Results for 'Biopolitics – baroque torso – fragment – technic – body – blosses Leben'

979 found
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  1.  37
    Política E estética no trauerspiel: Programa de Uma justiça para O corpo.Tereza de Castro Callado - 2012 - Cadernos de Ética E Filosofia Política 20:76-89.
    A tematização de uma política para o corpo, nas contingências do progresso técnico, leva a reflexão de Walter Benjamin a desenvolver a versão filosófica do torso barroco da arte seiscentista que irá explicar, nesse artigo, a contraposição entre os conceitos de mera vida ( blosses Leben ) ao de espaço para o corpo ( Leibraum ).
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  2.  28
    Ethics for Robots: how to design a moral algorithm.Derek Leben - 2018 - Routledge.
    Ethics for Robots describes and defends a method for designing and evaluating ethics algorithms for autonomous machines, such as self-driving cars and search and rescue drones. Derek Leben argues that such algorithms should be evaluated by how effectively they accomplish the problem of cooperation among self-interested organisms, and therefore, rather than simulating the psychological systems that have evolved to solve this problem, engineers should be tackling the problem itself, taking relevant lessons from our moral psychology. Leben draws on (...)
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  3.  97
    Pushing the Intuitions behind Moral Internalism.Derek Leben & Kristine Wilckens - 2015 - Philosophical Psychology 28 (4):510-528.
    Moral Internalism proposes a necessary link between judging that an action is right/wrong and being motivated to perform/avoid that action. Internalism is central to many arguments within ethics, including the claim that moral judgments are not beliefs, and the claim that certain types of moral skepticism are incoherent. However, most of the basis for accepting Internalism rests on intuitions that have recently been called into question by empirical work. This paper further investigates the intuitions behind Internalism. Three experiments show not (...)
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  4.  2
    Ausgewählte Zeugnisse.Leben Pindars - 1967 - In H. G. Pindar (ed.), Siegesgesänge Und Fragmente: Griechisch Und Deutsch. De Gruyter. pp. 497-510.
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  5.  8
    The monstrosity of the beauty of the apparent, the bodies and communities of the possible: freaks and the shape of water, enclaves of biopolitical analysis on the global social crisis.Jocelyn Maldonado Garay & Daniela Palacios Hermosilla - 2023 - Alpha (Osorno) 56:82-106.
    Resumen: El siguiente ensayo realiza un análisis crítico de los discursos/prácticas de la modernidad desde la biopolítica en torno a la anormalidad, la ciencia (como tecnociencia) y las posibilidades de comunidad que existen en las relaciones de las/los marginados/as. Tomando como referentes las películas Freaks y La Forma del Agua. Mostrando cómo el cine juega y propone elementos críticos de estas prácticas/discursos de la modernidad. Dentro de esta anormalidad se considerará a la monstruosidad como metáfora y como realidad corpórea, y (...)
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  6.  4
    Liminal Biopolitics: Towards a Political Anthropology of the Umbilical Cord and the Placenta.Pablo Santoro - 2011 - Body and Society 17 (1):73-93.
    One of the most intriguing bio-objects in the emerging field of regenerative medicine is umbilical cord blood. Employed in existing haematological therapies, but also loaded with potentialities for future uses, cord blood has been lately the focus of a regulatory debate which confronts public and private forms of biobanking. This article explores the political and anthropological side of this debate, describing the ways in which different health practices related to the umbilical cord (and to its symbolic sibling, the placenta) have (...)
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  7.  18
    The Biopolitical Embodiment of Work in the Era of Human Enhancement.Nicolas Le Dévédec - 2020 - Body and Society 26 (1):55-81.
    Human enhancement or the use of technoscientific and biomedical advances to improve human performance is a social phenomenon that has become increasingly significant in Western societies over the last 15 years or so, notably in the workplace. By focusing on the non-medical use of psychostimulants, and from a perspective that is both critical and exploratory, this article aims to show that human enhancement practices prefigure new forms of embodiment and interiorization of work that are contributing to a significant reconfiguration of (...)
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  8.  8
    Whose Life Counts: Biopolitics and the “Bright Line” of Chloropicrin Mitigation in California’s Strawberry Industry.Sandy Brown & Julie Guthman - 2016 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 41 (3):461-482.
    In the context of the mandated phaseout of methyl bromide, California’s strawberry industry has increased its use of chloropicrin, another soil fumigant that has long been on the market. However, due to its 2010 designation as a toxic air contaminant, the US Environmental Protection Agency and California’s Department of Pesticide Regulation have developed enhanced application protocols to mitigate exposures of the chemical to bystanders, nearby residents, and farmworkers. The central feature of these mitigation technologies are enhanced buffer zones between treated (...)
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  9.  12
    Molecular Politics, Wearables, and the Aretaic Shift in Biopolitical Governance.Peter Lindner - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (3):71-96.
    Since the publication of Nikolas Rose’s ‘The Politics of Life Itself’ there has been vivid discussion about how biopolitical governance has changed over the last decades. This article uses what Rose terms ‘molecular politics’, a new socio-technical grip on the human body, as a contrasting background to ask anew his question ‘What, then, of biopolitics today?’ – albeit focusing not on advances in genetics, microbiology, and pharmaceutics, as he does, but on the rapid proliferation of wearables and other (...)
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  10. Walter Benjamins blosses Leben und Hannah Arendts blosses Menschsein. Ein Vergleich.Jan Maximilian Robitzsch - 2011 - Philosophisches Jahrbuch 118 (1):104-128.
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  11.  86
    Being Better Bodies. [REVIEW]Joel Michael Reynolds - 2017 - Hastings Center Report 47 (6):46-47.
    [Excerpt]: Bioethics has an uneasy relationship with embodiment. Only with vigilance does knowledge of the body as it is lived counterbalance the momentous inertia of knowledge of the body as an object brought about by modern medical sciences. As a field tethered to detached, technical ways of knowing the world, bioethics must toil to treat the body as more than mere material and machine. To be more is, among other things, to be social—to live in the thickets (...)
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  12.  10
    The Technical Body: Incorporating Technology and Flesh.James Barry Jr - 1991 - Philosophy Today 35 (4):390-401.
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  13.  23
    The Thickness of Tissue Engineering: Biopolitics, Biotech, and the Regenerative Body.Eugene Thacker - 1999 - Theory and Event 3 (3).
  14. The biopolitics of postmodern bodies.Donna Haraway - 2013 - In Timothy C. Campbell & Adam Sitze (eds.), Biopolitics: A Reader. Durham: Duke University Press.
     
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  15.  49
    Docile Bodies: Transnational Research Ethics as Biopolitics.M. T. Lysaught - 2009 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 34 (4):384-408.
    This essay explores the claim that bioethics has become a mode of biopolitics. It seeks to illuminate one of the myriad of ways that bioethics joins other institutionalized discursive practices in the task of producing, organizing, and managing the bodies—of policing and controlling populations—in order to empower larger institutional agents. The focus of this analysis is the contemporary practice of transnational biomedical research. The analysis is catalyzed by the enormous transformation in the political economy of transnational research that has (...)
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  16.  11
    The Body in the Field of Tensions between Biopolitics and Necropolitics.Marina Gržinić - 2023 - Filozofski Vestnik 44 (2):19-52.
    The article contributes to the understanding of how societal conflict, aggression, and racism are intertwined with the concepts of the body and necropolitics. Achille Mbembe’s exploration of historical conflicts refers to the way in which states and other necropolitical entities exert control over life and death. Persistent conflicts reflect a form of necropolitics in which certain groups are subjected to violence and death as a means of maintaining power. Frank B. Wilderson III’s analysis of aggression towards Black individuals reveals (...)
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  17.  8
    Risky Bodies, Drugs and Biopolitics: On the Pharmaceutical Governance of Addiction and Other ‘Diseases of Risk’.Scott Vrecko - 2016 - Body and Society 22 (3):54-76.
    While there has been a significant amount of scholarship done on health and risk in relation to public health and disease prevention, relatively little attention has been paid to therapeutic interventions which seek to manage risks as bodily, and biological, matters. This article elucidates the distinct qualities and logics of these two different approaches to risk management, in relation to Michel Foucault’s conception of the two poles of biopower, that is, a biopolitics of the population and an anatomo-politics of (...)
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  18.  1
    Biopolitics and Capital: Poverty, Mobility and the Body-in-transplantation in Mexico.Ciara Kierans - 2015 - Body and Society 21 (3):42-65.
    Organ transplantation has been central to debates on medical technologies and their complex biopolitical consequences, new forms of medical governance and new opportunities for capital. Attending to transplantation has also opened up new ways of thinking about, acting on and living ‘in’ the body, raising important questions about what it means to be embodied under particular cultural conditions. The specific ways in which a technology like transplantation puts the body parts of some at the disposal of the bodies (...)
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  19. Marking boundaries, making connections : fragmenting the body in Bronze Age Britain.Joanna Brück - 2023 - In Anna Sörman, Astrid A. Noterman & Markus Fjellström (eds.), Broken bodies, places and objects: new perspectives on fragmentation in archaeology. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  20. Bodies, Populations, Citizens : The Biopolitics of African Environmentalism.Carl Death - 2016 - In Sergei Prozorov & Simona Rentea (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Biopolitics. Routledge.
     
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  21. Chinese surplus: biopolitical aesthetics and the medically commodified body.Ari Larissa Heinrich - 2018 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    Biopolitical aesthetics and the Chinese body as surplus -- Chinese whispers : Frankenstein, the sleeping lion, and the emergence of a biopolitical aesthetics -- Souvenirs of the organ trade : the diasporic body in contemporary Chinese literature and art -- Organ economics: transplant, class, and witness from made in Hong Kong to the eye -- Still life : recovering (Chinese) ethnicity in the body worlds and beyond -- All rights preserved : intellectual property and the plastinated cadaver (...)
     
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  22.  15
    Leben als Fragment.Bernd Jaspert - 1973 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 25 (2):173-178.
  23.  11
    Fragments of the Body in Christian, Bioethical and Social Imaginaries.Paul Scherz - 2017 - Studies in Christian Ethics 30 (4):449-463.
    Human tissue samples are essential to biomedical research, but recent controversies reveal disagreement over how to relate these fragments to donors. Deidentification has become impossible, a property model contravenes legal and religious traditions, and there is conflict over procedures for informed consent. While Michael Banner draws on Augustine and ethnographies to emphasize the role of fragments of the body in mourning, ethnographies actually suggest that many people believe that tissues and organs retain an ongoing connection to their donors. The (...)
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  24.  42
    Biopolitics without Bodies: Feminism and the Feeling of Life.Nathan Snaza - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):178-203.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:178 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Nathan Snaza Biopolitics without Bodies: Feminism and the Feeling of Life Against a restrictive and imperialist concept of “the human,” which has become globalized during the long march of colonialist, heterosexist modernity, Samantha Frost’s Biocultural Creatures summons “counter-concepts” of the human that might authorize new political possibilities and theories of what it means to be human. (...)
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  25.  11
    Broken bodies, places and objects: new perspectives on fragmentation in archaeology.Anna Sörman, Astrid A. Noterman & Markus Fjellström (eds.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Broken bodies, places and objects demonstrates the breadth of fragmentation and fragment use in prehistory and history, and provides an up-to-date insight into the current archaeological thinking around the topic. A seal broken and shared by two trade parties, dog jaws accompanying the dead in Mesolithic burials, fragments of ancient warships commodified as souvenirs, parts of an ancient dynastic throne split up between different colonial collections... Pieces of the past are everywhere around us. Fragments have a special potential precisely (...)
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  26.  37
    Feral biopolitics: Animal bodies and/as border technologies.Hyaesin Yoon - 2017 - Angelaki 22 (2):135-150.
    This article explores how technological interventions into animal bodies refigure the borders of political community, in assemblage with sexuality, race, nation, and species. To this end, the article reconceptualizes “feral” as a biopolitical figure that unsettles categorical divisions such as culture/nature, domestic/wild, and belonging/exclusion. Alongside the theoretical development of “feral,” I extend the discussion to two sites: the use of long-tail macaques for bio-defense research in the post-9/11 United States and the transspecies intimacy and feral violence/justice in the South Korean (...)
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  27.  46
    The Alienation of Body Tissue and the Biopolitics of Immortalized Cell Lines.Margaret Lock - 2001 - Body and Society 7 (2-3):63-91.
    The alienation of body parts and their transformation into commodities raises questions about ownership, property rights, and about possible violation of the moral order. This article focuses on the `social life' of objects, including body parts, and the multiple meanings attached to them that are made visible in systems of exchange. The transformation of DNA obtained in blood samples into immortalized cell lines for use in the Human Genome Diversity Project is introduced as an illustration of contested commodification. (...)
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  28. Embodied Subjects and Fragmented Objects: Women’s Bodies, Assisted Reproduction Technologies and the Right to Self-Determination.Jyotsna Agnihotri Gupta & Annemiek Richters - 2008 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 5 (4):239-249.
    This article focuses on the transformation of the female reproductive body with the use of assisted reproduction technologies under neo-liberal economic globalisation, wherein the ideology of trade without borders is central, as well as under liberal feminist ideals, wherein the right to self-determination is central. Two aspects of the body in western medicine—the fragmented body and the commodified body, and the integral relation between these two—are highlighted. This is done in order to analyse the implications of (...)
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  29.  30
    Living à la mode: Form-of-life and democratic biopolitics in Giorgio Agamben’s The Use of Bodies.Sergei Prozorov - 2017 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 43 (2):144-163.
    The publication of The Use of Bodies, the final volume in Giorgio Agamben’s Homo Sacer series, makes it possible to take stock of Agamben’s project as a whole. Having started with a powerful critique of the biopolitical sovereignty as the essence of modern politics, Agamben concludes his project with an affirmative vision of inoperative politics of form-of-life, in which life is not negated or sacrificed to the privileged form it must attain, but rather remains inseparable from the form that does (...)
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  30.  42
    Biopolitics: A Reader.Timothy C. Campbell & Adam Sitze (eds.) - 2013 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    This anthology collects the texts that defined the concept of biopolitics, which has become so significant throughout the humanities and social sciences today. The far-reaching influence of the biopolitical—the relation of politics to life, or the state to the body—is not surprising given its centrality to matters such as healthcare, abortion, immigration, and the global distribution of essential medicines and medical technologies. Michel Foucault gave new and unprecedented meaning to the term "biopolitics" in his 1976 essay "Right (...)
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  31.  65
    Fragments for a History of the Human Body.Michel Feher, Ramona Naddaff & Nadia Tazi - 1991 - Philosophy East and West 41 (2):276-278.
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  32.  34
    Body Fragmentation: Native American Community Members’ Views on Specimen Disposition in Biomedical/Genetics Research.Puneet Chawla Sahota - 2014 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 5 (3):19-30.
    Background: Genetics research is controversial in Native American communities, and the disposition and ownership of biological specimens are central issues. Within Native communities, there is considerable variety in tribal members’ views. This article reports the results from an ethnographic study conducted with a Native American community in the southwestern United States. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship (past and present) between the tribe and biomedical/genetics research. Methods: Qualitative interviews were conducted with 53 members of a Native (...)
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  33.  21
    Galileo's 1604 Fragment on Falling Bodies.Stillman Drake - 1969 - British Journal for the History of Science 4 (4):340-358.
    The first attempted derivation by Galileo of the law relating space and time in free fall that has survived is preserved on an otherwise unidentified sheet bound among his manuscripts preserved at Florence. It is undoubtedly closely associated with a letter from Galileo to Paolo Sarpi, dated 16 October 1604, which somehow found its way into the Seminary of Pisa, where it is still preserved. Those two documents, together with the letter from Sarpi to Galileo which seems to have inspired (...)
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  34.  8
    The Body as Original Medium and Vehicle of Technique.Bernhard Waldenfels - 2024 - Critical Hermeneutics 8.
    Living corporeity is the intermediate element between nature and culture, which must be thought of as a reciprocal interconnection, since as corporeal beings we always move on a threshold. In the reflection of the bodily self, a doubling between the living body as a functioning subject and as a material object is revealed; after all, even one's own body sometimes takes on the features of a foreign body, as is the case in the experience of illness. In (...)
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  35.  7
    Oscillation of Contemporary Bodies between Biopolitics and Necropolitics.Katerina Paramana - 2023 - Filozofski Vestnik 44 (2):265-85.
    The article examines Tania Bruguera’s works 10,148,451 (2019, Tate Modern, UK) and the three versions of Tatlin’s Whisper #6 (2009 and 2014, Havana; 2015, Tate Modern). Thinking with Achille Mbembe’s work on necropolitics, Lauren Berlant’s on “slow death,” and Michel Foucault’s on biopolitics, Paramana suggests that 10,148,451 addresses the collective subject and critiques contemporary necropolitics, while the versions of Tatlin’s Whisper #6 address individuals as political subjects, and comment on the panoptic gaze and contemporary biopolitics. Through her analysis (...)
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  36.  9
    Biopolitics and utopia: an interdisciplinary reader.Patricia Stapleton & Andrew Byers (eds.) - 2015 - New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Biopolitics and Utopia explores the intersection of biopolitics and utopian thought. As an interdisciplinary work, it addresses many salient biopolitical issues (state and medical interventions in the body, fears over scientific progress, resistance to state biopower, and ethical concerns), while also engaging in the utopian drive behind biopolitical efforts. The book is structured into four main sections: Actions, Speculations, Reactions, and Reflections. The chapters in Actions examine the practices of direct, medical intervention to 'normalize' citizens' bodies. The (...)
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  37.  55
    Biopolitics in the ‘Psychic Realm’: Han, Foucault and neoliberal psychopolitics.Caroline Alphin & François Debrix - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (4):477-491.
    This article explores German Korean philosopher Byung-Chul Han’s notion of psychopolitics and his concept of the neoliberal subject. For Han, mental processes are now the primary target of power. This means that, according to Han, biopower must give way to what he calls psychopower since perspectives that critically seek to understand neoliberalism through a biopolitical lens are no longer adequate to contemporary regimes of neoliberal achievement. This article examines and evaluates Han’s argument that Foucauldian biopolitics is obsolete in today’s (...)
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  38.  35
    Biopolitics in the ‘Psychic Realm’: Han, Foucault and neoliberal psychopolitics.Caroline Alphin & François Debrix - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (4):477-491.
    This article explores German Korean philosopher Byung-Chul Han’s notion of psychopolitics and his concept of the neoliberal subject. For Han, mental processes are now the primary target of power. This means that, according to Han, biopower must give way to what he calls psychopower since perspectives that critically seek to understand neoliberalism through a biopolitical lens are no longer adequate to contemporary regimes of neoliberal achievement. This article examines and evaluates Han’s argument that Foucauldian biopolitics is obsolete in today’s (...)
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  39. Seminar on the Fragmenting Body and the freeing of Luminous Spaciousness to be Embodied.Rudolph Bauer - 2012 - Transmission 2.
    This paper beginning with a Lacanian view point describes fragmentation and the unfolding of awareness in the process of embodiment within the understanding of dzogchen.
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  40.  13
    From the body politic to the politics of the body: The biopolitical theory of Ferenc Fehér and Agnes Heller.J. F. Dorahy - 2018 - Constellations 25 (4):657-668.
  41.  58
    Heart of the matter: Bodies without organs and biopolitics in organ transplant films.Patricia Pisters - 2014 - Angelaki 19 (4):23-36.
    :In this essay I will look at four recent films that have organ transplantations “at their heart”: 21 Grams, L'Intrus, Dirty Pretty Things and Heart of Jenin. Each film in its own way shows how Nancy's concept of the intruder balances in a different dynamics between biopolitical and biophilosophical concerns and proposes in various ways a changed concept of sacrifice, transforming sacrifice from religious offering into political or ethical resistance and allowing a-religious strivings to persist.
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  42.  26
    Biopolitics in the ‘Psychic Realm’: Han, Foucault and neoliberal psychopolitics.Caroline Alphin & François Debrix - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (4):477-491.
    This article explores German Korean philosopher Byung-Chul Han’s notion of psychopolitics and his concept of the neoliberal subject. For Han, mental processes are now the primary target of power. This means that, according to Han, biopower must give way to what he calls psychopower since perspectives that critically seek to understand neoliberalism through a biopolitical lens are no longer adequate to contemporary regimes of neoliberal achievement. This article examines and evaluates Han’s argument that Foucauldian biopolitics is obsolete in today’s (...)
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  43.  17
    Biopolitics, Life, and Body… Considerations from Latin American Point of View.Luciana Alvarez - 2014 - Philosophy Study 4 (4).
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  44.  38
    From the Body of Christ to Racial Homogeneity: Carl Schmitt's Mobilization of 'Life' against 'the Spirit of Technicity'.Kathrin Braun - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (1):1 - 17.
    This article traces the semantics of ?life? and ?vitality? in Carl Schmitt up to the 1930s. It shows that Schmitt deploys these vitalist elements against the modern ?spirit of technicity? in his attempt to combat the lack of substantial ideas in modern politics. However, Schmitt himself cannot escape a fundamental political relativism. There remains an unstable tension at the heart of his thought between the quest for substance and the quest for order. The latter is relativist because it is a (...)
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  45.  14
    Governing Goods, Bodies and Minds: The Biopolitics of Spain during the Francoism.Salvador Cayuela - 2019 - Foucault Studies 26:21-41.
    In this article I am going to analyse the creation of a series of disciplinary and regulatory mechanisms aimed at increasing the State’s forces and decreasing the individual’s capacity to protest during the initial years of Franco’s regime. In order to do this, after an introductory section that presents certain concepts and methodologies, I am going to describe three areas of analysis in which the biopolitical mechanisms belonging to the Franco regime emerged: the economic sphere, the medical-social sphere and the (...)
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  46.  26
    Technics and the Human Sensorium: Rethinking Media Theory through the Body.Mark Coté - forthcoming - Theory and Event 13 (4).
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  47.  27
    Techno-aesthetic Thinking. Technicity and Symbolism in the Body.Anna Caterina Dalmasso - 2019 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 12 (1):69-84.
    This paper investigates the reciprocal implications between aesthetics and technics, to show how technicity, as a cultural and symbolic attitude, is constitutively rooted in the aesthetic dimension of human experience. The analysis conducted aims to bring into focus the originarity of technicity in the development of the living body, understood in its inseparable connection with the mind, as junction between the sensible and the symbolic, the organic and the cultural, the perceptive and the expressive. I address this question through (...)
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  48.  14
    Women's Bodies Between National Hospitality and Domestic Biopolitics.Rosalyn Diprose - 2009 - Paragraph 32 (1):69-86.
    This paper develops a political ontology of hospitality from the philosophies of Arendt, Derrida and Levinas, paying particular attention to the gendered, temporal, and corporeal dimensions of hospitality. Arendt's claim, that central to the human condition and democratic plurality is the welcome of ‘natality’, is used to argue that the more that this hospitality becomes conditional under conservative political forces, the more that the time that it takes is given by women without acknowledgement or support. Women's bodies are thus caught (...)
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  49.  57
    Heidegger and Foucault, critics of modernity: humanism, technics and biopolitics.André Duarte - 2006 - Trans/Form/Ação 29 (2):95-114.
    I intend to discuss Foucault's and Heidegger's critical diagnosis of Modernity emphasizing its continuities. Generally speaking, it is possible to argue that in Heidegger philosophical reflection assumes itself as essentially historical, while in Foucault's case historical investigation assumes itself as an essentially philosophical task. Although recognizing the differences between Foucault's and Heidegger's general theoretical approaches, I argue that both consider that, in order to understand who we are today, it is necessary to elaborate a critical understanding of Modernity. In both (...)
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  50.  6
    Ethik und Leben: Fragmente einer Metaphysik der individuellen Existenz.Ferdinand Ebner - 2013 - Wien: Lit. Edited by Richard Hörmann & Ernst Pavelka.
    Es muss also neben der "objektiven" Biologie, die Wissenschaft im eigentlichen Sinne ist und das Leben immer nur als gewordenes nimmt, als eine in der Materie, wenn auch, bei tieferer Besinnung auf das Wesentliche organischer Vorgänge, nicht aus ihr gewordene Erfahrungstatsache, noch eine andere Lehre vom Leben geben - man mag sie, um den Gegensatz zur Wissenschaft zu betonen, eine Subjektive heissen oder, wenn man das will, eine introspektive - die zu erfassen sucht, wie das Leben im (...)
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