Results 301 to 310 of about 24,361,159 (357)
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Humane, Humanities, Humanitarian, Humanism
The Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 1982(1982). Humane, Humanities, Humanitarian, Humanism. The Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas: Vol. 55, No. 7, pp. 308-310.
Kenneth A. Penman, Samuel H. Adams
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Human Dignity, Human Rights, and Human Genetics
The Modern Law Review, 1998According to an emerging international consensus, the practice of human genetics should respect both human dignity and human rights.' In the Preamble to the Council of Europe's Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine,2 for example, the signatories resolve 'to take such measures as are necessary to safeguard human dignity and the fundamental rights ...
D, Beyleveld, R, Brownsword
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European Journal of Medical Genetics, 2012
Genetics has marked the second half of the 20th century by addressing such formidable problems as the identification of our genes and their role, their interaction with the environment, and even their therapeutic uses. The identification of genes raises questions about differences between humans and non-humans, as well as about the evolution towards ...
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Genetics has marked the second half of the 20th century by addressing such formidable problems as the identification of our genes and their role, their interaction with the environment, and even their therapeutic uses. The identification of genes raises questions about differences between humans and non-humans, as well as about the evolution towards ...
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Human, stubbornly human, sensibly human?
Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory, 2019A century ago, shortly before his death, Simmel (1964) formulated an enigmatic idea of a philosophical sociology as a ‘study of the epistemological and metaphysical aspects of society’ (23) concern...
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Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 2017
Abstract:Within the literature surrounding nonhuman animals on the one hand and cognitively disabled humans on the other, there is much discussion of where beings that do not satisfy the criteria for personhood fit in our moral deliberations. In the future, we may face a different but related problem: that we might create (or cause the creation of ...
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Abstract:Within the literature surrounding nonhuman animals on the one hand and cognitively disabled humans on the other, there is much discussion of where beings that do not satisfy the criteria for personhood fit in our moral deliberations. In the future, we may face a different but related problem: that we might create (or cause the creation of ...
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Gerontology, 2019
Human aging is a very complex process that occurs in an intricate biological and physiological setting. Many changes occur with aging and among the most important are changes in immune reactivity associated with cell differentiation stages and the phenomenon of inflammaging, understood as subclinical inflammatory readiness, manifested by elevated ...
Tamàs, Fülöp +2 more
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Human aging is a very complex process that occurs in an intricate biological and physiological setting. Many changes occur with aging and among the most important are changes in immune reactivity associated with cell differentiation stages and the phenomenon of inflammaging, understood as subclinical inflammatory readiness, manifested by elevated ...
Tamàs, Fülöp +2 more
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Human rights, human needs, human development, human security [PDF]
Human rights, human development and human security form increasingly important, partly interconnected, partly competitive and misunderstood ethical and policy discourses. Each tries to humanize a pre-existing and unavoidable major discourse of everyday life, policy and politics; each has emerged within the United Nations world; each relies implicitly ...
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Human dignity in Renaissance humanism
2014Renaissance humanism As a topic worthy of sustained and systematic scrutiny, human dignity first appeared on the philosophical agenda in the Renaissance. An indication of this is the appearance, from the middle of the fifteenth century onwards, of several tracts about the dignity and excellence of man.
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British Medical Bulletin, 1961
May I begin by recalling that at the Copenhagen Conference five years ago, Tjio and Levan had just published their almost apologetic announcement that they could only find 46 chromosomes in cultured human somatic cells, and Hamerton and I presented evidence that there were 23 bivalents in spermatocytes, not 24.Since that time there has been a very ...
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May I begin by recalling that at the Copenhagen Conference five years ago, Tjio and Levan had just published their almost apologetic announcement that they could only find 46 chromosomes in cultured human somatic cells, and Hamerton and I presented evidence that there were 23 bivalents in spermatocytes, not 24.Since that time there has been a very ...
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