Results for 'Vivian Carol Sobchack'

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  1.  37
    Remembering Paige Baty, III.Vivian Carol Sobchack - 1997 - Theory and Event 1 (4).
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  2. Postfuturism.Vivian Sobchack - 2000 - In Gill Kirkup (ed.), The gendered cyborg: a reader. New York: Routledge in association with the Open University. pp. 136--147.
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  3.  51
    Living a ‘Phantom Limb’: On the Phenomenology of Bodily Integrity.Vivian Sobchack - 2010 - Body and Society 16 (3):51-67.
    This article is a phenomenological exploration and description of certain selected aspects of living the specificities and conundrums posed by what is usually, if problematically, called a ‘phantom limb’. Using my own body as an ‘intimate laboratory’, I attend to the dynamics and mutability of the supposed ‘phantom’, both during the post-operative period of the above-the-knee amputation of my left leg as well as after I began to use and incorporate my prosthetic leg. Throughout, I explore the reversible aspects of (...)
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  4. When the ear dreams : Dolby digital and the imagination of sound.Vivian Sobchack - 2011 - In Jacques Khalip, Robert Mitchell, Giorgio Agamben, Cesare Casarino, Peter Geimer & Mark Hansen (eds.), Releasing the Image: From Literature to New Media. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
     
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  5. “Is Any Body Home?” Embodied Imagination and Visible Evictions.Vivian Sobchack - 1999 - In Hamid Naficy (ed.), Home, exile, homeland: film, media, and the politics of place. New York: Routledge. pp. 45.
  6.  12
    Beating the Meat/surviving the Text, or How to Get Out of this Century Alive.Vivian Sobchack - 1995 - Body and Society 1 (3-4):205-214.
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  7. Toward inhabited space: The semiotic structure of camera movement in the cinema.Vivian Sobchack - 1982 - Semiotica 41 (1-4).
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  8. Phenomenology.Vivian Sobchack - 2008 - In Paisley Livingston & Carl R. Plantinga (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Philosophy and Film. New York: Routledge.
     
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  9. “The Active Eye”.Vivian Sobchack - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:63-90.
    The foundational basis of the cinematic moving image is camera movement, which occurs not only in the image but also, and from the first, as the image. This essay approaches off-screen camera movement through phenomenological description of the gestalt structure of its four interrelated onscreen forms: the moving image as an intentional and composite “viewing view/viewed view”; the moving image as “qualified” by optical camera movement through subjective modes of spatiotemporal transcendence; the movement of subjects and objects in the moving (...)
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  10.  96
    “Choreography for One, Two, and Three Legs”.Vivian Sobchack - 2004 - Topoi 24 (1):55-66.
    Choreography for One, Two, and Three Legs approaches the intentional formation of bodily movement and expression from the various perspectives of individuals who are differently abled. Exploring what it is for a non-dancer to experience various rhythms and movements and spaces with crutches, prosthetic leg, and cane, the essay interweaves phenomenological description and interpretation of suddenly defamiliarized daily activities with discourse drawn from the experiences of professional dancers who are differently abled. The aim is to foreground the opacities, transparencies, and (...)
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  11.  77
    The insistent fringe: Moving images and historical consciousness.Vivian Sobchack - 1997 - History and Theory 36 (4):4–20.
    Using the form of cinematic montage, this essay explores the nature of historical consciousness in a mass-mediated culture where historical discourse takes the form of both showing and saying, moving images and written words. The title draws upon and argues with Roland Barthes's critique of the duplicity of the "insistent fringes" that supposedly reduce and naturalize "Roman-ness" to fringed hair in popular historical film. Barthes presumes a "certainty" in such a cinematic image, and hence deems it mythological-that is, "it goes (...)
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  12.  18
    Comprehending Screens: A Meditation in Medias Res.Vivian Sobchack - 2014 - Rivista di Estetica 55:87-101.
    This essay argues that the digitization and proliferation of contemporary screens has moved us from a “screen-scape” to an encompassing “screen-sphere” – a new topologically-bounded and systemically-organized domain that has not only radically changed our lifeworld but also our ontological and epistemological comportment in it. With reference to recent cartoons and other popular discourses as well as to Humberto Maturana and Francesco Varela’s description of, and distinction between, “autonomous” and “autopoietic systems,” the essay speculates on the organizational structure of this (...)
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  13. From screen-scape to screen-sphere : a meditation in Medias Res.Vivian Sobchack - 2016 - In Dominique Chateau & José Moure (eds.), Screens: from materiality to spectatorship: a historical and theoretical reassessment. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
     
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  14.  49
    The Address of the Eye: A Phenomenology of Film Experience.Neal Oxenhandler & Vivian Sobchack - 1993 - Substance 22 (1):132.
  15.  17
    La CIF-EA : une approche pertinente pour évaluer l’impact de l’environnement sur la participation des élèves?Viviane Guerdan, Cécile Belet, Carole Corthesy, Antoine Jaccottet & Vincent Gigon - 2013 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 7 (1):3-19.
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  16.  20
    O problema da fundamentação da moral e a ética feminista.Viviane Magalhães Pereira - 2020 - Veritas – Revista de Filosofia da Pucrs 65 (1):e36862.
    Este artigo tem como tema o problema filosófico da fundamentação da moral com o objetivo de apresentar o sentido e a validade de uma ética feminista. Parte-se da hipótese de que uma ética feminista se distinguiria das éticas antigas e apresentaria uma alternativa adequada ao problema da fundamentação da moral, bem como dos conflitos morais atuais, em especial, pelo tipo de solução que propõe, a qual segue uma lógica construída mediante uma práxis humana determinada. Em outros termos, o objetivo deste (...)
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  17.  46
    Screening the Postmodern, on Vivian Sobchack Screening Space: The American Science Fiction Film.Lysa Rivera - 2003 - Film-Philosophy 7 (3).
    Vivian Sobchack _Screening Space: The American Science Fiction Film_ New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1987 ISBN 0-8135-2492-X 345 pp.
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  18.  61
    Bodies that Matter: Vivian Sobchack (2004) Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment and Moving Image Culture.Douglas Morrey - 2006 - Film-Philosophy 10 (2):11-22.
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  19.  54
    Conversations: With Andrew Solomon, Evan Osnos, Tim Marlow, Amale Andraos, Carol Becker, Vivian Yee, Nicholas Baume. [REVIEW]William M. Hawley - 2022 - The European Legacy 28 (2):215-217.
    Ai Weiwei is an installation artist who enjoyed great acclaim in the West after having absented himself from China, his homeland. He owes his global recognition to his dual identity as an artist/di...
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  20.  24
    ‘Let me see her face when he kisses her, please’: Mediating Emotion and Locating the Melodramatic Mode in Stella Dallas.Ilka Brasch - 2015 - Film-Philosophy 19 (1):289-303.
    This article explores melodrama's capacity to evoke strong emotional responses with a focus on the ending of King Vidor's Stella Dallas. It suggests a consideration of the phenomenological concept of instrument-mediation as coined by Vivian Sobchack as a filmic structure that fosters melodrama's emotional appeal and the spectator's engagement with it. It suggests a self-reflexive element in highly emotional film scenes that inscribes the spectator's subject position into the film, thus enabling the film to impact the spectator's body. (...)
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  21.  84
    Cinematic Signs and the Phenomenology of Time.Corry Shores - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:343-372.
    By means of Vivian Sobchack’s semiotic film phenomenology, we may examine our immediate perceptual acts in film experience in order to determine the ways that the primordial language of embodied existence found at this primary level grounds the secondary level of the more explicit interpretations we give to the film’s elements. Although Gilles Deleuze is openly defiant toward the phenomenological tradition, his studies of film experience can serve this purpose as well, because he is interested in the direct (...)
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  22. The gendered cyborg: a reader.Gill Kirkup (ed.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge in association with the Open University.
    The Gendered Cyborg brings together material from a variety of disciplines that analyze the relationship between gender and technoscience, and the way that this relationship is represented through ideas, language and visual imagery. The book opens with key feminist articles from the history and philosophy of science. They look at the ways that modern scientific thinking has constructed oppositional dualities such as objectivity/subjectivity, human/machine, nature/science, and male/female, and how these have constrained who can engage in science/technology and how they have (...)
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  23.  46
    Digital hermeneutics for the new age of cinema.Stacey O. Irwin - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2207-2215.
    Philosophical and technoculture studies surrounding the existential understanding of the human–technology–world experience have seen a slow but steady increase that makes a turn to material hermeneutics in the second decade of the twenty-first century (Ihde in Postphenomenology: essays in the postmodern context. Northwestern University Press, Evanston, 1993; Capurro in AI Soc 25(1):35–42, 2010; Romele in Digital hermeneutics: philosophical investigations in new media and technologies. Routledge, Abingdon, 2020; among others). This renewed focus makes sense because human–technology–world experiences need to be interpreted. (...)
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  24.  17
    The soul of film theory.Sarah Cooper - 2013 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    In contemporary film theory, body and mind have been central to explorations of film form, representation, and spectatorship. While the soul may seem to have no place here, the history of film theory and its legacy to the present suggest otherwise. From the origins of film theory - from Hugo Münsterberg through French Impressionism to writings of the Weimar Republic - to the mid-twentieth century work of Henri Agel and Amédée Ayfre and Henri Agel, as well as Edgar Morin, the (...)
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  25.  33
    Asteroids, Holoblack and Clearance Futurism.Pat McConville - 2022 - British Journal of Aesthetics 62 (3):405-418.
    In this paper, I argue that the video game Asteroids’ enduring appeal turns on its ability to be read as futurist text. I connect Asteroids’ black and white aesthetic to the phenomenologist Vivian Sobchack’s notion of postfuturism. Central to postfuturism is a change from representations of space as deep to representations of space as surface, incapable of concealment. I consider materials designed to absorb almost all visible light—which I call holoblacks—as pushing past representations of space as surface into (...)
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  26. Home, exile, homeland: film, media, and the politics of place.Hamid Naficy (ed.) - 1999 - New York: Routledge.
    Global changes in capital, power, technology and the media have caused massive shifts in how we define home and community, leaving redrawn territories and globalized contexts. This interdisciplinary study of the media brings together essays by accomplished critics to discuss the way film, television, music, and computer and electronic media are shaping identities and cultures in an increasingly globalized world. Ranging from intensely personal to highly theoretical, the contributors explore our complex negotiation of "home" and homeland" in a postmodern world. (...)
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  27.  32
    The Phenomenological Movement in Context of the Philosophy of Film and Motion Pictures.Shawn Loht - 2019 - In Noël Carroll, Laura T. Di Summa & Shawn Loht (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of the Philosophy of Film and Motion Pictures. Springer. pp. 285-313.
    This chapter surveys foundational concepts in the history of phenomenology for the purpose of highlighting their relevance for key contemporary issues in the philosophy of film. A central argument concerns phenomenology’s capacity for unraveling the ontology of film, given phenomenology’s emphasis on accounting for the ontology of phenomena through description based in first-person experience. On this ground, the chapter defends the claim that film’s ontology stems from the projective intentionality of the film viewer, where the communicative nature of embodied vision (...)
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  28.  23
    Exactitude and Partiality. Merleau-Ponty and Nancy on Cinema.Daniele Rugo - 2017 - Chiasmi International 19:201-221.
    While it is possible, as Vivian Sobchack and others show, to illuminate film through Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy, it is more difficult to find within Merleau-Ponty’s work a coherent and systematic reflection on cinema. This absence is seldom interrogated. This article addresses what this absence might reveal by analyzing the reasons why Merleau-Ponty stopped short of an explicit discussion of film. The argument builds on these analyses to show how what Merleau-Ponty found problematic about cinema might turn out to be (...)
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  29. Bringing Bodies Back In: For a Phenomenological and Psychoanalytic Film Criticism of Embodied Cultural Identity.Kate Ince - 2011 - Film-Philosophy 15 (1):1-12.
    This article reassesses the concept of identification in line with the increased importance phenomenology has taken on in film-philosophy of the 1990s and 2000s. In the 1970s and 1980s, a Lacanian psychoanalytic interpretation of identification dominated film theory and criticism, and spectatorial engagement with elements of films was understood as what psychoanalysis calls secondary identification – the identification with stable subject-positions (characters) in the film-text. But non-Lacanian psychoanalysis and Merleau-Ponty’s existential phenomenology offer film-philosophy a very different understanding of identification as (...)
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  30.  4
    Traducción. Merleau-Ponty y el cine: documentando la imaginación, escrito por Sarah Cooper.Leandro Sánchez-Marín - 2024 - Revista Filosofía Uis 23 (2):265-281.
    Since the mid-1940s, when Maurice Merleau-Ponty gave a lecture on cinema at the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC) in Paris, which was later published as “Cinema and the New Psychology” (Merleau-Ponty, 1977, pp. 89-105), film scholars have shown a lively interest in the relationship between philosophy and the seventh art. During his lifetime, his thinking influenced a number of important film theorists, from Amédée Ayfre, who was his student, to André Bazin to Henri Agel. More recently, in an Anglophone (...)
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  31.  29
    How It Feels: Black Screen as Negative Event in Early Cinema and 9/11 Films.Tanya Shilina-Conte - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:409-438.
    In this essay I engage the perspective of film phenomenology to analyze the black screen as a frame-breaking negative experience, based on an understanding of cinema as event. Relying on Vivian Sobchack’s phenomenological approach and taking inspiration from Cecil M. Hepworth’s How It Feels to Be Run Over, a case in point for a method predicated on the question of “how,” I place emphasis on the “film’s body” and consciousness which, through its own paralysis and impairment, affects the (...)
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  32.  51
    Experiential Realism and Motion Pictures: A Neurophenomenological Approach.Jane Stadler - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:439-465.
    This article sets up a neurophenomenological approach to understanding cinema spectatorship in order to investigate how embodied engagement with technologies of sound and motion can foster a sense of experiential realism. It takes as a starting point the idea that the empirical study of emotive, perceptual, motor, and cognitive processes involved in film spectatorship is impoverished without a phenomenological account of the lived experience under investigation. Correspondingly, engaging with neuroscientific studies enriches the scope of phenomenological inquiry and offers new insights (...)
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  33.  47
    The metaphysics and ethics of relativism.Carol Rovane - 2013 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    How to formulate the doctrine of relativism -- Evaluating the doctrine of relativism.
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  34.  37
    Le problème de l’identification filmique reconsidéré.Jean-Pierre Meunier - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:241-268.
    This article reconsiders some of the arguments that I made in my two phenomenology-inspired books on what I have called the “filmic identification” in the cinema: Les structures de l’expérience filmique and Essai sur l’image et la communication. While the former has received some attention in film studies via Vivian Sobchack’s mediating work in her influential essay “Toward a Phenomenology of Nonfictional Film Experience”, the latter is little known in film studies and phenomenological circles. The two guest editors (...)
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  35. Transnational solidarities.Carol C. Gould - 2007 - Journal of Social Philosophy 38 (1):148–164.
  36.  14
    Interdependent Mechanisms for Processing Gender and Emotion: The Special Status of Angry Male Faces.Daniel A. Harris & Vivian M. Ciaramitaro - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  37.  67
    Solidarity and the problem of structural injustice in healthcare.Carol C. Gould - 2018 - Bioethics 32 (9):541-552.
    The concept of solidarity has recently come to prominence in the healthcare literature, addressing the motivation for taking seriously the shared vulnerabilities and medical needs of compatriots and for acting to help them meet these needs. In a recent book, Prainsack and Buyx take solidarity as a commitment to bear costs to assist others regarded as similar, with implications for governing health databases, personalized medicine, and organ donation. More broadly, solidarity has been understood normatively to call for ‘standing with’ or (...)
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  38.  24
    Anticipatory Care.Carol J. Adams - 2021 - Critical Inquiry 47 (S2):S46-S48.
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  39. Is the church-Turing thesis true?Carol E. Cleland - 1993 - Minds and Machines 3 (3):283-312.
    The Church-Turing thesis makes a bold claim about the theoretical limits to computation. It is based upon independent analyses of the general notion of an effective procedure proposed by Alan Turing and Alonzo Church in the 1930''s. As originally construed, the thesis applied only to the number theoretic functions; it amounted to the claim that there were no number theoretic functions which couldn''t be computed by a Turing machine but could be computed by means of some other kind of effective (...)
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  40.  63
    Retailer-driven agricultural restructuring—Australia, the UK and Norway in comparison.Carol Richards, Hilde Bjørkhaug, Geoffrey Lawrence & Emmy Hickman - 2013 - Agriculture and Human Values 30 (2):235-245.
    In recent decades, the governance of food safety, food quality, on-farm environmental management and animal welfare has been shifting from the realm of ‘the government’ to that of the private sector. Corporate entities, especially the large supermarkets, have responded to neoliberal forms of governance and the resultant ‘hollowed-out’ state by instituting private standards for food, backed by processes of certification and policed through systems of third party auditing. Today’s food regime is one in which supermarkets impose ‘private standards’ along the (...)
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  41. From needs to goals and representations: Foundations for a unified theory of motivation, personality, and development.Carol S. Dweck - 2017 - Psychological Review 124 (6):689-719.
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  42.  32
    Events and their Names.Carol E. Cleland - 1994 - Noûs 28 (1):103-109.
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  43.  5
    Digital technology and on-farm responses to climate shocks: exploring the relations between producer agency and the security of food production.Carol Richards, Rudolf Messner & Vaughan Higgins - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-15.
    Recent research into climate shocks and what this means for the on-farm production of food revealed mixed and unanticipated results. Whilst the research was triggered by a series of catastrophic, climate related disruptions, Australian beef producers interviewed for the study downplayed the immediate and direct impacts of climate shocks. When considering the changing nature of production under shifting climatic conditions, producers offered a commentary on the digital technology and data which interconnected with climate solutions deriving from both on and off (...)
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  44.  59
    Influencers of ethical beliefs and the impact on moral distress and conscientious objection.Shoni Davis, Vivian Schrader & Marcia J. Belcheir - 2012 - Nursing Ethics 19 (6):738-749.
    Considering a growing nurse shortage and the need for qualified nurses to handle increasingly complex patient care situations, how ethical beliefs are influenced and the consequences that can occur when moral conflicts of right and wrong arise need to be explored. The aim of this study was to explore influencers identified by nurses as having the most impact on the development of their ethical beliefs and whether these influencers might impact levels of moral distress and the potential for conscientious objection. (...)
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  45.  15
    Book Review: The Materialities of Communication. [REVIEW]Eric Dean - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (2):395-396.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Materialities of CommunicationEric DeanThe Materialities of Communication, edited by Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht and K. Ludwig Pfeiffer; xvi & 447pp. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1994, $52.50 cloth, $17.95 paper.In closing this collection, Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht outlines the common purpose which makes it more than a random assortment. There has been, as he characterizes it, a theoretical shift in the humanities “from interpretation as identification of given meaning-structures to (...)
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  46. Epilogue: What's next for identity theory and research.Seth J. Schwartz, Vivian L. Vignoles & Koen Luyckx - 2011 - In Seth J. Schwartz, Koen Luyckx & Vivian L. Vignoles (eds.), Handbook of identity theory and research. New York: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 933.
     
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  47.  27
    Concerning the applicability of geometric models to similarity data: The interrelationship between similarity and spatial density.Carol L. Krumhansl - 1978 - Psychological Review 85 (5):445-463.
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  48. Cognitive and brain mechanisms of false memories and beliefs.Marcia K. Johnson & Carol L. Raye - 2000 - In Daniel L. Schacter & Elaine Scarry (eds.), Memory, Brain, and Belief. Harvard Univ Pr. pp. 35--86.
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  49.  40
    How Democracy Can Inform Consent: Cases of the Internet and Bioethics.Carol C. Gould - 2019 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 36 (2):173-191.
    Traditional conceptions of informed consent seem difficult or even impossible to apply to new technologies like biobanks, big data, or GMOs, where vast numbers of people are potentially affected, and where consequences and risks are indeterminate or even unforeseeable. Likewise, the principle has come under strain with the appropriation and monetisation of personal information on digital platforms. Over time, it has largely been reduced to bare assent to formalistic legal agreements. To address the current ineffectiveness of the norm of informed (...)
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  50.  46
    Knowing Who.Carol A. Rovane - 1989 - Philosophical Review 98 (3):392.
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