues of distributive justice in the clinical setting have received significant attention from bioethicists, less attention has been paid to the distribution of resources in the research setting. This paper focuses on ethical tensions brought about between shifting funding priorities in psychiatric research over time, that is, questions of “diachronic justice.” It focuses on current adjustment to the National Institute of Mental Health’s budget, which reflect a growing interest in funding basic science research over clinical research in pursuit of the epistemic value of “precision.” Chapter 1 introduces the NIMH’s new vision for psychiatric progress, best captured in its framework for classifying research proposals, the Research Domain Criteria Project. Chapter 2 shows how this shift in vision can be described as a problem of diachronic justice. While there are numerous theoretical challenges involved in assessing diachronic justice, the present discussion focuses on empirical ones that are requisite to any analysis, here called “epistemic puzzles.” Chapter 3 discusses the epistemic puzzles most central to assessments of the ethics of precision psychiatry. Finally, a concluding chapter considers other ethical concerns that arise from the embrace of a precision medicine paradigm in psychiatry, and introduces two alternative frameworks for thinking about psychiatric research that avoid some of these pitfalls. ","owner":{"id":3280875,"first_name":"Kathryn","middle_initials":null,"last_name":"Tabb","page_name":"KathrynTabb","domain_name":"bard","created_at":"2013-02-05T13:10:46.338-08:00","display_name":"Kathryn Tabb","url":"https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":4440,"name":"Philosophy of Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy_of_Medicine"},{"id":58009,"name":"Psychiatric nosology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatric_nosology"},{"id":104593,"name":"Psychiatric Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychiatric_Ethics"},{"id":141494,"name":"Healthcare policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Healthcare_policy"},{"id":463471,"name":"Healthcare Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Healthcare_Ethics"},{"id":1173343,"name":"Precision Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Precision_Medicine"},{"id":1434338,"name":"RDoC","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/RDoC"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="9879517" id="academicarticles"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="40906095"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/40906095/Experimental_philosophical_bioethics"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Experimental philosophical bioethics" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/62195843/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/40906095/Experimental_philosophical_bioethics">Experimental philosophical bioethics</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://oxford.academia.edu/BrianDEarp">Brian D . Earp</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://oxford.academia.edu/JoannaDemareeCotton">Joanna Demaree-Cotton</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb">Kathryn Tabb</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/KTobia">K. Tobia</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>AJOB Empirical Bioethics</span><span>, Feb 25, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">There is a rich tradition in bioethics of gathering empirical data to inform, supplement, or test...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">There is a rich tradition in bioethics of gathering empirical data to inform, supplement, or test the implications of normative ethical analysis. To this end, bioethicists have drawn on diverse methods, including qualitative interviews, focus groups, ethnographic studies, and opinion surveys to advance understanding of key issues in bioethics. In so doing, they have developed strong ties with neighboring disciplines such as anthropology, history, law, and sociology. Collectively, these lines of research have flourished in the broader field of “empirical bioethics” for more than 30 years (Sugarman &amp; Sulmasy 2010). More recently, philosophers from outside the field of bioethics have similarly employed empirical methods—drawn primarily from psychology, the cognitive sciences, economics, and related disciplines—to advance theoretical debates. This approach, which has come to be called experimental philosophy (or x-phi), relies primarily on controlled experiments to interrogate the concepts, intuitions, reasoning, implicit mental processes, and empirical assumptions about the mind that play a role in traditional philosophical arguments (Knobe et al. 2012). Within the moral domain, for example, experimental philosophy has begun to contribute to long-standing debates about the nature of moral judgment and reasoning; the sources of our moral emotions and biases; the qualities of a good person or a good life; and the psychological basis of moral theory itself (Alfano, Loeb, &amp; Plakias 2018). We believe that experimental philosophical bioethics—or “bioxphi”—can similarly contribute to bioethical scholarship and debate.&nbsp; Here, we introduce this emerging discipline, explain how it is distinct from empirical bioethics more broadly construed, and attempt to characterize how it might advance theory and practice in this area.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3f1c4d0e45f4ab6e56f3f9d1366e201d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:62195843,&quot;asset_id&quot;:40906095,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/62195843/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="40906095"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="40906095"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 40906095; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=40906095]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=40906095]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 40906095; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='40906095']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 40906095, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3f1c4d0e45f4ab6e56f3f9d1366e201d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=40906095]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":40906095,"title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1080/23294515.2020.1714792","issue":"1","volume":"11","abstract":"There is a rich tradition in bioethics of gathering empirical data to inform, supplement, or test the implications of normative ethical analysis. To this end, bioethicists have drawn on diverse methods, including qualitative interviews, focus groups, ethnographic studies, and opinion surveys to advance understanding of key issues in bioethics. In so doing, they have developed strong ties with neighboring disciplines such as anthropology, history, law, and sociology. Collectively, these lines of research have flourished in the broader field of “empirical bioethics” for more than 30 years (Sugarman \u0026 Sulmasy 2010). More recently, philosophers from outside the field of bioethics have similarly employed empirical methods—drawn primarily from psychology, the cognitive sciences, economics, and related disciplines—to advance theoretical debates. This approach, which has come to be called experimental philosophy (or x-phi), relies primarily on controlled experiments to interrogate the concepts, intuitions, reasoning, implicit mental processes, and empirical assumptions about the mind that play a role in traditional philosophical arguments (Knobe et al. 2012). Within the moral domain, for example, experimental philosophy has begun to contribute to long-standing debates about the nature of moral judgment and reasoning; the sources of our moral emotions and biases; the qualities of a good person or a good life; and the psychological basis of moral theory itself (Alfano, Loeb, \u0026 Plakias 2018). We believe that experimental philosophical bioethics—or “bioxphi”—can similarly contribute to bioethical scholarship and debate. Here, we introduce this emerging discipline, explain how it is distinct from empirical bioethics more broadly construed, and attempt to characterize how it might advance theory and practice in this area. \n","more_info":"Earp, B. D., Demaree-Cotton, J., Dunn, M., Dranseika, V., Everett, J. A. C., Feltz, A., Geller, G., Hannikainen, I. R., Jansen, L., Knobe, J., Kolak, J., Latham, S., Lerner, A., May, J., Mercurio, M., Mihailov, E., Rodriguez-Arias, D., Rodriguez Lopez, B., Savulescu, J., Sheehan, M., Strohminger, N., Sugarman, J., Tabb, K., \u0026 Tobia, K. (2020). Experimental philosophical bioethics. AJOB Empirical Bioethics, 11(1), 30-33.","journal_name":"AJOB Empirical Bioethics","page_numbers":"30-33","publication_date":{"day":25,"month":2,"year":2020,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"AJOB Empirical Bioethics"},"translated_abstract":"There is a rich tradition in bioethics of gathering empirical data to inform, supplement, or test the implications of normative ethical analysis. To this end, bioethicists have drawn on diverse methods, including qualitative interviews, focus groups, ethnographic studies, and opinion surveys to advance understanding of key issues in bioethics. In so doing, they have developed strong ties with neighboring disciplines such as anthropology, history, law, and sociology. Collectively, these lines of research have flourished in the broader field of “empirical bioethics” for more than 30 years (Sugarman \u0026 Sulmasy 2010). More recently, philosophers from outside the field of bioethics have similarly employed empirical methods—drawn primarily from psychology, the cognitive sciences, economics, and related disciplines—to advance theoretical debates. This approach, which has come to be called experimental philosophy (or x-phi), relies primarily on controlled experiments to interrogate the concepts, intuitions, reasoning, implicit mental processes, and empirical assumptions about the mind that play a role in traditional philosophical arguments (Knobe et al. 2012). Within the moral domain, for example, experimental philosophy has begun to contribute to long-standing debates about the nature of moral judgment and reasoning; the sources of our moral emotions and biases; the qualities of a good person or a good life; and the psychological basis of moral theory itself (Alfano, Loeb, \u0026 Plakias 2018). We believe that experimental philosophical bioethics—or “bioxphi”—can similarly contribute to bioethical scholarship and debate. Here, we introduce this emerging discipline, explain how it is distinct from empirical bioethics more broadly construed, and attempt to characterize how it might advance theory and practice in this area. \n","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/40906095/Experimental_philosophical_bioethics","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-11-12T08:10:20.148-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":377433,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[{"id":33274751,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":null,"co_author_invite_id":6931607,"email":"b***p@yale.edu","display_order":1,"name":"B. Earp","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274752,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":5111344,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"j***e@hotmail.com","affiliation":"University of Oxford","display_order":2,"name":"Joanna Demaree-Cotton","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274753,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":468573,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"m***n@googlemail.com","affiliation":"National University of Singapore","display_order":3,"name":"Michael Dunn","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274754,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":null,"co_author_invite_id":6838951,"email":"j***t@psy.ox.ac.uk","display_order":4,"name":"Jim Everett","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274755,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":994146,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"i***n@fgv.br","affiliation":"PUC-RJ","display_order":5,"name":"Ivar Hannikainen","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274757,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":25866814,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"t***k@gmail.com","affiliation":"Graduate Center of the City University of New York","display_order":7,"name":"Julia Kolak","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274758,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":39704131,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"m***o@yale.edu","display_order":8,"name":"M. Mercurio","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274759,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":4925095,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"j***u@gmail.com","affiliation":"University of Oxford","display_order":9,"name":"Julian Savulescu","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274760,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":3280875,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"k***b@bard.edu","affiliation":"Bard College","display_order":10,"name":"Kathryn Tabb","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"},{"id":33274761,"work_id":40906095,"tagging_user_id":377433,"tagged_user_id":135954878,"co_author_invite_id":6931608,"email":"k***a@yale.edu","display_order":11,"name":"K. Tobia","title":"Experimental philosophical bioethics"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":62195843,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/62195843/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bioxphi_AJOB_acad.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/62195843/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Experimental_philosophical_bioethics.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/62195843/Bioxphi_AJOB_acad-libre.pdf?1582659943=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DExperimental_philosophical_bioethics.pdf\u0026Expires=1734617090\u0026Signature=bZrfXqhE-RLGEHSSJ7renKaPiXPAisPnrJK2dAcz~d7yDbsnW1a~mBwgFAbMzaaSea~Xd0MlyaGlm8D3xtc8vE8OIw35fF4FCZrK0~3awCNmwmZTXg0xncqoIdGdrf1Kx56zl7FEIdiNWOK9XhdZjzJK--JCgrKnk6e1-uct6JhkTfkMK033mKNlbAICrbjV-5v2wjgvjaPTcaXdGzKr9K03F4Q9ZPIxOzcJ2l01FT0e~6iukt3-OTBDePIZLyM-W75M3s6AkLBxEziJ1KJEChKhp2~6U-0OOi9gbekNJVbQt9GwH7T59wbypgCdu-OuMw2~cj9TsvXUNoP5YxTDnQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Experimental_philosophical_bioethics","translated_slug":"","page_count":7,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","summary":"There is a rich tradition in bioethics of gathering empirical data to inform, supplement, or test the implications of normative ethical analysis. To this end, bioethicists have drawn on diverse methods, including qualitative interviews, focus groups, ethnographic studies, and opinion surveys to advance understanding of key issues in bioethics. In so doing, they have developed strong ties with neighboring disciplines such as anthropology, history, law, and sociology. Collectively, these lines of research have flourished in the broader field of “empirical bioethics” for more than 30 years (Sugarman \u0026 Sulmasy 2010). More recently, philosophers from outside the field of bioethics have similarly employed empirical methods—drawn primarily from psychology, the cognitive sciences, economics, and related disciplines—to advance theoretical debates. This approach, which has come to be called experimental philosophy (or x-phi), relies primarily on controlled experiments to interrogate the concepts, intuitions, reasoning, implicit mental processes, and empirical assumptions about the mind that play a role in traditional philosophical arguments (Knobe et al. 2012). Within the moral domain, for example, experimental philosophy has begun to contribute to long-standing debates about the nature of moral judgment and reasoning; the sources of our moral emotions and biases; the qualities of a good person or a good life; and the psychological basis of moral theory itself (Alfano, Loeb, \u0026 Plakias 2018). We believe that experimental philosophical bioethics—or “bioxphi”—can similarly contribute to bioethical scholarship and debate. Here, we introduce this emerging discipline, explain how it is distinct from empirical bioethics more broadly construed, and attempt to characterize how it might advance theory and practice in this area. \n","owner":{"id":377433,"first_name":"Brian","middle_initials":"D .","last_name":"Earp","page_name":"BrianDEarp","domain_name":"oxford","created_at":"2011-03-26T07:36:13.724-07:00","display_name":"Brian D . Earp","url":"https://oxford.academia.edu/BrianDEarp"},"attachments":[{"id":62195843,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/62195843/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bioxphi_AJOB_acad.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/62195843/download_file?st=MTczNjQwNjE5NSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Experimental_philosophical_bioethics.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/62195843/Bioxphi_AJOB_acad-libre.pdf?1582659943=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DExperimental_philosophical_bioethics.pdf\u0026Expires=1734617090\u0026Signature=bZrfXqhE-RLGEHSSJ7renKaPiXPAisPnrJK2dAcz~d7yDbsnW1a~mBwgFAbMzaaSea~Xd0MlyaGlm8D3xtc8vE8OIw35fF4FCZrK0~3awCNmwmZTXg0xncqoIdGdrf1Kx56zl7FEIdiNWOK9XhdZjzJK--JCgrKnk6e1-uct6JhkTfkMK033mKNlbAICrbjV-5v2wjgvjaPTcaXdGzKr9K03F4Q9ZPIxOzcJ2l01FT0e~6iukt3-OTBDePIZLyM-W75M3s6AkLBxEziJ1KJEChKhp2~6U-0OOi9gbekNJVbQt9GwH7T59wbypgCdu-OuMw2~cj9TsvXUNoP5YxTDnQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":184,"name":"Sociology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Sociology"},{"id":221,"name":"Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Psychology"},{"id":236,"name":"Cognitive Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Psychology"},{"id":237,"name":"Cognitive Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Science"},{"id":767,"name":"Anthropology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Anthropology"},{"id":793,"name":"Medical Anthropology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medical_Anthropology"},{"id":803,"name":"Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Philosophy"},{"id":814,"name":"Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Ethics"},{"id":866,"name":"Experimental philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Experimental_philosophy"},{"id":906,"name":"Applied Ethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Applied_Ethics"},{"id":907,"name":"Moral Psychology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Psychology"},{"id":1414,"name":"Bioethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Bioethics"},{"id":3499,"name":"Social and Cultural Anthropology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_and_Cultural_Anthropology"},{"id":4486,"name":"Political Science","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Political_Science"},{"id":11923,"name":"Critical Bioethics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Critical_Bioethics"},{"id":18373,"name":"Moral Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_Philosophy"},{"id":26327,"name":"Medicine","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Medicine"},{"id":33855,"name":"Moral and Political Philosophy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Moral_and_Political_Philosophy"}],"urls":[{"id":8960897,"url":"https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/23294515.2020.1714792"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/google_contacts-0dfb882d836b94dbcb4a2d123d6933fc9533eda5be911641f20b4eb428429600.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb $('.js-google-connect-button').click(function(e) { e.preventDefault(); GoogleContacts.authorize_and_show_contacts(); Aedu.Dismissibles.recordClickthrough("WowProfileImportContactsPrompt"); }); $('.js-update-biography-button').click(function(e) { e.preventDefault(); Aedu.Dismissibles.recordClickthrough("UpdateUserBiographyPrompt"); $.ajax({ url: $r.api_v0_profiles_update_about_path({ subdomain_param: 'api', about: "", }), type: 'PUT', success: function(response) { location.reload(); } }); }); $('.js-work-creator-button').click(function (e) { e.preventDefault(); window.location = $r.upload_funnel_document_path({ source: encodeURIComponent(""), }); }); $('.js-video-upload-button').click(function (e) { e.preventDefault(); window.location = $r.upload_funnel_video_path({ source: encodeURIComponent(""), }); }); $('.js-do-this-later-button').click(function() { $(this).closest('.js-profile-nag-panel').remove(); Aedu.Dismissibles.recordDismissal("WowProfileImportContactsPrompt"); }); $('.js-update-biography-do-this-later-button').click(function(){ $(this).closest('.js-profile-nag-panel').remove(); Aedu.Dismissibles.recordDismissal("UpdateUserBiographyPrompt"); }); $('.wow-profile-mentions-upsell--close').click(function(){ $('.wow-profile-mentions-upsell--panel').hide(); Aedu.Dismissibles.recordDismissal("WowProfileMentionsUpsell"); }); $('.wow-profile-mentions-upsell--button').click(function(){ Aedu.Dismissibles.recordClickthrough("WowProfileMentionsUpsell"); }); new WowProfile.SocialRedesignUserWorks({ initialWorksOffset: 20, allWorksOffset: 20, maxSections: 3 }) }); </script> </div></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile_edit-5ea339ee107c863779f560dd7275595239fed73f1a13d279d2b599a28c0ecd33.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/add_coauthor-22174b608f9cb871d03443cafa7feac496fb50d7df2d66a53f5ee3c04ba67f53.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/tab-dcac0130902f0cc2d8cb403714dd47454f11fc6fb0e99ae6a0827b06613abc20.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb window.ae = window.ae || {}; window.ae.WowProfile = window.ae.WowProfile || {}; if(Aedu.User.current && Aedu.User.current.id === $viewedUser.id) { window.ae.WowProfile.current_user_edit = {}; new WowProfileEdit.EditUploadView({ el: '.js-edit-upload-button-wrapper', model: window.$current_user, }); new AddCoauthor.AddCoauthorsController(); } var userInfoView = new WowProfile.SocialRedesignUserInfo({ recaptcha_key: "6LdxlRMTAAAAADnu_zyLhLg0YF9uACwz78shpjJB" }); WowProfile.router = new WowProfile.Router({ userInfoView: userInfoView }); Backbone.history.start({ pushState: true, root: "/" + $viewedUser.page_name }); new WowProfile.UserWorksNav() }); </script> </div> <div class="bootstrap login"><div class="modal fade login-modal" id="login-modal"><div class="login-modal-dialog modal-dialog"><div class="modal-content"><div class="modal-header"><button class="close close" data-dismiss="modal" type="button"><span aria-hidden="true">&times;</span><span class="sr-only">Close</span></button><h4 class="modal-title text-center"><strong>Log In</strong></h4></div><div class="modal-body"><div class="row"><div class="col-xs-10 col-xs-offset-1"><button class="btn btn-fb btn-lg btn-block btn-v-center-content" id="login-facebook-oauth-button"><svg style="float: left; width: 19px; line-height: 1em; margin-right: .3em;" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fab" data-icon="facebook-square" class="svg-inline--fa fa-facebook-square fa-w-14" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M400 32H48A48 48 0 0 0 0 80v352a48 48 0 0 0 48 48h137.25V327.69h-63V256h63v-54.64c0-62.15 37-96.48 93.67-96.48 27.14 0 55.52 4.84 55.52 4.84v61h-31.27c-30.81 0-40.42 19.12-40.42 38.73V256h68.78l-11 71.69h-57.78V480H400a48 48 0 0 0 48-48V80a48 48 0 0 0-48-48z"></path></svg><small><strong>Log in</strong> with <strong>Facebook</strong></small></button><br /><button class="btn btn-google btn-lg btn-block btn-v-center-content" id="login-google-oauth-button"><svg style="float: left; width: 22px; line-height: 1em; margin-right: .3em;" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fab" data-icon="google-plus" class="svg-inline--fa fa-google-plus fa-w-16" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M256,8C119.1,8,8,119.1,8,256S119.1,504,256,504,504,392.9,504,256,392.9,8,256,8ZM185.3,380a124,124,0,0,1,0-248c31.3,0,60.1,11,83,32.3l-33.6,32.6c-13.2-12.9-31.3-19.1-49.4-19.1-42.9,0-77.2,35.5-77.2,78.1S142.3,334,185.3,334c32.6,0,64.9-19.1,70.1-53.3H185.3V238.1H302.2a109.2,109.2,0,0,1,1.9,20.7c0,70.8-47.5,121.2-118.8,121.2ZM415.5,273.8v35.5H380V273.8H344.5V238.3H380V202.8h35.5v35.5h35.2v35.5Z"></path></svg><small><strong>Log in</strong> with <strong>Google</strong></small></button><br /><style type="text/css">.sign-in-with-apple-button { width: 100%; height: 52px; border-radius: 3px; border: 1px solid black; cursor: pointer; }</style><script src="https://appleid.cdn-apple.com/appleauth/static/jsapi/appleid/1/en_US/appleid.auth.js" type="text/javascript"></script><div class="sign-in-with-apple-button" data-border="false" data-color="white" id="appleid-signin"><span &nbsp;&nbsp;="Sign Up with Apple" class="u-fs11"></span></div><script>AppleID.auth.init({ clientId: 'edu.academia.applesignon', scope: 'name email', redirectURI: 'https://www.academia.edu/sessions', state: "516fe59cfd67f6d05e4c96dad0335e238f0ce2b5860ed3d8fd283980b76d0873", });</script><script>// Hacky way of checking if on fast loswp if (window.loswp == null) { (function() { const Google = window?.Aedu?.Auth?.OauthButton?.Login?.Google; const Facebook = window?.Aedu?.Auth?.OauthButton?.Login?.Facebook; if (Google) { new Google({ el: '#login-google-oauth-button', rememberMeCheckboxId: 'remember_me', track: null }); } if (Facebook) { new Facebook({ el: '#login-facebook-oauth-button', rememberMeCheckboxId: 'remember_me', track: null }); } })(); }</script></div></div></div><div class="modal-body"><div class="row"><div class="col-xs-10 col-xs-offset-1"><div class="hr-heading login-hr-heading"><span class="hr-heading-text">or</span></div></div></div></div><div class="modal-body"><div class="row"><div class="col-xs-10 col-xs-offset-1"><form class="js-login-form" action="https://www.academia.edu/sessions" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post"><input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="&#x2713;" autocomplete="off" /><input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="7CU43gXARBOcI654HKpz/zMcZxd5FWBaB4NFYNHPWQsBGyiDRXKzv7x66tP63jQkIGWeLg9/AuhgTeY7Q7c8pQ==" autocomplete="off" /><div class="form-group"><label class="control-label" for="login-modal-email-input" style="font-size: 14px;">Email</label><input class="form-control" id="login-modal-email-input" name="login" type="email" /></div><div class="form-group"><label class="control-label" for="login-modal-password-input" style="font-size: 14px;">Password</label><input class="form-control" id="login-modal-password-input" name="password" type="password" /></div><input type="hidden" name="post_login_redirect_url" id="post_login_redirect_url" value="https://bard.academia.edu/KathrynTabb" autocomplete="off" /><div class="checkbox"><label><input type="checkbox" name="remember_me" id="remember_me" value="1" checked="checked" /><small style="font-size: 12px; margin-top: 2px; display: inline-block;">Remember me on this computer</small></label></div><br><input type="submit" name="commit" value="Log In" class="btn btn-primary btn-block btn-lg js-login-submit" data-disable-with="Log In" /></br></form><script>typeof window?.Aedu?.recaptchaManagedForm === 'function' && window.Aedu.recaptchaManagedForm( document.querySelector('.js-login-form'), document.querySelector('.js-login-submit') );</script><small style="font-size: 12px;"><br />or <a data-target="#login-modal-reset-password-container" data-toggle="collapse" href="javascript:void(0)">reset password</a></small><div class="collapse" id="login-modal-reset-password-container"><br /><div class="well margin-0x"><form class="js-password-reset-form" action="https://www.academia.edu/reset_password" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post"><input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="&#x2713;" autocomplete="off" /><input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="dqb0rehB0thaVfiQ1J/tAl7cIfWEzVzjWio4SlBMQtCbmOTwqPMldHoMvDsy66rZTaXYzPKnPlE95JsRwjQnfg==" autocomplete="off" /><p>Enter the email address you signed up with and we&#39;ll email you a reset link.</p><div class="form-group"><input class="form-control" name="email" type="email" /></div><script src="https://recaptcha.net/recaptcha/api.js" async defer></script> <script> var invisibleRecaptchaSubmit = function () { var closestForm = function (ele) { var curEle = ele.parentNode; while (curEle.nodeName !== 'FORM' && curEle.nodeName !== 'BODY'){ curEle = curEle.parentNode; } return curEle.nodeName === 'FORM' ? curEle : null }; var eles = document.getElementsByClassName('g-recaptcha'); if (eles.length > 0) { var form = closestForm(eles[0]); if (form) { form.submit(); } } }; </script> <input type="submit" data-sitekey="6Lf3KHUUAAAAACggoMpmGJdQDtiyrjVlvGJ6BbAj" data-callback="invisibleRecaptchaSubmit" class="g-recaptcha btn btn-primary btn-block" value="Email me a link" value=""/> </form></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/collapse-45805421cf446ca5adf7aaa1935b08a3a8d1d9a6cc5d91a62a2a3a00b20b3e6a.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb $("#login-modal-reset-password-container").on("shown.bs.collapse", function() { $(this).find("input[type=email]").focus(); }); }); </script> </div></div></div><div class="modal-footer"><div class="text-center"><small style="font-size: 12px;">Need an account?&nbsp;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/signup">Click here to sign up</a></small></div></div></div></div></div></div><script>// If we are on subdomain or non-bootstrapped page, redirect to login page instead of showing modal (function(){ if (typeof $ === 'undefined') return; var host = window.location.hostname; if ((host === $domain || host === "www."+$domain) && (typeof $().modal === 'function')) { $("#nav_log_in").click(function(e) { // Don't follow the link and open the modal e.preventDefault(); $("#login-modal").on('shown.bs.modal', function() { $(this).find("#login-modal-email-input").focus() }).modal('show'); }); } })()</script> <div class="bootstrap" id="footer"><div class="footer-content clearfix text-center padding-top-7x" style="width:100%;"><ul class="footer-links-secondary footer-links-wide list-inline margin-bottom-1x"><li><a href="https://www.academia.edu/about">About</a></li><li><a href="https://www.academia.edu/press">Press</a></li><li><a href="https://www.academia.edu/documents">Papers</a></li><li><a href="https://www.academia.edu/topics">Topics</a></li><li><a href="https://www.academia.edu/journals">Academia.edu Journals</a></li><li><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/hiring"><svg style="width: 13px; height: 13px;" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="briefcase" class="svg-inline--fa fa-briefcase fa-w-16" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M320 336c0 8.84-7.16 16-16 16h-96c-8.84 0-16-7.16-16-16v-48H0v144c0 25.6 22.4 48 48 48h416c25.6 0 48-22.4 48-48V288H320v48zm144-208h-80V80c0-25.6-22.4-48-48-48H176c-25.6 0-48 22.4-48 48v48H48c-25.6 0-48 22.4-48 48v80h512v-80c0-25.6-22.4-48-48-48zm-144 0H192V96h128v32z"></path></svg>&nbsp;<strong>We're Hiring!</strong></a></li><li><a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.academia.edu/"><svg style="width: 12px; height: 12px;" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="question-circle" class="svg-inline--fa fa-question-circle fa-w-16" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M504 256c0 136.997-111.043 248-248 248S8 392.997 8 256C8 119.083 119.043 8 256 8s248 111.083 248 248zM262.655 90c-54.497 0-89.255 22.957-116.549 63.758-3.536 5.286-2.353 12.415 2.715 16.258l34.699 26.31c5.205 3.947 12.621 3.008 16.665-2.122 17.864-22.658 30.113-35.797 57.303-35.797 20.429 0 45.698 13.148 45.698 32.958 0 14.976-12.363 22.667-32.534 33.976C247.128 238.528 216 254.941 216 296v4c0 6.627 5.373 12 12 12h56c6.627 0 12-5.373 12-12v-1.333c0-28.462 83.186-29.647 83.186-106.667 0-58.002-60.165-102-116.531-102zM256 338c-25.365 0-46 20.635-46 46 0 25.364 20.635 46 46 46s46-20.636 46-46c0-25.365-20.635-46-46-46z"></path></svg>&nbsp;<strong>Help Center</strong></a></li></ul><ul class="footer-links-tertiary list-inline margin-bottom-1x"><li class="small">Find new research papers in:</li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Physics">Physics</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Chemistry">Chemistry</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Biology">Biology</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Health_Sciences">Health Sciences</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Ecology">Ecology</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Earth_Sciences">Earth Sciences</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cognitive_Science">Cognitive Science</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mathematics">Mathematics</a></li><li class="small"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Computer_Science">Computer Science</a></li></ul></div></div><div class="DesignSystem" id="credit" style="width:100%;"><ul class="u-pl0x footer-links-legal list-inline"><li><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/terms">Terms</a></li><li><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/privacy">Privacy</a></li><li><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/copyright">Copyright</a></li><li>Academia &copy;2025</li></ul></div><script> //<![CDATA[ window.detect_gmtoffset = true; window.Academia && window.Academia.set_gmtoffset && Academia.set_gmtoffset('/gmtoffset'); //]]> </script> <div id='overlay_background'></div> <div id='bootstrap-modal-container' class='bootstrap'></div> <div id='ds-modal-container' class='bootstrap DesignSystem'></div> <div id='full-screen-modal'></div> </div> </body> </html>

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10