keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34267702/deontological-feeling-the-tranquil-the-familiar-and-the-body
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Henning Nörenberg
This paper contributes to filling a lacuna in recent research on common normative backgrounds. On the one hand, discussions of common normative backgrounds tend to underexpose the role the feeling body plays in relation to the agent's recognition of deontic powers (obligations, compelling reasons or rights). On the other hand, discussions of bodily background orientations and their role in the agent's sensitivity to practical significance tend to underexpose the recognition of deontic power. In this paper, I argue that bodily background orientations can contribute to an agent's sensitivity to deontic power...
2021: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33774894/interactional-practices-in-person-centred-care-conversation-analysis-of-nurse-patient-disagreement-during-self-management-support
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Forsgren, Ida Björkman
BACKGROUND: Person-centred care implies a change in interaction between care professionals and patients where patients are not passive recipients but co-producers of care. The interactional practices of person-centred care remain largely unexplored. OBJECTIVE: This study focuses on the analysis of disagreements, which are described as an important part in the co-production of knowledge in interaction. DESIGN: A qualitative exploratory study using conversation analysis...
June 2021: Health Expectations: An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33629443/authority-in-therapeutic-interaction-a-conversation-analytic-study
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Olga Smoliak, Clare MacMartin, Alexa Hepburn, Amanda Le Couteur, Robert Elliott, Christopher Quinn-Nilas
A paradigmatic shift toward postmodern, collaborative practice in family therapy raises questions about how therapists can use professional authority to facilitate change and how clients can assert their knowledge and agency. We used conversation analysis to investigate how the authority to know and to determine here-and-now action (i.e., who does what, and how, in therapy) was negotiated and accomplished in 10 sessions of emotion-focused therapy involving chair work. Therapists were observed to rely on a particular interactional sequence structure: stepwise entry into a directive, in which directives were preceded by a question-answer sequence...
February 24, 2021: Journal of Marital and Family Therapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33576530/identity-and-action-help-seeking-requests-in-calls-to-a-victim-support-service
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Tennent
The nature of the link between identity and action is a fundamental question for social science. One focus in psychology is how actions like seeking help are implicated in matters of identity. This paper presents a discursive psychology study of identity and help in social interaction. Drawing on a corpus of nearly 400 recorded calls to a victim support helpline, I analysed how participants oriented to the link between identity and help. With attention to epistemic, deontic, and affective relations between participants, I analysed how identity was demonstrably relevant and procedurally consequential for building and interpreting help-seeking requests...
February 12, 2021: British Journal of Social Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33484351/-speak-of-the-devil%C3%A2-and-he-shall-appear-religiosity-unconsciousness-and-the-effects-of-explicit-priming-in-the-misperception-of-immorality
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Myron Tsikandilakis, Man Qing Leong, Zhaoliang Yu, Georgios Paterakis, Persefoni Bali, Jan Derrfuss, Pierre-Alexis Mevel, Alison Milbank, Eddie M W Tong, Christopher Madan, Peter Mitchell
Psychological theory and research suggest that religious individuals could have differences in the appraisal of immoral behaviours and cognitions compared to non-religious individuals. This effect could occur due to adherence to prescriptive and inviolate deontic religious-moral rules and socio-evolutionary factors, such as increased autonomic nervous system responsivity to indirect threat. The latter thesis has been used to suggest that immoral elicitors could be processed subliminally by religious individuals...
February 2022: Psychological Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33219990/downgrading-deontic-authority-in-open-dialogue-reflection-proposals-a-conversation-analysis
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ben Ong, Scott Barnes, Niels Buus
The Open Dialogue approach promotes collaboration with clients and families in decisions about the direction of therapy. This creates potential problems for Open Dialogue therapists who seek collaboration but also have responsibility for managing the session. Using conversation analysis, we examined 14 hours of video recordings of Open Dialogue sessions, and specifically how therapists proposed the transition to a reflecting conversation. We found that, when making proposals to reflect, therapists routinely downgrade their deontic authority (i...
December 2021: Family Process
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33134442/logikey-workbench-deontic-logics-logic-combinations-and-expressive-ethical-and-legal-reasoning-isabelle-hol-dataset
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christoph Benzmüller, Ali Farjami, David Fuenmayor, Paul Meder, Xavier Parent, Alexander Steen, Leendert van der Torre, Valeria Zahoransky
The LogiKEy workbench and dataset for ethical and legal reasoning is presented. This workbench simultaneously supports development, experimentation, assessment and deployment of formal logics and ethical and legal theories at different conceptual layers. More concretely, it comprises, in form of a dataset (Isabelle/HOL theory files), formal encodings of multiple deontic logics, logic combinations, deontic paradoxes and normative theories in the higher-order proof assistant system Isabelle/HOL. The data were acquired through application of the LogiKEy methodology, which supports experimentation with different normative theories, in different application scenarios, and which is not tied to specific logics or logic combinations...
December 2020: Data in Brief
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33123062/getting-to-yes-overcoming-client-reluctance-to-engage-in-chair-work
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Muntigl, Adam O Horvath, Lynda Chubak, Lynne Angus
GOALS: Securing clients' active and enthusiastic collaboration to participate in activities therapists would like to implement in therapy (e.g., free association, in vivo exposure, or the engagement in chair work) is a core mission in therapy. However, from the clients' perspective, these tasks frequently represent novel challenges that can trigger anxiety and reluctance. Thus, a key element in therapy is the negotiation between therapist and client to move beyond such reluctance to potentially effective therapy activities and, at the same time, maintain positive relational affiliation between therapist and client...
2020: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32980632/beliefs-and-emotions-about-social-conventions
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Monica Bucciarelli, P N Johnson-Laird
Deontic assertions concern what people should and shouldn't do. One sort concern moral principles, such as: People should care for the environment; and another sort concern social conventions, such as: People should knock before entering an office. The present research examined such deontic assertions and their corresponding factual assertions, such as: People care for the environment and People knock before entering an office. Experiment 1 showed a correlation between emotions and beliefs for both sorts of deontic assertion, but not for their factual counterparts in which the word "should" had been deleted (as in the preceding examples)...
October 2020: Acta Psychologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32940911/eliciting-stance-and-mitigating-therapist-authority-in-open-dialogue-meetings
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ben Ong, Scott Barnes, Niels Buus
Open Dialogue is a collaborative systemic approach to working with families in crisis. A core feature is the creation of dialogue through the elicitation of a multiplicity of voices. Using conversation analysis, we studied 14 hr of Open Dialogue sessions. We found that therapists recurrently produced utterances containing "I'm wondering." These utterances topicalized particular issues and invited stance positions from other participants while also allowing the therapist to mitigate their deontic authority and present potentially disaligning stances...
January 2021: Journal of Marital and Family Therapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32902898/tempted-to-join-in-or-not-moral-temptation-and-self-reported-behaviour-in-bullying-situations
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eveline Gutzwiller-Helfenfinger, Sonja Perren
We investigate the relationship between adolescents' construction of a transgression relating to a hypothetical temptation and bystander behaviour and bullying (offline and online). A total of 331 Swiss eighth graders completed an electronic questionnaire on bystanding, bullying, moral disengagement, and empathy. Moral functioning was assessed in a hypothetical scenario, using different moral judgements (deontic and self-judgement, judging the transgression; paper-and-pencil measure). Cluster analyses were used to identify patterns of moral functioning...
March 2021: British Journal of Developmental Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32495318/possibilities-and-the-parallel-meanings-of-factual-and-counterfactual-conditionals
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Orlando Espino, Ruth M J Byrne, P N Johnson-Laird
The mental model theory postulates that the meanings of conditionals are based on possibilities. Indicative conditionals-such as "If he is injured tomorrow, then he will take some leave"-have a factual interpretation that can be paraphrased as It is possible, and remains so, that he is injured tomorrow, and in that case certain that he takes some leave. Subjunctive conditionals, such as, "If he were injured tomorrow, then he would take some leave," have a prefactual interpretation that has the same paraphrase...
October 2020: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32460097/caller-resistance-to-perform-cardio-pulmonary-resuscitation-in-emergency-calls-for-cardiac-arrest
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marine Riou, Stephen Ball, Austin Whiteside, Sheryl Gallant, Alani Morgan, Paul Bailey, Judith Finn
A key objective of an emergency call for cardiac arrest is to recruit a bystander to perform cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) until the ambulance arrives. Emergency medical services worldwide work towards increasing the rate of bystander-CPR, and existing research has identified a number of physical barriers to the provision of bystander-CPR. Yet, little is known about the specific ways in which emergency callers resist recruitment to perform basic first-aid, sometimes in the absence of any physical obstacle...
July 2020: Social Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32304241/advising-without-personalising-how-a-helpline-may-satisfy-callers-without-giving-medical-advice-beyond-its-remit
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles Antaki, Steven Bloch
Callers to telephone helplines often seek advice beyond the authorisation of those staffing the service. On health helplines, this poses a problem to the call-taker. How do they manage the dilemma between, on the one hand, exceeding their competence and authority to give medical advice, and, on the other, leaving the caller unsatisfied with the service? We offer a framework in which to set newly identified practices along with those identified in previous studies. Using a set of calls to a medical helpline run by Parkinson's United Kingdom, we show that the call-taker manages the problem by (i) only suggesting courses of action highly marked for impersonality or contingency (displaying a 'low deontic stance', Stevanovic and Peräkylä 2012), and (ii) limiting the interactional risks of tailoring the advice to callers' personal circumstances...
June 2020: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32269536/a-world-unto-itself-human-communication-as-active-inference
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jared Vasil, Paul B Badcock, Axel Constant, Karl Friston, Maxwell J D Ramstead
Recent theoretical work in developmental psychology suggests that humans are predisposed to align their mental states with those of other individuals. One way this manifests is in cooperative communication ; that is, intentional communication aimed at aligning individuals' mental states with respect to events in their shared environment. This idea has received strong empirical support. The purpose of this paper is to extend this account by proposing an integrative model of the biobehavioral dynamics of cooperative communication...
2020: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32214503/the-irreducibility-of-collective-obligations
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allard Tamminga, Frank Hindriks
Individualists claim that collective obligations are reducible to the individual obligations of the collective's members. Collectivists deny this. We set out to discover who is right by way of a deontic logic of collective action that models collective actions, abilities, obligations, and their interrelations. On the basis of our formal analysis, we argue that when assessing the obligations of an individual agent, we need to distinguish individual obligations from member obligations. If a collective has a collective obligation to bring about a particular state of affairs, then it might be that no individual in the collective has an individual obligation to bring about that state of affairs...
2020: Philosophical Studies
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32203528/uncovering-the-moral-heuristics-of-altruism-a-philosophical-scale
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julian Friedland, Kyle Emich, Benjamin M Cole
Extant research suggests that individuals employ traditional moral heuristics to support their observed altruistic behavior; yet findings have largely been limited to inductive extrapolation and rely on relatively few traditional frames in so doing, namely, deontology in organizational behavior and virtue theory in law and economics. Given that these and competing moral frames such as utilitarianism can manifest as identical behavior, we develop a moral framing instrument-the Philosophical Moral-Framing Measure (PMFM)-to expand and distinguish traditional frames associated and disassociated with observed altruistic behavior...
2020: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31884237/challenging-the-interprofessional-epistemic-boundaries-the-practices-of-informing-in-nurse-physician-interaction
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Letizia Caronia, Marzia Saglietti, Arturo Chieregato
Interprofessional management of knowledge in health care settings appears to be particularly vital for the ways in which information circulates, medical decisions are taken, and nursing practices are implemented. Drawing on an extensive ethnographic fieldwork in an Italian Intensive Care Unit, this article investigates how the nurses orient to and concurrently challenge the nurse-physician epistemic boundaries by the different ways through which they perform "informing", and make it work as a diagnostic-relevant activity...
December 18, 2019: Social Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31755314/-cos-you-re-quite-normal-aren-t-you-epistemic-and-deontic-orientations-in-the-presentation-of-model-of-care-talk-in-antenatal-consultations
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lindsay Cole, Amanda LeCouteur, Rebecca Feo, Hannah Dahlen
Women's involvement in decision-making around antenatal care is an issue of ongoing debate and discussion. Most research on the topic has used interview and focus group methods to examine women's perspectives. The present study uses a different kind of evidence. By analyzing recordings of actual antenatal consultations, this paper presents a preliminary exploration of model-of-care talk in a hospital setting where a policy of woman-centered care underpinned practice. Conversation Analysis was used to examine how model-of-care pathways were introduced by midwives and discussed with women in consultations...
November 22, 2019: Health Communication
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31495791/physicians-refusals-of-service-on-grounds-of-conscience
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lance K Stell
What is conscience, and when should we let it be our guide? Only when it threatens indictment for nonadherence to an ethically valid duty? How do we know when that is? Doesn't conscience change? And shouldn't we change it intentionally sometimes, for example, on the basis of an all-things-considered judgment? Is conscience subject to reason-guided amendment? Mightn't it be immune to change based on a cost-benefit analysis? Isn't that its deontic characteristic? Suppose we can't help fearing conscience, should we be excused for knuckling under to it? Is conscience then a bully we can't evade? When should society and the law respect physicians' divergent consciences? Mustn't physicians subordinate their interest in being on good terms with conscience to the fiduciary duty owed to patients? Isn't that what fidelity to the goals of medicine requires? Whose medicine? Wouldn't dogmatism about this eradicate physicians' moral agency? This essay provides partial and tentative answers to these questions...
2019: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
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