Results for ' arcades'

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  1.  3
    La théorie des premiers principes selon Maine de Biran.Arcade-M. Monette - 1945 - Montréal: Éditions du Levrier.
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  2.  21
    La Theorie des Premiers Principes Selon Maine de Biran.Arcade M. Monette - 1947 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 7 (4):663-664.
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  3.  13
    The Arcades: Contemporary Art and Walter Benjamin.Jens Hoffmann (ed.) - 2017 - Jewish Museum.
    _The Arcades Project_, the monumental unfinished work of cultural criticism by Walter Benjamin, is the German philosopher’s effort to comprehend urban modernity through the 19th-century Parisian shopping arcade. _The Arcades: Contemporary Art and Walter Benjamin_ combines artworks with archival materials and poetic interventions to form an original, multifaceted response to this collagelike cultural text. Jens Hoffmann astutely pairs works by thirty-six well-known and emerging artists, including Lee Friedlander, Andreas Gursky, Pierre Huyghe, and Cindy Sherman, with the thirty-six “Convolutes,” (...)
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  4. The Arcades Project.Walter Benjamin, Howard Eiland & Kevin Mclaughlin - 1999 - Science and Society 65 (2):243-246.
     
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  5. The Arcades Project (Book Review).James L. Marsh - 2001 - Science and Society 65 (2):243.
     
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  6. Benjamin's Arcades Project and the Postcolonial City.Rajeev S. Patke - 2000 - Diacritics 30 (4):2-14.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 30.4 (2000) 3-13 [Access article in PDF] Benjamin's Arcades Project and the Postcolonial City Rajeev S. Patke [Tables]Walter Benjamin. The Arcades Project. Trans. Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1999. [AP] Post-this, post-that, post-the-other, yet in the endNot past a thing. —Seamus Heaney, "On His Work in the English Tongue" Preamble Among the several Benjamins to be conjured from The Arcades Project (...)
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  7. Walter Benjamin, The Arcades Project Reviewed by.Mark Jackson - 2001 - Philosophy in Review 21 (2):79-81.
  8. The American arcade sanitization crusade and the amusement arcade action group.Alan Meades - 2018 - In Kristine Jorgensen & Faltin Karlsen (eds.), Transgression in games and play. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
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  9.  37
    Superimposition in Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project.Howard Eiland - 2007 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2007 (138):121-138.
    Among the more prominent nineteenth-century types populating Benjamin's Arcades Project—collector, flâneur, gambler, prostitute, worker, revolutionary—the figure of the flâneur is exemplary for the way he perceives the landscape of the modern city. Distracted to the point of intoxication by the spectacle of the streets, which he views for the most part en passant, he is nonetheless intimately, micrologically involved with some of the most familiar and therefore often most inconspicuous aspects of urban existence. Benjamin underlines this function of “excavating” (...)
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  10.  85
    The Dialectics of Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project.Susan Buck-Morss - 1989 - MIT Press.
  11.  20
    What Management Does to Space Projects: The Franco-Soviet Project ARCAD 3 in the Late 1970s.Jérôme Lamy - 2011 - Science in Context 24 (4):545-586.
    ArgumentSpace projects represent, after World War II, the archetype of large-scale organization of scientific practices that are flexible, temporary, and oriented towards specific goals. A new form of activity, the project, emerged through the management of technical means, allocation of skills, and coordination of various players. Project management emerged as the synthesis of a set of social practices designed to subordinate as well as synchronize the initiatives of researchers, engineers, and technicians who had temporarily joined forces. This article presents the (...)
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  12.  71
    On making-up and breaking-up: woman and ware, craving and corpse in Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project.Esther Leslie - 1997 - Historical Materialism 1 (1):66-90.
    Walter Benjamin's writings on the Paris shopping arcades and nineteenth- century urban industrial culture are frequently referenced in contemporary examinations of ‘modernity'. In current cultural studies Benjamin's investigation of the aesthetics of merchandise and his insights into the social fact of mass consumerism are repeatedly invoked. Indeed these investigations may be alluded to even more frequently than reference is made to Benjamin's once much reproduced essay ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction'. A decade and a (...)
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  13.  78
    On Walter Benjarnin’s Arcades Project. [REVIEW]Morgan Meis - 2002 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 23 (2):213-231.
  14.  7
    Criticism and Praise in the Terms of the Arcade.Paul Standish - 2014 - Philosophy of Education 70:104-106.
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  15.  42
    Benjamin as Producer in The Arcades Project.Gary Farnell - 2005 - Historical Materialism 13 (4):121-159.
  16. Susan Buck-Morss, The Dialects of Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project Reviewed by.Nicholas Xenos - 1991 - Philosophy in Review 11 (3):159-161.
     
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  17.  8
    Assassin at the Arcade. Book Review: Woodcock J. (2019) Marx at the Arcade. Consoles, Controllers and Class Struggle, Chicago, Illinois: Haymarket Books. [REVIEW]A. S. Serada - 2020 - Sociology of Power 32 (1):299-307.
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  18.  14
    Approaches to Walter Benjamin's The Arcades Project.Paweł Stachura - 2017 - Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang Edition.
    Walter Benjamin is one of the most important figures of modern culture. The authors focus within this book on Benjamin as a philosopher, but also as a writer. Philosophical and philological readings are accompanied by essays presenting his biography.
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  19.  55
    The Method is the Message: Benjamin’s Arcades Project and the Production of Theoretical Space.Brian Elliott - 2009 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 17 (1):115 – 127.
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  20.  22
    Intending and Trying: Tuomela vs. Bratman at the Video Arcade.Alfred Mele - 2003 - In Matti Sintonen, Petri Ylikoski & Kaarlo Miller (eds.), Realism in Action: Essays in the Philosophy of the Social Sciences. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    I have long been an admirer of Raimo Tuomela’s work in the philosophy of action. In this paper I will address a disagreement between Tuomela and Michael Bratman about intention and trying. I will argue that each disputant is partly right and partly wrong.
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  21.  15
    matériel d'évasion et de rêve: il cautionne aussi des idées subversives, car on le travestit à la mode de sa propre époque. Fabuleux Orient. Orient de luxe: plumes, satins et joyaux, serviteurs sans compter, décor allusif d'arcades et de minarets, univers des Mille et Une Nuits. Il convient de souligner la place éminente des célèbres contes, traduits en français entre 1704 et 1717 par Antoine Galland, qui font découvrir. [REVIEW]Madamma Butterfly - 2006 - In Maxence Caron & Jocelyn Benoist (eds.), Heidegger. Paris: Cerf. pp. 797--291.
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  22.  50
    The Dialectics of Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project (review).Robert Tobin - 1991 - Philosophy and Literature 15 (1):149-150.
  23.  30
    Wade Rowland. Galileo’s Mistake: A New Look at the Epic Confrontation between Galileo and the Church. 320 pp., illus., index. New York: Arcade, 2001. $26.95. [REVIEW]Rivka Feldhay - 2006 - Isis 97 (2):356-358.
  24.  24
    Baudelaire Laboratory. Brief History of a Project by Walter Benjamin.Marina Montanelli - 2020 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 13 (2):17-29.
    The article intends to retrace, from a historical-philological point of view, the main steps of Walter Benjamin’s unfinished research and works, conducted during his later years, dedicated to Charles Baudelaire. Setting Benjamin’s translation of the Ta-bleaux parisiens as the first result of his interest for the poet, the text delves into the composition process of The Arcades Project, from which the idea of a book on Baudelaire then takes shape. The article examines the crucial stages of this second project’s (...)
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  25.  83
    Digital Flânerie: Illustrative Seeing in the Digital Age.Murray Skees - 2010 - Critical Horizons 11 (2):265-287.
    This paper investigates a contemporary flowering of flânerie similar to that which Walter Benjamin analyzed in the first decades of the Parisian arcades. The flâneur has resurrected in a new space of the recent past as the computer hacker of digital culture. There is, however, a significant difference between the two figures’ ways of relating to the world that gives the hacker an important socio-political agency – with which Benjamin tried, unsuccessfully, to imbue in the flâneur.
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  26.  19
    Walter Benjamin: An Aesthetic of Redemption.Richard Wolin - 1994 - University of California Press.
    Few twentieth-century thinkers have proven as influential as Walter Benjamin, the German-Jewish philosopher and cultural and literary critic. Richard Wolin's book remains among the clearest and most insightful introductions to Benjamin's writings, offering a philosophically rich exposition of his complex relationship to Adorno, Brecht, Jewish Messianism, and Western Marxism. Wolin provides nuanced interpretations of Benjamin's widely studied writings on Baudelaire, historiography, and art in the age of mechanical reproduction. In a new Introduction written especially for this edition, Wolin discusses the (...)
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  27. (1 other version)The Architecture of Lincoln Cathedral and the Cosmologies of Bishop Grosseteste.John Hendrix - 2014 - In Nicholas Temple, John Hendrix & Christia Frost (eds.), Bishop Robert Grosseteste and Lincoln Cathedral: tracing relationships between medieval concepts of order and built form. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    The geometrical elements in the architecture of Lincoln Cathedral, in the vaulting and elevations, can be compared to the geometries described by Robert Grosseteste in his cosmologies. The architecture can be read as a catechism of the cosmologies. The geometries appear in the cathedral for the first time in the history of architecture to explain the generation, emanation, reflection, refraction and rarefaction of light as it forms the material world. The proposition is that the geometries of the architecture of Lincoln (...)
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  28.  31
    Artistic Parrhesia and the Genealogy of Ethics in Foucault and Benjamin.Julian Brigstocke - 2013 - Theory, Culture and Society 30 (1):57-78.
    In The Use of Pleasure, Michel Foucault suggests that it is possible to read Walter Benjamin’s writings on Baudelaire as a contribution to a genealogy of ethics. This article experiments with reading Benjamin in this way. It shows that a distinctive analysis of each of the four elements of Foucauldian ethics (ethical substance, mode of subjectivation, ethical practice and telos) can be found in Benjamin’s work on Baudelaire and the Paris arcades. Specifically, the article makes the case for reading (...)
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  29.  11
    (1 other version)The Madness of Vision: On Baroque Aesthetics.Dorothy Z. Baker (ed.) - 2013 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
    Christine Buci-Glucksmann’s__ _The Madness of Vision_ is one of the most influential studies in phenomenological aesthetics of the baroque. Integrating the work of Merleau-Ponty with Lacanian psychoanalysis, Renaissance studies in optics, and twentieth-century mathematics, the author asserts the materiality of the body and world in her aesthetic theory. All vision is embodied vision, with the body and the emotions continually at play on the visual field. Thus vision, once considered a clear, uniform, and totalizing way of understanding the material world, (...)
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  30.  9
    The Madness of Vision: On Baroque Aesthetics.Christine Buci-Glucksmann - 2013 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press. Edited by Dorothy Zayatz Baker.
    Christine Buci-Glucksmann’s The Madness of Vision is one of the most influential studies in phenomenological aesthetics of the baroque. Integrating the work of Merleau-Ponty with Lacanian psychoanalysis, Renaissance studies in optics, and twentieth-century mathematics, the author asserts the materiality of the body and world in her aesthetic theory. All vision is embodied vision, with the body and the emotions continually at play on the visual field. Thus vision, once considered a clear, uniform, and totalizing way of understanding the material world, (...)
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  31.  63
    Memory, Modernity, Repetition: Walter Benjamin's History.Aniruddha Chowdhury - 2008 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2008 (143):22-46.
    In an important fragment in The Arcades Project, Walter Benjamin points to two perspectives on the present. The present is defined either as catastrophe or as triumph.1 Two perspectives, Benjamin seems to suggest, constitute two modes of temporality. Whereas for a triumphant history, the present is located in the duration of time that Benjamin famously calls “homogeneous, empty time,”2 in the movement of the same, for the historiography of the oppressed, on the other hand—and that is how Benjamin sees (...)
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  32.  7
    The Whisper.Emma Clayton - 2012 - Chicken House/Scholastic.
    A Glitch -- What Mutant Eyes Could See -- Bloody Fingers and Black Rock -- Monkey Maggot -- Return to the Shadows -- A Swarm of Shiny Flies -- No Time to be Messing About -- The Goat Kid -- Dangerous Friends -- A Strange Task -- A New Sound -- Return to the Arcade -- Game Over -- A Wistful Oliver -- Mika Offers Gorman a Biscuit -- Helen's Hat Falls Off -- The Wrong Place -- A Sad Supper (...)
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  33.  16
    Walter Benjamin and the idea of natural history.Eli Friedlander - 2024 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    In this incisive new work, Eli Friedlander demonstrates that Walter Benjamin's entire corpus, from early to late, comprises a rigorous and sustained philosophical questioning of how human beings belong to nature. Across seemingly heterogeneous writings, Friedlander argues, Benjamin consistently explores what the natural in the human comes to, that is, how nature is transformed, actualized, redeemed, and overcome in human existence. The book progresses gradually from Benjamin's philosophically fundamental writings on language and nature to his Goethean empiricism, from the presentation (...)
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  34.  11
    The Manhattan Project: A Theory of a City.David Kishik - 2015 - De Gruyter.
    This sharp, witty study of a book never written, a sequel to Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project, is dedicated to New York City, capital of the twentieth century. A sui generis work of experimental scholarship or fictional philosophy, it analyzes an imaginary manuscript composed by a ghost. Part sprawling literary montage, part fragmentary theory of modernity, part implosive manifesto on the urban revolution, The Manhattan Project offers readers New York as a landscape built of sheer life. It initiates them into (...)
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  35.  13
    From Habit-Forming to Habit-Breaking Availability: Experiences on Electronic Gambling Machine Closures During COVID-19.Virve Marionneau & Johanna Järvinen-Tassopoulos - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Electronic gambling machines are among the most harmful forms of gambling. The structural characteristics of EGMs prolong and reinforce gambling similarly to other habit-forming technologies. In Finland, the wide availability of EGMs in non-casino locations is likely to further reinforce the habit-creating nature of gambling offer by incorporating EGMs into everyday practices. The COVID-19 pandemic changed the landscape of gambling in Finland. The most visible change was the closure of land-based EGMs in non-casino environments, arcades, and the casino in (...)
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  36.  26
    Gillian Piggott, Dickens and Benjamin: moments of revelation, fragments of modernity [Book Review].Ben Moore - unknown
    Gillian Piggott's study of the resonances between the work of Charles Dickens and Walter Benjamin arrives in the wake of an increasing critical interest in Benjamin's life and thought, as an array of books from Graham Gilloch's Myth and Metropolis: Walter Benjamin and the City (1996) to Esther Leslie's biographical Walter Benjamin (2007), and beyond, makes clear. While many critics have addressed Benjamin's importance to discussions of nineteenth-century modernity, Piggott's is the first booklength attempt to compare Benjamin and Dickens. Fler (...)
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  37.  12
    Entwendungen: Walter Benjamin und seine Quellen.Jessica Nitsche & Nadine Werner (eds.) - 2019 - Paderborn: Brill Fink.
    "Der Text ist ein Wald, in dem der Leser der Jäger ist" notierte Benjamin für sein Passagen-Projekt. Das Buch erschließt Benjamins Arbeitsweise erstmals ausgehend von seiner eigenen Lektürepraxis. Als lesender Jäger und Sammler durchforstete Benjamin Texte von Goethe, Marx, Kafka, Freud und vielen weiteren Autoren. Angesichts der Heterogenität seiner Quellen ist erstaunlich, dass sich in der Art seiner Lektüre methodische Eigenheiten wiederholen. Burkhardt Lindner hat diesen Zugriff auf andere Autoren als Entwendung beschrieben, mit der Benjamin "den fremden Text sich anverwandelt (...)
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  38.  57
    A Conspectus of Poetry: Part I.Elder Olson - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (1):159-180.
    Is there an alternative course to one which sets up hypotheses as to the nature of poetry and then proceeds to illustrate them? Happily, there is. Rather than beginning with the hypothesis we may begin with the fact, and let what may emerge. That is, rather than beginning with some notion of the nature of poetry, we may begin with individual poems and discover what we may of their nature or form. This procedure evidently involves four phases: examination of the (...)
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  39.  9
    The pathos of distance: affects of the moderns.Jean-Michel Rabaté - 2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing.
    Jean-Michel Rabaté uses Nietzsche's image of a "pathos of distance," the notion that certain values cannot originate in a community but are created by a few gifted and lofty individuals, as the basis for a wide-ranging investigation into the ethics of the moderns. The expression of "pathos of distance" impressed would-be modernists like the American James Huneker and the Irish poet W. B. Yeats as they confronted the new in the arts. Later, it helped Deleuze and Barthes make sense of (...)
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  40.  8
    Keep calm and nom nom nom.John Sazaklis (ed.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.
    Offering wisdom for everyone, along with colorful original illustrations, arcade icon Pac-Man shares a collection of his most famous inspirational and feel-good quotes.
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  41.  12
    Guilt and Mourning.Alexander Stern - 2019 - In Peter Eli Gordon (ed.), A companion to Adorno. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 51–66.
    Walter Benjamin's influence on Theodor Adorno centers on the former's early philosophy of language, which drew on manifold sources, including importantly the theological writings of Johann Georg Hamann. Adorno adapts this “expressivist” philosophy of language as part of a critique of Hegel's dialectic that forms the basis for Adorno's understanding of epistemology and social criticism. The result of this tempered influence is that Benjamin's and Adorno's projects share a great deal of common ground and vocabulary, but diverge in fundamental ways. (...)
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  42. Aura ex machina.Fabrizio Desideri - 2013 - Rivista di Estetica 52:33-52.
    The essay has three main objectives and therefore is divided into three parts. The first is to dispel some misconceptions related to the notion of aura, in the centre of Benjamin’s essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (§ 1). First and foremost, is criticized the claim that Benjamin intends the decline of the aura of the work of art (its crisis) in terms of an irreversible end. In response to this misunderstanding is then analyzed the (...)
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  43. Historical Citation and Revolutionary Epistemology.Alison Ross - 2015 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (2):258-283.
    This article defends the thesis that there are multiple points of exchange between the categories of “word” and “image” in Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project. Benjamin describes the truth of the articulate wish of the past as “graphically perceptible” and the image as “readable.” In this respect the vocabulary of “word” and “image” that Benjamin’s early work had opposed are not just deployed in concert, but specific features of the vocabulary of “word” and “image” become exchangeable. The distinctive features of (...)
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  44. Electronic gaming and the ethics of information ownership.Dan Burk - 2005 - International Review of Information Ethics 4:39-45.
    Players of electronic games, particularly on-line role-playing games, may invest a substantial degree of time, effort, and personal identity into the game scenarios they generate. Yet, where the wishes of players diverge from those of game publishers, the legal and ethical interests of players remain unclear. The most applicable set of legal principles are those of copyright law, which is often grounded in utilitarian justifications, but which may also be justified on deontological grounds. Past copyright cases involving video arcade and (...)
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  45.  17
    Conceptual film as a form of philosophizing (existential perspective of W. Wenders’s films).Natalya Dyadyk & Olga Confederat - 2019 - Sotsium I Vlast 3:95-106.
    Introduction. Observing the production and consumer area of modern cinematography makes it possible to draw conclusions about the value dominants of modern society, to conduct its sociocultural analysis. Cinema, both auteur and mass, is a way of reflecting and modeling the society spiritual state and its analysis makes it possible to draw quite serious and justified philosophical and social conclusions. The film in a philosophical sense is ontologized by the dominant intention of the era. Such a dominant intention of modernity (...)
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  46.  6
    Human Performance in Competitive and Collaborative Human–Machine Teams.Murray S. Bennett, Laiton Hedley, Jonathon Love, Joseph W. Houpt, Scott D. Brown & Ami Eidels - forthcoming - Topics in Cognitive Science.
    In the modern world, many important tasks have become too complex for a single unaided individual to manage. Teams conduct some safety-critical tasks to improve task performance and minimize the risk of error. These teams have traditionally consisted of human operators, yet, nowadays, artificial intelligence and machine systems are incorporated into team environments to improve performance and capacity. We used a computerized task modeled after a classic arcade game to investigate the performance of human–machine and human–human teams. We manipulated the (...)
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  47.  50
    The pedagogue of the auratic medium—extending the argument.Stephen Dobson - 2008 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 42 (2):325-331.
    Nick Peim has recently revisited the work of Walter Benjamin; specifically his famous essay on art and mechanical reproduction. In this reply, I too draw upon the inspiration of Benjamin to extend the argument to the question of experience and what might count as knowledge, both in a philosophical sense and also in terms of the curriculum. To exemplify my argument I draw upon the topics of prostitution, gambling and the urban. They were all central to Benjamin's unfinished work 'The (...)
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  48.  70
    The task of the name: A reply to Carol Poster.Jason Helms - 2008 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 41 (3):pp. 278-287.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Task of the Name: A Reply to Carol PosterJason HelmsIn the fields with which we are concerned, knowledge comes only in lightning flashes. The text is the long roll of thunder that follows.—Walter Benjamin, Arcades N1, 1 (1999)Logos, in whose lighting they come and go, remains concealed from them, and forgotten.—Martin Heidegger, “Aletheia” (1975, 122)One of the first things learned in the most rudimentary attempt at stargazing (...)
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  49.  44
    Façades: Walter Benjamin's Paris.Patrice Higonnet, Anne Higonnet & Margaret Higonnet - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 10 (3):391-419.
    “Paris, Capital of the Nineteenth Century” juxtaposes elliptical descriptions that reveal the interiorization of commodities in the economy of high capitalism. “Allegory in the nineteenth century vacated the outer world, to colonize the inner world.”32 Each of the exposé’s six sections consists of two parts: “Fourier, or the Arcades,” “Daguerre, or the Panoramas,” “Grandville, or the World Exhibitions,” “Louis-Philippe, or the Interior,” “Baudelaire, or the Streets of Paris,” “Haussmann, or the Baricades.”33The commercial arcade and not the factory is the (...)
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  50.  18
    Barricades: Between Resistance and Revolution.Ori Rotlevy - 2022 - Critical Horizons 23 (3):265-283.
    ABSTRACT In a reflection on his Marxist past, J. F. Lyotard described a différend between himself and the revolutionary discourse. This might also represent the relations between the latter and the contemporary discourse of resistance, with its characteristic fascination with non-teleological political action. The disdain for teleology apparently justifies the incommensurability of these discourses, thus disabling any inheritance of elements of the revolutionary tradition. This essay challenges the unbridgeable nature of this gap and explores alternative relations between the two discourses, (...)
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