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  1. Accelerated aesthetics: Paul Virilio's the vision machine.John Armitage - 1997 - Angelaki 2 (3):199 – 209.
  • Beyond Enlightenment?Couze Venn - 1997 - Theory, Culture and Society 14 (3):1-28.
  • Ethico-political engagement and the self-constituting subject in Foucault.Lenka Ucnik - 2018 - Ethics and Bioethics (in Central Europe) 8 (1-2):63-79.
    Foucault is critical of the tendency to reduce all social and political problems according to predetermined ends and verifiable procedures. For Foucault, philosophical activity is a condition of possibility for the articulation of the question of the self. Inspired by his work on the desiring subject, Foucault begins to explore the ethical and political implications of self-care for modern day concerns. He presents an account of self-care that centres on developing an attitude that questions the personal relationship to truth, and (...)
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  • Critique as Virtue: Buddhism, Foucault, and the Ethics of Critique.Saul Tobias - 2021 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 13 (3):258-274.
    ABSTRACT This article examines Michel Foucault’s views concerning the ethical salience of critique and compares those views to the Buddhist Madhyamaka tradition. As a critic of the Enlightenment, Foucault’s approach to ethics vacillated between deconstructing moral concepts such as “self” and “freedom,” and affirming them as the basis of an ethics conceived as “self-fashioning.” Madhyamaka thought provides a critical account of social reality that resonates with Foucault, particularly concerning the emancipatory potential of critique, but it arrives at different ethical conclusions, (...)
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  • Action and Noise Over a Hundred Years: The Making of a Nature Region.David Matless - 2000 - Body and Society 6 (3-4):141-165.
    This article explores the cultures of nature and the body in the Norfolk Broads region of eastern England, where relations of body and nature are central to culture and economy. Themes of moral geography and history are shown to run through the production of Broadland as a nature region over the past 100 years. The article discusses the contrasting presentation of the region as a space of improving and non-improving pleasure, the assertion of the former entailing a rejection of the (...)
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  • Foucault, ethics and dialogue.Michael Gardiner - 1996 - History of the Human Sciences 9 (3):27-46.
  • The ethics of Foucault and Ricoeur: an underrepresented discussion in nursing.Don Flaming - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (3):220-227.
    Paul Ricoeur and Michel Foucault enjoy a privileged status in nursing academia as two thinkers who influence both nursing research and philosophical explorations of nursing practice. Most nurse authors, however, focus only on the earlier works of these two philosophers and, for example, base qualitative research methodologies on Foucault's genealogy and Ricoeur's hermeneutics. In their later years, both these writers talk more explicitly about being an ethical self. Ideas from their earlier writing is evident in their writing on ethics and (...)
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