5,423 research outputs found

    Tolerating Hate in the Name of Democracy

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    This article offers a comprehensive and critical analysis of Eric Heinze’s book Hate Speech and Democratic Citizenship (Oxford University Press, 2016). Heinze’s project is to formulate and defend a more theoretically complex version of the idea (also defended by people like Ronald Dworkin and James Weinstein) that general legal prohibitions on hate speech in public discourse compromises the state’s democratic legitimacy. We offer a detailed synopsis of Heinze’s view, highlighting some of its distinctive qualities and strengths. We then develop a critical response to this view with three main focal points: (1) the characterisation of democratic legitimacy as something distinct from (and whose demands aren’t identical with those of) legitimacy per se; (2) the claim that the requirements of democracy are hypothetical, rather than categorical, imperatives; and relatedly (3) the question of how we should reconcile the requirements of democratic legitimacy with the costs that may follow from prioritising democratic legitimacy. We argue that there are significant difficulties for Heinze’s account on all three fronts

    The Riemann mapping theorem from Riemann's viewpoint

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    This article presents a clear proof of the Riemann Mapping Theorem via Riemann's method, uncompromised by any appeals to topological intuition.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure

    Current Approaches to Improving the Value of Care: A Physician's Perspective

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    Evaluates the utility of judgment-based approaches to quality improvement -- pay-for-performance, public reporting, consumer-directed health plans, and tiering -- as ways to control costs. Recommends incentive- and accountability-based programs

    Studies of Charles Olson

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    Sports aggression| An ethical perspective

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    Letter to the Editor: The Value of Value-Based Purchasing

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    Modulation of calcium and potassium currents by lamotrigine

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    Actions of the new antiepileptic drug lamotrigine (LTG) were characterized using extracellular and whole cell patch clamp recordings from rat CAI and CA3 pyramidal cells in vitro. The results suggest that LTG, beside its previously described effect on the fast sodium inward current, also modulates - presumably voltage-gated - calcium currents and the transient potassium outward current ID. These may be effective mechanisms to inhibit pathological excitation in epilepsy and may be of potential benefit in treating: underlying cellular disturbances in bipolar disorder
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