Something for the weekend: How to live better, according to Nietzsche (magazine) The central problem of postmodernism, according to Terry Eagleton (magazine) ‘Everything I enjoy doing I just couldn’t do’: Biographical disruption for sport-related injury (article) The (subtly fascistic) Ethics Of Transhumanism And The Cult Of Futurist Biotech (blog) Aged care failures show how little we value older people – and those who care for them, plus this, and this (news) Consolation philosophy: A truly African philosophy (magazine) A Discursive Analysis Method to Investigate Decision-Making Processes in the Intensive Care Unit I, holobiont. Are you and your microbes a … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #8
CPN Digest #7
Something for the discerning physiotherapy reader: In honour of Paul Virilio, one of my favourite philosophers, who died on 18th September 2018 (magazine) Assembling the ‘Fitbit subject’ (article) When patients’ invisible work becomes visible (article) How the humanities can deliver for the fourth industrial revolution (blog) Wandering as a Sociomaterial Practice (article) A Systematized Review of Creative Research Methods (article) Medical illustration (podcast) The Central Role of Theory in Qualitative Research (article) People with illness experiences seeking legitimate positions as health service developers and producers (article) The 'other' (magazine) … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #7
CPN Digest #6
Something for the weekend: How should we understand disability? (podcast) The intersection of movement, freedom and the mind (animation) Ethics as ritual: smoothing over moments of dislocation in biomedicine (article) What is left behind by science? And also this (articles) More than 'know thyself' (magazine) Triathlon Bodies in Motion: Reconceptualizing Feelings of Pain, Nausea and Disgust in the Ironman Triathlon (article) Women, ‘madness’ and exercise (blog) Needless procedures: knee arthroscopy (magazine) Digital touch communication (article) Could AI also mean more men doing care work? (magazine) No Right to Be Idle: The Invention of Disability, … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #6
CPN Digest #5
Something for the weekend: First World War rehabilitation (eBook) A favorite anecdote about the origins of the vibrator is probably a myth (magazine) Neurological illness, loss and disruption (article) Digital Subjectivity and Mediated Intimacy (event) To fix higher education, we also need to fix vocational (magazine) The Commission on Social Determinants of Health: Ten years on (article) Impact from critical research: what might it look like and what support is required? (blog) Human-machine reconfigurations (book review) The Place of Post-Traumatic Amnesia in the Assessment of Blunt Head Trauma 1920–40 (article) Visualizing Disease: The Art and History of … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #5
CPN Digest #4
Something for the weekend: People who see men and women as fundamentally different are more likely to accept workplace discrimination (link) A case of sick leave due to burnout (link) The Affect-Responsive Interview and In-Depth Interviewing: What We Can Learn From Therapy Research (link) Twitter...is a scrolling record of bad reading habits (link) The brain as an agentic system (link) Five common writing mistakes new scientists make (link) Was there a theological turn in phenomenology? (link) Why do our muscles stiffen as we age? (link) Sex, technology and disability (link) What does it mean to be a qualitative researcher? (link) The most important thing I … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #4
CPN Digest #3
Something for the weekend: Trees are made of human breath (link) How women led the rise of professional work in Australia (link) Why is it important to refuse the idea of treating students like customers? (link) Standing at a Critical Nexus in the Evolution of Physiotherapy (link) Should nurses fill the hole in future primary care (link)? The brain as an agentic system (link) Going beyond RCTs in Cochrane's vision of health care (link) A €5,000 prize for best essay on the topic of 'Interdisciplinarity: the new orthodoxy?' (link) 4th Qualitative Health Research Network (QHRN) Conference| 21-22 March 2019| London, UK (link) Why are chronic illnesses increasing … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #3
CPN Digest #2
Something for the weekend: A curated list of treasures from this week around the Internet, for the physio with an inquiring mind. How women led the rise of professional work in the Australian economy (link) The horror of WWI transformed the way we think about art, and that changed everything (link) Education’s latest secret trend: Networking (link) A very detailed bibliography of writings on and by Foucault relating to education (link) Beyond skills: Preparing College Students for Life and Work (link) Learning from nature: A humming, complex, clockwork machine (link) Is the Internet making you dumb? Have you lost the "cognitive patience" for big ideas? (link) How … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #2