Results for 'Mark Hansen'

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  1. Public Stem Cell Banks.Hilary Bok Mueller Agnew, Danw Brock, Aravinda Chakravarti, Xiao-Jiang Gao, Mark Greene, John A. Hansen, Patricia A. King, Stephen J. O'brien, David H. Sachs & Kathryn E. Schill - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (6):13-27.
     
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  2.  21
    The Crime System.Julia Kristeva, Carolyn Abbate, Carlo Ginzburg, Mark Seltzer, Mark Hansen, Clark Lunberry & Dipesh Chakrabarty - 2004 - Critical Inquiry 30 (3):557.
  3.  97
    Public Stem Cell Banks: Considerations of Justice in Stem Cell Research and Therapy.Ruth R. Faden, Liza Dawson, Alison S. Bateman-House, Dawn Mueller Agnew, Hilary Bok, Dan W. Brock, Aravinda Chakravarti, Xiao-Jiang Gao, Mark Greene, John A. Hansen, Patricia A. King, Stephen J. O'Brien, David H. Sachs, Kathryn E. Schill, Andrew Siegel, Davor Solter, Sonia M. Suter, Catherine M. Verfaillie, LeRoy B. Walters & John D. Gearhart - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (6):13-27.
    If stem cell-based therapies are developed, we will likely confront a difficult problem of justice: for biological reasons alone, the new therapies might benefit only a limited range of patients. In fact, they might benefit primarily white Americans, thereby exacerbating long-standing differences in health and health care.
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  4.  61
    New Philosophy for New Media.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2004 - MIT Press.
    In New Philosophy for New Media, Mark Hansen defines the image in digital art in terms that go beyond the merely visual. Arguing that the "digital image" encompasses the entire process by which information is made perceivable, he places the body in a privileged position -- as the agent that filters information in order to create images. By doing so, he counters prevailing notions of technological transcendence and argues for the indispensability of the human in the digital era. (...) examines new media art and theory in light of Henri Bergson's argument that affection and memory render perception impure -- that we select only those images precisely relevant to our singular form of embodiment. Hansen updates this argument for the digital age, arguing that we filter the information we receive to create images rather than simply receiving images as preexisting technical forms. This framing function yields what Hansen calls the "digital image." He argues that this new "embodied" status of the frame corresponds directly to the digital revolution: a digitized image is not a fixed representation of reality, but is defined by its complete flexibility and accessibility. It is not just that the interactivity of new media turns viewers into users; the image itself has become the body's process of perceiving it.To illustrate his account of how the body filters information in order to create images, Hansen focuses on new media artists who follow a "Bergsonist vocation"; through concrete engagement with the work of artists like Jeffrey Shaw, Douglas Gordon, and Bill Viola, Hansen explores the contemporary aesthetic investment in the affective, bodily basis of vision. The book includes over 70 illustrations from the works of these and many other new media artists. (shrink)
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  5.  46
    Seeing with the Body: The Digital Image in Postphotography.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2001 - Diacritics 31 (4):54-82.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 31.4 (2001) 54-82 [Access article in PDF] Seeing With The Body The Digital Image In Postphotography Mark B. N. Hansen In a well-known scene from the 1982 Ridley Scott film Bladerunner, Rick Deckard scans a photograph into a 3-D rendering machine and directs the machine to explore the space condensed in the two-dimensional photograph as if it were three-dimensional [see fig. 1]. Following Deckard's commands to (...)
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  6.  37
    Feed-Forward: On the Future of Twenty-First-Century Media.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2014 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Prehensity -- Intensity -- Potentiality -- Sensibility.
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  7.  63
    The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty.Taylor Carman & Mark B. N. Hansen (eds.) - 2004 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty was described by Paul Ricoeur as 'the greatest of the French phenomenologists'. The essays in this volume examine the full scope of Merleau-Ponty's philosophy, from his central and abiding concern with the nature of perception and the bodily constitution of intentionality to his reflections on science, nature, art, history, and politics. The authors explore the historical origins and context of his thought as well as its continuing relevance to contemporary work in phenomenology, philosophy of mind, cognitive science, biology, (...)
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  8.  62
    Media Theory.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):297-306.
    Poised on the cusp between phenomenology and materiality, media institute a theoretical oscillation that promises to displace the empirical-transcendental divide that has structured western meditation on thinking, including the thinking of technics. Because media give the infrastructure conditioning thought without ceasing to be empirical, they form the basis for a complex hermeneutics that cannot avoid the task of accounting for its unthematizable infrastructural condition. Tracing the oscillation constitutive of such a hermeneutics as it serves variously to constitute media theory in (...)
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  9. The Embryology of the (In) visible.Mark Bn Hansen - 2004 - In Taylor Carman & Mark B. N. Hansen (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  10.  40
    Living (with) Technical Time.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (2-3):294-315.
    This article proposes that time is not so much constituted by time-consciousness as given by technical inscriptions of time. The `digital gift' of time that comprises one fundamental mode of this giving of time correlates with Aristotle's conception of time as `the number of movement according to the before and after'; more specifically, it furnishes a minimal form of temporal difference — a minimal before-after structure — that proves useful for exploring how the experience of time has changed today. The (...)
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  11.  33
    The Time of Affect, or Bearing Witness to Life.Mark Hansen - 2004 - Critical Inquiry 30 (3):584.
  12.  22
    Appearance In-Itself, Data-Propagation, and External Relationality: Towards a Realist Phenomenology of »Firstness«.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2016 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 7 (1):45-60.
    Drawing on American philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce›s »phaneroscopy«, and particularly on its point of disjunction from more orthodox phenomenology concerning the status and necessity of reception, this article argues that today’s databases phenomenalize the aesthetic dimension of worldly sensibility. Although database phenomenalizing explicitly substitutes for the phenomenalizing performed by consciousness on standard accounts of phenomenology, the important point is that it does so without severing contact with human experience. What is ultimately at stake here is the status of the phenomenon (...)
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  13.  25
    The Operational Present of Sensibility.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2015 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 24 (47).
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  14.  43
    The Ontology of Media Operations, or, Where is the Technics in Cultural Techniques?Mark B. N. Hansen - 2017 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 8 (2):169-186.
    "My aim in this paper is to develop an ontology of media operations that is rooted in Gilbert Simondon’s theory of individuation. I position this media operative ontology in contrast to Bernhard Siegert’s understanding of operative ontology as a cultural technique. Drawing on Wolfgang Ernst, Henri Atlan, and Michel Serres, I argue that Siegert’s position compromises the extra-cultural operationality of technical media, and of techniques more generally, in its bid to redirect media theory from its Kittlerian trajectory. With his theory (...)
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  15. .Taylor Carman & Mark B. N. Hansen - 2005 - Cambridge University Presscarman, Taylor.
     
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  16.  86
    Trustworthiness, Governance, and Wealth Creation.Cam Caldwell & Mark H. Hansen - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 97 (2):173 - 188.
    Although trustworthiness has been described as a source of competitive advantage, its value extends to organizational governance and wealth creation. We identify the importance of the commitment—compliance continuum in the decision to trust and note that trustworthiness is a subjective perception viewed through each person's mediating lens. That lens and each person's interpretation of the social contract impact one's commitment to cooperate. We suggest five propositions that integrate trustworthiness, governance, and wealth creation.
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  17. Appearance In-Itself, Data-Propagation, and External Relationality: Towards a Realist Phenomenology of »Firstness«.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2016 - Latest Issue of Zeitschrift Fuer Medien Und Kulturforschung 2016 (7):45-60.
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  18.  63
    Digitizing the Racialized Body or The Politics of Universal Address.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2004 - Substance 33 (2):107-133.
  19. From fixed to fluid : material-mental images between neural synchronization and computational mediation.Mark B. N. Hansen - 2011 - In Jacques Khalip, Robert Mitchell, Giorgio Agamben, Cesare Casarino, Peter Geimer & Mark Hansen (eds.), Releasing the Image: From Literature to New Media. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
     
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  20.  44
    Bernard Stiegler. What Makes Life Worth Living: On Pharmacology. Trans. Daniel Ross. Cambridge: Polity, 2013. 200 pp.For a New Critique of Political Economy. Trans. Daniel Ross. Cambridge: Polity 2010. 100 pp. [REVIEW]Mark B. N. Hansen - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 42 (2):421-422.
  21.  32
    Releasing the Image: From Literature to New Media.Jacques Khalip, Robert Mitchell, Giorgio Agamben, Cesare Casarino, Peter Geimer & Mark Hansen (eds.) - 2011 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    It has become a commonplace that "images" were central to the twentieth century and that their role will be even more powerful in the twenty-first. But what is an image and what can an image be? _Releasing the Image_ understands images as something beyond mere representations of things. Releasing images from that function, it shows them to be self-referential and self-generative, and in this way capable of producing forms of engagement beyond spectatorship and subjectivity. This understanding of images owes much (...)
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  22.  35
    Deconstructing Affect: Posthumanism and Mark Hansen’s Media Theory.David Cecchetto - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (5):3-33.
    In the context of the highly contested discourse of posthumanism, this essay examines Mark Hansen’s attempt to give a robust account of technology in its extra-linguistic dimension by evincing an ‘‘‘originary’’ coupling of the human and the technical’ that grounds experience as such (Hansen, 2006a: 9). Specifically, I argue that Hansen’s perspective is haunted by the representational logic that it moves against. In this, I do not repudiate Hansen’s argument as such, but rather reject one (...)
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  23.  29
    A new perspective on Lysenko?Nils Roll-Hansen - 1985 - Annals of Science 42 (3):261-278.
    Zhores Medvedev and Mark Popovsky have both drawn attention to the positive response on the part of the scientific community to the early work of Lysenko on the phasic development of plants. This aspect of the Lysenko Affair is explored more fully in this paper. Vavilov's sponsorship of Lysenko is set in the intellectual context of plant physiology circa 1930, and in the political climate of the pressing needs of Russian agriculture at that time. Lysenko's rise was also favoured (...)
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  24.  4
    Patterns of thanking in the closing section of UK service calls.Maj-Britt Mosegaard Hansen - 2016 - Pragmatics and Society 7 (4):664-692.
    I investigate patterns of usage of thanking formulae in the closing section of a corpus of 94 telephone calls made by tenants to a UK housing association. The data suggest that unilateral thanking is the norm when calls are institutionally and interactionally unmarked. In contrast, mutual thanking correlates mainly with the presence of interactional problems of various kinds, or, in a few cases, with features that are not problematic as such, but simply interactionally marked given the nature of the activity. (...)
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  25.  27
    Eugenics before world war II: The case of norway.Nils Roll-Hansen - 1980 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 2 (2):269 - 298.
    During the first half of the twentieth century there was a marked decline in biological conceptions of man and society. This paper describes the development of the views concerning eugenics held by the Norwegian scientific expertise, from open racism before World War I to a moderate nonracist eugenic program in the 1930's. It is claimed that public criticism of the popular eugenics movement by the experts came earlier in Norway than in most other countries, including the United States. The first (...)
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  26. Monsters of Sex: Foucault and the Problem of Life.Sarah K. Hansen - 2018 - Foucault Studies 24 (2):102-124.
    This article argues, contra-Derrida, that Foucault does not essentialize or precomprehend the meaning of life or bio- in his writings on biopolitics. Instead, Foucault problematizes life and provokes genealogical questions about the meaning of modernity more broadly. In The Order of Things, the 1974-75 lecture course at the Collège de France, and Herculine Barbin, the monster is an important figure of the uncertain shape of modernity and its entangled problems (life, sex, madness, criminality, etc). Engaging Foucault’s monsters, I show that (...)
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  27. Existential Fright or Ferocious Market Forces?: A Critique of Mark Rego's" Existential Loss Hypothesis".Jennifer Hansen - 2005 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 12 (2):129-136.
  28.  23
    Monsters of Sex: Michel Foucault and the Problem of Life.Sarah K. Hansen - 2018 - Foucault Studies 24:102-124.
    This article argues, contra-Derrida, that Foucault does not essentialize or pre-comprehend the meaning of life or bio- in his writings on biopolitics. Instead, Foucault problematizes life and provokes genealogical questions about the meaning of modernity more broadly. In The Order of Things, the 1974-75 lecture course at the Collège de France, and Herculine Barbin, the monster is an important figure of the uncertain shape of modernity and its entangled problems. Engaging Foucault’s monsters, I show that the problematization of life is (...)
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  29.  31
    Capital as Power: A Study of Order and Creorder.Bue Rübner Hansen - 2011 - Historical Materialism 19 (2):144-159.
    Nitzan and Bichler’s Capital as Power suggests that conventional theories of capitalism, Marxist and liberal alike, are unable to answer the question: what is capital? They argue that the basic units of Marxist economics, abstract labour and value, are unobservable and immeasurable, and hence ‘non-existent’ and ‘fictitious’. Against Marxists, they argue that capital is not an ‘economic’ entity, but a symbolic quantification of power.This review contends that what Nitzan and Bichler present as a critique of Marxism as such pivots on (...)
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  30.  19
    Communicative In-Betweens of Email Communication.Ejvind Hansen - 2009 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 13 (1):13-26.
    In this paper I seek to deconstruct internet-based communication. I highlight Derrida’s focus on the margins and in-betweens of communication, and relate it to the genre of e-mail. I argue (i) that the silence between the dialogic turns becomes more marked, while (ii) the separation of present and previous statements becomes less marked. The visibility of the silence between the turns (i) can be a resource for increased awareness of how communicative exchanges are shaped by self-arrangements and -presentations. The dissolution (...)
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  31.  10
    Interview with Friedrich Kittler and Mark Hansen.Nicholas Gane & Stephen Sale - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (7-8):323-329.
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  32.  23
    Jens Peter Schjødt, Initiation between Two Worlds: Structure and Symbolism in Pre-Christian Scandinavian Religion. Trans. Victor Hansen.(The Viking Collection: Studies in Northern Civilisation, 17.) Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2008. Pp. 525; tables. DKr 375. [REVIEW]Mark P. Mullane - 2010 - Speculum 85 (3):741-742.
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  33.  9
    Public opinion quarterly : Steven J. Rosenstone, John Mark Hansen, and Donald R. Kinder, measuring change in personal economic well-being, 50 (1986) 176-192.J. Scott Armstrong & Steven J. Rosenstone - 1988 - International Journal of Forecasting 4 (1).
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  34.  28
    On language: analytic, continental and historical contributions.Jon Burmeister & Mark Sentesy (eds.) - 2007 - Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    Language was at the heart of philosophical inquiry for Plato and Aristotle, and in contemporary discussion it is no less central. In addition to the history of philosophy’s extensive investigations of language, analytic and continental philosophy too have focused intensively on the matter. But since most inquiries into language remain enclosed in their own methodology, terminology, and tradition, the multiplicity of approaches is often accompanied by their mutual isolation. This book shows, however, that these traditions can speak meaningfully to each (...)
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  35.  70
    Review of Taylor Carman (ed.), Mark Hansen (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty[REVIEW]Jack Reynolds - 2005 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (9).
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  36.  39
    Mark B. N. Hansen. Feed-Forward: On the Future of Twenty-First Century Media. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015. 320 pp. [REVIEW]James J. Hodge - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 42 (2):417-418.
  37. Taylor Carman and Mark BN Hansen, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty Reviewed by.Stephen A. Noble - 2006 - Philosophy in Review 26 (6):393-397.
     
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  38.  10
    New Media Pharmacology: Hansen, Whitehead, and Worldly Sensibility.Joseph Schneider - 2019 - Theory, Culture and Society 36 (1):133-154.
    New media theorist Mark Hansen, in Feed-Forward: On the Future of Twenty-first Century Media and a series of articles, argues that the most sophisticated forms of media technology today have the capacity to broaden and enrich human experience and consciousness. Refusing the popular discourses of nonhuman and posthuman, while acknowledging yet turning away from the dystopian, he insists, using the figure of the Pharmakon and the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead, that while the balance of benefits and costs (...)
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  39. Bruce C. Clarke and Mark BN Hansen, eds, Emergence and Embodiment: New Essays in Second-Order Systems Theory.Jon Goodbun - 2011 - Radical Philosophy 165:48.
  40.  64
    The cambridge companion to Merleau-ponty - edited by Taylor Carman and mark B.n. Hansen.Katherine J. Morris - 2008 - Philosophical Books 49 (1):57-59.
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  41.  46
    Review Essay: Politics and Moving Bodies: Social Choreography: Ideology and Performance in Dance and Everyday Movement, by Andrew Hewitt. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005. 254 pp. $22.95 . Bodies in Code: Interfaces with Digital Media, by Mark B. N. Hansen. New York: Routledge, 2006. 327 pp. $24.95 . Politics of Touch: Sense, Movement, Sovereignty, by Erin Manning. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2007. 195 pp. $22.50. [REVIEW]Derek P. McCormack - 2007 - Political Theory 35 (6):816-824.
  42.  14
    Eulogy for Miriam Hansen.Gertrud Koch - 2011 - Critical Inquiry 37 (4):787-790.
    Miriam and I were born in 1949, only a month apart. The world we were born to was deeply marked by then-recent history. Our playgrounds were the rubble fields in the streets and the extended woods between Frankfurt, where I grew up, and Darmstadt, where Miriam grew up, some twenty-five miles apart.
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  43.  13
    The Surge: Turning Away from Affect.Timothy Bewes - 2018 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 12 (3):313-335.
    This essay offers a critique of the philosophical ‘turn to affect’, a formation represented here by the work of Brian Massumi and Mark Hansen. In such discourses, affect is celebrated as an entity that is inimical to conceptualisation, subjective intention and linguistic transcription. However, insofar as it boasts such qualities, affect cannot, I argue, be celebrated or made the object of a critical ‘turn’. In drawing on Deleuze's work, contemporary scholarly discourses on affect dispense with Deleuze's most profound (...)
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  44.  83
    Did buddhism ever go east?: The westernization of buddhism in Chad Hansen's daoist historiography.Douglas L. Berger - 2011 - Philosophy East and West 61 (1):38-55.
    The scholarly career of Professor Chad Hansen has been devoted in large measure to an elucidation of the relationship between the classical Chinese language and the structure and aims of pre-Qin philosophical thought. His “mass-noun” hypothesis of classical Chinese thought, his notion of dao 道 as “guiding discourse,” and his clarifications of the significance of Mohism are marked achievements from which all of us have benefited immensely. In the opening chapters of A Daoist Theory of Chinese Thought, Hansen (...)
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  45.  8
    Humanesis: Sound and Technological Posthumanism.David Cecchetto - 2013 - Minneapolis: Univ of Minnesota Press.
    _Humanesis_ critically examines central strains of posthumanism, searching out biases in the ways that human–technology coupling is explained. Specifically, it interrogates three approaches taken by posthumanist discourse: scientific, humanist, and organismic. David Cecchetto’s investigations reveal how each perspective continues to hold on to elements of the humanist tradition that it is ostensibly mobilized against. His study frontally desublimates the previously unseen presumptions that underlie each of the three thought lines and offers incisive appraisals of the work of three prominent thinkers: (...)
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  46.  16
    Le nouveau paradigme écologique.Erich Hörl - 2012 - Multitudes 51 (4):74-85.
    Résumé Notre rapport aux technologies médiatiques ne nous met pas tant en présence de nouveaux objets que de nouveaux environnements. C’est donc à partir d’une écologie générale qu’il nous faut tenter de comprendre les médias, nouveaux et anciens. Les réflexions de Félix Guattari, Gilbert Simondon, mais aussi l’agentivité environnementale de Mark Hansen ou la « struction » de Jean-Luc Nancy sont convoqués ici comme autant de pistes fécondes en direction d’une techno-écologie du sens.
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  47.  26
    Touch, Time and Technics.Dave Boothroyd - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (2-3):330-345.
    The development of immersive media-communication environments, and their theorization in terms of the `haptic', calls for a reconsideration of the relationship between sensuality and the ethics of contact. For the most part, the cultural theorization of the virtual which remains preoccupied with the visual has tended to limit its scope to the paradoxes, politics and ethics of representation. Much of media and cultural studies work, for instance, has adopted, directly or indirectly, the traditional visual and ocularcentric paradigm in its analyses (...)
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  48.  7
    Critique and the digital.Erich Hörl, Nelly Y. Pinkrah & Lotte Warnsholdt (eds.) - 2021 - Zurich: Diaphanes.
    In this volume the editors gather diverse perspectives on one agreed-upon condition: that the computational power of today's world has fundamentally transformed all aspects of this very world. This requires the investigation and questioning not only of the possible sites of critique but also of the concept of critique as such. If there used to be a critical subject constituted in the cultural techniques of modernity, and if digitality, as a condition, indicates itself as a product of modernity while at (...)
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  49.  96
    Passions and Actions: Deleuze's Cinematographic Cogito.Richard Rushton - 2008 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (2):121-139.
    When writing about cinema does Deleuze have a conception of cinema spectatorship? In New Philosophy for New Media, Mark Hansen argues that Deleuze does have a conception of cinema spectatorship but that the subjectivity central to that spectatorship is weak and impoverished. This article argues against Hansen's reductive interpretation of Deleuze. In doing so, it relies on the three syntheses of time developed in Difference and Repetition alongside an elaboration of Deleuze's notion of a ‘cinematographic Cogito’. In (...)
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  50.  19
    Emotional Experience and Religious Understanding: Integrating Perception, Conception and Feeling.Mark Wynn - 2005 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this book Mark Wynn argues that the landscape of philosophical theology looks rather different from the perspective of a re-conceived theory of emotion. In matters of religion, we do not need to opt for objective content over emotional form or vice versa. On the contrary, these strategies are mistaken at root, since form and content are not properly separable here - because 'inwardness' may contribute to 'thought-content', or because emotional feelings can themselves constitute thoughts; or because, to put (...)
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