Results for 'Rosie Harman'

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  1.  22
    Feldherr, Hardy The Oxford History of Historical Writing. Volume I: Beginnings to ad 600. Pp. xx + 652, ills, maps. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. Cased, £95, US$180. ISBN: 978-0-19-921815-8. Marincola Oxford Readings in Classical Studies: Greek and Roman Historiography. Pp. x + 498. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. Paper, £44, US$65 . ISBN: 978-0-19-923350-2. [REVIEW]Rosie Harman - 2014 - The Classical Review 64 (1):175-179.
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  2.  6
    Foxhall L., Gehrke H.J. and Luraghi N. Eds. Intentional History: Spinning Time in Ancient Greece. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2010. Pp. 360. €62. 9783515096836. [REVIEW]Rosie Harman - 2013 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 133:225-226.
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  3. Posthumanism in art and science: a reader.Giovanni Aloi & Susan McHugh (eds.) - 2020 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Posthumanism has come to synthesize philosophical, literary, and artistic responses to the pressures of technology, globalization, and mass extinction in the Anthropocene. It asks what it can mean to be human in an increasingly more-than-human world that has lost faith in the ideal of humanism, the autonomous, rational subject, and it models generative alternatives cognizant of the demands of social and ecological justice. Posthumanism in Art and Science is an anthology of indispensable statements and artworks that provide an unprecedented mapping (...)
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  4.  60
    New Materialism and Neutralized Subjectivity. A Cultural Renewal?Pedro Sargento - 2013 - Cultura 10 (2):113-125.
    Abstract. In the increasingly notorious philosophy of new materialism, a serious attempt to redefine subjectivity in terms of its non-dualistic nature can be ascertained. The criticism on dualisms draws directly on a wider critique focusing the anthropocentric and correlationist models that shaped modernity and modern thought. In this paper, I consider new materialism’s non-dualism as a starting point from which a subsequent decline of subjectivity can be purported. This decline does not involve immediately, or at all, devaluation but, instead, it (...)
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  5.  46
    Nomadic Theory: The Portable Rosi Braidotti.Rosi Braidotti - 2011 - Columbia University Press.
    Transposing differences -- Meta(l)morphoses: women, aliens, and machines -- Animals and other anomalies -- The cosmic buzz of insects -- Matter-realist feminism -- Intensive genre and the demise of gender -- Postsecular paradoxes -- Against methodological nationalism -- Nomadic European citizenship -- Powers of affirmation -- Sustainable ethics and the body in pain -- Forensic futures -- A secular prayer.
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  6.  63
    The Prince and the Wolf: Latour and Harman at the LSE.Bruno Latour, Graham Harman & Peter Erdélyi (eds.) - 2011 - Zero Books.
    The Prince and the Wolf contains the transcript of a debate which took place on February 5, 2008 at the London School of Economics (LSE) between the prominent French sociologist, anthropologist, and philosopher Bruno Latour and the Cairo-based American philosopher Graham Harman.
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  7.  13
    Interview with Graham Harman.Andrew Iliadis & Graham Harman - 2013 - Figure/Ground Communication.
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  8.  86
    Interview with Graham Harman.Tom Beckett & Graham Harman - 2011 - Ask/Tell.
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  9.  56
    New APPS Interview: Graham Harman.John Protevi & Graham Harman - 2011 - New APPS.
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  10. A dialogue between Graham Harman and Tristan Garcia.Rik Peters, Graham Harman & Tristan Garcia - 2013 - In Deva Waal (ed.), in Drift wijsgerig festival. Drift. pp. 70-96.
     
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  11. A dialogue between Graham Harman and Tristan Garcia.Rik Peters, Graham Harman & Tristan Garcia - 2015 - Speculations:167-203.
  12. Interviews: Graham Harman, Jane Bennett, Tim Morton, Ian Bogost, Levi Bryant and Paul Ennis.Peter Gratton, Graham Harman, Jane Bennett, Tim Morton, Levi Bryant & Paul Ennis - 2010 - Speculations 1 (1):84-134.
    The context for these interviews was a seminar [Peter Gratton] conducted on speculative realism in the Spring 2010. There has been great interest in speculative realism and one reason Gratton surmise[s] is not just the arguments offered, though [Gratton doesn't] want to take away from them; each of these scholars are vivid writers and great pedagogues, many of whom are in constant contact with their readers via their weblogs. Thus these interviews provided an opportunity to forward student questions about their (...)
     
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  13. The Object Strikes Back: An Interview with Graham Harman.Lucy Kimbell & Graham Harman - 2013 - Design and Culture 5 (1):103-117.
     
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  14.  70
    On Landscape Ontology: An Interview with Graham Harman.Brian Davis & Graham Harman - 2012
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  15. Marginalia on Radical Thinking: An Interview with Graham Harman.Derick Varn & Graham Harman - 2012
     
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  16. On the Horrors of Realism-- Interview with Graham Harman.Tom Sparrow & Graham Harman - 2008 - Pli 19:218-239.
     
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  17. The Object Takes on a Life of its Own: A Conversation Between Thomas Feuerstein and Graham Harman.Thomas Feuerstein & Graham Harman - 2015 - In Beate Ermacora, Franziska Nori & Matthia Löbke (eds.), Psychoprosa: Thomas Feuerstein. Snoeck. pp. 222-230.
     
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  18. Art and OOObjecthood: Graham Harman in Conversation with Christoph Cox and Jenny Jaskey.Graham Harman, Christoph Cox & Jenny Jaskey - 2015 - Realism Materialism Art.
     
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  19.  32
    Thought, Inference, and Knowledge: Gilbert Harman's ThoughtThought.Ernest Sosa & Gilbert Harman - 1977 - Noûs 11 (4):421.
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  20.  1
    The posthuman.Rosi Braidotti - 2013 - Malden, MA, USA: Polity Press.
    The Posthuman offers both an introduction and major contribution to contemporary debates on the posthuman. Digital 'second life', genetically modified food, advanced prosthetics, robotics and reproductive technologies are familiar facets of our globally linked and technologically mediated societies. This has blurred the traditional distinction between the human and its others, exposing the non-naturalistic structure of the human. The Posthuman starts by exploring the extent to which a post-humanist move displaces the traditional humanistic unity of the subject. Rather than perceiving this (...)
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  21.  33
    Propositions, Objects, Questions: Graham Harman in conversation with Jon Roffe.Graham Harman - 2014 - Parrhesia 21:23-52.
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  22.  6
    Entrevista a Graham Harman.Graham Harman, Rodrigo Baraglia & Mariano Vilar - 2015 - Luthor 24.
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  23. Art and objects.Graham Harman - 2019 - Medford, MA: Polity.
    OOO and art: a first summary -- Formalism and its flaws -- Theatrical, not literal -- The canvas is the message -- After high modernism -- Dada, surrealism, and literalism -- Weird formalism.
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  24.  17
    Immaterialism: Objects and Social Theory.Graham Harman - 2016 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    What objects exist in the social world and how should we understand them? Is a specific Pizza Hut restaurant as real as the employees, tables, napkins and pizzas of which it is composed, and as real as the Pizza Hut corporation with its headquarters in Wichita, the United States, the planet Earth and the social and economic impact of the restaurant on the lives of its employees and customers? In this book the founder of object-oriented philosophy develops his approach in (...)
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  25.  16
    Architecture and Object-Oriented Ontology: Simon Weir in Conversation with Graham Harman.Graham Harman - 2022 - Architecture Philosophy 5 (2).
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  26. Reasoning, Meaning, and Mind.Gilbert Harman - 1999 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    In this important new collection, Gilbert Harman presents a selection of fifteen interconnected essays on fundamental issues at the center of analytic philosophy. The book opens with a group of four essays discussing basic principles of reasoning and rationality. The next three essays argue against the once popular idea that certain claims are true and knowable by virtue of meaning. In the third group of essays Harman presents his own view of meaning and the possibility of thinking in (...)
  27.  18
    Posthuman Glossary.Rosi Braidotti (ed.) - 2018 - London: Bloomsbury.
    If art, science, and the humanities have shared one thing, it was their common engagement with constructions and representations of the human. Under the pressure of new contemporary concerns, however, we are experiencing a “posthuman condition”; the combination of new developments-such as the neoliberal economics of global capitalism, migration, technological advances, environmental destruction on a mass scale, the perpetual war on terror and extensive security systems- with a troublesome reiteration of old, unresolved problems that mean the concept of the human (...)
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  28. Object-oriented ontology: a new theory of everything.Graham Harman - 2018 - [London]: Pelican Books.
    We humans tend to believe that things are only real in as much as we perceive them, an idea reinforced by modern philosophy, which privileges us as special, radically different in kind from all other objects. But as Graham Harman, one of the theory's leading exponents, shows, Object-Oriented Ontology (OOO) rejects the idea of human specialness: the world, he states, is clearly not the world as manifest to humans. "To think a reality beyond our thinking is not nonsense, but (...)
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  29. Dialoghi di Estetica. Intervista a Graham Harman.Graham Harman, Davide Dal Sasso & Vincenzo Santarcangelo - 2015 - Artribune 252017.
     
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  30. Das Eigenleben der Objekte: Ein Gespräch zwischen Thomas Feuerstein und Graham Harman.Graham Harman - 2015 - In Beate Ermacora, Franziska Nori & Matthia Löbke (eds.), Psychoprosa: Thomas Feuerstein. Snoeck. pp. 211-221.
     
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  31. Other People and Their Ideas: Graham Harman.Graham Harman & J. J. Charlesworth - 2014 - ArtReview 66 (66):72-75.
     
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  32.  94
    Moral Relativism and Moral Objectivity.Gilbert Harman & Judith Jarvis Thomson - 1996 - Blackwell.
    Do moral questions have objective answers? In this great debate, Gilbert Harman explains and argues for relativism, emotivism, and moral scepticism. In his view, moral disagreements are like disagreements about what to pay for a house; there are no correct answers ahead of time, except in relation to one or another moral framework. Independently, Judith Jarvis Thomson examines what she takes to be the case against moral objectivity, and rejects it; she argues that it is possible to find out (...)
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  33.  21
    De objectgerichte filosofie van Graham Harman: Interview.Graham Harman, Noortje Marres & Ruth Sonderegger - 2007 - Krisis 4 (4):65-79.
  34. Explaining Value: And Other Essays in Moral Philosophy.Gilbert Harman - 2000 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Explaining Value is a selection of the best of Gilbert Harman's shorter writings in moral philosophy. The thirteen essays are divided into four sections, which focus in turn on moral relativism, values and valuing, character traits and virtue ethics, and ways of explaining aspects of morality. Harman's distinctive approach to moral philosophy has provoked much interest; this volume offers a fascinating conspectus of his most important work in the area.
  35. Working Together at a Children's Centre.Rosie Walker - 2009 - In Michael Reed & Natalie Canning (eds.), Reflective Practice in the Early Years. Sage Publications. pp. 113.
  36.  1
    Deleuze and the Humanities: East and West.Rosi Braidotti, Kin Yuen Wong & Amy K. S. Chan (eds.) - 2018 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    The volume is inspired by Gilles Deleuze's philosophical project, which builds on the critique of European Humanism and opens up inspiring new perspectives for the renewal of the field.
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  37.  84
    The Only Exit From Modern Philosophy.Graham Harman - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):132-146.
    This article contends that the central principle of modern philosophy is obscured by a side-debate between two opposed camps that are united in accepting a deeper flawed premise. Consider the powerful critiques of Kantian philosophy offered by Quentin Meillassoux and Bruno Latour, respectively. These two thinkers criticize Kant for opposite reasons: Meillassoux because Kant collapses thought and world into a permanent “correlate” without isolated terms, and Latour because Kant tries to purify thought and world from each other rather than realizing (...)
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  38.  19
    Super/rosy L k -theories and classes of finite structures.Cameron Donnay Hill - 2013 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 164 (10):907-927.
    We recover the essentials of þ-forking, rosiness and super-rosiness for certain amalgamation classes K, and thence of finite-variable theories of finite structures. This provides a foundation for a model-theoretic analysis of a natural extension of the “LkLk-Canonization Problem” – the possibility of efficiently recovering finite models of T given a finite presentation of an LkLk-theory T. Some of this work is accomplished through different sorts of “transfer” theorem to the first-order theory TlimTlim of the direct limit. Our results include, to (...)
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  39. Moral Relativism and Moral Objectivity.Gilbert Harman & Judith Jarvis Thomson - 1996 - Philosophy 71 (278):622-624.
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  40.  40
    Characterizing Rosy Theories.Clifton Ealy & Alf Onshuus - 2007 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 72 (3):919 - 940.
    We examine several conditions, either the existence of a rank or a particular property of þ-forking that suggest the existence of a well-behaved independence relation, and determine the consequences of each of these conditions towards the rosiness of the theory. In particular we show that the existence of an ordinal valued equivalence relation rank is a (necessary and) sufficient condition for rosiness.
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  41.  6
    Bruno Latour: Reassembling the Political.Graham Harman - 2014 - London: Pluto Press.
    Bruno Latour, the French sociologist, anthropologist and long-established superstar in the social sciences is revisited in this pioneering account of his ever-evolving political philosophy. Breaking from the traditional focus on his metaphysics, most recently seen in Harman's book Prince of Networks, the author instead begins with the Hobbesian and even Machiavellian underpinnings of Latour's early period and encountering his shift towards Carl Schmitt and finishing with his final development into the Lippmann / Dewey debate. Harman brings these twists (...)
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  42. Harman on Mental Paint and the Transparency of Experience.Erhan Demircioglu - 2020 - Organon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 27 (1):56-81.
    Harman famously argues that a particular class of antifunctionalist arguments from the intrinsic properties of mental states or events (in particular, visual experiences) can be defused by distinguishing “properties of the object of experience from properties of the experience of an object” and by realizing that the latter are not introspectively accessible (or are transparent). More specifically, Harman argues that we are or can be introspectively aware only of the properties of the object of an experience but not (...)
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  43.  5
    Editorial for the Topical Issue “Object-Oriented Ontology and Its Critics II”.Graham Harman - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):657-663.
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  44.  30
    Thought.Gilbert Harman & Laurence BonJour - 1975 - Philosophical Review 84 (2):256.
  45. .Gilbert Harman - 2008 - Cambridge University Press.
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  46.  21
    Malabou’s Political Critique of Speculative Realism.Graham Harman - 2021 - Open Philosophy 4 (1):94-105.
    A recent political critique of Speculative Realism by Catherine Malabou finds fault with this loosely arranged movement for its focus on reality in its own right, apart from the subject. Malabou responds with a radical ontological claim, holding effectively – if not always explicitly – that subject and object mutually generate one another amidst a primal void. After criticizing this idea, I point to some of the difficult political consequences of such a position, though Malabou defines it positively as an (...)
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  47.  19
    Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and Sexual Difference in Contemporary Feminist Theory.Rosi Braidotti - 1994 - Cambridge University Press.
    _Nomadic Subjects_ argues for a new kind of philosophical thinking, one that would include the insights of feminism and abandon the hegemonic mode that is conventionally adopted in high theory. Braidotti's personal, surprising, and lively prose insists on an integration of feminism in mainstream discourse. The essays explore problems that are central to current feminist debates including Western epistemology's relation to the "woman question," feminism and biomedical ethics, European feminism, and how American feminists might relate to European movements.
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  48.  38
    Connecting learning to the world beyond the classroom through collaborative philosophical inquiry.Rosie Scholl, Kim Nichols & Gilbert Burgh - 2015 - Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education:1-19.
    This study explored the impact of facilitating collaborative philosophical inquiry, in the tradition of “Philosophy for Children,” on connectedness pedagogies. The study employed an experimental design that included 59 primary teachers in 2 groups. The experimental group received an intervention that comprised training in CPI and the comparison group received training in Thinking Tools, a subset of the CPI training. Lessons were coded on four variables of connectedness pedagogies, across the two groups, at three time-points. Teacher interviews were conducted to (...)
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  49.  2
    More posthuman glossary.Rosi Braidotti, Emily Jones & Goda Klumbyte (eds.) - 2022 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The notion of the posthuman continues to both intrigue and confuse, not least because of the huge number of ideas, theories and figures associated with this term. More Posthuman Glossary provides a way in to the dizzying array of posthuman concepts, providing vivid accounts of emerging terms. It is much more than a series of definitions, however, in that it seeks to imagine and predict what new terms might come into being as this exciting field continues to expand. A follow-up (...)
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  50.  1
    Posthuman knowledge.Rosi Braidotti - 2019 - Medford, MA: Polity.
    Posthuman, all-too-human -- The posthuman condition -- Posthuman subjects -- Posthuman knowledge production -- The critical posthumanities -- How to do posthuman thinking -- On affirmative ethics -- The inexhaustible.
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