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  1. Thinking with Excerpts: John Locke (1632–1704) and his Notebooks.Richard Yeo - 2020 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 43 (2):180-202.
    In his “Méthode nouvelle,” an anonymous article in the Bibliothèque universelle of 1686, John Locke described his way of collecting excerpts in notebooks and retrieving relevant entries. The well‐known practice of entering textual passages in commonplace books sits uneasily with Locke's criticism of received opinion and authority. Is it possible that he used any of these notes to think with? I suggest that the conditions for this were provided by Locke's interactions with some of his notes, including those which recorded (...)
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  • The Study of Notes and Notebooks: Some Epistemological and Ontological Issues.Anton Crișan - 2023 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia 68 (3):41-56.
    "The aim of the present paper is to situate the recent attempts to study the phenomena of knowledge management in a larger epistemological context. More precisely, I intend to look at it from the perspective of the philosophy of the humanities. This involves understanding it as an endeavor concerned with the search for regularities. As a result, key notions figuring in the repertoire of this kind of undertaking, primarily those of notes and notebooks, are scrutinized for the purpose of revealing (...)
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  • Lockean Natural History and the Revivification of Post-Truth Objects.Piper W. Corp - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (2):117-141.
    ABSTRACT Post-truth, understood as a turn from collective sense and judgment to nonpublic forms of epistemic justification, is a distinctly rhetorical problem. This article offers, in response, a theorization of knowledge making as the means by which affective and material impingements upon bodies become publicly legible and rhetorically available. For this, the author turns, perhaps unexpectedly, to John Locke. Locke’s works offer the foundations of an empirical theory of rhetoric that embraces the sensible realm not as a conduit to reality (...)
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