Results for 'Erotics'

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  1.  22
    The Erotic Work of Art is Also Sacred.Sydni Zastre - 2019 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 10 (2).
    The Viennese obsession with sex at the fin-de-siècle was vividly expressed in the artworks of Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele. Their depictions of women demonstrated their fascination with and fear of female sexual pleasure and desire, reflecting a wider societal anxiety and erotic fixation. This paper will analyse selected paintings and drawings by both Klimt and Schiele to explore this dynamic of 'erotic neurasthenia.'.
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  2. Audre Lorde’s Erotic as Epistemic and Political Practice.Caleb Ward - 2023 - Hypatia 38 (4):896–917.
    Audre Lorde’s account of the erotic is one of her most widely celebrated contributions to political theory and feminist activism, but her explanation of the term in her brief essay “Uses of the Erotic” is famously oblique and ambiguous. This article develops a detailed, textually grounded interpretation of Lorde’s erotic, based on an analysis of how Lorde’s essay brings together commitments expressed across her work. I describe four integral elements of Lorde’s erotic: feeling, knowledge, power, and concerted action. The erotic (...)
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  3.  51
    Erotic Art.Hans Maes - 2014 - Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy.
    What is erotic art? Do all paintings with a sexual theme qualify as erotic? How to distinguish between erotica and erotic art? In what way are aesthetic experiences related to, or different from, erotic experiences and are they at all compatible? Both people and works of art can be sensually appealing, but is the beauty in each case substantially the same? How helpful is the distinction between the nude and the naked? Can we draw a strict line between erotic art (...)
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  4.  61
    Erotic Art as Proprioceptive Art.Jiri Benovsky - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (2):247-258.
    The philosophical discussion about erotic art has often been understood in terms of the possibility of erotic art as a form of visual or auditory art. In this article, I focus on erotic experiences qua proprioceptive experiences and I defend the claim that, under the right circumstances, such experiences can bring about proprioceptive artworks.
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  5. Erotic art and pornographic pictures.Jerrold Levinson - 2005 - Philosophy and Literature 29 (1):228-240.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Erotic Art and Pornographic PicturesJerrold LevinsonOnly in primitive art, with its urgent need to evoke the sources of fertility, are the phallus and the vulva emphasized, as it were innocently. By ancient Greek and Roman times there already existed the special category of the pornographic—graphic art or writing supposed, like a harlot, or porne, to sexually stimulate.1IAS REGARDS PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS of the opposition between the erotic and the pornographic, (...)
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  6.  11
    The erotic/aesthetic quality seen from the perspective of Levinas’s ethical an-archaeology.Srđan Maraš - 2020 - Filozofija I Društvo 31 (1):98-107.
    This paper emphasizes the place and the role of the aesthetic quality and the role of the erotic in Levinas’s project that deals with ethical an-archaeology. Despite Levinas’s categorical statements that there are irreconcilable differences between ethics and aesthetics, i.e. between ethics and the erotic, above all, it is emphasized here that these differences do not represent a stark or sharp contrast, but quite contrary, they often constitute a subversive ontological element. On the other hand, somewhat unexpectedly, with its ethical (...)
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  7.  32
    Socrates’ Erotic Educational Methods.Hege Dypedokk Johnsen - 2019 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 53 (2):309-322.
    Socrates is famous for claiming that ‘I know one thing: That I know nothing’. There is one subject that Socrates repeatedly claims to have expertise in, however: ta erôtika. Socrates also refers to this expertise as his erôtikê technê, which may be translated as ‘erotic expertise’. I argue that the purposes this expertise serve are, to a significant extent, educational in nature: Socrates has certain erotic educational methods that participate in his expertise on erôs. In addition, I suggest that Socrates (...)
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  8. The erotic phenomenon.Jean-Luc Marion - 2007 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    While humanists have pondered the subject of love to the point of obsessiveness, philosophers have steadfastly ignored it. One might wonder whether the discipline of philosophy even recognizes love. The word philosophy means “love of wisdom,” but the absence of love from philosophical discourse is curiously glaring. So where did the love go? In The Erotic Phenomenon, Jean-Luc Marion asks this fundamental question of philosophy, while reviving inquiry into the concept of love itself. Marion begins his profound and personal book (...)
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  9.  58
    Erotic Wisdom: Philosophy and Intermediacy in Plato's Symposium.Gary Alan Scott & William A. Welton - 2008 - Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. Edited by William A. Welton.
    Erotic Wisdom provides a careful reading of one of Plato's most beloved dialogues, the Symposium, which explores the nature and scope of human desire (erôs). Gary Alan Scott and William A. Welton engage all of the dialogue's major themes, devoting special attention to illuminating Plato's conception of philosophy. In the Symposium, Plato situates philosophy in an intermediate (metaxu) position--between need and resource, ignorance and knowledge--showing how the very lack of what one desires can become a guiding form of contact with (...)
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  10.  5
    Can erotic capital subvert masculine economy? Aesthetic work and the post-feminist approach to economics / ¿Puede el capital erótico subvertir la economía masculina? Aesthetic work y el enfoque postfeminista hacia la economía.Alicia Valdés Lucas - 2019 - Recerca.Revista de Pensament I Anàlisi 24 (2):87-108.
    The aim of this article is to elucidate whether and how the theory of erotic capital may function as a feminist tool to subvert the hierarchies and relations in current economy in favour of the empowerment and liberation of women. Thus, by analyzing the ways in which white, liberal feminism directly constructs its claims and petitions through the absorption of liberal epistemological dogmas, we intend to search the direct relation between the ideology developed by white, cisgender feminists and liberal economics (...)
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  11. The Erotics of Sacrifice in the Qur'anic Tale of Abel and Cain.Mahdi Tourage - 2011 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 5 (2).
    Taking a cue from Slavoj Zizek’s reading of the Qur’anic tale of the two sons of Adam, Abel and Cain, this paper examines an overlooked erotic layer of meaning archived in the key Qur’anic term for sacrifice; it also explores the nexus of eroticism and sacrifice in this tale. At the beginning of this text the Qur’an announces that the “truth” of this story will be told. However, that truth turns out to be the symbolic absence of the truth, allowing (...)
     
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  12.  16
    Erotic Welfare: Sexual Theory and Politics in the Age of Epidemic.Iris Marion Young - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (3):184-193.
    In this essay I follow one argument strand from Linda Singer's Erotic Welfare. How can we have a forward-looking and affirmative ideal of sexual freedom when the AIDS panic has altered the sexual landscape and instigated new justifications for oppressive sexual disciplines? How can we be sexual subjects when processes of commodification and disciplinary practices have constrained sexual expression while proliferating sexual fetishes? These are some of the questions this book formulates, without answering.
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  13.  23
    Erotic Ascent.Stanley Rosen - 1994 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 17 (1-2):37-57.
    What follows is a self-contained excerpt from a work in progress, namely, a reconsideration of the Platonic doctrine of Eros, together with a commentary on the non-erotic paradigm of the philosopher to be found in the Theaetetus and Phaedo. My intention is to arrive at a comprehensive understanding of the Platonic view of the philosophical life on the one hand and of the relation binding the so-called Ideas of beauty and the good with truth on the other.
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  14.  4
    Erotic Perception: Philosophical Portraits.James Waddell - 1997 - Upa.
    This book shows that scientific explanations fall short of providing an exhaustive explanation of the dynamics of erotic perception. It furnishes portraits from Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, and Irigaray that help us understand the ethical, ontological, and religious dimensions of the pleasure, pain, hostility, shame, immodesty, tenderness, caring, and playfulness that compose erotic perception. The final portrait in the book portrays erotic perception as a challenge to existence. This portrait shows that the discernment of the other as sexually significant gives rise (...)
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  15.  21
    Erotion: Puella Delicata?.P. Watson - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (01):253-.
    Martial's epigrams on the dead slave-child Erotion, especially the first and third , have generally given rise to sentimental comments about the poet's love for young children or the humane concern which he displays for his slaves. Scholars show less unanimity in their interpretation of the second piece , where the poet's laudatio of his lost puella is made the occasion of a joke against Paetus, who has managed to survive the loss of his noble and wealthy wife. The poem (...)
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  16.  27
    Erotic Attunement: Parenthood and the Ethics of Sensuality between Unequals by Cristina L. H. Traina.Sandra Sullivan-Dunbar - 2014 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34 (1):240-241.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Erotic Attunement: Parenthood and the Ethics of Sensuality between Unequals by Cristina L. H. TrainaSandra Sullivan-DunbarErotic Attunement: Parenthood and the Ethics of Sensuality between Unequals CRISTINA L. H. TRAINA Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011, 363 pp. $55.00In this ambitious and broadly interdisciplinary work, Cristina Traina begins from an experience that evades contemporary discussion: maternal sensual pleasure in the care of infants and young children. As Traina notes, (...)
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  17.  40
    Erotic welfare: sexual theory and politics in the age of epidemic.Linda Singer - 1993 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Judith Butler & Maureen MacGrogan.
    A trenchant critique of sexuality in an age of discipline, where bodies and pleasures have become sites of regulatory power.
  18.  75
    Erotic Virtue.Lauren Ware - 2015 - Res Philosophica 92 (4):915-935.
    This paper defends an account of how erotic love works to develop virtue. It is argued that love drives moral development by holding the creation of virtue in the individual as the emotion’s intentional object. After analyzing the distinction between passive and active accounts of the object of love, this paper demonstrates that a Platonic virtue-ethical understanding of erotic love—far from being consumed with ascetic contemplation—offers a positive treatment of emotion’s role in the attainment and social practice of virtue.
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  19.  7
    The Erotic Bird: Phenomenology in Literature.Maurice Natanson - 2021 - Princeton University Press.
    How does literature illuminate the way we live? Maurice Natanson, a prominent champion of phenomenology, draws upon this method's unique power to show how fiction can highlight aspects of experience that are normally left unexamined. By exploring the structure of the everyday world, Natanson reveals the "uncanny" that lies at the core of the ordinary. Phenomenology--which involves the questioning of that which we usually take for granted--is for Natanson the essence of philosophy. Drawing upon his philosophical predecessors Edmund Husserl, Alfred (...)
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  20.  16
    Disney boys to men: erotic gaze and masculine gender capital of former Disney boy actors.Steven Dashiell - 2023 - Journal for Cultural Research 27 (4):355-373.
    This research examines the nature of gender presentation of men who were the stars on Disney Channel shows. Research has already examined how young women who were Disney stars become quickly sexualised and perceived as women under the male gaze. However, there is little corresponding research on boys who are subject to the scrutiny of the public. I engage in a phenomenological content analysis of the social media of three adult male actors who starred on the show Wizards of Waverly (...)
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  21.  30
    Erotic subset for the Nencki Affective Picture System : cross-sexual comparison study.Małgorzata Wierzba, Monika Riegel, Anna Pucz, Zuzanna Leśniewska, Wojciech Ł Dragan, Mateusz Gola, Katarzyna Jednoróg & Artur Marchewka - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  22. An Erotic Pattern of Thinking in Anselm’s Proslogion.D. Walz Matthew - 2011 - Quaestiones Disputatae 2 (1-2):126-145.
    Anselm’s 'Proslogion' is, as he says in its Preface, 'unum argumentum', a single line of reasoning, that builds toward the following: “that God is truly,” “that he is the highest good who needs no other,” and that he is the one “whom all things need so that they may be and may be well.” This paper attempts to shed light on how Anselm carries out the threefold task that he sets for himself and way in which his procedure brings unity (...)
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  23.  14
    Female erotic desire.Tereza Škubalová - 2018 - Human Affairs 28 (3):240-252.
    This paper explores the epistemology and methodology for describing sexual/erotic desire in women. Culture provides a variety of discourses which create possibilities for individual agents to think, experience and act. This paper outlines the dominant discourses of sexuality. The main focus is on the emerging psychodynamic understanding of erotic desire as a cultivated way of experiencing and expressing intersubjective embodied desire. The story of a female research participant has been selected to illustrate the journey from undifferentiated physical and mental experiences (...)
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  24.  7
    Deux Érotes et un lion sur un embléma délien.Anne-Marie Guimier-Sorbets - 2012 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 136 (1):407-419.
    Le réexamen des trois fragments d’embléma provenant de l’étage de la maison IV B du Quartier du théâtre à Délos montre qu’ils ne peuvent appartenir à un seul Éros en vol, comme cela avait été proposé lors de leur publication. La mise en série de plusieurs parallèles connus en Italie permet de reconstituer le sujet de la scène – des Érotes jouant avec un lion entravé – et de proposer une nouvelle interprétation pour le fragment C (patte de lion plutôt (...)
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  25.  7
    Erotic faith: desire, transformation, and beloved community in the incarnational theology of Wendy Farley.Mari Kim, Ellen T. Armour, Mount Shoop & W. Marcia (eds.) - 2022 - Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications.
    The thought of contemporary North American theologian and ethicist Wendy Farley is an unflinching clarion call to justice and compassion. Farley invites us to discover ways of embodying the deep compassion capable of resisting pernicious distortions and traumatizing injustices that harm and dehumanize us all. This volume of essays embodies her invitation to awaken as beloved community. And when we are overwhelmed by the magnitude of struggle and despair, Farley reminds us that the powerful longing of hope, at times against (...)
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  26.  13
    The Erotic Phenomenon.Stephen E. Lewis (ed.) - 2006 - University of Chicago Press.
    While humanists have pondered the subject of love to the point of obsessiveness, philosophers have steadfastly ignored it. One might wonder whether the discipline of philosophy even recognizes love. The word _philosophy _means “love of wisdom,” but the absence of love from philosophical discourse is curiously glaring. So where did the love go? In _The Erotic Phenomenon,_ Jean-Luc Marion asks this fundamental question of philosophy, while reviving inquiry into the concept of love itself. Marion begins his profound and personal book (...)
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  27.  31
    The Erotics of Philosophical Discourse.David L. Roochnik - 1987 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 4 (2):117 - 129.
  28.  7
    The erotic element in the rewriting of the conquest and discovery of America in Abel Posse’s Daimón.Christian René Rivera R. - 2021 - Alpha (Osorno) 53:153-167.
    Resumen: El presente estudio tiene como finalidad el análisis e interpretación del componente erótico en la novela Daimón. Bajo este presupuesto teórico, se promueve un enfoque contradiscursivo en el que América es transfigurada en espacio erótico, donde el tiempo pagano se superpone a la temporalidad oficial, desatando una crítica continua que desafía lo que se considera como la verdad oficial de los hechos.: The article is an analysis and interpretation of the erotic element in the novel Daimón. Based on this (...)
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  29.  12
    The Erotic and the Political: The Somaesthetics of Sex in Social.Crispin Sartwell - 2021 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 5 (4):152-155.
    Preview: /Commentary: Richard Shusterman, Ars Erotica: Sex and Somaesthetics in the Classical Arts of Love, 436 pages./ Richard Shusterman’s work is remarkable, among other things, for extending the range and power of the discipline of aesthetics, conceived by him as fundamental to many dimensions of human experience. Indeed, he has driven aesthetics into entirely new ranges of phenomena and strategies for research, and also perhaps returned to an ancient sense of the centrality of aesthetic concepts such as beauty to virtually (...)
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  30.  24
    Erotic Liberalism: Women and Revolution in Montesquieu's Persian Letters.Diana J. Schaub - 1995 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    A treatment of Montesquieu's Persian Letters, which argues that the novel is a philosophic critique of despotism in all its forms: domestic, political and religious. It shows that Montesquieu believed that the Enlightenment failed as a philosophy by not recognising man as an erotic being.
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  31.  26
    Erotics or Hermeneutics?: Nehamas and Gadamer on Beauty and Art.Daniel L. Tate - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 2 (1):7-29.
    ABSTRACTAlthough grounded in different philosophical traditions, Alexander Nehamas and Hans-Georg Gadamer each return to Plato's idea of the beautiful, to kalon, in order to reclaim the relevance of beauty for our understanding of art today. Their appeal to Plato challenges the reign of aesthetics that both see inaugurated by Kant's aesthetic theory. Nehamas criticizes the Kantian notion of “disinterest” as a “pleasure bereft of desire” in order to reassert the passionate longing that draws us toward art. Gadamer criticizes Kant's analysis (...)
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  32.  25
    Decolonial Erotics: Power Bottoms, Topping from Bottom Space, and the Emergence of a Queer Sexual Theology.Robyn Henderson-Espinoza - 2018 - Feminist Theology 26 (3):286-296.
    Indecent Theology has provided both Feminist Theology and Liberation Theology with new contours for rethinking bodies, power, dominance, and submission. With regard to the logic of dominance that radically pushes the margins of the margins into a form of inexistent living, I suggest a material turn to rethink the contours that are evoked with Indecent Theology. Materialism has long stood as a philosophy opposing the overwhelming dominance of language and the poststructuralist emphasis that has emerged as the ‘linguistic turn’. Considering (...)
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  33.  16
    Erotic Exuberance: Bataille’s Notion of Eroticism.Thomas Minguy - 2017 - PhaenEx 12 (1):34-52.
    The figure of Eros is permeated with a logic of lack and fulfillment. As a figure of desire that seeks to be filled, that craves the ineffable, Eros is appropriately described by Plato as the child of poverty and abundance. It is a form of desire that seeks to take what lies outside, to possess the unpossessed and to devour what is desirable. Is it possible, however, to conceive of Eros—and eroticism—as something that is not working according to the traditional (...)
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  34. Erotic melancholia and hysteria. [Spanish].Paul Mengal - 2003 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 1:110-127.
    En este ensayo se presenta la genealogía de las nociones de melancolía erótica e histeria a través del estudio de textos de la medicina abarcando desde la antigüedad hasta el siglo XIX.
     
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  35.  21
    The erotic stories of Marosa di Giorgio: poetic strange and epistemological criticism.María Teresa Aedo Fuentes - 2019 - Alpha (Osorno) 48:67-83.
    Resumen: Propongo una lectura de los relatos eróticos de Di Giorgio, según este, el hibridismo genérico textual y sexual ampliamente reconocido por la crítica, así como la recurrencia de transformaciones y metamorfosis a impulsos de un deseo que cancela las fronteras entre lo humano, lo animal, lo vegetal y lo material, realiza una profunda crítica epistemológica a la racionalidad moderna, andro y antropocéntrica, y su forma de concebir identidad y diferencia. El eje de esta ruptura epistemológica es la desarticulación de (...)
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  36.  56
    The Erotic Imaginary of Divine Realization in Kabbalistic and Tantric Metaphysics.Paul C. Martin - manuscript
    In this paper I consider the way in which divinity is realized through an imaginary locus in the mystical thought of Jewish kabbalah and Hindu tantra. It demonstrates a reflective consciousness by the adept or master in understanding the place of God’s being, as a supernal and mundane reality. For the comparative assessment of these two distinctive approaches I shall use as a point of departure the interpretative strategies employed by Elliot Wolfson in his detailed work on Jewish mysticism. He (...)
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  37.  7
    The erotic/aesthetic quality seen from the perspective of Levinas’s ethical an-archaeology.Srdjan Maras - 2020 - Filozofija I Društvo 31 (1):98-107.
    This paper emphasizes the place and the role of the aesthetic quality and the role of the erotic in Levinas?s project that deals with ethical an-archaeology. Despite Levinas?s categorical statements that there are irreconcilable differences between ethics and aesthetics, i.e. between ethics and the erotic, above all, it is emphasized here that these differences do not represent a stark or sharp contrast, but quite contrary, they often constitute a subversive ontological element. On the other hand, somewhat unexpectedly, with its ethical (...)
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  38.  50
    The Erotic Attitude Toward Nature and Cognitive Existentialism.Dimitri Ginev - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (152):145-160.
    ExcerptI. Marcuse's “New Science”In his celebrated critique of “technological rationality,” Herbert Marcuse pleads for a “new science” in which an “erotic” attitude toward nature would permit the entities of the natural world to transform in such a manner that they become free to be what they are. Following this line of reasoning in Eros and Civilization, he reaches the conclusion: “To be what they are they depend on the erotic attitude: they receive their telos only in it.”1 In addition, the (...)
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  39.  40
    Socratic erotics and Foucault’s permanent revolution.Craig Greenman - 2001 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 27 (2):76-99.
    In this paper, I argue that it is Foucault's conception of Socratic erotics, presented in Volume 2 of the History of Sexuality series, which provides him with a theoretical ground in the history of philosophy for his notions of political activism, power and government. Once we understand this, it is possible to understand how Foucault, rather than using a mixture of demonstration and diplomacy to oppose the idealization of revolution that eventually leads to the 'permanent revolution' of Stalinism, opposes (...)
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  40.  34
    Curing Virtue: Epicureanism and Erotic Fantasy in Machiavelli’s Mandragola.Michelle T. Clarke - 2022 - Political Theory 50 (6):913-938.
    Who is Lucrezia, the mysterious woman at the center of Machiavelli’s comic play Mandragola? And why is she deemed “fit to govern a kingdom”? This article revisits these questions with attention to Mandragola’s sophisticated, and often irreverent, allusions to Roman source materials. While scholars have long recognized that Mandragola draws on Roman history and drama, its sustained engagement with Lucretian and Ovidian poetry has gone largely unnoticed. In what follows, I trace these allusions and show how Machiavelli uses them to (...)
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  41.  37
    Sex differences in how erotic and painful stimuli impair inhibitory control.Jiaxin Yu, Daisy L. Hung, Philip Tseng, Ovid J. L. Tzeng, Neil G. Muggleton & Chi-Hung Juan - 2012 - Cognition 124 (2):251-255.
  42. Erotic Modes of Discourse: The Union of Mythos and Dialectic in Plato's Phaedrus in The Elemental Passions of the Soul. Poetics of the Elements in the Human Conditions: Part 3.Dl Smith - 1989 - Analecta Husserliana 28:399-407.
  43.  23
    Erotic Creation and Creative Eroticism.Sid Sondergard - 1997 - Semiotics:139-150.
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  44. The Erotics of Instruction (edited by Regina Barrecca & Deborah Denenholz Morse).M. G. Spillane - 1998 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 30:95-96.
     
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  45.  21
    The Erotic Authority of Nature: Science, Art, and the Female during Goethe=s Italian Journey.Robert J. Richards - unknown
    In a late reminiscence, Goethe recalled that during his close association with the poet Friedrich Schiller, he was constantly defending “the rights of nature" against his friend's “gospel of freedom.”1 Goethe’s characterization of his own view was artfully ironic, alluding as it did to the French Revolution's proclamation of the "Rights of Man." His remark implied that values lay within nature, values that had authority comparable to those ascribed to human beings by the architects of the Revolution. During the time (...)
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  46.  12
    Symposia: Plato, the Erotic, and Moral Value.Louis A. Ruprecht - 1999 - State University of New York Press.
    Argues that the underlining of erotic matters in Plato's dialogues marks the most significant moment in his career.
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  47. Epoché as the Erotic Conversion of One into Two.Rachel Aumiller - 2016 - In Giuseppe Veltri (ed.), Yearbook of the Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies. [Boston]: De Gruyter. pp. 3-13.
    This essay interprets the epoché of ancient scepticism as the perpetual conversion of the love of one into the love of two. The process of one becoming two is represented in Plato’s Symposium by Diotima’s description of the second rung of ‘the ladder,’ by which one ascends to the highest form of philosophical devotion (Pl. Sym. 209e-210e). Diotima’s ladder offers a vision of philosophy as a total conversion of both the lover and the object of love (or philosopher and object (...)
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  48.  71
    Exotic becomes erotic: A developmental theory of sexual orientation.Daryl J. Bem - 1996 - Psychological Review 103 (2):320-335.
    A developmental theory of erotic/romantic attraction is presented that provides the same basic account for opposite-sex and same-sex desire in both men and women. It proposes that biological variables, such as genes, prenatal hormones, and brain neuroanatomy, do not code for sexual orientation per se but for childhood temperaments that influence a child's preferences for sex-typical or sex-atypical activities and peers. These preferences lead children to feel different from opposite-or same-sex peers — to perceive them as dissimilar, unfamiliar, and exotic. (...)
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  49. The Erotic Word: Sexuality, Spirituality, and the Bible.David M. Carr - 2003
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  50. The Virtue of Erotic Curiosity.Rachel Aumiller - 2022 - Philosophy and Literature 46 (1):208-222.
    Apuleius’s The Golden Ass presents curiosity as the protagonist’s downfall, yet ultimately recodes curiosity as the single virtue through which the human soul achieves not only immortality but joy. I identify Apuleius’s treatment of curiosity as falling into the categories of erotic and nonerotic. The union of Eros and the curious human soul suggests that one who is erotically curious can take pleasure in her devotion to one, precisely because she has eyes for the beauty of many.
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