Results for 'Günther Charwat'

260 found
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  1.  15
    Biocommunication of Ciliates.Guenther Witzany & Mariusz Nowacki (eds.) - 2016 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    This is the first coherent description of all levels of communication of ciliates. Ciliates are highly sensitive organisms that actively compete for environmental resources. They assess their surroundings, estimate how much energy they need for particular goals, and then realise the optimum variant. They take measures to control certain environmental resources. They perceive themselves and can distinguish between ‘self’ and ‘non-self’. They process and evaluate information and then modify their behaviour accordingly. These highly diverse competences show us that this is (...)
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  2.  11
    Biocommunication of Fungi.Guenther Witzany (ed.) - 2012 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    Fungi are sessile, highly sensitive organisms that actively compete for environmental resources both above and below the ground. They assess their surroundings, estimate how much energy they need for particular goals, and then realise the optimum variant. They take measures to control certain environmental resources. They perceive themselves and can distinguish between ‘self’ and ‘non-self’. They process and evaluate information and then modify their behaviour accordingly. These highly diverse competences show us that this is possible owing to sign-mediated communication processes (...)
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  3.  6
    Biocommunication and Natural Genome Editing.Witzany Guenther - 2010 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    First uniform description of all key levels of communication in the organismic kingdoms of plants, fungi, animals (bees and corals), bacteria and additionally the natural genome editing competences of viruses based on the most recent empirical data. The biocommunicative approach presented is based on the results of the philosophy of science discourse concerning coherent definitions of 'language' and 'communication'.
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  4.  23
    Methods for solving reasoning problems in abstract argumentation – A survey.Günther Charwat, Wolfgang Dvořák, Sarah A. Gaggl, Johannes P. Wallner & Stefan Woltran - 2015 - Artificial Intelligence 220 (C):28-63.
  5. Biocommunication of Soil Microorganisms.Witzany Guenther (ed.) - 2011 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    Communication is defined as an interaction between at least two living agents which share a repertoire of signs. These are combined according to syntactic, semantic and context dependent, pragmatic rules in order to coordinate behavior. This volume deals with the important roles of soil bacteria in parasitic and symbiotic interactions with viruses, plants, animals and fungi. Starting with a general overview of the key levels of communication between bacteria, further reviews examine the various aspects of intracellular as well as intercellular (...)
     
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  6. Six Senses of Critique for Critical Phenomenology.Lisa Guenther - 2021 - Puncta 4 (2):5-23.
    What is the meaning of critique for critical phenomenology? Building on Gayle Salamon’s engagement with this question in the inaugural issue of Puncta: A Journal for Critical Phenomenology (2018), I will propose a six-fold account of critique as: 1) the art of asking questions, moved by crisis; 2) a transcendental inquiry into the conditions of possibility for meaningful experience; 3) a quasi-transcendental, historically-grounded study of particular lifeworlds; 4) a (situated and interested) analysis of power; 5) the problematization of basic concepts (...)
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  7.  91
    The Viral Origins of Telomeres and Telomerases and their Important Role in Eukaryogenesis and Genome Maintenance.Guenther Witzany - 2008 - Biosemiotics 1 (2):191-206.
    Whereas telomeres protect terminal ends of linear chromosomes, telomerases identify natural chromosome ends, which differ from broken DNA and replicate telomeres. Although telomeres play a crucial role in the linear chromosome organization of eukaryotic cells, their molecular syntax most probably descended from an ancient retroviral competence. This indicates an early retroviral colonization of large double-stranded DNA viruses, which are putative ancestors of the eukaryotic nucleus. This contribution demonstrates an advantage of the biosemiotic approach towards our evolutionary understanding of telomeres, telomerases, (...)
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  8. The rise of western rationalism. Max Weber's developmental history. By Wolfgang Schluchter. Translated by Guenther Roth. [REVIEW]Guenther Roth - 1983 - History and Theory 22 (1):102.
     
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  9. Theoretical Information Studies.Guenther Witzany (ed.) - 2020 - Singapur:
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  10. Weber the would-be Englishman: Anglophilia and family history.Guenther Roth - 1993 - In Hartmut Lehmann & Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber's Protestant ethic: origins, evidence, contexts. New York, N.Y.: Cambridge University Press. pp. 83--121.
     
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  11. Being-from-others: Reading Heidegger after Cavarero.Lisa Guenther - 2008 - Hypatia 23 (1):99-118.
    : Drawing on Adriana Cavarero's account of natality, Guenther argues that Martin Heidegger overlooks the distinct ontological and ethical significance of birth as a limit that orients one toward an other who resists appropriation, even while handing down a heritage of possibilities that one can—and must—make one's own. Guenther calls this structure of natality Being-from-others, modifying Heidegger's language of inheritance to suggest an ethical understanding of existence as the gift of the other.
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  12. Rethinking Epistemology.Guenther Abel & James Conant (eds.) - 2011 - de Gruyter.
     
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  13.  34
    Introduction: Keylevels of Biocommunication in Fungi.Guenther Witzany - 2012 - In Biocommunication of Fungi. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 1--18.
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  14.  10
    Poland: August 1980 -- December 1982 a Conference Report.Halina M. Charwat - 1982 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1982 (54):173-178.
  15.  35
    Einschliessend oder ausschliessend, Das ist hier die frage – zur bedeutung Von "oder".Matthias Guenther - 2006 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 70 (1):127-145.
    Commonly it is supposed that there is an inclusive "or" and an exclusive "or". However, doubts have been raised about this standard interpretation of "or". But, as far as I know, these doubts have never been elaborated. In this article I shall develope a critique of the standard interpretation. It is argued that the distinction between the inclusive and the exclusive understanding of sentences of the form "p or q" can be explained by making use of the inclusive "or" alone. (...)
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  16.  2
    Epigenetics in Biological Communication.Guenther Witzany (ed.) - 2024 - Cham: SpringerNature.
    Every cell, tissue, organ and organism is competent to use signs to exchange information reaching common coordinations and organisations of both single cell and group behavior. These sign-mediated interactions we term biological communication. The regulatory system that works in development, morphology, cell fate and identity, physiology, genetic instructions, immunity, memory/learning, physical and mental disease depends on epigenetic marks. The communication of cells, persistent viruses and their defectives such as mobile genetic elements and RNA networks ensures both the transport of regulatory (...)
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  17. Sprache und Kommunikation als zentrale Struktur- und Organisationsprinzipien belebter Natur.Guenther Witzany - 2002 - In Ludger Albers & Ottmar Leiß (eds.), Körper - Sprache - Weltbild: Integration Biologischer Und Kultureller Interpretationen in der Medizin ; Mit 36 Tabellen. Schattauer. pp. 87-96.
  18. Zeichenprozesse als Bedingung der Möglichkeit von Evolution. Zur Notwendigkeit einer Molekularpragmatik.Guenther Witzany - 1993 - Zeitschrift Für Semiotik 2 (15):107-125.
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  19.  46
    Asking Different Questions: a Decolonial Reading of Merleau-Ponty’s Institution Course Notes.Lisa Guenther - 2022 - Chiasmi International 24:311-332.
    In this essay, I draw on Merleau-Ponty’s Institution Course Notes to clarify Patrick Wolfe’s claim that, for settler colonialism, “invasion is a structure, not an event.” I also engage critically with colonial assumptions in Merleau-Ponty’s own work, including his Eurocentric response to questions such as: “[I]s there a field of world history or universal history? Is there an intended accomplishment? A closure on itself? A true society?” In this essay, I ask different questions – with Merleau-Ponty, against him, and beyond (...)
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  20.  17
    Viruses: Essential Agents of Life.Witzany Guenther (ed.) - 2012 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    A renaissance of virus research is taking centre stage in biology. Empirical data from the last decade indicate the important roles of viruses, both in the evolution of all life and as symbionts of host organisms. There is increasing evidence that all cellular life is colonized by exogenous and/or endogenous viruses in a non-lytic but persistent lifestyle. Viruses and viral parts form the most numerous genetic matter on this planet.
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  21. The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience. A book review and commentary.Herbert Guenther - 1991 - World Futures: The Journal of General Evolution 37 (4):219-25.
  22.  49
    Facing complexity: Against scientific oversimplification.Guenther Palm - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (5):902-903.
    Steven Rose's book is essentially a plea for considering the variety and complexity of life and against simplistic reductions of human and animal behavioral phenomena to single genetic causes.
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  23.  50
    How to combine interpolation with feedback?Guenther Palm - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (4):478-478.
    The Chorus representation is a sparse, similarity-preserving representation achieved by a feedforward neural network. Hence it is probably better suited for interpolation than for categorization. This commentary raises the question of how to combine categorization with interpolation, whether feedforward networks can be reasonable models for parts of the cerebral cortex, and whether people can perform more than one interpolation at a time.
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  24.  69
    Synchronicity and its use in the brain.Guenther Palm & Thomas Wennekers - 1997 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (4):695-696.
    We briefly review the long-standing ideas about the use of synchronicity in the brain, which rely on Donald Hebb's views on cell assemblies and synaptic plasticity. More recently the distinction among several timescales in the description of neural activity has become a focus of theoretical discussion. Phillips & Singer's target article is criticized mainly because it does not distinguish these timescales properly and hence does not really address the questions so intensely debated today.
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  25.  82
    Emotion and reality.Guenther Stern Anders - 1950 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 10 (4):553-562.
  26.  92
    On the pseudo-concreteness of Heidegger's philosophy.Guenther Stern - 1947 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 8 (3):337 - 371.
  27. The DNA Habitat and its RNA Inhabitants.Luis Villarreal & Guenther Witzany - 2013 - Genomics Insights 6:1-12.
  28.  9
    Wholeness Lost and Wholeness Regained: Forgotten Tales of Individuation from Ancient Tibet.Herbert V. Guenther - 1994 - SUNY Press.
    This book deals in narrative form with the theme of recovering lost wholeness—with the perennial question of beginnings and what role a human being must play in order to find meaning in his or her life.
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  29.  23
    Max Weber's Vision of History: Ethics and Methods.Guenther Roth & Wolfgang Schluchter - 1979 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
    This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1979.
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  30. Solitary Confinement: Social Death and its Afterlives.Lisa Guenther - 2013 - Minnesota University Press.
    Prolonged solitary confinement has become a widespread and standard practice in U.S. prisons—even though it consistently drives healthy prisoners insane, makes the mentally ill sicker, and, according to the testimony of prisoners, threatens to reduce life to a living death. In this profoundly important and original book, Lisa Guenther examines the death-in-life experience of solitary confinement in America from the early nineteenth century to today’s supermax prisons. Documenting how solitary confinement undermines prisoners’ sense of identity and their ability to understand (...)
  31. The Psychopathology of Space: A Phenomenological Critique of Solitary Confinement.Lisa Guenther - 2015 - In Darian Meacham (ed.), Medicine and Society, New Perspectives in Continental Philosophy. Dordrecht: Springer Verlag.
    Many prisoners in solitary confinement experience adverse psychological and physical effects such as anxiety, paranoia, insomnia, headaches, hallucinations and other perceptual distortions. Psychiatrists call this SHU syndrome, named after the Security Housing Units [SHU] of supermax prisons. While psychiatric accounts of the effects of supermax confinement are important, especially in a legal context, they are insufficient to account for the phenomenological and even ontological harm of solitary confinement. This paper offers a phenomenological analysis of the lived experience of space in (...)
     
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  32.  9
    The life and teaching of Náropa: translated from the original Tibetan with a philosophical commentary based on the oral transmission.Herbert V. Guenther - 1963 - Boston: Shambhala. Edited by Nāḍapāda.
    In the history of Tibetan Buddhism, the eleventh-century Indian mystic Nbropa occupies an unusual position, for his life and teachings mark both the end of a long tradition and the beginning of a new and rich era in Buddhist thought. Nbropa's biography, translated by the world-renowned Buddhist scholar Herbert V. Guenther from hitherto unknown sources, describes with great psychological insight the spiritual development of this scholar-saint. It is unique in that it also contains a detailed analysis of his teaching that (...)
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  33.  14
    Key Levels of Biocommunication in Plants.Witzany Guenther - 2012 - In Guenther Witzany & František Baluška (eds.), Biocommunication of Plants. Springer. pp. 1--9.
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  34.  45
    Agents Competent in Natural Genetic Engineering.Guenther Witzany - 2012 - Biosemiotics 5 (2):291-296.
  35. Unborn mothers: The old rhetoric of new reproductive technologies.Lisa Guenther - 2005 - Radical Philosophy 130.
    In 2003, The Guardian newspapers ran an article with the headline, “Prospect of babies from unborn mothers.” A team of Israeli researchers had been attempting to grow viable eggs from the ovarian tissue of aborted fetuses for use in fertility treatments such as IVF. The rhetoric of “unborn mothers” poses new challenges to the liberal feminist discourse of personhood. How do we articulate the ethical issues involved in harvesting eggs from an aborted fetus, without resurrecting the debate over whether this (...)
     
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  36.  91
    Topics in Contemporary Legal Argumentation: Some Remarks on the Topical Nature of Legal Argumentation in the Continental Law Tradition.Guenther Kreuzbauer - 2008 - Informal Logic 28 (1):71-85.
    The article discusses topics in the context of contemporary legal argumentation. It starts with a sketch of the development of topics from ancient times until the present day. Here the author focuses on the theory of the German legal philosopher Theodor Viehweg, which was most influential to legal argumentation in the 20th century. Then a modern concept of topics is introduced and finally the author discusses the role of topics in contemporary legal argumentation. In this part the distinction between topoi (...)
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  37.  40
    Rousseau and Weber Two Studies in the Theory of Legitimacy.Guenther Roth - 1980
  38. Homeless sculpture.Guenther Stern - 1944 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 5 (2):293-307.
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  39.  53
    Kafka, pro und Contra.Guenther Anders - 1953 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 13 (4):582-583.
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  40.  50
    Property, Dispossession, and State Violence.Lisa Guenther - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (1):81-98.
    In “Criminal Empire,” Ojibwe scholar Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark argues that the criminalization of Indigenous resistance to colonization “averts attention” from the criminality of democratic settler states, which fail or refuse to honor their own legal agreements with Indigenous peoples. This chapter reflects on the implications of Stark’s analysis for the relation between property, dispossession, and liberal democratic state violence. From this perspective, the prison appears not as a correctional institution for individual lawbreakers, but as a spatial strategy for the imposition (...)
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  41.  65
    Meditation differently, phenomenological-psychological aspects of Tibetan Buddhist (Mahāmudrā and sNying-thig) practices from original Tibetan sources.Herbert V. Guenther - 1992 - Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
    Concept of meditation in Tibetan Buddhism.
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  42.  6
    Reinhard Bendix.Guenther Roth - 1990 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1990 (86):141-143.
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  43.  13
    Politics, Policy, and Political Science: Theoretical Alternatives.Guenther F. Schaefer & Stuart H. Rakoff - 1970 - Politics and Society 1 (1):51-77.
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  44.  32
    Meaning‐making in the aftermath of sudden infant death syndrome.Guenther Krueger - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (3):163-171.
    The reconstruction of meaning in the aftermath of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is part of the grieving process but has to date been poorly understood. Earlier theorists including Freud, Bowlby and Kübler‐Ross provided a foundation for what occurs during this time using stage theories. More recent researchers, often using qualitative techniques, have provided a more complex and expanded view that enhances our knowledge of meaning reconstruction following infant loss. This overview of representative contemporary authors compares and contrasts them with (...)
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  45. Shame and the temporality of social life.Lisa Guenther - 2011 - Continental Philosophy Review 44 (1):23-39.
    Shame is notoriously ambivalent. On one hand, it operates as a mechanism of normalization and social exclusion, installing or reinforcing patterns of silence and invisibility; on the other hand, the capacity for shame may be indispensible for ethical life insofar as it attests to the subject’s constitutive relationality and its openness to the provocation of others. Sartre, Levinas and Beauvoir each offer phenomenological analyses of shame in which its basic structure emerges as a feeling of being exposed to others and (...)
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  46.  41
    Max Weber's ethics and the peace movement today.Guenther Roth - 1984 - Theory and Society 13 (4):491-511.
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  47. Merquior, J. G., "Rousseau and Weber: Two Studies in the Theory of Legitimacy". [REVIEW]Roth Guenther Roth Guenther - 1982 - Ethics 93:401.
     
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  48.  14
    Editorial Introduction: Special Topics Issue on Other Animals.Lisa Guenther & Chloë Taylor - 2007 - PhaenEx 2 (2).
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  49. Mandala and/or dkyil-'khor'.Herbert Guenther - 1999 - International Journal of Transpersonal Studies 18 (2):149-162.
    This essay traces the development and the nature of two ideas that have played an important role in Buddhist thought and Buddhist experience. The one, called mandala , is fairly well known in Western literature, particularly because of its intricate and aesthetically moving patterning. It describes the experiencer's anthropocosmic universe. AI; such it is governed by the two major forms of geometry, plane and projective, with circles, squares, and triangles entering various combinations. Broadly speaking, a mandala presents a static worldview. (...)
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  50. Sound, Color, and Self-Organization.Herbert Guenther - 1998 - International Journal of Transpersonal Studies 17 (2):67-88.
    In Buddhist experience-qua-experienced based and process-oriented thought the experiencer is an integral aspect by virtue of his being a participant, not a detached observer, in the anthropocosmic unfolding of life's mystery, variously called "reality," "Being," or "wholeness." The unfolding process passes through three phases, called "in-depth appraisals," toward a definite value of phase difference. The whole process is experienced as shifting patterns of energy in constant creative interaction with their environment through frequencies of light and intensities of vibrations . These (...)
     
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