Results for 'body and corporality'

965 found
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  1.  41
    Motion, Body and Corporeal Substance in Leibniz: The Defense of Relativity of Motion and its Impact in the Development of his Metaphysics of Bodies.Rodolfo Fazio - 2017 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 26:238-267.
    Resumen En este trabajo evaluamos el impacto que la adopción de la relatividad del movimiento tiene en la metafísica de Leibniz. En particular argumentamos que el abandono de la comprensión absolutista del mismo anula su noción juvenil de sustancia corpórea. En primer lugar analizamos cómo entiende Leibniz las nociones de cuerpo y movimiento en el periodo juvenil y defendemos que la comprensión absolutista de este último constituye una piedra angular en su primera concepción de la sustancia corpórea. En segundo lugar (...)
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  2. Body and Corporeality in Ancient Philosophy – Foucault and the Space and Time of Subjectivity in the Collège de France Lectures (1970-1984).Jack Robert June Edmunds-Coopey - forthcoming - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy.
  3.  29
    Brain, Body, and Society: Bioethical Reflections on Socio-Historical Neuroscience and Neuro-Corporeal Social Science.Stephen Lyng - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (9):25-26.
    Grant Gillett's (2009) provocative essay exploring the neuroethical implications of a holistic or relational approach to brain science is indicative of some promising interdisciplinary trends withi...
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  4.  21
    The Body and the Universe: On Corporeality in Stanisław Lem’s Return from the Stars.Łukasz Kucharczyk - 2022 - Filozofia i Nauka. Studia Filozoficzne I Interdyscyplinarne 1 (10):85-96.
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  5. Idealism and Corporeity: An Essay on the Problem of the Body in Husserl's Phenomenology by James Dodd.A. Giorgi - 1998 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 29 (1):152-153.
     
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  6.  13
    Bodies and artefacts: historical materialism as corporeal semiotics.Joseph G. Fracchia - 2021 - Boston: Brill.
    In a seemingly offhand, often overlooked comment, Karl Marx deemed 'human corporeal organisation' the 'first fact of human history'. Following Marx's corporeal turn and pursuing the radical implications of his corporeal insight, this book undertakes a reconstruction of the corporeal foundations of historical materialism. Part I exposes the corporeal roots of Marx's materialist conception of history and historical-materialist Wissenschaft. Part II attempts a historical-materialist mapping of human corporeal organisation. Suggesting how to approach human histories up from their corporeal foundations, Part (...)
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  7.  15
    Corporate Bodies and Categorical Imperatives.Eric Palmes - 2001 - In Volker Gerhardt, Rolf-Peter Horstmann & Ralph Schumacher, Kant Und Die Berliner Aufklärung: Akten des IX Internationalen Kant-Kongresses. New York: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 228-238.
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  8.  38
    Dodd, James. Idealism and Corporeity: An Essay on the Problem of Body in Husserl’s Phenomenology. [REVIEW]Erich P. Schellhammer - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (1):158-159.
    Idealism and Corporeity is James Dodd’s doctoral thesis. The book deals with the most developed form of Husserl’s phenomenology of the body. Dodd remarks that Husserl’s published work barely touches on the analysis of the body, though Husserl’s Nachlass demonstrates his preoccupation with it. This is because the analysis of the body is subsumed under the “basic problems of phenomenology”. Dodd’s treatise is divided into four chapters.
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  9. Imaginary Bodies: Ethics, Power and Corporeality.Moira Gatens - 1995 - New York: Routledge.
    Moira Gatens investigates the ways in which differently sexed bodies can occupy the same social or political space. Representations of sexual difference have unacknowledged philosophical roots which cannot be dismissed as a superficial bias on the part of the philosopher, nor removed without destroying the coherence of the philosophical system concerned. The deep structural bias against women extends beyond metaphysics and its effects are felt in epistemology, moral, social and political theory. The idea of sexual difference is contextualised in _Imaginary (...)
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  10.  52
    Idealism and Corporeity: An Essay on the Problem of the Body in Husserl’s Phenomenology.James Dodd - 1997 - Springer.
    This essay argues that the problem of the body is of central importance for Husserl's transcendental idealism.
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  11.  73
    Body and method heidegger´s treatment of issue of corporeality in the zollikon seminares.Felipe Johnson - 2014 - Ideas Y Valores 63 (155):7-30.
    En este artículo se desarrollan las consideraciones heideggerianas acerca de la corporalidad expuestas en Zollikoner Seminare, atendiendo a la posición fundamental desde la cual estas se despliegan. Se discute acerca de la necesidad, por parte de Heidegger, de abordar el problema del cuerpo vivo al margen de las consideraciones científicas y, por consiguiente, se enfatiza el sentido íntimo de un eventual "6cambio de método" que pareciera conducir la reflexión sobre el cuerpo a la aclaración de su modo de ser propio, (...)
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  12.  18
    In-corporations: Food, Bodies and Organizations.Gill Valentine - 2002 - Body and Society 8 (2):1-20.
    In this article I draw on an approach - Actor Network Theory - which is well developed within the sociology of science and technology. However, rather than focusing on technical objects in the workplace, I examine food and drink as non-human entities which build, maintain and stabilize links between diverse actants. Using five case study examples I consider what happens when people come together at work around food, and the specific sets of relations between people, activity and organizations that result (...)
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  13.  46
    The Brain’s Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics by Victoria Pitts-Taylor.Keyvan Shafiei - 2019 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 29 (2):3-12.
    The brain matters. Says the opening line from Victoria Pitts-Taylor’s The Brain’s Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics. On the face of it, the human brain matters inasmuch as it is the body’s central information processing organ; the CEO that presides over many of our executive bodily functions. But the brain matters beyond the ways in which it has biologically evolved and currently processes information. The brain also matters in social thought, as neuroscientific research has historically informed widespread perceptions (...)
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  14. Imaginary Bodies: Ethics, Power and Corporeality.Moira Gatens - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (4):217-222.
     
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  15.  97
    Corporate Bodies and Guilty Minds. [REVIEW]William S. Laufer & John R. Boatright - 2008 - Business Ethics Quarterly 18 (3):417-426.
  16.  23
    Imaginary bodies: Ethics, power and corporeality.M. B. Walker - 1998 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 76 (2):335-337.
  17. Imaginary Bodies: Ethics, Power and Corporeality. [REVIEW]Rosalyn Diprose - 1997 - Radical Philosophy 82.
     
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  18.  35
    James Dodd, Idealism and Corporeity: An Essay on the Problem of the Body in Husserl’s Phenomenology. [REVIEW]Daniel Dahlstrom - 2000 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 22 (1):340-343.
    From a phenomenological point of view, others present themselves as unities within my intentional life as a whole, constituted ‘for’ me even while maintaining a certain reserve. This ‘reserve’ is meant to indicate that the consciousness of alter egos involves the consciousness of a breach that does not obtain between consciousness and its other ‘objects’. Indeed, there is an obvious sense in which this very consciousness requires a considerable modification of the phenomenological understanding of the ego itself and the way (...)
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  19.  25
    Violenta si corporalitate/ Violence and Corporality.Francisc Baja - 2003 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 2 (4):84-89.
    The relation between violence and corporality is no more or less than teleological, a relation that had a huge impact upon an older one, between mind and body, or soul and body. This teleology of violence was made possible by the political investiture of the body. The extermination camp becomes the symbol and the symptom where the relations between mind and body were broke. Torture, as a limit experience, brings us in front of a revolt (...)
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  20.  30
    Straightedge Bodies and Civilizing Processes.Michael Atkinson - 2006 - Body and Society 12 (1):69-95.
    Much of the extant popular culture literature points to the nihilistic and present-centred philosophies of material/image consumption common among North American youth enclaves. Few researchers, however, inspect how ascetic youth subcultures on the continent reject mainstream pressures to consume, and perform moral reformist work through the body. In this article, participant observation-based data collected on eastern Canadian practitioners of an ascetic lifestyle called ‘Straightedge’ are utilized to illustrate how social discipline and moral commentary is interactively displayed via ‘restrained’ (...) ritual. Practitioners of Straightedge express a quasi-religious conviction or sense of ‘calling’ to their rather Puritanical way of life, and view commitment to Straightedge as an ongoing marker of self-control and efficacy. Straightedge narratives suggest how the desire to pursue asceticism springs from a learned cultural habitus, and how the practice may be ‘read’ by others as a form of social protest. Practitioners stress how the calling to asceticism serves as a means of personal salvation, and how performing Straightedge encourages ‘civilized’ corporeal practice. (shrink)
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  21.  68
    (1 other version)Between Body and Spirit: The Liminality of Pedagogical Relationships.Sharon Todd - 2014 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 48 (2):231-245.
    This article explores the pedagogical, transformative aspects of education as a relation, viewing such transformation as occurring in the liminal space between body and spirit. In order to explore this liminal space more thoroughly, the article first outlines a case for why liminality is of educational and not only of pedagogical concern, building on James Conroy's notion of the liminal imagination and his emphasis on the importance of metaphor for calling our attention to the ontological spaces that make up (...)
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  22.  41
    (1 other version)The Body and the Brain.John Sutton - 2000 - In Stephen Gaukroger, John Andrew Schuster & John Sutton, Descartes' Natural Philosophy. New York: Routledge. pp. 697--722.
    Does self-knowledge help? A rationalist, presumably, thinks that it does: both that self-knowledge is possible and that, if gained through appropriate channels, it is desirable. Descartes notoriously claimed that, with appropriate methods of enquiry, each of his readers could become an expert on herself or himself. In this paper I reject the widespread interpretation of Descartes which makes his dualist view of the body as negative or as pathological as that expressed by Socrates in Plato's *Phaedo*. I argue not (...)
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  23.  11
    Jefferson's body: a corporeal biography.Maurizio Valsania - 2017 - London: University of Virginia Press.
    What did Thomas Jefferson look like? How did he carry himself? Such questions, reasonable to ask as we look back on a person who lived in an era before photography, are the starting point for this boldly original new work. Maurizio Valsania considers all aspects of Jefferson’s complex conception of "the body," from eighteenth-century clothing and fashion to manners, adornment, posture, gesture, and visual and material culture. Drawing also from the fields of medical science, psychology, and cultural anthropology, the (...)
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  24.  30
    Reclaiming the Corporeal: The Black Male Body and the ‘Racial’ Mountain in Looking for Langston.Chi-Yun Shin - 2003 - Paragraph 26 (1-2):201-212.
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  25.  89
    The husserlian conception of corporality: a phenomenological distinction between personal body and inanimated bodies.Aron Pilotto Barco - 2012 - Synesis 4 (2):1-12.
  26. The Body as Password: Biometrics and Corporeal Dispossession.Nina Czegledy & Andre P. Czegledy - 2002 - Filozofski Vestnik 23 (2):75-92.
     
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  27. La distinzione fenomenologica fra corpo vivo e oggetto corporeo in Husserl e Scheler.The phenomenological distinction between Leib (living body) and Körper (corporeal object) in Scheler and Husserl.Guido Cusinato - 2018 - In Biosemiotic and psychopathology of the ordo amoris. Biosemiotica e psicopatologia dell'ordo amoris. In dialogo con Max Scheler. Milano MI, Italia: FrancoAngeli.
    In this paper, I show that, although Husserl explicitly explains a kinetic theory of Leib already in § 83 of Raum und Ding, a real phenomenology of the distinction between Leib (living body) and Körper (corporeal object) is not conceivable without Scheler's contribution. It’s quite common to search for the origin of this distinction in Ideen II, in a work composed of texts written in different moments from 1912 on. Before 1912 Husserl dedicated himself to the theme of corporeality (...)
     
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  28.  21
    Imaginary Bodies : Ethics, Power and Corporeality. [REVIEW]Kathleen Lennon - 1996 - Women’s Philosophy Review 16:20-21.
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  29.  22
    Education and Corporeality: Contributions from the Philosophy of Sport.Ana Cristina Zimmermann - 2021 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 25 (4):602-612.
    Corporeality is a subject strongly present in educational discussion nowadays. The purpose of this paper is to present an outline of issues we may address from the philosophy of sport that could foster a fruitful dialogue with the philosophy of education. It is understood that the philosophy of education can benefit from reflections on corporeality and human movement, namely from sports and games. Initially, the article introduces the philosophy of sport as a field of study that addresses reflections on human (...)
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  30.  81
    Dream bodies and dream pains in Augustine's "de natura et origine animae".Mary Sirridge - 2005 - Vivarium 43 (2):213-249.
    In his De Natura et Origine Animae, an answer to a work by Vincentius Victor, Augustine was drawn into attempting to answer some questions about what kind of reality dream-bodies, dream-worlds and dream-pains have. In this paper I concentrate on Augustine's attempts to show that none of Victor's arguments for the corporeality of the soul are any good, and that Victor's inflated claims about the extent of the soul's self-knowledge are the result of mistaking self-awareness for self-knowledge. Augustine takes the (...)
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  31. Moira Gatens, Imaginary Bodies: Ethics, Power and Corporeality.R. Diprose - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
     
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  32.  41
    Corporeal Time: the cinematic bodies of arthur rimbaud and gilles deleuze.Christian Haines - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (2):103-126.
    This article examines the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud in terms of the intersection between corporeality, temporality, and the political. The first part analyzes the deconstruction of lyrical subjectivity in Rimbaud’s verse in relation to the breakdown of the “sensory-motor link” described in the first volume of Deleuze’s Cinema; it discusses these homologous movements as a release of free-floating bodily potentiality. The second part shows how the shift from the first to the second volume of (...)
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  33.  81
    (1 other version)Body and Soul in Aristotle.Richard Sorabji - 1974 - Philosophy 49 (187):63-89.
    Interpretations of Aristotle's account of the relation between body and soul have been widely divergent. At one extreme, Thomas Slakey has said that in theDe Anima‘Aristotle tries to explain perception simply as an event in the sense-organs’. Wallace Matson has generalized the point. Of the Greeks in general he says, ‘Mind–body identity was taken for granted.… Indeed, in the whole classical corpus there exists no denial of the view that sensing is a bodily process throughout’. At the opposite (...)
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  34. Social Accountability and Corporate Greenwashing.William S. Laufer - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 43 (3):253 - 261.
    Critics of SRI have said little about the integrity of corporate representations resulting in screening inclusion or exclusion. This is surprising given social and environmental accounting research that finds corporate posturing and deception in the absence of external verification, and a parallel body of literature describing corporate "greenwashing" and other forms of corporate disinformation. In this paper I argue that the problems and challenges of ensuring fair and accurate corporate social reporting mirror those accompanying corporate compliance with law. Similarities (...)
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  35.  79
    Whose Body Matters? Feminist Sociology and the Corporeal Turn in Sociology and Feminism.Anne Witz - 2000 - Body and Society 6 (2):1-24.
    This article proposes that the urgent task for feminist sociology is to recuperate those lost or residual `body matters' which lurk, unattended to, on the sidelines of the social. Feminist sociology must carefully negotiate the complex space between sociality and corporeality. The new feminist philosophies of the body tend sometimes to grate against this project by valorizing the body but de-valorizing gender. The new sociology of the body is recuperating the body within sociology, but pays (...)
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  36.  31
    Body and world: The correlation between the virtual and the actual through phenomenological reflections via Merleau-Ponty and Deleuze.Irene Breuer - 2020 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 20 (1):e1863564.
    ABSTRACT The current article deals with the correlation between virtual and physical reality as they concern the body. The thesis of this article is that the lived body transposed into virtual reality becomes a body without organs in Deleuze’s terms, i.e. the lived body, a sensitive field of sensorial events immersed in a lived space, becomes a virtual body made up of intensities, of pure forces or magnitudes within a vector space, thereby losing its affective (...)
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  37.  41
    Supererogation: Beyond Positive Deviance and Corporate Social Responsibility.Daina Mazutis - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 119 (4):517-528.
    The special class of supererogatory actions—those that go “beyond the call of duty”—has thus far been omitted from the management literature. Rather, actions of a firm that may surpass economic and legal requirements have been discussed either under the umbrella term of Corporate Social Responsibility or the concept of positive deviance as articulated by the Positive Organizational Scholarship movement. This paper seeks to clarify how “duty” is understood in these literatures and makes an argument that paradigmatic examples of corporate supererogation (...)
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  38.  55
    Rethinking the Body and Space in Alfred Schutz’s Phenomenology of Music.Rhonda Claire Siu - 2016 - Human Studies 39 (4):533-546.
    What is initially striking about Alfred Schutz’s phenomenological account of the musical experience, which encompasses both the performance and reception of music, is his apparent dismissal of the corporeal and spatial aspects of that experience. The paper argues that this is largely a product of his wider understanding of temporality wherein the mind and time are privileged over the body and space, respectively. While acknowledging that Schutz’s explicit or stated view is that the body and space are relatively (...)
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  39.  21
    The Past, History, and Corporate Social Responsibility.Robert Phillips, Judith Schrempf-Stirling & Christian Stutz - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 166 (2):203-213.
    An emerging body of research recognizes the importance of the past and history for corporate social responsibility scholarship and practice. However, the meanings that scholars and practitioners can ascribe to the past and history differ fundamentally, posing challenges to the integration of history and CSR thinking. This essay reviews diverse approaches and proposes a broad conceptualization of the relationship between the past, history, and CSR. We suggest historical CSR as an umbrella term that comprises three distinct theoretical perspectives. The (...)
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  40.  64
    Mind, body and world in the philosophy of Hilary Putnam.Hilary Putnam & Léo Peruzzo - 2015 - Trans/Form/Ação 38 (2):211-216.
    O artigo visa analisar, em linhas gerais, a arqueologia do sujeito operada por Alain de Libera, o que será feito pela concentração no estudo de duas teses fundamentais: Descartes chegou ao sujeito menos por reflexão e mais por refração, em seu debate com Hobbes e Regius, ao tentar escapar da redução do indivíduo à vida corporal e, portanto, à passividade; Tomás de Aquino e Pedro de João Olivi teriam sido os responsáveis por dar certo acabamento a uma temática elaborada desde (...)
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  41.  47
    Foucault, Butler and corporeal experience.Joris Vlieghe - 2014 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 40 (10):1019-1035.
    This article is concerned with the possibility of conceiving a form of social critique that has its locus in the human body. Therefore I engage in a close reading of the (later) work of Butler which can be analysed as an elaboration of a Foucaldian critical ‘virtue’. In order to elaborate and to refine my ideas I go deeper into the criticisms McNay has uttered regarding the very impossibility of taking any distance from a given social or political order (...)
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  42.  37
    Our Daily Body and its Instrumental Role in Communication. Aurel Codoban’s Reading „Body as Language”.Sandu Frunza - 2018 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 17 (50):140-156.
    As in religious traditions, the soul organizes entirely the human condition horizon; postmodern culture sets the body as the organizing centre of its sacralizing mechanisms. Some even speak about a cult and about ritual mechanisms having a religious charge. On the one hand, the body is attributed a symbolic dimension surfacing in the fight against the finite and life’s lack of meaning. On the other, turning the body into a centre of the existential universe triggers a better (...)
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  43.  25
    Substantial and Substantive Corporeality in the Body Discourses of Bhakti Poets.Yadav Sumati - 2020 - Perichoresis 18 (2):73-94.
    This paper studies the representation of human corporeal reality in the discourses of selected Bhakti poets of the late medieval period in India. Considering the historical background of the Bhakti movement and contemporary cultural milieu in which these mystic poets lived, their unique appropriation of the ancient concept of body is reviewed as revolutionary. The focus of the study is the Kabir Bijak, Surdas’s Vinay-Patrika, and Tulsidas’s Vinay-Patrika, wherein they look at and beyond the organic corporeality and encounter human (...)
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  44. Embodying Bodies and Worlds.Matteo Candidi, Salvatore Maria Aglioti & Patrick Haggard - 2012 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 3 (1):109-123.
    Sensorimotor representations are essential for building up and maintaining corporeal awareness, i.e. the ability to perceive, know and evaluate one's own body as well as the bodies of others. The notion of embodied cognition implies that abstract forms of conceptual knowledge may be ultimately instantiated in such sensorimotor representations. In this sense, conceptual thinking should evoke, via mental simulation, some underlying sensorimotor events. In this review we discuss studies on the relation between embodiment and corporeal awareness. We approach the (...)
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  45. Corpus Meum : Disintegrating Bodies and the Ideal of Integrity.Diane Perpich - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (3):75-91.
    This essay shows that Jean-Luc Nancy's reconceptualization of corporeality in such texts as L'Intrus and Corpus can be an important ally to feminist theories of body. I introduce Nancy's ontology and argue that his rejection of the unified, integrated body of humanist discourses in favor of dis-integrated bodies constituted by multiple alterities and his consequent reinterpretation of body as a "being-exscribed" begin the task of thinking bodies beyond traditional dualisms and their ahistorical and rationalist frameworks. I then (...)
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  46.  63
    Robotic Bodies and the Kairos of Humanoid Theologies.James McBride - 2019 - Sophia 58 (4):663-676.
    In the not-too-distant future, robots will populate the walks of everyday life, from the manufacturing floor to corporate offices, and from battlefields to the home. While most work on the social implications of robotics focuses on such moral issues as the economic impact on human workers or the ethics of lethal machines, scant attention is paid to the effect of the advent of the robotic age on religion. Robots will likely become commonplace in the home by the end of the (...)
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  47. Communication between Body and Image.Irena Aimova - 2009 - Filozofia 64 (5):465-469.
    The concept of the digital-facial-image as employed by Mark N. Hansen offers a new paradigm of our approach to digital media. The article aims at exploring the category of affect , which is understood not as a quality inherent to the image , but as a potential of human body, which thus achieves a privileged position. Affection can be conceived a necessary bodily response to digital information. To experience it as an information unit the data flux have to be (...)
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  48.  31
    Body and the Senses in Spatial Experience: The Implications of Kinesthetic and Synesthetic Perceptions for Design Thinking.Jain Kwon & Alyssa Iedema - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Human perception has long been a critical subject of design thinking. While various studies have stressed the link between thinking and acting, particularly in spatial experience, the term “design thinking” seems to disconnect conceptual thinking from physical expression or process. Spatial perception is multimodal and fundamentally bound to the body that is not a mere receptor of sensory stimuli but an active agent engaged with the perceivable environment. The body apprehends the experience in which one’s kinesthetic engagement and (...)
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  49.  31
    Spread Body and Exposed Body: dialogue with jean-luc nancy.Nikolaas Deketelaere, Marie Chabbert & Emmanuel Falque - 2021 - Angelaki 26 (3-4):126-138.
    The question of the body spans across the work of Jean-Luc Nancy, from Noli me tangere, to Corpus and Jacques Derrida’s dialogue with Nancy in On Touching. In constant conversation with Christianity (“This is my body” or Dis-Enclosure), corporeality in Nancy can be summarised using the figure of the “exposed body (corps ex-peausé)”: a demonstration of the surface of the skin (peau) and an exposition of the self to the other in the sense of a “staging” (Corpus). (...)
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  50.  11
    Democracy, citizenship, and corporate governance reform: How to deal with the internationalization of corporate activity.Grahame Thompson - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 167 (1):42-57.
    Commercial companies are increasingly being recognized as agents of societal governance operating alongside the public authorities in their traditional role as governance bodies. In addition, companies are claiming to be ‘corporate citizens’ in the way they deal with their environmental, employment and social/ethical responsibilities. Given the fact that large corporations are now heavily internationalized in their operational characteristics – with branches, subsidiaries, affiliates and extended supply chains operating in multiple jurisdictions – can such organizations be brought into a democratic register? (...)
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