Something for the weekend: Who is doing inter- and transdisciplinary research, and why?The world’s to 50 thinkers 2019Derrida and Foucault. Philosophy, Politics, and Polemics (2017)Yoga for prisonersSensor-filled skin gives prosthetic hand a better sense of touchMarxism and Buddhism on pain and sufferingOn how to disagreeWhat Contributions, if Any, Can Non-Indigenous Researchers Offer Toward Decolonizing Health Research?Problematization, with Foucault, Bachelard and DeleuzeSpecial Issue on the Anthropocene in the Study of Higher EducationJane Austen’s exercise planDesign crash test dummies to look like men and more women die in car accidentsThe Anthropology of Sport, Bodies, Borders, … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #46
CPN Digest #45
Something for the weekend: Photovoice online course Download slides from Implicit Bias session at WCPT What does it mean, and what does it cost, to make a complaint? Marxism and Buddhism On how to disagree Elon Musk unveils plan to build mind-reading implants New disability emojis Pain and gender The unbearable smugness of walking What about a robot that has touch sense? Pioneering surgery brings movement back to paralysed hands A Commentary on the Black Physical Therapy Student Experience Threshold concepts and OT Sharon Stone: I was forgotten after I had a stroke The Chattanooga Medical Company … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #45
CPN Digest #44
Something for the weekend: How Cooking Websites Are Failing People With DisabilitiesBut what is a neural network?Illuminating occupations at the heart of social problemsHow nurses transform the subjective experience of pain into objective numbersPhysiotherapists’ Perspectives on the Threats Posed to Their Profession in the Areas of Training, Education, and Knowledge ExchangeWe’re told that too much screen time hurts our kids. Where’s the evidence?Exercise in vital bodiesCritical health education studies: Reflections on a new conference and this themed symposiumDo Brain Decoders Have an Ontological Mind of Their Own?Professional Health Regulation in the Public Interest. International … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #44
CPN Digest #43
Something for the weekend: The rise of junk scienceGetting serious about barriers faced by disabled studentsThe Value of Qualitative Inquiry for Public PolicyEnchanting Robots: Intimacy, Magic, and TechnologyFrom Bodily Sensations to SymptomsSociology, Health, and the Fractured SocietyTrialling technologies to reduce hospital in‐patient falls: an agential realist analysisProfessional autonomy and surveillance: the case of public reporting in cardiac surgeryOn the body of the consumer: performance‐seeking with wearables and health and fitness appsTreat or trick: we asked people how they feel about sharing fitness data with insurance companiesShould disability be seen as a form of student … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #43
CPN Digest #42
Something for the weekend: The treadmill's dark and twisted past A Qualitative Study Exploring Physical Therapists’ Attitudes Toward Their Roles in Weight Management for People With Knee Osteoarthritis A qualitative study of long-term users’ experiences of physiotherapy in primary health care When Bodies Think: Panpsychism, Pluralism, Biopolitics The science of how we sense ourselves from within Framing citizenship: from assumptions to possibilities in health and physical education The perils of the human imagination Risk and the Spectral Politics of Disability Understanding Physiotherapists’ Intention to Counsel Clients with Chronic Pain on Exercise A critical habermasian … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #42
CPN Digest #41
Something for the weekend: The Fitness Craze That Changed the Way Women Exercise Philosophical bias is the one bias that science cannot avoid The Utopian Leisure of Soviet Sanatoriums Hegel and history How long does it take to mark an exam? Our culture affects the way we look after ourselves. It should shape the health care we receive, too Working the edges of Posthuman disability studies: theorising with disabled young people with life‐limiting impairments Special issue on auto-ethnography and activism Leisure and its educational embodiment Living with Parkinson’s Shaping Our Algorithms Before They Shape Us - by Michael Rowe Chronic living conference 2020 Exploring … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #41
CPN Digest #40
Something for the weekend: Sporting Activities for Individuals Who Experienced Trauma During Their Youth: A Meta-Study It’s perfectly legal for doctors to charge huge amounts for surgery, but should it be allowed? Terry Eagleton on The History of Philosophy by AC Grayling The dancing species: how moving together in time helps make us human Robots aren’t coming for your job ... management is The Biopsychosocial Model of Health and Disease: New Philosophical and Scientific Developments Foucault on painting Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and an Illness-Focused Approach to Care: Controversy, Morality, and Paradox Diversity Is Not Just About the Differences We Like Wrapping up the … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #40