Results for 'Marxian archaeology'

962 found
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  1.  27
    The political technology of the ‘Camp’ in historical capitalism.John Welsh - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (1):96-118.
    So much of what we experience in neoliberal capitalism resembles the operation of the camp. How then can we understand the camp as a political technology of labour control recurrent in historical capitalism, and why would we want to? Driven by the perennial imperatives to govern and to accumulate, the camp as a modulation of social control allows us to explore the role of ‘meta-disciplinary’ technique in the ‘real subsumption of labour’. The aims here are to question the sanguine expectations (...)
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  2.  66
    “As Close as Possible to the Unlivable”.Stéphane Legrand - 2008 - Sophia 47 (3):281-291.
    This article aims at showing that in spite of Michel Foucault’s violent rejection of phenomenology, this discipline never ceased to bear a crucial significance for his archaeological and genealogical analyses, in that it can be construed as a symptom indicating the most serious challenge that the contemporary philosophy has to meet: thinking together Experience and Knowledge. The author intends to prove, by resorting to the Marxian concept of ‘objectively necessary appearance’, that Foucault’s main opposition to phenomenology stems from his (...)
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  3.  22
    Disassembling archeology, reassembling the modern world.William Carruthers & Stéphane Van Damme - 2017 - History of Science 55 (3):255-272.
    This article provides a substantive discussion of the relevance of the history of archeology to the history of science. At the same time, the article introduces the papers contained in this special issue as exemplars of this relevance. To make its case, the article moves through various themes in the history of archeology that overlap with key issues in the history of science. The article discusses the role and tension of regimes of science in antiquarian and archeological practices, and also (...)
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  4. Theory and Explanation in Archaeology the Southampton Conference /Edited by Colin Renfrew, Michael J. Rowlands, Barbara Abbott Segraves. --. --.Colin Renfrew, M. Rowlands, Barbara Abbott Segraves & Theoretical Archaeology Group - 1982 - Academic Press, 1982.
     
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  5.  11
    Ideology, Power and Prehistory.Daniel Miller, Christopher Y. Tilley & Theoretical Archaeology Group - 1984 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book starts from the premise that methodology has always dominated archaeology to the detriment of broader social theory.
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  6. Archeology of religious knowledge.Angela Ales Bello - 1988 - In Angela Ales Bello & Richard Rojcewicz (eds.), Phenomenology and the Numinous: The Fifth Annual Symposium of the Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center. Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center, Duquesne University.
  7.  13
    The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Corpus. Vol. 2: LZ (excluding Tyre). By Denys Pringle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. xxix+ 456 pp. 203 black-and-white plates, 107 figures. $150.00 cloth. The second volume of Denys Pringle's Corpus will be warmly welcomed by. [REVIEW]An Archaeological Gazeteer - 1995 - Speculum 671:73.
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  8. The Archeology of World Religions.Jack Finegan - 1952
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  9. The Archeology of Qualia.Cosmin Visan - 2021 - Journal Of Anthropological And Archeological Sciences 4 (5):565-569.
    Researching into our past, scientists use different methods, from looking at the night sky to digging traces of our past and analyzing DNA. I propose here another method, that can have the potential of shedding more light into our history and the type of entities that we are. Working under philosophical idealism, I propose that evolution is in the first place the evolution of consciousness, and thus the traces of evolution are mostly not to be found in our physical bodies, (...)
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  10.  25
    (1 other version)An Archeology of Corruption in Medicine.Miles Little, Wendy Lipworth & Ian Kerridge - 2018 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 27 (3):525-535.
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  11.  13
    Archeology and the language-ready brain.Benoît Dubreuil & Christopher Stuart Henshilwood - forthcoming - Language and Cognition.
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  12.  19
    The Archeology Method in History of Thoughts and the Study of Chinese Philosophy [J].Zheng Xiaojiang - 2002 - Modern Philosophy 1:010.
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  13.  36
    The archeology of internalism.Martin Kurthen - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (4):682-683.
    Behavioral regularities are open to both representationist (hence internalist) and non-representationist explanations. Shepard improvidently favors internalism, which is burdened with severe conceptual and empirical shortcomings. Hecht and Kubovy & Epstein half-heartedly criticize internalism by tracing it back to “unconscious” metaphors or by replacing it with weak externalism. Explanations of behavioral regularities are better relocated within a radical embodiment approach. [Hecht; Kubovy & Epstein; Shepard].
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  14.  89
    The archeology of the frivolous: reading Condillac.Jacques Derrida - 1980 - Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. Edited by Etienne Bonnot de Condillac.
    In 1746 the French philosophe Condillac published his Essay on the Origin of Human Knowledge , one of many attempts during the century to determine how we organize and validate ideas as knowledge. In investigating language, especially written language, he found not only the seriousness he sought but also a great deal of frivolity whose relation to the sober business of philosophy had to be addressed somehow. If the mind truly reflects the world, and language reflects the mind, why is (...)
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  15.  47
    Refuse Archeology: Virchow—Schliemann—Freud.Dietmar Schmidt & tr Gledhill, Andrew - 2001 - Perspectives on Science 9 (2):210-232.
    : In the early twentieth century, psychoanalysis tries to investigate a specific logic of the appearance and the incident of what is taken to be unintended in everyday communication and human behavior. What before hardly seemed to be worth systematic research, now becomes a privileged field, in which the meaningful signs of a hidden and unwelcome past appear. For representing this new field of research Freud often makes use of archaeological metaphors. But in quoting the knowledge and the techniques of (...)
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  16.  13
    Visualizing a monumental past: Archeology, Nasser’s Egypt, and the early Cold War.William Carruthers - 2017 - History of Science 55 (3):273-301.
    This article examines geographies of decolonization and the Cold War through a case study in the making of archeological knowledge. The article focuses on an archeological dig that took place in Egypt in the period between the July 1952 Free Officers’ coup and the 1956 Suez crisis. Making use of the notion of the ‘boundary object’, this article demonstrates how the excavation of ancient Egyptian remains at the site of Mit Rahina helped to constitute Nasserist revolutionary modernity and its relationship (...)
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  17.  26
    Archeology of the Art of Body Movement: Learning from Japanese Ko-bujutsu.Satoshi Higuchi - 2019 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 53 (1):97-105.
    Probably very few people today would believe that, prior to Japan's modernization during the Meiji period, the Japanese were not able to run. It seems commonsensical that human beings should be able to perform the same body movements such as running—since, of course, we are human beings regardless of whether we live in modern countries. However, it appears, in fact, that people in the Edo Period did not run in the sense of how we run today. There was no need, (...)
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  18. The Archeology of Skepticism.John Christian Laursen - 2010 - Iris. European Journal of Philosophy and Public Debate 2 (3):197-203.
    Skepticism is a central aspect of our intellectual heritage, even if many of us do not recognize it. Only in recent decades has the intellectual archeology been done that enables to see this part of our heritage and its role in how we came to think the way we do. Gianni Paganini's Skepsis . Le debat des modernes sur le scepticisme (2008) is the most important recent work in this archeology, bringing out the role of early modern thinkers from Montaigne (...)
     
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  19.  32
    Irony, Archeology, and the Rule of Rhyme: Two Readings of the Ṭasmu Luzūmiyya of Abū l-ʿAlāʾ al-Maʿarrī.Suzanne Pinckney Stetkevych - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 138 (3):507.
    Two contrasting approaches to the genesis of the Luzūmiyya rhymed in Ṭasmu serve as entry points into Abū l-ʿAlāʾ al-Maʿarrī’s double-rhymed diwan, Luzūm mā lā yalzam. The first takes the seventh/thirteenth-century litterateur Ibn al-Qifṭī’s account of the Umayyad caliph al-Walīd’s Mosque of Damascus excavations, which was read before al-Maʿarrī, as the inspiration for the poem. This reading elicits the metaphorical connection, through the ubi sunt topos of the Arabic nasīb, between the extinct Arab tribe Ṭasm and the long-lost civilization unearthed (...)
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  20.  67
    Feminist Archeology: Uncovering Women's Philosophical History.Mary Anne Warren - 1989 - Hypatia 4 (1):155-159.
    A History of Women Philosophers, Volume I: Ancient Women Philoophers, 600 B.C. - 500 A.D., edited by Mary Ellen Waithe, is an important but somewhat frustrating book. It is filled with tantalizing glimpses into the lives and thoughts of some of our earliest philosophical foremothers. Yet it lacks a clear unifying theme, and the abrupt transitions from one philosopher and period to the next are sometimes disconcerting. The overall effect is not unlike that of viewing an expansive landscape, illuminated only (...)
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  21.  34
    Archeology of St. Lawrence Island, AlaskaHenry B. Collins, Jr.M. F. Ashley-Montagu - 1938 - Isis 28 (2):534-536.
  22. Archeology and a Science of Man.Wilfred T. Neill - 1981 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 32 (1):106-109.
     
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  23.  26
    Archeology and the Sumerian Problem.E. A. Speiser & Henri Frankfort - 1933 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 53 (4):359.
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  24. Modern archeology of modernity.Manuel Afonso Costa - 2012 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 53 (125).
     
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  25.  42
    The Archeology of Wisdom.Donald R. Kelley - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (7):2037-2054.
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  26. Archeology as Structuralist Philosophy.Samo Tomsic - 2009 - Filozofski Vestnik 30 (3):191 - +.
     
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  27.  40
    The Archeology of the Sign.Chantal Cinquin - 1986 - Semiotics:179-190.
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  28.  88
    The Birth of the Clinic: An Archaeology of Medical Perception.Michel Foucault - 1972-1977 - Vintage Books.
    In this remarkable book Michel Foucault, one of the most influential thinkers of recent times, calls us to look critically at specific historical events in order to uncover new layers of significance.
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  29.  10
    Archeology of Art Theory.Henk Slager - 1995 - Brill | Rodopi.
    This study is an archeological investigation into the historically changing relationship between words and images. The result is an encyclopedia of interpretative techniques in which language functions as a model of thought. Three periods come to the fore. In the classical one, grammatical structures are responsible for the dominance of describing and identifying activities. Thought about art departs from the idea, that classificatory systems represent images. _Art criticism_ is the form of interpretation in this period. In the modern period time (...)
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  30.  56
    Abstract: Archeology of Consciousness.Veniero Venier - 2005 - Chiasmi International 7:339-339.
  31.  14
    Rules and Resistance: A Commentary on “An Archeology of Corruption in Medicine”.Kathryn MacKay - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 19 (1):123-127.
    In the paper “An archeology of corruption in medicine”, Miles Little, Wendy Lipworth, and Ian Kerridge present an account of corruption and describe its prevalent forms in medicine. In presenting an individual-focused account of corruption found within “social entities”, Little et al. argue that these entities are corruptible by nature and that certain individuals are prone to take advantage of the corruptibility of social entities to pursue their own ends. The authors state that this is not preventable, so the way (...)
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  32.  35
    The Archeology of World Religions: The Background of Primitivism, Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Shinto, Islam, and Sikhism.Jack Finegan - 1954 - Philosophy East and West 3 (4):374-374.
  33. The archeology as a method of philosophical analysis. [Spanish].Rubén Darío Maldonado Ortega - 2004 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 2:54-61.
    Normal 0 21 false false false ES X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Tabla normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0cm 5.4pt 0cm 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0cm; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} This article is a didactic attempt to make comprehensible the methodological stance of Michel Foucault whereby philosophy is said to be made in a similar way that archeologists work. According to these terms, interpretation is replaced by (...)
     
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  34.  16
    Foucault's Archeology: History Without Foundation.Joseph R. Cronin - 2001 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 5 (2):67-101.
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  35.  71
    Impacting the University: An Archeology of the Future.Éric Méchoulan & Roxanne Lapidus - 2013 - Substance 42 (1):7-27.
    In memoriam Bill ReadingsIt is generally agreed that the modern university originated in early 19th-century Prussia, under the inspiration of Wilhelm von Humboldt. Thus it was stamped with the seal of idealism and of German Romanticism. Today the entrepreneurial model that seems to be imposing itself on universities around the globe confounds this former ideal, particularly by requiring academia to report on its economically quantifiable "impact." But an impact on what, exactly? On knowledge in general? On society at large? On (...)
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  36.  20
    Hitting two birds with one stone: An afterword on archeology and the history of science.Mirjam Brusius - 2017 - History of Science 55 (3):383-391.
    This afterword comments on the articles gathered together in this special section of History of Science (“Disassembling Archaeology, Reassembling the Modern World”). Criticizing the consistent lack of institutional infrastructure for histories of archaeology in the history of science, the piece argues that scholars should recognize the commonality of archaeology’s practices with those of the nineteenth and twentieth century field sciences that have received more historical attention. The piece also suggests avenues to help take this approach further, such (...)
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  37.  14
    Finding Time for the Old Stone Age: A History of Palaeolithic Archaeology and Quaternary Geology in Britain, 1860-1960.Anne O'Connor - 2007 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Finding Time for the Old Stone Age explores a century of colourful debate over the age of our earliest ancestors. In the mid nineteenth century curious stone implements were found alongside the bones of extinct animals. Humans were evidently more ancient than had been supposed - but just how old were they? There were several clocks for Stone-Age time, and it would prove difficult to synchronize them. Conflicting timescales were drawn from the fields of geology, palaeontology, anthropology, and archaeology. (...)
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  38.  18
    Revolutionary Archeology: Julia Kristeva and the Utopia of the Text.Jonathan Rée - 1997 - Paragraph 20 (3):258-269.
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  39. Public Practical Reason: An Archeology*: GERALD J. POSTEMA.Gerald J. Postema - 1995 - Social Philosophy and Policy 12 (1):43-86.
    Kant argues that the “discipline” of reason holds us to public argument and reflective thought. When we speak the language of reasoned judgment, Kant maintains, we “speak with a universal voice,” expecting and claiming the assent of all other rational beings. This language carries with it a discipline requiring us to submit our judgments to the forum of our rational peers. Remarkably, Kant does not restrict this thought to the realm of politics, but rather treats politics as the model for (...)
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  40. Impressionable Biologies: From the Archaeology of Plasticity to the Sociology of Epigenetics.Maurizio Meloni - 2019 - New York, USA: Routledge.
    Chapter 1st of the book. This chapter explores the fundamental ambiguity of the concept of plasticity – between openness and determination, change and stabilization of forms. This pluralism of meanings is used to unpack different instantiations of corporeal plasticity across various epochs, starting from ancient and early modern medicine, particularly humouralism. A genealogical approach displaces the notion that plasticity is a unitary phenomenon, coming in the abstract, and illuminates the unequal distribution of different forms of plasticities across social, gender, and (...)
  41. Julian Jaynes' software archaeology.Daniel C. Dennett - 1986 - Canadian Psychology 27:149-54.
  42.  1
    An Archeology of Public Practical Reasoning.Gerald J. Postema - 1991 - Faculty of Law, University of Toronto.
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  43. The archeology of the visible and invisible.Marta Szabat - 2011 - Diametros:63-81.
    The article describes the final period of development of Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy, during which he wrote The Visible and the Invisible. Using the interpretations and commentaries of French scholars, I try to show that the subject-object dualism which the French philosopher tried to overcome throughout his philosophical activity continues to persist. In fact, it would seem that it cannot be overcome.
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  44.  11
    The Sacrament of Language: An Archaeology of the Oath.Giorgio Agamben - 2010 - Stanford University Press.
    In The Sacrament of Language Agamben investigates the phenomenon of the oath, arguing that it points toward a fundamental experience of language that lies at the root of religion and law alike.
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  45.  25
    An Archeology of the Self: The Prehistory of Personhood.Ian Hodder - 2011 - In J. Wentzel van Huyssteen & Erik P. Wiebe (eds.), In search of self: interdisciplinary perspectives on personhood. Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans. pp. 50.
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  46.  68
    The Archeology of Vision: On The Image in Dispute: Art and Cinema in the Age of Photography , edited by Dudley Andrew.Jan-Christopher Horak - 1998 - Film-Philosophy 2 (1).
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  47.  76
    Explanation in Archeology; An Explicitly Scientific Approach. Patty Jo Watson, Steven A. Leblanc, Charles L. Redman.H. David Tuggle - 1972 - Philosophy of Science 39 (4):564-566.
  48. Property relations vs. surplus value in Marxian exploitation.John E. Roemer - 1982 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 11 (4):281-313.
  49.  29
    The industrial archaeology of deep time.Jenny Bulstrode - 2016 - British Journal for the History of Science 49 (1):1-25.
  50.  25
    Ethopolitical modulation of existence: an archeology of the political and ethical life in Michel Foucault.Iván Torres Apablaza - 2021 - Las Torres de Lucca. International Journal of Political Philosophy 10 (18):199-223.
    The article aims to base the presence of a reconceptualization of the political in Michel Foucault's thought, taking as the reading key ethhopolitics as a conceptual proposal. There, we can find a concept completely opposed to the way in which both modern governmentality and the tradition of political thought have understood the meaning of politics in the West. Following this purpose, the hypothesis is proposed and developed, according to which the analytical gesture that persists in Michel Foucault's thought is a (...)
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