Results for 'Marc Guillaume Radical Alterity'

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  1.  29
    Vanessa Agnew. Enlightenment Orpheus: The Power of Music in Other Worlds (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), xiv+ 263 pp.£ 13.99 cloth. Esref Aksu, ed. Early Notions of Global Governance: Selected Eighteenth-Century Proposals for 'Perpetual Peace'(Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2008), viii+ 244 pp.£ 19.99 paper. [REVIEW]Jean Baudrillard, Marc Guillaume Radical Alterity, Anne-Marie Blondeau, Katia Buffetrille & Authenticating Tibet - 2009 - The European Legacy 14 (4):509-512.
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  2.  35
    Radical Alterity.Jean Baudrillard & Marc Guillaume - 2008 - Semiotext(E).
    A focused exploration of Baudrillard's understanding and use of alterity and “otherness,” a crucial theme that appears and reappears throughout his work as a whole. Alterity is in danger. It is a masterpiece in peril, an object lost or missing from our system, from the system of artificial intelligence and the system of communication in general.—from Radical Alterity Where is the Other today? Can Otherness challenge our arrogant, insular cultural narcissism? From artificial intelligence to the streets (...)
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  3.  28
    Une recherche citoyenne sur l’article 12 de la convention de l’ONU sur les droits des personnes handicapées.Benoit Eyraud, Arnaud Béal, Nacerdine Bezghiche, Stef Bonnot-Briey, Chantal Bruno, Erick Cattez, Jean-Philippe Cobbaut, Sylvie Daniel, Guillaume François, Julien Grard, Gael Klein, Michel Lalemant, Céline Lefebvre, Valérie Lemard, Jacques Lequien, Céline Letailleur, Claudine Levray, Marc Losson, Ana Marques, Bernard Meile, Nicolas Ordener, Mouna Romdhani, Nicolas Saenen, Sébastien Saetta, Iuliia Taran & Florie Vuattoux - 2021 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 15 (2):165-176.
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  4.  10
    Radical Alterity.Ames Hodges (ed.) - 2008 - Semiotext(E).
    Alterity is in danger. It is a masterpiece in peril, an object lost or missing from our system, from the system of artificial intelligence and the system of communication in general.--from Radical AlterityWhere is the Other today? Can Otherness challenge our arrogant, insular cultural narcissism? From artificial intelligence to the streets of Venice, from early explorers to contemporary photographers, Jean Baudrillard and Marc Guillaume discuss the traces of radical alterity in our world. These provocative (...)
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  5.  18
    Les abords Sud de l’agora.Jean-Yves Marc, Guillaume Biard, Séverine Blin, Jean-Sébastien Gros, Marjolaine Imbs, Pierre Mougin, Tarek Oueslati, Claire Soriano, Natacha Trippé & Manuela Wurch-Koželj - 2010 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 134 (2):503-518.
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  6.  7
    La philosophie poétique de Jean Baudrillard.Marc Guillaume - 2019 - Paris, France: Descartes & Cie.
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  7. Vers l'autre in Michel de Certeau. Le voyage mystique.Marc Guillaume - 1988 - Recherches de Science Religieuse 76 (3):399-404.
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  8.  15
    Recreational Diving Practice for Stress Management: An Exploratory Trial.Frédéric Beneton, Guillaume Michoud, Mathieu Coulange, Nicolas Laine, Céline Ramdani, Marc Borgnetta, Patricia Breton, Regis Guieu, J. C. Rostain & Marion Trousselard - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  9.  22
    Altered states of consciousness: experiences out of time and self.Marc Wittmann - 2018 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    What altered states of consciousness—the dissolution of feelings of time and self—can tell us about the mystery of consciousness. During extraordinary moments of consciousness—shock, meditative states and sudden mystical revelations, out-of-body experiences, or drug intoxication—our senses of time and self are altered; we may even feel time and self dissolving. These experiences have long been ignored by mainstream science, or considered crazy fantasies. Recent research, however, has located the neural underpinnings of these altered states of mind. In this book, neuropsychologist (...)
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  10.  31
    Nouvelles approches philosophiques.Yves Charles Zarka, Paul Audi, Ali Benmakhlouf, Jocelyn Benoist, Marc Crépon, Franck Fischbach, Tristan Garcia, Frédéric Gros, Bruno Karsenti, Hélène L'Heuillet, Guillaume Le Blanc, Corine Pelluchon, Charles Ramond, Pierre-Henri Tavoillot & Pierre Zaoui - 2013 - Cités 56 (4):133.
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  11.  52
    Handbook of Evolutionary Thinking in the Sciences.Thomas Heams, Philippe Huneman, Guillaume Lecointre & Marc Silberstein (eds.) - 2015 - Springer.
    The Darwinian theory of evolution is itself evolving and this book presents the details of the core of modern Darwinism and its latest developmental directions. The authors present current scientific work addressing theoretical problems and challenges in four sections, beginning with the concepts of evolution theory, its processes of variation, heredity, selection, adaptation and function, and its patterns of character, species, descent and life. The second part of this book scrutinizes Darwinism in the philosophy of science and its usefulness in (...)
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  12.  14
    The Surprising Creativity of Digital Evolution: A Collection of Anecdotes From the Evolutionary Computation and Artificial Life Research Communities.Joel Lehman, Jeff Clune, Dusan Misevic, Christoph Adami, Julie Beaulieu, Peter Bentley, Bernard J., Belson Samuel, Bryson Guillaume, M. David, Nick Cheney, Antoine Cully, Stephane Donciuex, Fred Dyer, Ellefsen C., Feldt Kai Olav, Fischer Robert, Forrest Stephan, Frénoy Stephanie, Gagneé Antoine, Goff Christian, Grabowski Leni Le, M. Laura, Babak Hodjat, Laurent Keller, Carole Knibbe, Peter Krcah, Richard Lenski, Lipson E., MacCurdy Hod, Maestre Robert, Miikkulainen Carlos, Mitri Risto, Moriarty Sara, E. David, Jean-Baptiste Mouret, Anh Nguyen, Charles Ofria, Marc Parizeau, David Parsons, Robert Pennock, Punch T., F. William, Thomas Ray, Schoenauer S., Shulte Marc, Sims Eric, Stanley Karl, O. Kenneth, Fran\C. Cois Taddei, Danesh Tarapore, Simon Thibault, Westley Weimer, Richard Watson & Jason Yosinksi - 2018 - CoRR.
    Biological evolution provides a creative fount of complex and subtle adaptations, often surprising the scientists who discover them. However, because evolution is an algorithmic process that transcends the substrate in which it occurs, evolution’s creativity is not limited to nature. Indeed, many researchers in the field of digital evolution have observed their evolving algorithms and organisms subverting their intentions, exposing unrecognized bugs in their code, producing unexpected adaptations, or exhibiting outcomes uncannily convergent with ones in nature. Such stories routinely reveal (...)
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  13.  14
    Assembling Resistance: From Foucault's Dispositif to Deleuze and Guattari's Diagram of Escape.Guillaume Collett - 2020 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (3):375-401.
    While Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus is quite rightly considered a fully fledged response to May ’68 and as one with the radical politics of the 1970s, their 1980 follow-up, A Thousand Plateaus, has tended to provoke a more perplexed reaction. In this article, I will argue that we can nonetheless extract a definite line of argumentation serving a precise political end if we relate the text back to Foucault's mid-1970s output on power/knowledge. In particular, I will emphasise Deleuze and (...)
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  14.  34
    The Micro-level Foundations and Dynamics of Political Corporate Social Responsibility: Hegemony and Passive Revolution through Civil Society.Arno Kourula & Guillaume Delalieux - 2016 - Journal of Business Ethics 135 (4):769-785.
    Exploration of the political roles firms play in society is a flourishing stream within corporate social responsibility research. However, few empirical studies have examined multiple levels of political CSR at the same time from a critical perspective. We explore both how the motivations of managers and internal organizational practices affect a company’s choice between competing CSR approaches, and how the different CSR programs of corporate and civil society actors compete with each other. We present a qualitative interpretative case study of (...)
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  15. An Introduction to the Philosophy of Physics: Locality, Fields, Energy, and Mass.Marc Lange - 2002 - Blackwell.
    This book combines physics, history, and philosophy in a radical new approach to introducing the philosophy of physics.
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  16. Jacob Rogozinski, The Ego and the Flesh: An Introduction to Egoanalysis.Guillaume Collett - 2011 - Radical Philosophy 169:56.
  17.  4
    Martin Heidegger: catholicisme, révolution, nazisme.Guillaume Payen - 2016 - Paris: Perrin.
    "Le national-socialisme est un principe barbare", écrit Martin Heidegger dans ses Cahiers noirs, ajoutant : "C'est ce qui lui est essentiel et sa possible grandeur." Révolutionnaire radical, ayant vu et approuvé le caractère destructeur du nazisme, le recteur de Fribourg a réservé d'autres surprises dans ses journaux philosophiques, dans lesquels il évoque par exemple l'"auto-anéantissement du "juif"". Alors que le philosophe est devenu un objet d'incompréhension et d'horreur, nombre de spécialistes en appellent désormais à l'histoire. C'est cette réhistoricisation que (...)
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  18.  9
    Upon Opening the Black Box and Finding It Full: Exploring the Ethics in Design Practices.Marc Steen - 2015 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 40 (3):389-420.
    Contemporary design practices, such as participatory design, human-centered design, and codesign, have inherent ethical qualities, which often remain implicit and unexamined. Three design projects in the high-tech industry were studied using three ethical traditions as lenses. Virtue ethics helped to understand cooperation, curiosity, creativity, and empowerment as virtues that people in PD need to cultivate, so that they can engage, for example, in mutual learning and collaborative prototyping. Ethics of alterity helped to understand human-centered design as a fragile encounter (...)
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  19.  5
    Karl Löwiths Kritik der geschichtlichen Existenz: Zur Bedeutung und Aktualität eines philosophischen Entwurfs.Guillaume Fagniez - 2019 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 67 (5):789-804.
    This paper examines the “critique of historical existence” as a main theme in Karl Löwith’s philosophical works and discusses its emergence, its exact meaning and its contemporary relevance. First, the study shows that Löwith’s critique of History stems from his preoccupation with the question of nihilism. He first discusses the question of “the world as such” in the 1920’s in the context of his anthropological project, and then again in the 1930’s as part of his interpretation of the work of (...)
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  20.  6
    La contribution de Karl Löwith à l’anthropologie.Guillaume Fagniez - 2015 - Alter: revue de phénoménologie 23:98-115.
    L’œuvre de Karl Löwith est connue dans le monde francophone, à travers quelques grands textes, comme celle d’un interprète de Nietzsche (Nietzsche : Philosophie de l’éternel retour du même, 1935), d’un historien de la philosophie allemande du xixe siècle (De Hegel à Nietzsche, 1940), d’un disciple critique de Heidegger (Ma vie en Allemagne avant et après 1933, 1940), enfin d’un intervenant majeur dans le débat contemporain sur la sécularisation (Histoire et Salut, 1949). Ces quelques titres f...
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  21.  5
    Ontologie et anthropologie de l’historique.Guillaume Fagniez - 2017 - Alter: revue de phénoménologie 25:97-114.
    Karl Löwith est l’auteur d’un ouvrage bien connu, Histoire et salut, dont le sous-titre, « Les présupposés théologiques de la philosophie de l’histoire », paraît dire l’essentiel. Pourtant, s’il s’agit bien dans ce livre – et dans les textes qui l’accompagnent dans le tome 2 des Schriften de Löwith – de dégager l’arrière-plan de la « philosophie de l’histoire », qui la fait envisager comme « sécularisation » d’un patrimoine spirituel judéo-chrétien, son enjeu est plus profondément de dépasser...
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  22.  2
    Notes de lecture.Guillaume Favre & Julien Brailly - 2012 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 6 (2):151-155.
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  23.  8
    Trahir la trame : contrainte et affect chez Samuel Beckett, François Morellet, KP Brehmer.Guillaume Gesvret - 2012 - Nouvelle Revue d'Esthétique 9 (1):41-54.
    Résumé Chez Samuel Beckett, François Morellet et KP Brehmer, l’art de la contrainte impose une trame formelle et logique pour mieux la trahir – l’altérer, la révéler –, renouvelant au passage l’économie de l’œuvre et son statut. Dans une double tradition littéraire et plastique, la mise au dehors du geste créateur et l’apparente désaffection des systèmes choisis produisent autant d’interférences symptomatiques dans l’œuvre et dans son contexte. Cet abandon agit comme le moyen paradoxal d’impliquer l’affect et d’ouvrir l’œuvre à des (...)
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  24. Transformative experiences, rational decisions and shark attacks.Marc-Kevin Daoust - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    How can we make rational decisions that involve transformative experiences, that is, experiences that can radically change our core preferences? L. A. Paul (2014) has argued that many decisions involving transformative experiences cannot be rational. However, Paul acknowledges that some traumatic events can be transformative experiences, but are nevertheless not an obstacle to rational decision-making. For instance, being attacked by hungry sharks would be a transformative experience, and yet, deciding not to swim with hungry sharks is rational. Paul has tried (...)
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  25.  19
    The ‘religion of the child’: Korczak’s road to radical humanism.Marc Silverman - 2017 - Ethics and Education 12 (1):84-94.
    This paper explores the biographical and cultural sources that inspired the decision of Janusz Korczak to make his life’s vocation the education of young children from dysfunctional families. This decision emerged out of the radical version of humanism he embraced. His identification of children as the population his humanist ethos must serve, distinguishes it from other versions of humanism. The paper explores the role his sense of self and his identification with Poles, Jews, and humanity play in the composition (...)
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  26.  7
    Where does mind end?: a radical history of consciousness and the awakened self.Marc J. Seifer - 2011 - Rochester, Vt.: Park Street Press. Edited by Marc J. Seifer.
    A new comprehensive model of mind and its nearly infinite possibilities • Recasts psychology as a vehicle not for mental health but for higher consciousness • Shows that we have consciousness for a reason; it is humanity’s unique contribution to the cosmos • Integrates the work of Freud, Jung, Gurdjieff, Tony Robbins, Rudolf Steiner, the Dalai Lama as well as ESP, the Kabbalah, tarot, dreams, and kundalini yoga The culmination of 30 years of research, Where Does Mind End? takes you (...)
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  27.  23
    Marc-Antoine Vallée, Gadamer et Ricœur. La conception herméneutique du langage , 242 pp.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2014 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 5 (2):128-131.
  28.  1
    Beyond Standard Model Collider Phenomenology of Higgs Physics and Supersymmetry.Marc Christopher Thomas - 2016 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    This thesis studies collider phenomenology of physics beyond the Standard Model at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). It also explores in detail advanced topics related to Higgs boson and supersymmetry - one of the most exciting and well-motivated streams in particle physics. In particular, it finds a very large enhancement of multiple Higgs boson production in vector-boson scattering when Higgs couplings to gauge bosons differ from those predicted by the Standard Model. The thesis demonstrates that due to the loss of (...)
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  29. Le bronze doré: structure et altérations de quelques dorures à l'amalgame de mercure.Marc Aucouturier, Benoît Mille & Odile Leconte - 2002 - Techne: La Science au Service de l'Histoire de l'Art Et des Civilisations 16:11-19.
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  30.  25
    Projectification of Doctoral Training? How Research Fields Respond to a New Funding Regime.Marc Torka - 2018 - Minerva 56 (1):59-83.
    Funding is an important mechanism for exercising influence over ever more parts of academic systems. In order to do so, funding agencies attempt to export their functional and normative prerequisites for financing to new fields. One essential requirement for fundees is then to construct research processes in the form of a project beforehand, one that is limited in time, scope and content. This article demonstrates how the public funding of doctoral programs expands this model of project research from experienced academics (...)
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  31.  11
    Aetiologies of Blame: Fevers, Environment, and Accountability in a War Context (France and Italy, ca. 1800).Paul-Arthur Tortosa & Guillaume Linte - 2023 - Centaurus 65 (1):63-90.
    During the Italian campaigns of the French Revolutionary Wars (1796–1801), several epidemic outbreaks sparked acrimonious aetiological debates: were the fevers spread by soldiers and prisoners of war, or produced by environmental factors? This debate was not only a scientific issue, but also a political one, for causation was linked to accountability. Looking at a series of medical investigations written by French military practitioners, this paper argues that theories of contagion were used by civilians to accuse the army of spreading disease, (...)
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  32.  1
    La déshumanisation civilisée.Marc Grassin - 2012 - Paris: Les Éditions du Cerf. Edited by Frédéric Pochard.
    Le développement de l'éthique serait le signe prometteur d'une humanité responsable. L'éthique, nouvelle compagne de route du sujet libéral contemporain, ne semble être, le plus souvent, qu'un alibi pour éviter d'engager une critique qui obligerait à revisiter de fond en comble son anthropologie. L'usage inflationniste, l'indifférenciation et l'instrumentalisation des discours « éthiques » vident l'éthique de son enjeu critique. Derrière l'image séduisante de l'humanisme libéral d'aujourd'hui, ouvert à la différence et à l'altérité, se cache une réalité plus sombre, celle d'un (...)
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  33.  54
    La logique mathématique en France entre les deux guerres mondiales : Quelques repères.Marcel Guillaume - 2009 - Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 62 (1):177-219.
    Une première période où les influences mêlées d’Alessandro Padoa et de Bertrand Russell s’exercent en France culmine avec les essais philosophiques de Jean Nicod. Une seconde période voit fleurir les travaux du mathématicien Jacques Herbrand ; avant de périr, il laisse son nom à un théorème fondamental. Suit une période de débats entre philosophes, mathématiciens et physiciens, stimulés en 1935 et 1937 par la tenue à Paris de deux congrès consacrés, totalement ou en partie, à la philosophie des sciences. Paulette (...)
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  34. Why we do not see what we feel.Marc A. Hight - 2002 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 83 (2):148-162.
    Of all of Berkeley’s claims about perception, perhaps the most unusual is his assertion that we do not see the numerically same objects we feel. Ideas are radically heterogeneous. The question I seek to answer is why Berkeley thought this thesis true. Traditional accounts hold that Berkeley was forced into accepting heterogeneity by his views concerning either distance or abstraction, but careful analysis reveals these to be mistaken. I conclude that how Berkeley thought of the ontic status of ideas finishes (...)
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  35.  48
    Alteration of the dynamic modulation of auditory beta-band oscillations by voice power during speech-in-noise.Vander Ghinst Marc, Bourguignon Mathieu, Wens Vincent, Marty Brice, Op De Beeck Marc, Van Bogaert Patrick, Goldman Serge & De Tiège Xavier - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  36.  59
    " Nuit rhénane" de Guillaume Apollinaire.Marc Dominicy, Liliane Tasmowski & Anne Zribi-Hertz - 1992 - In Liliane Tasmowksi & Anne Zribi-Hertz (eds.), De la Musique à la Linguistique. Hommages à Nicolas Ruwet. Communication & Cognition. pp. 81--94.
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  37.  24
    Le jeune Hegel et la naissance de la réconciliation moderne essai sur le fragment de Tübingen (1792-1793).Marc Herceg - 2004 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 3 (3):383-401.
    Résumé — L’hégélianisme est la philosophie de la réconciliation la plus radicale qui soit. À partir de l’étude du Fragment de Tübingen, il s’agit de mieux comprendre comment Hegel s’est engagé, dès ses plus jeunes années, dans une pensée de la réconciliation, et en quoi, cependant, la réconciliation de la jeunesse diffère de celle de la maturité. Cet article soutient que Hegel, à Tübingen, se concentre avant tout sur l’intérêt et la difficulté de ce qu’il croit être le véritable sens (...)
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  38.  19
    Le jeune Hegel et la naissance de la réconciliation moderne essai sur le fragment de Tübingen.Marc Herceg - 2004 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 70 (3):383.
    L'hégélianisme est la philosophie de la réconciliation (Versöhnung) la plus radicale qui soit. A partir de l'étude du Fragment de Tübingen, il s'agit de mieux comprendre comment Hegel s'est engagé, dès ses plus jeunes années, dans une pensée de la réconciliation, et en quoi, cependant, la réconciliation de la jeunesse diffère de celle de la maturité. Cet article soutient que Hegel, à Tübingen, se concentre avant tout sur l'intérêt et la difficulté de ce qu'il croit être le véritable sens de (...)
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  39. Between Substance and Mode: The Ontology of Ideas Among the Early Moderns.Marc A. Hight - 1999 - Dissertation, Syracuse University
    This work studies early modern thought concerning the ontology of ideas. I endeavor to establish, contrary to some current scholarship, that the Early Moderns remained firmly in the grip of a substance/mode ontology narrowed from the substance/property distinction inherited from Aristotle. I argue that this traditional dichotomy provides the most philosophically and historically fruitful approach to understanding early modern thought. In particular, I demonstrate how the increasing radicalization in the metaphysics of the moderns is best explained by remaining within the (...)
     
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  40.  13
    Time and causality.Marc J. Buehner (ed.) - 2014 - [Lausanne, Switzerland]: Frontiers Media SA.
    This research topic will review and further explore the nature of the mutual influence between time and causality, how causal knowledge is constructed in the context of time, and how it in turn shapes and alters our perception of time. We aim to draw together literatures from the perception and cognitive science, and welcome experimental as well as theoretical papers. Contributions investigating the neural bases of binding and causal learning/perception, methodological advances, as well as articles addressing functional implications of causal (...)
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  41.  14
    A Dichotomous Visual Brain?Marc Jeannerod - 1999 - PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 5.
    Recent experiments in normal subjects using neuroimaging demonstrate that the dorsal cortico-cortical pathway is involved during purely perceptual activities. Pathological cases with right posterior parietal lesions show deficits in visuospatial perception. It is argued that the radical dichotomy between perception and action pathways, as heralded in Milner and Goodale's book should be reexamined. The idea of distributed networks using resources in both visual pathways and recruited as a function of task demands is presented.
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  42.  9
    Binding the book of nature: microscopy as literature.Marc Olivier - 2005 - History of European Ideas 31 (2):173-191.
    From its ornamental and often bookish exterior to its use as an exegetical tool for understanding the Book of Nature, the 18th-century microscope was socialized as an instrument of letters as well as of science. This essay proposes a reading of the microscope as a literary artifact by examining its bindings, its texts and its illustrations. While the instrument promised to extend human sense perception and to give its user access to invisible worlds, it simultaneously threatened to alter received views (...)
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  43. How to account for the relation between chancy facts and deterministic laws.Marc Lange - 2006 - Mind 115 (460):917--946.
    Suppose that unobtanium-346 is a rare radioactive isotope. Consider: (1) Every Un346 atom, at its creation, decays within 7 microseconds (µs). (50%) Every Un346 atom, at its creation, has a 50% chance of decaying within 7µs. (1) and (50%) can be true together, but (1) and (50%) cannot together be laws of nature. Indeed, (50%)'s mere (non-vacuous) truth logically precludes (1)'s lawhood. A satisfactory analysis of chance and lawhood should nicely account for this relation. I shall argue first that David (...)
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  44. A sense for the other: the timeliness and relevance of anthropology.Marc Augé - 1998 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    If the end of exoticism is one of the characteristics of our time, and if classical anthropology based its study of alterity on this exotic distance from the other, is anthropology still possible, and if so, to what end? The author uses these questions as a point of departure for a probing interrogation of ethnological practice, starting with Le;vi-Strauss. The author advocates an anthropology of 'proximity' in place of the usual anthropology of distance. He has studied such emblematic places (...)
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  45.  4
    Murderous Consent: On the Accommodation of Violent Death.Marc Crépon - 2019 - Fordham University Press.
    Winner, 2002 French Translation Prize for Nonfiction Murderous Consent details our implication in violence we do not directly inflict but in which we are structurally complicit: famines, civil wars, political repression in far-away places, and war, as it’s classically understood. Marc Crépon insists on a bond between ethics and politics and attributes violence to our treatment of the two as separate spheres. We repeatedly resist the call to responsibility, as expressed by the appeal—by peoples across the world—for the care (...)
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  46.  13
    Credo Quia Absurdum: No Strawman for the Revolution.Marc James Léger - 2016 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 10 (3).
    Debates in radical cultural praxis reflect conflicting viewpoints on the left. While one might assume that the enormity of the challenges facing the left would lead to a common front this is rarely the case as communist and horizontalist viewpoints clash. This essay addresses new possibilities for thinking about avant-garde art and vanguard politics by considering the recent debates between Slavoj Žižek and McKenzie Wark and further, by looking at the limits of the cultural revolution as we have known (...)
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  47.  10
    I Am a Beautiful Monster: Poetry, Prose, and Provocation.Marc Lowenthal (ed.) - 2007 - MIT Press.
    Poet, painter, self-described funny guy, idiot, failure, pickpocket, and anti-artist par excellence, Francis Picabia was a defining figure in the Dada movement; indeed, André Breton called Picabia one of the only "true" Dadas. Yet very little of Picabia's poetry and prose has been translated into English, and his literary experiments have never been the subject of close critical study. _ I Am a Beautiful Monster_ is the first definitive edition in English of Picabia's writings, gathering a sizable array of Picabia's (...)
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    I Am a Beautiful Monster: Poetry, Prose, and Provocation.Marc Lowenthal (ed.) - 2012 - MIT Press.
    Poet, painter, self-described funny guy, idiot, failure, pickpocket, and anti-artist par excellence, Francis Picabia was a defining figure in the Dada movement; indeed, André Breton called Picabia one of the only "true" Dadas. Yet very little of Picabia's poetry and prose has been translated into English, and his literary experiments have never been the subject of close critical study. _ I Am a Beautiful Monster_ is the first definitive edition in English of Picabia's writings, gathering a sizable array of Picabia's (...)
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    Special section: The future of a discipline: Considering the ontological/methodological future of the anthropology of consciousness, part II†.Marc Blainey - 2010 - Anthropology of Consciousness 21 (2):113-138.
    In order for the valuable research published in the Anthropology of Consciousness (AoC) journal to have the impact it ought to have upon the anthropological mainstream, contributors must demonstrate that they appreciate the historical tradition of anthropology as an intellectual forebear. Although “ethnometaphysics” has been cited sporadically by anthropologists over the past half-century, it never really caught on as an interdisciplinary speciality like ethnobotany, ethnomusicology, and ethnomathematics. Pointing to the example of discord in the West between viewing psychoactive substances as (...)
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    Social play is more than a Pavlovian romp.Marc Bekoff & Colin Allen - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (2):250-251.
    Some aspects of play may be explained by Pavlovian learning processes, but others are not so easily handled. Especially when there is a chance that specific actions can be misinterpreted; animals alter their behavior to reduce the likelihood that this will occur. The flexibility and fine-tuning of play make it an ideal candidate for comparative and evolutionary cognitive studies.
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