Results for 'dream concept'

976 found
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  1.  47
    Dream Concepts of Hausa Children: A Critique of the "Doctrine of Invariant Sequence" in Cognitive Development.Richard A. Shweder & Robert A. Levine - 1975 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 3 (2):209-230.
  2.  1
    The Moment of the Sublime in Marc Richir’s Phenomenology.Focuses Primarily on the Methodological Problem of Motivation He Also has A. Cross-Disciplinary Interest & A. Monograph on Eugen Fink’S. Phenomenology of Dreaming Is Working on the Phenomenology of Dreaming He is the Author of Formen der Versunkenheit - 2025 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 11 (1):171-185.
    In the final years of his life, the Belgian phenomenologist Marc Richir started to question if philosophical writing would become pointless when artists, great poets for example, have already achieved so well what philosophers have always aspired to achieve. There is no doubt that Richir considers himself in alliance with artists, since he basically believes that “phenomenology is trying to say the same thing as poets or musicians, or even possibly painters, but with philosophical language”. He seems thereby to imply (...)
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  3. Dreaming the Whole Cat: Generative Models, Predictive Processing, and the Enactivist Conception of Perceptual Experience.Andy Clark - 2012 - Mind 121 (483):753-771.
    Does the material basis of conscious experience extend beyond the boundaries of the brain and central nervous system? In Clark 2009 I reviewed a number of ‘enactivist’ arguments for such a view and found none of them compelling. Ward (2012) rejects my analysis on the grounds that the enactivist deploys an essentially world-involving concept of experience that transforms the argumentative landscape in a way that makes the enactivist conclusion inescapable. I present an alternative (prediction-and-generative-model-based) account that neatly accommodates all (...)
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  4. The concept of dreaming.Vere C. Chappell - 1963 - Philosophical Quarterly 13 (July):193-213.
  5.  44
    Dreams as a source of supernatural agent concepts.Patrick McNamara & Kelly Bulkeley - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
  6.  29
    Key Concepts in Dream Research: Cognition and Consciousness Are Inherently Linked, but Do No Not Control “Control”!Caroline L. Horton - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
  7.  10
    The Dream of Language: Wittgenstein's Concept of Dreams in the Context of Style and Lebensform.Thorsten Botz&Ndashbornstein - 2003 - Philosophical Forum 34 (1):73-89.
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  8.  28
    Children's conceptions of dreams.Jacqueline D. Woolley & Henry M. Wellman - 1992 - Cognitive Development 7 (3).
    Children's conceptions of dreams are an important component of their developing understanding of the mind. Although there is much that even adults do not understand about the nature of dreams, most adults in Western society believe that: Dream entities are not real in the sense that they are nonphysical; they are private in the sense that they are not available to public perception, and are not directly shared with other dreamers; and, dreams are typically fictional in content. Thus, children (...)
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  9.  82
    The Dream of Language: Wittgenstein's Concept of Dreams in the Context of Style and Lebensform.Thorsten Botz–Bornstein - 2003 - Philosophical Forum 34 (1):73-89.
  10.  23
    Lucid dreams: their advantage and disadvantage in the frame of search activity concept.Vadim S. Rotenberg - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  11.  15
    Aristotle's concept of soul, sleep and dreams.H. Wijsenbeek-Wijler - 1978 - Amsterdam: [Uithoorn, Herman de Manlaan 8], Hakkert.
  12.  24
    Inducing lucid dreams by olfactory-cued reactivation of reality testing during early-morning sleep: A proof of concept.Daniel Erlacher, Daniel Schmid, Silvan Schuler & Björn Rasch - 2020 - Consciousness and Cognition 83:102975.
  13. The concept of the mental screen : the internalized screen, the dream screen, and the constructed screen.Roger Odin - 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. Dreaming: a conceptual framework for philosophy of mind and empirical research.Jennifer Michelle Windt - 2015 - London, England: MIT Press.
    A comprehensive proposal for a conceptual framework for describing conscious experience in dreams, integrating philosophy of mind, sleep and dream research, and interdisciplinary consciousness studies. Dreams, conceived as conscious experience or phenomenal states during sleep, offer an important contrast condition for theories of consciousness and the self. Yet, although there is a wealth of empirical research on sleep and dreaming, its potential contribution to consciousness research and philosophy of mind is largely overlooked. This might be due, in part, to (...)
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  15.  20
    (1 other version)The dream in the light of a new conception of consciousness.John Bostock - 1927 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 5 (1):36 – 48.
  16. The concept of dreaming.Norman Malcolm - 1967 - In Harold Morick (ed.), Wittgenstein and the Problem of Other Minds. [Brighton], Sussex: Humanities Press.
  17. Dreams of Forces and Pneumatology: Kant’s Critique of Wolff and Crusius in 1766.Stephen Howard - 2019 - Studi Kantiani 32:91-115.
    The literature on Dreams of a Spirit-Seer typically emphasises the ways that Kant’s complex 1766 work prefigures his critical turn. Kant indeed criticises Wolffian «dreamers of reason» and defines metaphysics as a «science of the limits of human reason». It has not been noted, however, that Kant’s first restriction on human knowledge in Dreams is targeted at knowledge of fundamental physical forces. Moreover, Kant criticises the ‘pneumatological’ laws of mental forces, insisting that these cannot be known through analogy with physical (...)
     
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  18. Dreams and philosophy.Ernest Sosa - 2005 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 79 (2):7 - 18.
    That conception is orthodox in today’s common sense and also historically. Presupposed by Plato, Augustine, and Descartes, it underlies familiar skeptical paradoxes. Similar orthodoxy is also found in our developing science of sleep and dreaming.[2] Despite such confluence.
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  19.  9
    Dreaming the Myth Onwards: New Directions in Jungian Therapy and Thought.Lucy Huskinson (ed.) - 2008 - Routledge.
    _Dreaming the Myth Onwards_ shows how a revised appreciation of myth can enrich our daily lives, our psychological awareness, and our human relationships. Lucy Huskinson and her contributors explore the interplay between myth, and Jungian thought and practice, demonstrating the philosophical and psychological principles that underlie our experience of psyche and world. Contributors from multi-disciplinary backgrounds throughout the world come together to assess the contemporary relevance of myth, in terms of its utility, its effectual position within Jungian theory and practice, (...)
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  20.  19
    Manifest Dream/Association Comparison: A Criterion to Monitor the Psychotherapeutic Field (2nd part) Field Transformations: A Clinical Case.Giancarlo Trombini, Anna Corazza & Gerhard Stemberger - 2019 - Gestalt Theory 41 (3):241-261.
    Summary The present work focuses on the transformations of the psychotherapeutic field through the relationship dynamics that occur within it. The first part of this article starts with a brief outline of the Gestalt psychological understanding of the field concept, also in its application to the psychotherapeutic situation, followed by a brief review of the introduction of the field concept into the psychoanalytic theory formation. After this, the first author first presents the theoretical concept underlying a new (...)
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  21.  16
    Energy Dreams: Of Actuality.Michael Marder - 2017 - Columbia University Press.
    The question of energy is among the most vital for the future of humanity and the flourishing of life on this planet. Yet, only very rarely (if at all) do we ask what energy is, what it means, what ends it serves, and how it is related to actuality, meaning-making, and instrumentality. Energy Dreams interrogates the ontology of energy from the first coinage of the word energeia by Aristotle to the current practice of fracking and the popularity of "energy drinks." (...)
  22. The Reality of Dreaming.Eugene Halton - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (4):119-139.
    Dreaming is a communicative activity between the most sensitive archive of the enregistered experience of life on the earth, the brain, and the most plastic medium for the discovery and practice of meaning, the mind or culture. Both love and war have been made on the basis of dreams, not to mention scientific discoveries. In ancient Greece dreams were medicinal parts of curative sleeping or "incubation" rites in the temple of Aesculapius, and many psychoanalytic physicians today still consider dreams as (...)
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  23.  5
    The Dreams of Metaphysics.Keith Ward - 1972 - In The development of Kant's view of ethics. New York,: Humanities Press. pp. 34–51.
    Kant begins his own metaphysical ‘dream of a spiritual visionary’ by remarking that the conception of ‘spirit’ is not a difficult one to form, since it is ‘merely negative’, consisting in the denial of the properties of material existence. Though nature may ultimately be determined by spiritual forces, science cannot be concerned with them. ‘The morality of an action concerns the inner state of the spirit’, Kant writes; and the consequences of such spiritual actions only become fully apparent in (...)
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  24.  66
    To Dream of Fanon: Reconstructing a Method for Thought by a Revolutionary Intellectual.Anjali Prabhu - 2011 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 19 (1):57-70.
    The half-century, which is the time that has elapsed since the publication of Wretched of the Earth , seems such a short period when one imagines its author in all his intellectual magnificence, his anguish, and the many details we all know of his short-lived reality. Dare one say, after the concept has long been declared “dead” that we imagine him as having been a live “author”? As I write this, the idea of various notable intellectuals and revolutionary movements (...)
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  25.  38
    (1 other version)Dream of Recapture.Carlo Nicolai - 2022 - Analysis 82 (3):445-450.
    As a response to the semantic and logical paradoxes, theorists often reject some principles of classical logic. However, classical logic is entangled with mathematics, and giving up mathematics is too high a price to pay, even for nonclassical theorists. The so-called recapture theorems come to the rescue. When reasoning with concepts such as truth/class membership/property instantiation, (These are examples of concepts that are taken to satisfy naive rules such as the naive truth schema and naive comprehension, and that therefore are (...)
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  26.  36
    Manifest Dream/Association Comparison: A Criterion to Monitor the Psychotherapeutic Field.Giancarlo Trombini, Anna Corazza & Gerhard Stemberger - 2019 - Gestalt Theory 41 (1):61-78.
    Summary The present work focuses on the transformations of the psychotherapeutic field through the relationship dynamics which occur within it. The first part of this article starts with a brief outline of the Gestalt psychological understanding of the field concept, also in its application to the psychotherapeutic situation, followed by a brief review of the introduction of the field concept into the psychoanalytic theory formation. After this, the first author first presents the theoretical concept underlying a new (...)
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  27.  88
    Dreams as a Meta-Conceptual or Existential Experience.Jeremy Barris - 2014 - Philosophia 42 (3):625-644.
    The paper argues that dreams consist partly in an awareness or experience of the conceptual fabric of our existence. Since what we mean by reality is intimately tied to the concepts given in our experience, dreams are therefore also partly an awareness of the fabric of what we mean by being itself and in general, that is, by objective as well as subjective reality. Further, the paper argues that this characteristic of dreams accounts for several other, more specific aspects of (...)
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  28.  71
    Aristotle's Concept of Soul, Sleep and Dreams. [REVIEW]J. L. Ackrill - 1979 - The Classical Review 29 (2):321-322.
  29.  11
    The Art of Post-Human Era - Technological Imagination, Deep Dream and New-Conception Art -. 최병학 - 2018 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 92:283-301.
    이 논문은 알파고 충격 이후 등장할 미래 사회인 포스트휴먼 시대의 예술의 가능성을 살펴보려는 것이다. 인간의 형상이 기술적으로, 혹은 탈생물학적으로 다시 그려질 때 기존 인간(휴먼 시대)의 예술과 포스트휴먼 시대의 예술은 어떤 차이가 있을까? 물론 예술의 역사는 부친살해의 역사였다. 기존 전통을 해체하고 늘 새로움을 추구한 것이 예술사였다. 그렇다면 포스트휴먼 시대에도 휴먼 시대의 예술과 같이 부친 살해의 전통을 따르는 새로움이 있을 것인가? 그 새로움은 휴머니즘 예술에 기초한 것일까? 아니면 전혀 새로운 차원의 예술인가? 혹은 예술의 개념이 전혀 달라지는 것인가? 따라서 예술에 대한 기본적 이해와 (...)
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  30.  17
    A Dreamed Form of Being: Zhuang Zhou’s and Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s Dream Narratives as Aesthetic Conceptions of an Alternative Life-World.Li Shuangzhi - 2018 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 2018 (3):206-219.
    AbstractThis paper attempts to develop a comparative approach to the dream narratives of the Daoist philosopher Zhuang Zhou and the Austrian poet Hugo von Hofmannsthal. The analogous rhetorical function of the dream in their texts links the two authors from different cultures and traditions. As will be argued, in using dreams to stress a challenging and even deconstructive view of the so-called reality, both Zhuang and Hofmannsthal articulate their skepticism against substantial notions of human subjectivity and offer an (...)
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  31.  65
    Defense, dreams and rationality.Harvey Mullane - 1983 - Synthese 57 (2):187 - 204.
    Are some mental activities rational but unconscious? Psychopathological symptoms, it is said, have a sense — they are seen as compromise-formations which express the intentions of agents even though the agents are totally unaware of bringing about such symptoms. Philosophers, who often claim that such a conception is simply contradictory or incoherent, have shed little light on the puzzles and apparent paradoxes that surround the issue. It is argued here that Freud's two models of explanation — the mechanistic and the (...)
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  32.  22
    The dream of transcending the human through the digital matrix: A relational critique.Pierpaolo Donati - 2019 - Scientia et Fides 7 (2):171-193.
    The advent of the digital era brings with it the dream of ‘transcending the human’ through the most sophisticated AI / robot technologies. The Author argues that the concept and practices of ‘transcendence’ are deeply ambiguous, since on the one hand they simply aim to overcome the weaknesses, limits and fragility of the human, while on the other hand they modify the human by selecting its specific qualities and its causal properties in a way to generate beings ‘other (...)
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  33.  73
    Green dreams of reason. Green nanotechnology between visions of excess and control.Astrid E. Schwarz - 2009 - NanoEthics 3 (2):109-118.
    Nanotechnology has recently been identified with principles of sustainability and with a ‘green’ agenda generally . Some maintain that this green dream of nanotechnology is a rather ephemeral societal phenomenon that owes its existence to the campaign ploys of politics and business. This paper argues that deeper lying societal and cognitive structures are at work here that complement or even substantiate in some sense the seemingly manipulative saying of a greening of nanotechnologies. Taking seriously the concept of ‘green (...)
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  34. Dreams, agency, and judgement.Matthew Soteriou - 2017 - Synthese 197 (12):5319-5334.
    Sosa : 7–18, 2005) argues that we should reject the orthodox conception of dreaming—the view that dream states and waking states are “intrinsically alike, though different in their causes and effects”. The alternative he proposes is that “to dream is to imagine”. According to this imagination model of dreaming, our dreamt conscious beliefs, experiences, affirmations, decisions and intentions are not “real” insofar as they are all merely imagined beliefs, experiences, affirmations, decisions and intentions. This paper assesses the epistemic (...)
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  35. Why are dreams interesting for philosophers? The example of minimal phenomenal selfhood, plus an agenda for future research.Thomas Metzinger - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychology 4:746.
    This metatheoretical paper develops a list of new research targets by exploring particularly promising interdisciplinary contact points between empirical dream research and philosophy of mind. The central example is the MPS-problem. It is constituted by the epistemic goal of conceptually isolating and empirically grounding the phenomenal property of “minimal phenomenal selfhood,” which refers to the simplest form of self-consciousness. In order to precisely describe MPS, one must focus on those conditions that are not only causally enabling, but strictly necessary (...)
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  36.  43
    Genetics' dreams in the post genomics era.Maurizio Salvi - 2002 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 5 (1):73-77.
    In this paper I explore the heuristic limits ofhuman genetics, in particular the claim that itis possible to manipulate human germcells in a pre-ordinate way (Gordon, 1999). I arguethat this claim is unrealistic based ongenetic reductionism and a wrong concept ofgenetic diseases.
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  37.  18
    From Dreaming of Desert Islands to Reterritorialising Philosophy.Yoshiyuki Koizumi - 2018 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 12 (2):268-282.
    In ‘Causes and Reasons of Desert Islands’, Gilles Deleuze presents a mythological and scientific vision in which new islands and new humanity emerge from the opposition between the land and sea in desert islands. However, what Deleuze cannot explain is how such new territory and people are produced and reproduced while rejecting old and conventional generational ways. To break this impasse, which is also present in Difference and Repetition, Deleuze and Guattari intend to retain the absolute movement of deterritorialisation, while (...)
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  38.  35
    The Dream of General Intellect.Taila Picchi - 2019 - Philosophy Today 63 (3):687-703.
    Within the workerist tradition the concept of general intellect theorised by Marx in the “Fragment on Machines” has framed a socio-political interpretation of Simondon capable of questioning the ongoing process of valorisation and subjectivation of living labour under capitalism. According to Virno, Leonardi and Pasquinelli, Simondon’s philosophy can provide the theoretical foundation for thinking new forms of political agency and cooperation. Their accounts rely on the concepts of transindividuality, individuation, and mecanology, in order to explore Post-Fordist concepts such as (...)
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  39.  8
    The dream universe: how fundamental physics lost its way.David Lindley - 2020 - New York: Doubleday.
    In the early seventeenth century Galileo broke free from the hold of ancient Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy. He drastically changed the framework through which we view the natural world when he asserted that we should base our theory of reality on what we can observe rather than pure thought. In the process, he invented what we would come to call science. This set the stage for all the breakthroughs that followed--from Kepler to Newton to Einstein. But in the early twentieth (...)
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  40.  20
    Other Dreams of Freedom: Religion, Sex, and Human Trafficking by Yvonne C. Zimmerman.Abbylynn Helgevold - 2014 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34 (2):229-231.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Other Dreams of Freedom: Religion, Sex, and Human Trafficking by Yvonne C. ZimmermanAbbylynn HelgevoldReview of Other Dreams of Freedom: Religion, Sex, and Human Trafficking YVONNE C. ZIMMERMAN New York: Oxford, 2013. 223 pp. $35.00In Other Dreams of Freedom, Yvonne Zimmerman develops a genealogical analysis of US antitrafficking policy. She aims to show how antitrafficking initiatives in the United States are influenced by and expressive of distinctively Protestant norms (...)
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  41.  83
    From city-dreams to the dreaming collective: Walter Benjamin's political dream interpretation.Tyrus Miller - 1996 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 22 (6):87-111.
    This essay discusses Walter Benjamin's development of 'dream' as a model for understanding 19th- and 20th-century urban culture. Following Bergson and surrealist poetics, Benjamin used 'dream' in the 1920s as an heuristic analogy for investigating child hood memories, kitsch art and literature; during the early 1930s, he also developed it into an historiographic concept for studying 19th- century Parisian culture. Benjamin's interpretative use of the dream cuts across Ricoeur's distinction between the hermeneutics of 'recol lection' and (...)
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  42.  19
    Why Personal Dreams Matter: How professionals affectively engage with the promises surrounding data-driven healthcare in Europe.Antoinette de Bont, Anne Marie Weggelaar-Jansen, Johanna Kostenzer, Rik Wehrens & Marthe Stevens - 2022 - Big Data and Society 9 (1).
    Recent buzzes around big data, data science and artificial intelligence portray a data-driven future for healthcare. As a response, Europe's key players have stimulated the use of big data technologies to make healthcare more efficient and effective. Critical Data Studies and Science and Technology Studies have developed many concepts to reflect on such overly positive narratives and conduct critical policy evaluations. In this study, we argue that there is also much to be learned from studying how professionals in the healthcare (...)
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  43.  44
    The neural substrate for dreaming: Is it a subsystem of the default network?G. William Domhoff - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4):1163-1174.
    Building on the content, developmental, and neurological evidence that there are numerous parallels between waking cognition and dreaming, this article argues that the likely neural substrate that supports dreaming, which was discovered through converging lesion and neuroimaging studies, may be a subsystem of the waking default network, which is active during mind wandering, daydreaming, and simulation. Support for this hypothesis would strengthen the case for a more general neurocognitive theory of dreaming that starts with established findings and concepts derived from (...)
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  44. Binding in dreams: The bizarreness of dream images and the unity of consciousness.Antti Revonsuo & K. Tarkko - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (7):3-24.
    Binding can be described at three different levels: In neuroscience it refers to the integration of single-cell activities to form functional neural assemblies, especially in response to global stimulus properties; in cognitive science it refers to the integration of distributed modular input processing to form unified representations for memory and action, and in consciousness studies it refers to the unity of phenomenal consciousness . To describe and explain the unity of consciousness, detailed phenomenological descriptions of binding at the phenomenal level (...)
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  45.  21
    Tolerating the Dream.Blade Ducote - 2018 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 12 (2).
    Analysis of Fry's dream in the Futurama episode "A FishFul of Dollars" in relation to Žižek and Lacan. This short essay delves into the ideological conception of reality and the way in which individuals utilize fantasy to compensate for their personal lack.
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  46.  24
    Dreaming of AI Lovers.Andrew Oberg - 2017 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 24 (1):15-28.
    The vision of building machines that are or can be self-aware has long gripped humankind and now seems closer than ever to being realized. Yet behind this idea lie deep problems associated with the self, with consciousness, and with what it is to be a being capable of experience. It is the aim of this paper to first explore these important background concepts and seek clarity in each one before then turning to the question of artificial intelligence and whether or (...)
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  47. Poetry and Dream-work: On Lowes' Account of Coleridge.Josef Fulka - 2011 - Filozofia 66 (7):644-654.
    The paper offers an interpretation of a classical study of Coleridge’s poetry: The Road to Xanadu by John Livingstone Lowes published in 1927. While Lowes’ book is considered a monumental work summarizing the sources of Coleridge’s poetic image, the paper tries to show that in addition to that Lowes develops a remarkable theory of imagination close to certain themes of Freud’s theory of dream-work, as well as to Warburg’s interpretation of Boticelli or Havlí?ek’s conception of poetic image.
     
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  48.  2
    Can the Confucian dream of peace dialogue with Realpolitik?Seán Golden - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    An economy based on agriculture required access to both tillage and tillers. Power was shared by two groups in the ruling class. The warriors’ priority was to mobilize the tillers for war and the acquisition of more lands by conquest at the cost of peace and agriculture. The priority of their rivals in power, known colloquially as ‘Mandarins’ in European languages, was to liberate the tillers from warfare and to promote peace and agriculture. The technocratic Mandarins could not use martial (...)
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  49.  52
    Sketch for a Phenomenology of Dreaming.Cecile T. Tougas - 1993 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 24 (2):130-143.
    Dreaming as lived experience qualifies as intentional life, despite its strangeness. Yet the dream-phenomena themselves receive little direct clarification consistent with Edmund Husserl's major work on conscious intentionality. With fundamental accomplishments of Husserlian phenomenology in play, how could a study of these neglected appearances begin? First it is necessary to describe the essential relevant Husserlian concepts. From Husserl's descriptions in his phenomenological psychology, his analysis of internal time-consciousness, and his theory of wholes and parts in Logical Investigations, the sense (...)
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  50.  89
    “Ridiculous” dream versus social contract: Dostoevskij, Rousseau, and the problem of ideal society.Olga Stuchebrukhov - 2007 - Studies in East European Thought 59 (1-2):101 - 169.
    Drawing on the Second Discourse and the Social Contract and Notes from Underground and “The Dream of a Ridiculous Man,” this essay examines the striking similarities and fundamental differences between Dostoevskij’s and Rousseau’s treatment of the problem of individual vs. society and their notions of ideal social relations. The essay investigates Rousseau’s attempt to absorb morality into politics and “to concretize” Diderot’s universal moral man into citizen. It also suggests that Dostoevskij takes Rousseau’s attempt at concretization a step further (...)
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