Results for 'School space'

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  1.  11
    Schools, Space and Culinary Capital.Achala Gupta - 2023 - British Journal of Educational Studies 71 (2):237-238.
    Schools, Space and Culinary Capital addresses some of the key issues concerning social inequality and food insecurity and the relationship between the two in an empirical case of school meals in an...
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  2.  8
    School beyond school. School space management between resource regeneration and sharing.Filippo Angelucci, Michele Di Sivo & Daniela Ladiana - 2013 - Techne: Journal of Technology for Architecture and Environment 6.
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  3.  16
    Creating Space for Feminist Ethics in Medical School.Georgina D. Campelia & Ashley Feinsinger - 2020 - HEC Forum 32 (2):111-124.
    Alongside clinical practice, medical schools now confront mounting reasons to examine nontraditional approaches to ethics. Increasing awareness of systems of oppression and their effects on the experiences of trainees, patients, professionals, and generally on medical care, is pushing medical curriculum into an unfamiliar territory. While there is room throughout medical school to take up these concerns, ethics curricula are well-positioned to explore new pedagogical approaches. Feminist ethics has long addressed systems of oppression and broader structures of power. Some of (...)
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  4.  24
    Light is Space: Olafur Eliasson and the School of Seeing and Feeling in the Focus of Kant’s Aesthetics.Violetta L. Waibel - 2018 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 2018 (3):76-92.
    AbstractThe sculptor Olafur Eliasson produces works together with his team that have two main goals: first, he intends to sensitize our daily perception of the world and our surroundings, and second, Eliasson’s works are not only works of art, but they also explore nature, the physical properties of light, of energy, of water, and other elements. With the famous project Little Suns, small plastic lamps with LED light bulbs and solar cells, he contributes to the amelioration of daily life for (...)
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  5.  44
    Common schools and uncommon conversations: Education, religious speech and public spaces.Kenneth A. Strike - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (4):693–708.
    This paper discusses the role of religious speech in the public square and the common school. It argues for more openness to political theology than many liberals are willing to grant and for an educational strategy of engagement over one of avoidance. The paper argues that the exclusion of religious debate from the public square has dysfunctional consequences. It discusses Rawls’s more recent views on public reason and claims that, while they are not altogether adequate, they are consistent with (...)
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  6.  13
    Common Schools and Uncommon Conversations: Education, Religious Speech and Public Spaces.Kenneth A. Strike - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (4):693-708.
    This paper discusses the role of religious speech in the public square and the common school. It argues for more openness to political theology than many liberals are willing to grant and for an educational strategy of engagement over one of avoidance. The paper argues that the exclusion of religious debate from the public square has dysfunctional consequences. It discusses Rawls’s more recent views on public reason and claims that, while they are not altogether adequate, they are consistent with (...)
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  7.  5
    Common Schools and Uncommon Conversations: Education, Religious Speech and Public Spaces.Kenneth A. Strike - 2008-10-10 - In Mark Halstead & Graham Haydon (eds.), The Common School and the Comprehensive Ideal. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 189–204.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Religious Dialogue in the Public Square Rawls on Public Reason Engagement in the Common Schools References.
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  8.  3
    Making space for cultural equality in educational leadership: school ethos and postcolonial pedagogy.Mathew Barnard - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book foregrounds postcolonial theory as a lens through which to explore the concept of 'global heritage' and argues that the meso-level spaces of institutional ethos and cultural pedagogy must take an active role in the pursuit of cultural equality. Through interviews and accounts of observational, eampirical data, chapters draw attention to how the cultural capital of Global Majority students is institutionally positioned as a racialised and inferior cultural capital that is constantly required to 'prove itself' in the Western (...). Ultimately, the book contributes to international discussion on decolonising education and the spaces within in order to enact change, further the field, and more precisely to recognise the importance of global heritage as vital to a transformative understanding of the West's cultural identity within a globalised world. This book will appeal to scholars, researchers, and post-graduate researchers in the fields of multicultural education, school leadership, management and administration, and education policy and politics more broadly. Those interested in social justice, ideas of cultural and racial equality, and the sociology of education more broadly will also benefit from the volume. (shrink)
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  9.  61
    Lost in Space? Located in place: Geo‐phenomenological exploration and school.Ruyu Hung & Andrew Stables - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (2):193-203.
    This paper aims at revealing the various meanings of schools as more than built physical environments from a geographical-phenomenological (or ‘geo-phenomenological’) perspective. This paper consists of five sections: the first explicates the meaning of ‘geo-phenomenology’; the second reveals the meaning of ‘environment’ and a dialectics of strangeness and intimacy through geo-phenomenological analysis; the third examines the meanings of environment as ‘space’ and ‘place’ and the act of naming as the process of constructing meaning between humans and environment; the fourth (...)
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  10.  16
    Schools as social spaces: Towards an Arendtian consideration of multicultural education.Rowena Azada-Palacios - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (4-5):564-576.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  11.  13
    Lost in Space? Located in place: Geo‐phenomenological exploration and school.Andrew Stables Ruyu Hung - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (2):193-203.
    This paper aims at revealing the various meanings of schools as more than built physical environments from a geographical‐phenomenological (or ‘geo‐phenomenological’) perspective. This paper consists of five sections: the first explicates the meaning of ‘geo‐phenomenology’; the second reveals the meaning of ‘environment’ and a dialectics of strangeness and intimacy through geo‐phenomenological analysis; the third examines the meanings of environment as ‘space’ and ‘place’ and the act of naming as the process of constructing meaning between humans and environment; the fourth (...)
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  12.  8
    Tangled Up in School: Politics, Space, Bodies, and Signs in the Educational Process.Jan Nespor - 1997 - Routledge.
    Based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork in an urban elementary school, this volume is an examination of how school division politics, regional economic policies, parental concerns, urban development efforts, popular cultures, gender ideologies, racial politics, and university and corporate agendas come together to produce educational effects. Unlike conventional school ethnographies, the focus of this work is less on classrooms than on the webs of social relations that embed schools in neighborhoods, cities, states, and regions. Utilizing a (...)
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  13.  19
    Gilles Deleuze and the Space of Education: Poststructuralism, Critical Psychology, and Schooled Bodies.John R. Morss - 2004 - In James Marshall (ed.), Poststructuralism, Philosophy, Pedagogy. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 85--97.
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  14.  7
    Education research and schooling in rural Europe. An engagement with changing patterns of education, space and place.Paul Flynn - 2022 - British Journal of Educational Studies 70 (2):261-262.
    Some of the most pressing and emergent societal challenges are often exposed by researchers in the field of educational research. Education Research and Schooling in Rural Europe by Cath Gristy, Li...
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  15.  41
    War the school of space: The space of war and the war for space.Eduardo Mendieta - 2006 - Ethics, Place and Environment 9 (2):207 – 229.
    This essay seeks to show that military strategists have not only been acute philosophers of space but also philosophers of world history. The works of Albert Speer, Friedrich Ratzel, A. T. Mahan, Halford Mackinder, Carl Schmitt, Guilio Duohet, and Harlan K. Ullman are considered in terms of the ways in which space has been militarized, or rather how war spatializes world history. The geography of world history has been the topos of war.
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  16.  47
    Gifts of Time and Space: Co-educative Companionship in a Community Primary School.Joanna Haynes - 2013 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 32 (3):297-311.
    Family-focused community education implies a relational pedagogy, whereby people of different ages and experiences, including children, engage interdependently in the education of selves and others. Educational projects grow out of lived experiences and relationships, evolving in dynamic conditions of community self-organisation and self-expression, however partial and approximate, as opposed to habitual and repetitive actions. In developing educational activities through radical listening, community educators aim to reflect the character of the neighbourhood and build on local knowledge and expertise. The paper reports (...)
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  17.  15
    Philosophy as a school of life at the time of totalitarianism. Part I. Thinking in the space of Soviet myths.Serhiy Proleyev, Xenija Zborovska, Ruslan Mironenko, Olena Kostenko & Mykola Shulha - 2018 - Sententiae 37 (2):186-205.
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  18.  20
    Engaging Schooling Subjectivities Across Post-Apartheid Urban Spaces. Fataar, A. Cape Town, South Africa: Stellenbosch University Press, 2015. [REVIEW]Yunus Omar - 2016 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 52 (1):78-82.
  19.  7
    Engaging Schooling Subjectivities Across Post-Apartheid Urban Spaces. Fataar, A. Cape Town, South Africa: Stellenbosch University Press, 2015. [REVIEW]Yunus Omar - 2016 - Educational Studies 52 (1):78-82.
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  20.  14
    Student Free Speech and Schools as Public Spaces.Neil Dhingra - 2019 - Educational Theory 69 (6):657-673.
  21.  15
    Rethinking the Elementary School Learning Space.Daniel Young - 2022 - Dissertation, University of Hawai'i at Manoa
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  22.  15
    Time, Third Space, and Counternarratives of Achievement for Young Mothers in High School.Elizabeth Chase - 2018 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 54 (3):237-252.
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  23. Disrupting the spectacle of school art through collage : new art teachers and in-between spaces of possibility.Christina Hanawalt - 2019 - In Boyd White, Anita Sinner & Pauline Sameshima (eds.), Ma: materiality in teaching and learning. New York: Peter Lang Publishing.
     
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  24. A transforming pedagogic space: The school crest.Jenni Karlsson - 2015 - In Wayne Hugo (ed.), Conceptual integration and educational analysis. Cape Town, South Africa: HSRC Press.
     
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  25. Beyond Discourse? Using Deleuze and Guattari's schizoanalysis to explore affective assemblages, heterosexually striated space, and lines of flight online and at school.Jessica Ringrose - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (6):598-618.
    This paper explores how Deleuze and Guattari's philosophical concepts extend and elaborate discursive and psychoanalytic interpretations of qualitative research findings. Analyzing data from a UK research project exploring young people's engagements with Social Networking Sites (SNSs), Deleuze and Guattari's schizoanalytic method is drawn upon to consider complex desire-flows in the social. In particular the notion of ‘affective assemblages’ is developed to explore the relationships between school and online spaces and subjective interfacing with these spaces. The paper suggests online (...) is heterosexually striated and SNSs create new intensified gendered and sexualized identities and affective relations between young people. Investigating the case study of a teen girl, Louise, who is socially rejected through the affective assemblage of the SNS, then pathologized at school for violently retaliating against being called a ‘fat slag’ online, the paper suggests a Deleuzoguattarian analysis offers new theoretical tools for thinking about discursive subjectification but also for mapping complex desire-flows and micro movements through and against discursive/symbolic norms. (shrink)
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  26.  37
    Developing a Framework of System Change between Diametric and Concentric Spaces for Early School Leaving Prevention.Paul Downes - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (9).
    A ‘spatial turn’ is observed as taking place across a range of disciplines. This article discusses the relevance of this ‘spatial turn’ to the issue of early school leaving prevention and engagement of marginalised students and their parents within the educational system and other support services. Building on reconceptualisation of an aspect of structural anthropology a specific dynamic spatial interaction between diametric and concentric structures of relation is proposed. Reification is interpreted as involving a diametric space of assumed (...)
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  27.  17
    Revisiting ‘blackboard’: Transformation of medium, space and pedagogy in school education.Lin Li - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (7):773-786.
    Appeared as a ‘low-tech’ yet significant teaching aid in the modern classroom, the blackboard has greatly shaped the medium, space and pedagogy of school education. Over the past two centuries, ‘blackboard’ itself has also been constantly remoulded in terms of its colour, material and function, from the traditional black wooden surface to the interactive digital screen, which requires comprehensive investigations from historical, technological and educational perspectives. This essay synthesizes approaches applied in three dimensions. First is the material and (...)
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  28.  22
    Activating Built Pedagogy: A genealogical exploration of educational space at the University of Auckland Epsom Campus and Business School.Kirsten Locke - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (6):596-607.
    Inspired by a new teaching initiative that involved a redesign of conventional classroom spaces at the University of Auckland’s Epsom Campus, this article considers the relationship between architecture, the built environment and education. It characterises the teaching space of the Epsom Campus as the embodiment of educational policy following its inception in the early 1970s. Heralded as a modernist work of architecture juxtaposing material and textural combinations, the Epsom Campus emerged as a metaphorical vanguard of teaching pedagogy that stood (...)
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  29.  30
    Space, time, and gravitation.Arthur Stanley Eddington - 1929 - New York,: Harper.
    PREFACE: - BY his theory of relativity Albert Einstein has provoked a revolution of thought in physical science. The achievement consists essentially in this Einstein has succeeded in separating far more completely than hitherto the share of the observer and the share of external nature in the things we see happen. The perception of an object by an observer depends on his own situation and circumstances for example, distance will make it appear smaller and dimmer. We make allowance for this (...)
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  30.  28
    Totalitarian Space and the Destruction of Aura.Saladdin Ahmed - 2019 - Albany, NY, USA: SUNY Press.
    We live today within a system in which state and corporate power aim to render space flat, transparent, and uniform, for only then can it be truly controlled. The gaze of power and the commodity form are capable of infiltrating even the darkest of corners, and often, we invite them into our most private spaces. We do so as a matter of convenience, but also to placate ourselves and cope with the alienation inherent in our everyday lives. The resulting (...)
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  31.  49
    Conversation in Place and About Place: Response to Chimakonam, “Conversational Philosophy as a New School of Thought in African Philosophy: A Conversation with Bruce Janz on the Concept of “Philosophical Space”.Bruce Janz - 2016 - Journal of World Philosophies 1 (1):41-50.
    I respond to Jonathan Chimakonam’s paper in which he presents an approach to dialogue in philosophical space, and raises questions about my own approach. I raise four questions to his understanding of conversation. First, I ask him for more details on his conception of conversation. Second, what happens if not everyone cares to enter into conversation? Third, is conversation a prerequisite to philosophy, or a part of philosophy? And fourth, how does wonder fit into conversation in and about place?
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  32.  33
    A queer geography of a school: Landscapes of safe spaces.Mel Mel Freitag - 2013 - Confero Essays on Education Philosophy and Politics 1 (2):123-161.
  33.  19
    Espaços outros que convivem nas escolas: heterotopias / Other spaces in the schools – heterotopias.Deborah Vier Fischer & Angelica Vier Munhoz - 2020 - Conjectura: Filosofia E Educação 25:020017.
    Este ensaio tem por objetivo pensar a escola como espaço vivo, produtor de heterotopias, conceito abordado por Foucault. As heterotopias, na perspectiva de Foucault, são espaços outros que convivem no espaço instituído, nos espaços de invenção que não podem ser controlados, justamente por não estarem previstos. Foram primeiramente pensadas como um efeito de linguagem, conforme encontramos no prefácio de As palavras e as coisas, obra publicada em 1966. O conceito é retomado em suas conferências radiofônicas, publicadas em 1984 com o (...)
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  34.  17
    Time, space and the scholarly habitus: Thinking through the phenomenological dimensions of field.Megan Watkins - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (13):1240-1248.
    This article engages critically with Bourdieu’s notion of field. It questions the emphasis that Bourdieu places on what he terms ‘objective relations’ at the expense of the actual relations of those within a field. This not only involves relations between human actors but the interactions of humans with the non-human such as inanimate objects that over time, and in particular spaces, engender certain forms of embodiment. The intention of the article is to think through these phenomenological dimensions of field. It (...)
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  35.  50
    From schools to learning environments: the dark side of being exceptional.Maarten Simons & Jan Masschelein - 2008 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 42 (3-4):687-704.
    Schools and classrooms, as well as the work place and the Internet, are considered today as learning environments . People are regarded as learners and the main target of school education has become 'learning' pupils and students how to learn. The roles of teachers and lecturers are redefined as instructors, designers of (powerful) learning environments and facilitators or coaches of learning processes. The aim of this paper is to argue that the current self-understanding in terms of learning environments is (...)
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  36.  63
    Space of Culture: Towards a Neo Kantian Philosophy Culture.Sebastian Luft - 2015 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Sebastian Luft explores the philosophy of culture championed by the Marburg School of Neo-Kantianism. Following a historical trajectory from Hermann Cohen to Paul Natorp and through to Ernst Cassirer, he defends the attractiveness of a philosophical culture in the transcendental vein.
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  37.  11
    The School Garden: A Social and Emotional Place.Susan Pollin & Carolin Retzlaff-Fürst - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    School gardens are part of many schools. Especially in primary schools, but also in secondary schools, they are used as a learning space and experience space for the pupils. Their importance for the development of cognitive and emotional-affective abilities of pupils is empirically well proven. It is also empirically well proven that exposure to nature has an influence on the prosocial behavior of children and adults. However, there is a lack of studies investigating the effect of the (...)
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  38.  15
    School Tourism Management in Peru: a comparative study in San Pedro Chanel and Carlos Augusto Salaverry.Cristina Pamela García Trasmonte, Priscila E. Lujan-Vera, Lucia-Viviana Patiño-García, Marlon Martín Mogollón Taboada, Joyce Mamani Cornejo & Luis Arnaldo Cruz García - 2023 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 21 (1):125-133.
    School tourism constitutes a source of learning to strengthen the cultural identity of students. The objective was to compare the development of school tourism in the educational institutions San Pedro Chanel and Carlos Augusto Salaverry. The Leiper space approach was used. The exhibition was constituted by 200 high school students and 20 teachers. The results show that there is statistically significant differences regarding the knowledge of the tourist resources of the province of Sullana. It was concluded (...)
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  39.  17
    Space of Culture: Towards a Neo Kantian Philosophy Culture.Sebastian Luft - 2015 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK.
    Sebastian Luft presents and defends the philosophy of culture championed by the Marburg School of Neo-Kantianism. Following a historical trajectory from Hermann Cohen to Paul Natorp and through to Ernst Cassirer, this book makes a systematic case for the viability and attractiveness of a philosophical culture in a transcendental vein, in the manner in which the Marburgers intended to broaden Kant's approach.
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  40. School and the future of schole: A preliminary dialogue.Walter Omar Kohan & David Knowles Kennedy - 2014 - Childhood and Philosophy 10 (19):199-216.
    This conversation offers a discussion of the meaning, sense and social function of school, both as an institution and as a time-space for the practice of schole . It also discusses the different types of Greek time : Schole is, as aion or childhood, a further emergence, a radicalization of school as an experimental zone of subjectivity and of collectivity. Schole is, as aion or childhood, a further emergence, a radicalization of school as an experimental zone (...)
     
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  41. No school manifesto: a movement of creative education.Ilse Ouwens, Fabiola Camuti, Betje Stevens & Matthijs Andriessen (eds.) - 2020 - Amsterdam: Valiz.
    No School Manifesto' is a book that serves as a key reference and inspiration for people working in (creative) education, ranging from teachers and school leaders at informal, secondary and vocational education and academies to museum educators, artists (in the broadest sense of the word), policy makers, and everyone who supports education and has an interest in developing new perspectives through creativity. No School is a movement that wants to open up the meaning of learning and fundamentally (...)
     
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  42.  17
    A Space of One’s Own: Barbosa du Bocage, the Foundation of the National Museum of Lisbon, and the Construction of a Career in Zoology.Daniel Gamito-Marques - 2018 - Journal of the History of Biology 51 (2):223-257.
    This paper discusses the life and scientific work of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage, a nineteenth-century Portuguese naturalist who carved a new place for zoological research in Portugal and built up a prestigious scientific career by securing appropriate physical and institutional spaces to the discipline. Although he was appointed professor of zoology at the Lisbon Polytechnic School, an institution mainly devoted to the preparatory training of military officers and engineers, he succeeded in creating the conditions that allowed him to (...)
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  43.  10
    Type space functors and interpretations in positive logic.Mark Kamsma - 2023 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 62 (1):1-28.
    We construct a 2-equivalence \(\mathfrak {CohTheory}^{op }\simeq \mathfrak {TypeSpaceFunc}\). Here \(\mathfrak {CohTheory}\) is the 2-category of positive theories and \(\mathfrak {TypeSpaceFunc}\) is the 2-category of type space functors. We give a precise definition of interpretations for positive logic, which will be the 1-cells in \(\mathfrak {CohTheory}\). The 2-cells are definable homomorphisms. The 2-equivalence restricts to a duality of categories, making precise the philosophy that a theory is ‘the same’ as the collection of its type spaces (i.e. its type (...) functor). In characterising those functors that arise as type space functors, we find that they are specific instances of (coherent) hyperdoctrines. This connects two different schools of thought on the logical structure of a theory. The key ingredient, the Deligne completeness theorem, arises from topos theory, where positive theories have been studied under the name of coherent theories. (shrink)
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  44.  30
    Space, Time and the Ethical Foundations.Robert Elliott Allinson - 2002 - Ashgate Publishing.
    Anthony C. Yu, Carl Buck Distinguished Professor in Humanities, Chairman, Division of East Asian Languages, University of Chicago, Divinity School, writes: "Robert Allinson's book represents tremendous thoughtfulness, originality, and erudition. Its wide-ranging and lucid discussions cover a huge terrain, from ancient metaphysics to quantum mechanics. The enlistment of certain classical Confucian concepts and themes at critical junctures to advance the book's argument also provides luminous comparison. His interpretation of the Confucian emphasis on life as social and self-preservation is both (...)
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  45.  6
    Space, Time, and Mechanics: Basic Structures of a Physical Theory.D. Mayr & G. Süssmann - 1982 - Springer.
    In connection with the "Philosophy of Science" research program conducted by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft a colloquium was held in Munich from 18th to 20th May 1919. This covered basic structures of physical theories, the main emphasis being on the interrelation of space, time and mechanics. The present volume contains contributions and the results of the discussions. The papers are given here in the same order of presentation as at the meeting. The development of these "basic structures of physical theories" (...)
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  46.  20
    Space in Hellenistic Philosophy: Critical Studies in Ancient Physics.Christoph Horn, Christoph Helmig & Graziano Ranocchia (eds.) - 2014 - Boston: De Gruyter.
    The volume discusses the notion of space by focusing on the most representative exponents of the Hellenistic schools and explores the role played by spatial concepts in both coeval and later authors who, without specifically thematising these concepts, made use of them in a theoretically original way. Renowned scholars investigate the philosophical significance and bring to light the problematical character of the ancient conceptions of space.
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  47.  97
    Is space created?: Reflections on śaṇkara's philosophy and philosophy of physics.Jonathan Duquette & K. Ramasubramanian - 2010 - Philosophy East and West 60 (4):517-533.
    Here the concept of "space" is discussed from two different streams of thought: the view held by Advaita Vedānta, as expounded by Śaṇkara, and the view that emerges from the ongoing debates in modern philosophy of physics. The emphasis is on addressing the following question: is space created or not? To set the necessary backdrop for a better appreciation of the debate that evolved within the Indian tradition, we first examine how the Vaiśeṣika and Sāṃkhya schools of thought (...)
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  48.  19
    Schooling Bodies to Read and Write: A Technosomatic Perspective.Joris Vlieghe - 2016 - Educational Theory 66 (4):441-455.
    In this article Joris Vlieghe defends the view that technologies of reading and writing are more than merely instruments that support education, arguing that these technologies themselves decide what education is all about and that they form subjectivity in substantial ways. Expanding on insights taken from media theory, Vlieghe uses the work of Bernard Stiegler in order to develop a “technosomatic” account of literacy initiation, that is, a perspective that zooms in on the physical dimensions of how to operate writing (...)
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  49.  79
    Space, difference, everyday life: reading Henri Lefebvre.Henri Lefebvre - 2008 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Kanishka Goonewardena.
    In the past fifteen years, Henri Lefebvre's reputation has catapulted into the stratosphere, and he is now considered an equal to some of the greats of European social theory (Bourdieu, Deleuze, Harvey). In particular, his work has revitalized urban studies, geography and planning via concepts like; the social production of space, the right to the city, everyday life, and global urbanization. Lefebvre's massive body of work has generated two main schools of thought: one that is political economic, and another (...)
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  50.  50
    Anarchism, Schooling, and Democratic Sensibility.David Kennedy - 2016 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 36 (5):551-568.
    This paper seeks to address the question of schooling for democracy by, first, identifying at least one form of social character, dependent, after Marcuse, on the historical emergence of a “new sensibility.” It then explores one pedagogical thread related to the emergence of this form of subjectivity over the course of the last two centuries in the west, and traces its influence in the educational counter-tradition associated with philosophical anarchism, which is based on principles of dialogue and social reconstruction as (...)
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