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2. Moral Intuitionism
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction xiii
- 1. Intuition in Medical and Moral Reasoning 1
- 2. Moral Intuitionism 18
- 3. The Place of Aristotelian Phronesis in Clinical Reasoning 41
- 4. Aristotle’s Practical Syllogism: Accounting for the Individual through a Theory of Action and Cognition 61
- 5. Individual and Statistical Physiognomy: The Art and Science of Making the Invisible Visible 70
- 6. Clinical Intuition versus Statistical Reasoning 105
- 7. Contingency and Correlation: The Significance of Modeling Clinical Reasoning on Statistics 127
- 8. Abduction: The Intuitive Support of Clinical Induction 149
- Conclusion: Medical Ethics beyond Ontology 170
- Notes 183
- Bibliography 211
- Index 227
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction xiii
- 1. Intuition in Medical and Moral Reasoning 1
- 2. Moral Intuitionism 18
- 3. The Place of Aristotelian Phronesis in Clinical Reasoning 41
- 4. Aristotle’s Practical Syllogism: Accounting for the Individual through a Theory of Action and Cognition 61
- 5. Individual and Statistical Physiognomy: The Art and Science of Making the Invisible Visible 70
- 6. Clinical Intuition versus Statistical Reasoning 105
- 7. Contingency and Correlation: The Significance of Modeling Clinical Reasoning on Statistics 127
- 8. Abduction: The Intuitive Support of Clinical Induction 149
- Conclusion: Medical Ethics beyond Ontology 170
- Notes 183
- Bibliography 211
- Index 227