Something for the weekend:
- Pedagogy of the Oppressed: Design Theory For Our Futures
- What is it like to be a philosopher?
- The Explorative Nature of Heideggerian Logic
- Why we need to diversify expertise
- Thorstein Veblen and the Myth of the Academic Outsider
- Hospitals without walls: The future of healthcare
- The dark matter of digital health
- Physical Therapy in the Time of Pandemic: Then and Now
- Special Issue: Global Perspectives on the Post-Qualitative Turn in Qualitative Inquiry
- The Scientific Method: An Evolution of Thinking from Darwin to Dewey
- 100 Years of Optimizing Movement
- Whither medical professionalism
- Is resilience a unique extension rather than a rejection of neoliberalism?
- The crisis in education: Hannah Arendt
- ‘Gymnasticks’ and Dumbbells: Exercise in early modern Britain
Ralph Hammond says
Found 12 Whither medical professionalism resonated with my perspective on physiotherapy. But I don’t think EBP or person-vetted care and other ideas are the problem. I agree that it’s the institutions and national dictats and ways and means of the system colonising the physiotherapy lifeworld that need challenging.
Dave Nicholls says
Lovely response thanks, Ralph. Were you alluding to Habermas’s idea of lifeworld? It’s something that I think definitely resonates with some of the issues currently facing PT.