Results 201 to 210 of about 294,790 (218)

Perceived medical disinformation and public trust: Commentary on Grimes and Greenhalgh (2024)

open access: yes
Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, Volume 31, Issue 3, April 2025.
Brian Baigrie, Mathew Mercuri
wiley   +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Live working as an example of electrical installation maintenance with the zero accidents philosophy

2014 11th International Conference on Live Maintenance (ICOLIM), 2014
Live working can be considered a contribution to safety at work, as it is an example of electrical installation maintenance with the zero accidents philosophy. The purpose of this paper is to promote the concepts of maintenance work without accidents or with “zero accidents”.
Boštjan Gomišček, Viktor Lovrencic
openaire   +2 more sources

`Accident of Birth': A Non-Utilitarian Motif in Mill's Philosophy

Journal of the History of Ideas, 1961
The primary objective of the following study is not to indulge in the familiar passtime of ferreting out inconsistencies and fallacies in the thought of one of the keenest, noblest, and least expendable thinkers and doers of the nineteenth century.
openaire   +2 more sources

The impact of the accident at Three Mile Island on plant control and instrumentation philosophy

1990
Instrumentation systems as defined in this book do not provide direct inputs to control systems but provide data for recording or display. The display, or so-called man—machine interface, is a key part of instrumentation systems which is easily neglected to the detriment of overall performance.
openaire   +2 more sources

Substance, mode, and accident in modern philosophy

2018
The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries inherited, and were witness to, the decline of the metaphysics of substance, mode, and accident of the Aristotelian tradition. The causes of this decline can be gleaned from an investigation of various puzzles which arose during the period, and of the ways in which different philosophers reacted to these puzzles.
openaire   +1 more source

Pluralism in Tort and Accident Law: Towards a Reasonable Accommodation

2001
Ernest Weinrib characterizes private law in general, and tort law more specifically, as an "exhibition of intelligence." To grasp private law is to come to terms with it, not merely as a set of decisions authoritatively imposed upon litigants, but as an engagement of thought where, says Weinrib, "the process of justification is at least as important as
openaire   +2 more sources

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