Results for 'Ready-made'

974 found
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  1. Ready-Mades: Ontology and Aesthetics.Simon J. Evnine - 2013 - British Journal of Aesthetics 53 (4):407-423.
    I explore the interrelations between the ontological and aesthetic issues raised by ready-mades such as Duchamp’s Fountain. I outline a hylomorphic metaphysics which has two central features. First, hylomorphically complex objects have matter to which they are not identical. Secondly, when such objects are artefacts (including artworks), it is essential to them that they are the products of creative work on their matter. Against this background, I suggest that ready-mades are of aesthetic interest because they pose a dilemma. (...)
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  2.  21
    Le ready-made : à quel titre?Francis Cohen - 2012 - Cahiers Philosophiques 131 (4):37-48.
    Les analyses du ready-made, qui ont considérablement renouvelé la philosophie de l’art, ignorent souvent, ou feignent d’ignorer, que pour Marcel Duchamp le ready-made est indissociable de son titre. N’importe quel objet usuel ne peut devenir un readymade, il doit au moins pouvoir supporter « une inscription ». Duchamp précise dans À propos des ready-made que les titres sont destinés « à emporter l’esprit du spectateur vers d’autres régions plus verbales ». Le titre ne supporte (...)
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  3.  57
    El ready made y la ruptura de la noción de arte del Modernismo.Jaime Aranda Del Solar - 2009 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 7:27-43.
    Este artículo revisa el modo en que la aparición de objetos críticos, como el Portabotellas de Duchamp, hacen entrar en crisis las nociones tradicionalmente aceptadas respecto de la obra de arte: su manualidad (la “buena factura”, producto de la destreza o habilidad del artista), su función representativa (mímesis) y su valor estético (el ser “bello”, objeto de una contemplación pura y desinteresada). Se plantea, así, que la aparición del ready made configura el momento final de un proceso de (...)
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  4. Event and ready-made: Delayed sabotage.Barbara Formis - 2004 - Communication and Cognition. Monographies 37 (3-4):247-261.
  5.  52
    Boredom and the Ready-Made Life.Haskell Bernstein - 1975 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 42.
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  6.  32
    Internal Communication in Bangladeshi Ready-Made Garment Factories: Illustration of the Internal Communication System and Its Connection to Labor Unrest.Helene Blumer - 2015 - Wiesbaden: Imprint: Springer Gabler.
    By drawing up a model of the internal communication system of Bangladeshi ready-made garment factories, Helene Blumer identifies the existence and intensity of its communication flows. She furthermore discloses a connection from this communication system to labor unrest. The absence of a functioning formal channel within the factory, the lack of effective labor representation and the rare physical presence of the factory owners confirm the existence of a communication barrier. As symptom of a flawed communication system, this barrier (...)
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  7. Why there are no ready-made phenomena: What philosophers of science should learn from Kant.Michela Massimi - 2008 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 63:1-35.
    The debate on scientific realism has raged among philosophers of science for decades. The scientific realist's claim that science aims to give us a literally true description of the way things are, has come under severe scrutiny and attack by Bas van Fraassen's constructive empiricism. All science aims at is to save the observable phenomena, according to van Fraassen. Scientific realists have faced since a main sceptical challenge: the burden is on them to prove that the entities postulated by our (...)
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  8. Husserl et la no ready-made theory : la phénoménologie dans la tradition constructiviste.Robert Brisart - 2011 - Bulletin d'Analyse Phénoménologique (1):3-36.
    Dans l?histoire récente de l?art, l?idée du ready-made fut un artifice assez efficace pour montrer que n?importe quel objet déjà manufacturé pouvait être érigé en ?uvre d?art, pourvu qu?on le conçoive et le nomme comme telle. C?était en somme délibérément minimiser toutes les qualités imparties à la matérialité d?un objet d?art pour mieux laisser apparaître la conceptualisation dont procède sa genèse. Je soutiens pour ma part que, dans l?histoire de la philosophie, la théorie du ready-made a (...)
     
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  9.  35
    Myth and the ready-made in David Levinthal's toy stories.Frances Stracey - 2012 - Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):367-378.
    The rise, in the 1980s, of what is now labelled appropriation-photography can be understood as the full absorption of the logic of the ready-made into photographic art. Like its Duchampian predecessor, the deployment of the ready-made was used to question the nature of institutionalized art-photography: was art inherent to the photo's medium; was it an auratic attribute of the author; conferred by the institution; or ratified by its consumption? It also enabled a critique of the politics (...)
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  10.  9
    Anestética del ready-made.R. Pablo Oyarzún - 2000 - [Santiago de Chile]: Lom Ediciones.
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  11.  11
    Minor Characters in Homer’s Iliad.Jonathan L. Ready - 2020 - Classical Antiquity 39 (2):284-329.
    This article focuses on those Iliadic characters who fall in battle to the poem’s major heroes. Homer has various ways to make these characters minor, such as through processes of obscuring or typification or by focusing on a specific body part. By making a character minor, the poet signals that we need not attend to him. After he makes a character minor, the poet can suggest that in the process of being made minor a character paradoxically ends up diverting (...)
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  12.  22
    Synthetic Biology as Ready-Made Nature in the Making.Massimiliano Simons - unknown
    That scientific practices can be interpreted as constructive practices that create their own objects rather than describing objects out there is a spreading idea within philosophy of science. But while normally the claim is that this is being done behind the scenes, in the case of synthetic biology it seems to be right in the open. To really comprehend what is going within synthetic biology, the idea of constructivism within philosophy must therefore be revised and differentiated in particular types of (...)
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  13. Holland. Remade oder Ready-made.Janny Rodermond & Tilman Harm - 2000 - Topos 31:32-40.
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  14.  21
    Masturbation, modernity, and the Swiftian diagnosis re-examined.Kathryn Ready - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (5):661-674.
    ABSTRACTThe opening reference to masturbation in Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels provides evidence of not only an embedded cultural commentary on the masturbatory tendencies of modernity but also specific contempt for the novel as a masturbatory literary form. The same point is made elsewhere in Swift’s poetry and his parody of the erotic scene of female masturbation that continued to be a staple of amatory fiction. Yet the same body of writing reveals Swift’s recognition that he too was guilty of (...)
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  15. Anestética del ready-made.Pablo Oyarzún R. - 2000 - [Santiago de Chile]: LOM Ediciones.
     
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  16. (2 other versions)Why There Isn't a Ready-Made World.Hilary Putnam - forthcoming - Hilary Putnam.
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  17.  12
    The "banal and ready-made style": Thinking the cliché from its criticisms (Antoine Albalat and Rémy de Gourmont).Sarah Troche - 2020 - Methodos 20.
    La pensée du cliché est indissociable d’un geste critique, qui en fait l’envers de l’originalité : ressassés, usés, signes de paresse intellectuelle, les clichés désignent dans la langue la puissance du commun. Au-delà d’une condamnation expéditive, qui génère elle-même ses propres clichés (des clichés il faut toujours se défaire), nous proposons ici d’analyser en détail les raisons de la critique, en prêtant une attention particulière aux apports de deux théoriciens du style, Antoine Albalat et Rémy de Gourmont. Ces deux auteurs (...)
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  18. El lugar del "ready-made", meta-ironía y lo infra-menudo.Pablo Oyarzun - 2004 - Revista Latinoamericana de Filosofia 30 (2):271-286.
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  19. Artworld as Horizon: A Phenomenological Analysis of Unaided Ready-Mades.Regina-Nino Kurg - 2014 - Studies on Art and Architecture (Kunstiteaduslikke Uurimusi) 23 (1/2):200-212.
    The article explores the possibility of defining unaided ready-mades as objects of art. It starts from the assumption that Edmund Husserl’s notion of horizon and Arthur Danto’s notion of artworld have similar meanings. Accordingly, it argues that unaided ready-mades are objects of art that appear with unique cultural horizons called artworlds. The aim is to show that the artworld is an external co-determining horizon that is sufficient for determining unaided ready-mades to be artworks.
     
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  20. Aesthetic empiricism and the challenge of fakes and ready-mades.Gordon Graham - 2005 - In Mathew Kieran (ed.), Contemporary Debates in Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 11--21.
     
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  21.  29
    The Discipline of Culturology: A New 'Ready-Made Thought' for Russia.Marlène Laruelle - 2004 - Diogenes 51 (4):21-36.
    ‘Culturology’ is an integral, often compulsory, part of Russian university courses; the discipline has largely replaced chairs in Marxist-Leninism and dialectical materialism, and bookshops are full of texts on the subject. This article is based on analysis of more than ten university textbooks recommended to first-year students. Marlène Laruelle examines why culturology has become so important, the place claimed for it within the human sciences, and what it means for changing Russian ideas of identity and nation.
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  22.  11
    »Ein Gemälde von Cézanne ist auch auf dem Klosett ein Gemälde von Cézanne«. Kunst, Alltagskultur und ready-made bei Marcuse.Gerhard Schweppenhäuser - 2007 - In Peter V. Zima & Rainer Winter (eds.), Kritische Theorie Heute. Transcript Verlag. pp. 159-176.
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  23.  32
    "Czy cały świat składa się z utajonych dzieł sztuki?" Ready-made jako model doświadczania rzeczywistości pozaartystycznej.Paula Milczarczyk - 2018 - Sztuka I Filozofia (Art and Philosophy) 52 (1):155-165.
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  24.  42
    The “Offence of any and all Ready-Made GivennessGivennesses”. Natorp’s Critique of Husserl’s Ideas I.Burt C. Hopkins - 2021 - In Rodney K. B. Parker (ed.), The Idealism-Realism Debate Among Edmund Husserl’s Early Followers and Critics. Springer Verlag. pp. 73-97.
    I present the first systematic account in the literature of a Husserlian response to Natorp’s critique of Husserl’s account of the pre-givenness of both the absolute stream of lived-experience and its essencesEssences to reflectionReflections. My response is presented within the broader context of what I argue is Heidegger’s misappropriation of Natorp’s critique of the phenomenological limits of reflectionReflections in Husserl’s transcendental phenomenologyTranscendental phenomenology and the misguided French attempt to address Heidegger’s critique by introducing the dialectical notion of “pre-reflectivePre-reflective” consciousness to (...)
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  25.  21
    Ready, Fire, Aim: the Underperformance of Current Food Access Efforts and “Food for Thought” Regarding Potential Solutions.Mark D. Fulford & Robert A. Coleman - 2020 - Food Ethics 5 (1):1-9.
    For more than 20 years, both here and abroad, significant efforts have been undertaken to provide equal access to nutritional food for all citizens. Yet, the numbers of under-nourished continue to rise, as do those afflicted with non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. Clearly, current efforts are not working. Relying on the psychological phenomena of learned helplessness and fundamental attribution error, it is argued that certain individuals may not be willing, or able, to take actions (...)
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  26.  22
    ‘Always Ready and Always Clean’?: Competing Discourses of Breast-feeding, Infant Illness and the Politics of Mother-blame in Bolivia.Maria Tapias - 2006 - Body and Society 12 (2):83-108.
    In this article I explore the multiple and at times conflicting public health and folk discourses which shape breast-feeding practices in Punata, Bolivia. I examine why women may cease to breast-feed despite active efforts made by the healthcare system to promote breast-feeding. Breast-feeding practices are saturated with meaning and circumscribed by time and economic constraints as well as numerous cultural factors. These include conceptualizations of the body, emotions and illnesses that affect infants who are breast-fed, as well as constructions (...)
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  27.  53
    Art made for pictures.John Kulvicki & Bence Nanay - 2018 - Phenomenology and Mind 14:120-134.
    Over the last fifteen years, communication has become pictorial in a manner that it never was before. Billions of people have smart phones that enable them to take, edit, and share pictures easily whenever they choose to do so. This has created expressive niches within which new activities, with their own norms, continue to develop. Ready availability of these pictorial modes of communication, we claim, not only constitutes a change in the range of our communicative practices, but also changes (...)
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  28.  53
    Readiness for legally literate medical practice? Student perceptions of their undergraduate medico-legal education.M. Preston-Shoot, J. McKimm, W. M. Kong & S. Smith - 2011 - Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (10):616-622.
    Medical councils increasingly require graduates to understand law and to practise medicine mindful of the legal rules. In the UK a revised curriculum for medical law and ethics has been published. However, coverage of law in medical education remains variable and doubts exist about how far students acquire legal knowledge and skills in its implementation. This survey of students in two UK medical schools measured their law learning and their confidence in using this knowledge. Concept maps and a self-audit questionnaire (...)
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  29.  45
    Readiness: Preparing for the Path.Terry C. Muck - 2001 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 21 (1):51-56.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Buddhist-Christian Studies 21.1 (2001) iii-iv [Access article in PDF] Editorial In this issue we publish a collection of articles using a dialogue format that we began in volume 19 of Buddhist-Christian Studies. Those articles, eventually published as the book Buddhists Talk About Jesus,Christians Talk About the Buddha (Continuum, 2000), asked Christians and Buddhists to critique the founder of the other religion. The format proved successful and provoked some good (...)
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  30.  70
    On the Existential Significance of ‘Readiness Potentials’.Shiva Rahman - 2021 - Phenomenology and Mind 20:204-227.
    Could there be a balanced philosophical stance capable of accommodating the scientific facts pertaining to free will without compromising the ideal of human freedom and autonomy? A stance that can render intelligible the inferences emerging from the factual analysis of free will in terms of the phenomenon called ‘Readiness Potential’(RP), at the same time, existentially upholding the ideal of freedom? In the present paper, an attempt will be made to bring to light such an existential phenomenological perspective implicit in (...)
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  31. Is your college ready to tackle more than sweatshops?Peter Suber - manuscript
    If your college discovered that its sweatshirts were made in sweatshops by workers paid below the minimum wage, it would probably yank the contract immediately and find a new vendor. But what if your heating-oil supplier pollutes? What if your temp agency discriminates against Mexican-American employees?
     
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  32.  27
    Are University Students Ready to Dump Their Textbooks?Mark van Heerden, Jacques Ophoff & Jean-Paul Van Belle - 2012 - International Journal of Cyber Ethics in Education 2 (3):15-44.
    Today’s students are accustomed to a world where information is available on-demand, anywhere and anytime. They bring this expectation to their academic world where they want to work cooperatively and flexibly, using the modern information processing tools and access with which they are familiar. New hardware platforms such as e-Readers and tablet computers have made substantial inroads in the consumer market. E-Readers are becoming more prevalent in universities – replacing the need for physical textbooks, lecturing notes and other academic (...)
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  33.  60
    Duchamp's “mechanistic sculptures”: Art, nudes and the game of chess.Gary Banham - 1999 - Angelaki 4 (3):181 – 190.
    In this paper I present some reasons for seeing Duchamp's ready-mades as part of the history of sculpture and relate them to his engagement with both nudes and chess motifs.
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  34.  16
    “There is no progress, change is all we know.” Notes on duchamp’s concept of plastic duration.Sarah Kolb - 2019 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 28 (57-58):87-108.
    Henri Bergson is generally recognized as one of the most influential philosophers in the history of historical avant-gardism. Nevertheless, it has been widely neglected that Bergson’s philosophy also played a crucial role for the radically new concept of art that Marcel Duchamp developed based on his critical attitude towards the avant-gardes. First and foremost, this is apparent in view of Duchamp’s paintings The Passage from Virgin to Bride and Bride of 1912, as they both feature an idea of transition laying (...)
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  35.  15
    My brain made me do it: the rise of neuroscience and the threat to moral responsibility.Eliezer J. Sternberg - 2010 - Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.
    Introduction -- The mischievous neuron -- The shadow of determinism -- The essential freedom -- A tempest in the brain -- Neurological disturbance -- The seat of the will -- The somatic-marker hypothesis -- The readiness potential -- The grand illusion -- Neuronal destiny -- The revolution of the brain -- Seeds of corruption -- Morality's end -- The depths of consciousness -- A challenge for experience -- The boundlessness of reason -- Rise of the moral agent -- The palace (...)
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  36.  25
    Translation as the Manufacturing of Meaning: A Few Words about the Title of Ibn Khaldūn’s History.Andrey V. Smirnov - 2021 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 58 (6):491-521.
    Meaning is not a ready-made entity found in dictionaries as signified by a language sign, but rather something which is manufactured through a sense-positing procedure that starts with an initial i...
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  37. Philosophical Anthropology of E. Fink.Algis Mickunas - 2008 - Problemos 73:167-178.
    Cultural and historical variability is completely overwhelming and within its context it is almostimpossible to decipher something “essential”, some “invariant variable” which would comprise a clueto what the human is, – this idea is presented as the main presupposition of Eugen Fink’s philosophicalanthropology. A major direction of Fink’s works is a fundamental critique of traditional ontology anda search for a worldly thinking that would be more appropriate or implicit in human “worldly” existence.While following Husserl’s transcendental philosophy, Fink opened up a (...)
     
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  38.  13
    Theology and Difference: The Wound of Reason.Walter James Lowe - 1993 - Indiana University Press.
    "... provocative and rewarding... " --Religious Studies Review "... a tour de force." --Theological Studies Theology and Difference reconceives the options confronting modern theology and investigates the disputed questions that underlie it. Pressing beyond the ready-made enlightenment offered by the subject-object framework, Walter Lowe uncovers a number of remarkable convergences between the contemporary philosopher Jacques Derrida and the early twentieth-century theologian Karl Barth.
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  39. Beyond case-studies: History as philosophy.Hasok Chang - unknown
    What can we conclude from a mere handful of case studies? The field of HPS has witnessed too many hasty philosophical generalizations based on a small number of conveniently chosen case studies. One might even speculate that dissatisfaction with such methodological shoddiness contributed decisively to a widespread disillusionment with the whole HPS enterprise. Without specifying clear mechanisms for history-philosophy interaction, we are condemned to either making unwarranted generalizations from history, or writing entirely "local" histories with no bearing on an overall (...)
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  40. El cadáver como texto estético (Avatares semióticos de la necroscopia).Eder García Dussán - 2007 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 12:85-95.
    Tomando como referencia principal el performance artístico “Mundos corporales” del médico alemán van Haggens, se adelanta un esfuerzo por interpretar el suceso textual dentro de algunas pistas conceptuales del psicoanálisis. La visión museizada del cadáver actúa como un espejo del cuerpo humano a través del cual el espectador satisface una pulsión de muerte. El goce, ese excedente del enfrentamiento visual con ese tipo de texto est-ético, suscita una relación estrecha con un querer-saber sobre (el) ser humano que, a la postre, (...)
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  41.  56
    The role of disciplinary perspectives in an epistemology of scientific models.Mieke Boon - 2020 - European Journal for Philosophy of Science 10 (3):1-34.
    The purpose of this article is to develop an epistemology of scientific models in scientific research practices, and to show that disciplinary perspectives have crucial role in such an epistemology. A transcendental approach is taken, aimed at explanations of the kinds of questions relevant to the intended epistemology, such as “How is it possible that models provide knowledge about aspects of reality?” The approach is also pragmatic in the sense that the questions and explanations must be adequate and relevant to (...)
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  42.  47
    The field and landscape of affordances: Koffka’s two environments revisited.Julian Kiverstein, Ludger van Dijk & Erik Rietveld - 2019 - Synthese 198 (Suppl 9):2279-2296.
    The smooth integration of the natural sciences with everyday lived experience is an important ambition of radical embodied cognitive science. In this paper we start from Koffka’s recommendation in his Principles of Gestalt Psychology that to realize this ambition psychology should be a “science of molar behaviour”. Molar behavior refers to the purposeful behaviour of the whole organism directed at an environment that is meaningfully structured for the animal. Koffka made a sharp distinction between the “behavioural environment” and the (...)
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  43.  58
    Learning by Doing. Training Health Care Professionals to Become Facilitator of Moral Case Deliberation.Margreet Stolper, Bert Molewijk & Guy Widdershoven - 2015 - HEC Forum 27 (1):47-59.
    Moral case deliberation is a dialogue among health care professionals about moral issues in practice. A trained facilitator moderates the dialogue, using a conversation method. Often, the facilitator is an ethicist. However, because of the growing interest in MCD and the need to connect MCD to practice, healthcare professionals should also become facilitators themselves. In order to transfer the facilitating expertise to health care professionals, a training program has been developed. This program enables professionals in health care institutions to acquire (...)
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  44.  31
    Response to Glenn Hughes, “Ulterior Significance in the Art of Bob Dylan”.Patrick Brown - 2011 - Journal of Macrodynamic Analysis 6.
    This essay—originally a conference response to Glenn Hughes’ essay—explores how themes and notions in Lonergan’s philosophy of art extend in surprising and often unnoticed ways into the larger whole of Lonergan’s thought. By the same token, the broader framework of Lonergan’s philosophy sheds a great deal of interesting light on his philosophy of art. The essay explores this mutual illumination in the context of Hughes’ reflections on “ulterior significance.” For example, it relates Lonergan’s notion of art to his heuristic of (...)
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  45.  55
    The Analects of Confucius.Confucius . - 1910 - Oxford University Press USA. Edited by William Edward Soothill.
    In the long river of human history, if one person can represent the civilization of a whole nation, it is perhaps Master Kong, better known as Confucius in the West. If there is one single book that can be upheld as the common code of a whole people, it is perhaps Lun Yu, or The Analects. Surely, few individuals in history have shaped their country's civilization more profoundly than Master Kong. The great Han historiographer, Si-ma Qian, writing 2,100 years ago (...)
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  46.  55
    Диагностика Как Вид Эпистемической Практики.Evgeny Krotkov - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 53:343-350.
    Diagnostics is becoming one of the most important kinds of epistemic practice: accurate and timely diagnosis is necessary not only for ill people, but for economic, social and political systems and institutions, culture, science, technology, and ecosystems. The analysis of researches into diversity of diagnostics used in various branches enabled the author to develop the outline of the philosophical theory of diagnostics, to identify its subject matter and problems, to name the categories and principles of the epistemological and methodological analysis (...)
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  47.  16
    The spell of Calcidius: platonic concepts and images in the medieval West.Peter Dronke - 2008 - Impruneta (Firenze): SISMEL edizioni del Galluzzo.
    While histories of literature and philosophy have till now presented Calcidius as if he were no more than a secondhand mediator of Platonic thought, Peter Dronke, in The Spell of Calcidius, shows that this judgement must be radically revised. Calcidius' commentary (probably of the early fourth century) on Plato's Timaeus is a deeply individual work, which was able to inspire a fresh way of looking for truth, of searching for a world-picture that was not ready-made, among exceptional thinkers (...)
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  48. Medical ethics and the two dogmas of liberalism.Terrence F. Ackerman - 1984 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 5 (1).
    Two dogmas of liberalism in the therapeutic setting are challenged: (1) that patients have a ready-made ability to act autonomously; and (2) that non-intervention by physicians is the best strategy for protecting the autonomy of patients. Recognition of the impact of illness upon autonomous behavior forms the basis of this challenge. It is suggested that autonomy is better conceived as a process of personal growth by which patients become better able to overcome the disruptive effects of illness. The (...)
     
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  49.  35
    ... Our Fate as a Living Corpse..Hannah Abdullah & Matthias Benzer - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (2):69-93.
    In this interview, Boris Groys discusses his key cultural-theoretical ideas, positions his thought in relation to debates on the cultural economy and clarifies questions emerging from his work. The conversation focuses on his untranslated cultural-theoretical contributions, notably Über das Neue [On the New] and Topologie der Kunst [Topology of Art], but also touches on his writings available in English, for example Art Power. The interview contains three sections. The first revisits Groys’s challenge to the postmodern claim about the end of (...)
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  50. The politics of postmodern philosophy of science.Joseph Rouse - 1991 - Philosophy of Science 58 (4):607-627.
    Modernism in the philosophy of science demands a unified story about what makes an inquiry scientific (or a successful science). Fine's "natural ontological attitude" (NOA) is "postmodern" in joining trust in local scientific practice with suspicion toward any global interpretation of science to legitimate or undercut that trust. I consider four readings of this combination of trust and suspicion and their consequences for the autonomy and cultural credibility of the sciences. Three readings take respectively Fine's trusting attitude, his emphasis upon (...)
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