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Part 1. Critical history and critical phenomenology of Health and Well-being
Chapter 1. Global Health and the Collateral Damage Utilitarianism (Kelly Oliver)
Chapter 2. Why does mental illness exist? Considerations on anthropological vulnerability (Thomas Fuchs)
Part 2. Well-Being, Health and Embodiment
Chapter 3. The Ontological and Ethical Value of Vulnerability (Valeria Bizzari)
Chapter 4. Well-Being, Health, and Human Embodiment: The Familial Lifeworld (Mark J. Cherry)
Part 3. Well-Being, Health and the Environment
Chapter 5. Being and Aging: A Phenomenology of Time, Place and Illness (Marjolein Oele)
Chapter 6. Vulnerability, Mutual Aid, Empathy (Gerard Kuperus)
Part 4. The Vulnerability of the Human World and Responsibility
Chapter 7. Pandemic Discrimination and Responsibility for Culturally Vulnerable Groups. A Phenomenological and Bioethical Perspective (Geoffrey Dierckxsens)
Chapter 8. Interdependency, responsibility and the care for the living (Elodie Boublil)
Part 5. The vulnerability of the human world. Health, technology and the environment
Chapter 9. From digital medicine to embodied care (Francesca Brencio)
Chapter 10. Aiming at Well-Being with Brain Implants: Any risk of Implanting Unprecedented Vulnerabilities? (Frederic Gilbert)
Chapter 11. Phenomenology of algorithms and emotions in cases of early re-hospitalization (Susi Ferrarello)
Chapter 12. Conclusion.

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