Results for 'Ulrika Gunnarsson-Östling'

147 found
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  1.  16
    ‘I didn’t count “willingness to pay” as part of the value’: Monetary valuation through respondents’ perspectives.Lina Isacs, Cecilia Håkansson, Therese Lindahl, Ulrika Gunnarsson-Östling & Pernilla Andersson - 2024 - Environmental Values 33 (2):163-188.
    A frequent justification in the literature for using stated preference methods (SP) is that they are the only methods that can capture the so-called total economic value (TEV) of environmental changes to society. Based on follow-up interviews with SP survey respondents, this paper addresses the implications of that argument by shedding light on the construction of TEV, through respondents’ perspective. It illuminates the deficiencies of willingness to pay (WTP) as a measure of value presented as three aggregated themes considering respondents’ (...)
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  2.  17
    Visual Iconicity Across Sign Languages: Large-Scale Automated Video Analysis of Iconic Articulators and Locations.Robert Östling, Carl Börstell & Servane Courtaux - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  3.  97
    ”Lagen”: ett användbart fokus för religionsinkluderande exphil?Ulrika Mårtensson - 2022 - Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 57 (1-2):87-102.
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  4. Kierkegaard's Phenomenology of Spirit.Ulrika Carlsson - 2014 - European Journal of Philosophy 24 (3):629-650.
    Kierkegaard's preoccupation with a separation between the ‘inner’ and the ‘outer’ runs through his work and is widely thought to belong to his rejection of Hegel's idealist monism. Focusing on The Concept of Irony and Either/Or, I argue that although Kierkegaard believes in various metaphysical distinctions between inside and outside, he nonetheless understands the task of the philosopher as that of making outside and inside converge in a representation. Drawing on Hegel's philosophy of art, I show that Kierkegaard's project in (...)
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  5.  8
    Music, Mind, and Education.Acton Ostling - 1992 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 26 (1):120.
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  6. Philosophy of Personal Identity and Multiple Personality.Logi Gunnarsson - 2009 - New York: Routledge.
    As witnessed by recent films such as _Fight Club_ and _Identity_, our culture is obsessed with multiple personality—a phenomenon raising intriguing questions about personal identity. This study offers both a full-fledged philosophical theory of personal identity and a systematic account of multiple personality. Gunnarsson combines the methods of analytic philosophy with close hermeneutic and phenomenological readings of cases from different fields, focusing on psychiatric and psychological treatises, self-help books, biographies, and fiction. He develops an original account of personal identity (...)
     
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  7.  13
    Migrating Young Unaccompanied Children and the Mobile Commons: Law, Vulnerability, and the Practice of Family Reunification in Sweden.Ulrika Andersson - 2023 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 36 (4):1547-1555.
    In this article I call for an awareness of the mobile commons– the informal support that exists among migrating people, NGOs, and activists – in relation to the realization of family reunification. Taking its point of departure in a concrete case of family reunification for young unaccompanied children, the article seeks to expose how the traditional legal notion of the liberal subject fails to provide protection in the context of legal practice. I argue for using the vulnerable subject as a (...)
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  8.  27
    Developing an ethical school through appreciating practice? Students' lived experience of ethical situations in school.Ulrika Bergmark & Eva Alerby - 2008 - Ethics and Education 3 (1):41-55.
    In meetings between people in school our values are shown through, for example, our actions, our speech and body language. These meetings can be regarded as ethical situations, which can arouse strong emotional reactions that ordinary, everyday situations usually do not do. The aim of this paper is to illuminate, interpret and discuss students' lived experiences of ethical situations in their school. The participants in the study were students in a Swedish secondary school, and the empirical data consisted of written (...)
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  9.  26
    Kierkegaard and Philosophical Eros: Between Ironic Reflection and Aesthetic Meaning.Ulrika Carlsson - 2021 - London: Bloomsbury.
    In a bold new argument, Ulrika Carlsson grasps hold of the figure of Eros that haunts Søren Kierkegaard's The Concept of Irony, and for the first time, uses it as key to interpret that text and his second book, Either/Or. According to Carlsson, Kierkegaard adopts Plato's idea of Eros as the fundamental force that drives humans in all their pursuits. For him, every existential stance-every way of living and relating to the outside world-is at heart a way of loving. (...)
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  10.  14
    ‘The right man in the right place’ – the consequences of gender-coding of place and occupation in collaboration processes.Ulrika Jansson & Lena Grip - 2022 - European Journal of Women's Studies 29 (2):250-265.
    Society needs to find new ways to utilise its resources in the best possible way in order to enable satisfactory services for its citizens in the long term. This is particularly important in sparsely populated areas, and in cities and municipalities with a declining population. This study contributes to this field by analysing a project for collaboration between the rescue service and the home-care service that has been introduced in a number of Swedish municipalities. The collaboration is intended to ensure (...)
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  11.  15
    Sweden vs. Apartheid: Putting Morality ahead of Profit.Johan Östling - 2005 - The European Legacy 10 (7).
  12. In Defense of Ambivalence and Alienation.Logi Gunnarsson - 2014 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 17 (1):13-26.
    In this paper, I argue against certain dogmas about ambivalence and alienation. Authors such as Harry Frankfurt and Christine Korsgaard demand a unity of persons that excludes ambivalence. Other philosophers such as David Velleman have criticized this demand as overblown, yet these critics, too, demand a personal unity that excludes an extreme form of ambivalence (“radical ambivalence”). I defend radical ambivalence by arguing that, to be true to oneself, one sometimes needs to be radically ambivalent. Certain dogmas about alienation are (...)
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  13. Love Among the Post-Socratics.Ulrika Carlsson - 2013 - Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 2013 (1).
    Victor Eremita proposes that the reader understand parts I and II of Either/Or as parties in a dialogue; most readers in fact view II as a devastating reply to I. I suggest that part I be read as a reaction or follow-up to Kierkegaard’s dissertation. Much of part I presents reflective characters who are aware of their freedom but reluctant or unable to adopt the ethical life. The modern Antigone and the Silhouettes are sisters of Alcibiades—failed students of Socrates. I (...)
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  14. Tragedy and Resentment.Carlsson Ulrika - 2018 - Mind 127 (508):1169-1191.
    According to Kantian ethics, immoral actions convey disrespect. This negative attitude makes injuries inflicted by other persons worse than injuries caused by nature, ceteris paribus. As Strawson would later put it, the perpetrator’s attitude of disregard prompts in the victim the reactive attitude of resentment. But, I point out, we harbour and display plenty of other negative attitudes toward people aside from disrespect. What, if any, reactive attitudes are natural and appropriate in response to these? In unrequited love, for example, (...)
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  15.  86
    A defence of the category ‘women’.Lena Gunnarsson - 2011 - Feminist Theory 12 (1):23-37.
    Against influential strands of feminist theory, I argue that there is nothing essentialist or homogenising about the category ‘women’. I show that both intersectional claims that it is impossible to separate out the ‘woman part’ of women, and deconstructionist contentions that the category ‘women’ is a fiction, rest on untenable meta-theoretical assumptions. I posit that a more fruitful way of approaching this disputed category is to treat it as an abstraction. Drawing on the philosophical framework of critical realism I elucidate (...)
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  16.  14
    The dissident and the spectre.Ulrika Björk - 2022 - Filosoficky Casopis 70 (Special issue 1):105-121.
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  17.  25
    Reading McDowell: On Mind and World. [REVIEW]Logi Gunnarsson - 2005 - Philosophical Review 114 (4):540-544.
  18.  62
    The Great Apes and the Severely Disabled: Moral Status and Thick Evaluative Concepts.Logi Gunnarsson - 2008 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 11 (3):305-326.
    The literature of bioethics suffers from two serious problems. (1) Most authors are unable to take seriously both the rights of the great apes and of severely disabled human infants. Rationalism—moral status rests on rational capacities—wrongly assigns a higher moral status to the great apes than to all severely disabled human infants with less rational capacities than the great apes. Anthropocentrism—moral status depends on membership in the human species—falsely grants all humans a higher moral status than the great apes. Animalism—moral (...)
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  19. Paradoxes of femininity in the philosophy of Simone de beauvoir.Ulrika Björk - 2010 - Continental Philosophy Review 43 (1):39-60.
    This article explicates the meaning of the paradox from the perspective of sexual difference, as articulated by Simone de Beauvoir. I claim that the self, the other, and their becoming are sexed in Beauvoir’s early literary writing before the question of sexual difference is posed in The Second Sex (1949). In particular, Beauvoir’s description of Françoise’s subjective becoming in the novel She Came to Stay (1943) anticipates her later systematic description of ‘the woman in love’. In addition, I argue that (...)
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  20.  3
    Utgångspunktens etikCappelen Damm Akademisk2023200 siderISBN: 9788202754617.Ulrika Mårtensson - 2024 - Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 59 (1-2):51-70.
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  21. A refinement of evil.Richard N. Ostling - 1993 - In Jonathan Westphal & Carl Avren Levenson (eds.), Time. Indianapolis: Hackett Pub. Co.. pp. 142--14.
     
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  22. The Church Search.Richard Ostling - 1993 - In Jonathan Westphal & Carl Avren Levenson (eds.), Time. Indianapolis: Hackett Pub. Co.. pp. 141--14.
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  23.  27
    Philosophy of Personal Identity and Multiple Personality.Logi Gunnarsson - 2009 - New York: Routledge.
    As witnessed by recent films such as _Fight Club_ and _Identity_, our culture is obsessed with multiple personality—a phenomenon raising intriguing questions about personal identity. This study offers both a full-fledged philosophical theory of personal identity and a systematic account of multiple personality. Gunnarsson combines the methods of analytic philosophy with close hermeneutic and phenomenological readings of cases from different fields, focusing on psychiatric and psychological treatises, self-help books, biographies, and fiction. He develops an original account of personal identity (...)
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  24.  25
    The Contradictions of Love : Towards a feminist-realist ontology of sociosexuality.Lena Gunnarsson - unknown
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  25.  36
    Making Moral Sense: Beyond Habermas and Gauthier.Logi Gunnarsson - 2000 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Is it rational to be moral? Can moral disputes be settled rationally? Which criteria determine what we have a good reason to do? In this innovative book, Logi Gunnarsson takes issue with the assumption made by many philosophers faced with the problem of reconciling moral norms with a scientific world view, namely that morality must be offered a non-moral justification based on a formal concept of rationality. He argues that the criteria for the rationality of an action are irreducibly (...)
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  26. Love as a Problem of Knowledge in Kierkegaard's Either/Or and Plato's Symposium.Ulrika Carlsson - 2010 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 53 (1):41-67.
    At the end of the essay “Silhouettes” in Either/Or , Kierkegaard writes, “only the person who has been bitten by snakes knows what one who has been bitten by snakes must suffer.” I interpret this as an allusion to Alcibiades' speech in Plato's Symposium. Kierkegaard invites the reader to compare Socrates to Don Giovanni, and Alcibiades to the seduced women. Socrates' philosophical method, in this light, is a deceptive seduction: just as Don Giovanni's seduction leads his conquests to unhappy love—what (...)
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  27.  9
    Au sujet de la possibilité d’une analyse linguistique de l’énonciation poétique contemporaine.Ulrika Dubos - 1980 - Semiotica 29 (1-2).
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  28.  21
    Festlegungstheorie zur Frage personaler Identität.Logi Gunnarsson - 2008 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 56 (4):535-553.
    Drei Thesen verfolgt der Beitrag: Eine empirische, zirkuläre Theorie kann wichtige Probleme in der Diskussion um „personale Identität“ lösen. Eine Korrelatstheorie bietet die richtige Antwort auf die Frage „Was bin ich grundlegend?“: Ich bin grundlegend ein Akteur, der ein Korrelat zu den psychologischen Verbindungen ist, für die er minimal verantwortlich ist. Meine Identität kann auf Grund einer Festlegungstheorie erläutert werden, das heißt auf Grund der Relationen Festlegungsrevision und Festlegungserhalt.
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  29.  40
    Chronic Conditions: Beckett, Bergson and Samuel Johnson.Ulrika Maude - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (2):193-204.
    This article analyses the work of the twentieth-century late modernist Samuel Beckett, in light of the turn-of-the-century anti-rationalist Henri Bergson and the eighteenth-century neoclassicist Samuel Johnson. What unites these three very different thinkers is a concern over habitual, automatic and involuntary behavior, which in all three cases has a distinctly neurological dimension. Beckett’s writing explores the Bergsonian notion, informed by medicine and experimental psychology, of the limitations of agency, of “the deep-seated recalcitrance of matter,” and of the human as always (...)
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  30. Sweden vs. Apartheid: Putting Morality ahead of Profit. By Abdul Karim Bangura.J. Ostling - 2005 - The European Legacy 10 (7):766.
     
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  31.  42
    Closer: Performance, technologies, phenomenology. By Susan Kozel.Ulrika Björk - 2010 - Hypatia 25 (3):704-707.
  32.  74
    The folk metaphysics of love.Ulrika Carlsson - 2018 - European Journal of Philosophy 26 (4):1398-1409.
    I argue against the intellectualist view of love according to which we (must) love for reasons so that love is rational. Engaging primarily with the quality appraisal view of love, I concede that qualities can cause love but insist that it is misguided to think of love as having reasons. A number of features of human psychology complicate the issue of how lover relates to beloved's qualities. (a) The lover may be attracted to a quality without appraising that quality reflectively. (...)
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  33.  67
    Love – exploitable resource or ‘No-lose situation’? : Reconciling Jónasdóttir’s feminist view with Bhaskar’s philosophy of meta-reality.Lena Gunnarsson - 2011 - Journal of Critical Realism 10 (4):419-441.
    In this article I attempt to reconcile two seemingly conflicting theorisations of love, the one elaborated by Roy Bhaskar as part of his philosophy of meta-Reality and Anna G. Jónasdóttir’s historical materialist-radical feminist theory of love power. While Bhaskar emphasises the essentially non-dual character of love, envisioning it as a ‘no-lose situation’, Jónasdóttir stresses the antagonistic features structuring love relations by conceptualising love as a productive power that men tend to exploit women of. Rather than seeing these accounts as mutually (...)
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  34.  32
    Femmebodiment: Notes on queer feminine shapes of vulnerability.Ulrika Dahl - 2017 - Feminist Theory 18 (1):35-53.
    In a time when worlds, communities and subjects are increasingly presented as ‘vulnerable’, much remains to be said about the distinctly feminine shapes of ‘vulnerability’; weakness, softness, permeability, a sense of being affected, imprinted upon, or entered and shattered. While this presumed vulnerability of the feminine body has often been the basis of feminist sexual politics, feminist goals of autonomy often presume an internal and external undoing of vulnerability as such. Drawing on ethnographic research with queer femmes and building on (...)
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  35. Enhet och tvetydighet i känslornas sfär.Ulrika Björk - 2005 - Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 2.
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  36.  17
    Simone de Beauvoir and Life.Ulrika Björk - 2013 - In Lester Embree & Thomas Nenon (eds.), Husserl’s Ideen. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 351--364.
  37.  27
    “It took time to understand Greek newspapers”. The media experience of Swedish women in Greece.Ulrika Sjöberg - 2006 - Communications 31 (2):173-192.
    This article tackles the media experience of ten Swedish women living in Greece. It focuses on the relation between their media experience and culture. This is examined by looking specifically at their use of Greek media during their first years in Greece as a way of learning a new culture, how they use Swedish media to maintain a link with Swedish culture and society, their concerns about children's media use, and how they view the importance of media in introducing the (...)
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  38.  12
    The eclipse of the transcendent and the poetics of praise.Björk Ulrika - 2018 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 6 (1):99-126.
    Literature has a central place in Hannah Arendt’s writings. In particular, scholars continually discuss the implications of storytelling to her theory of action. This paper takes a different approach by drawing attention to an early literary essay, ”Rilke’s Duino Elegies”, which Arendt co-authored with Günther Stern in 1930. The paper locates the essay in the early twentieth century intellectual response to the ”break in tradition”, arguing that the construction of a poetics dramatized in the Duino Elegies is crucial for judging (...)
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  39.  21
    A Framework to Assess Where and How Children Connect to Nature.Matteo Giusti, Ulrika Svane, Christopher M. Raymond & Thomas H. Beery - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  40.  14
    Climbing Up the Ladder.Logi Gunnarsson - 2001 - Journal of Philosophical Research 26:229-286.
    This paper is the work of two fictional authors, the late Johannes Philologus and Johannes Commentarius. One part consists of Philologus’s philosophical reflections on a fragment that, unbeknownst to him, is identical to the first four paragraphs of the Preface and the last two numbered propositions of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Commentarius writes a preface to Philologus’s article and a commentary on it, in which he, like Philologus, addresses the question of how a work consisting of nonsense can be elucidatory. By (...)
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  41.  30
    Hetero‐Love in Patriarchy: An Autobiographical Substantiation.Lena Gunnarsson - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (1):187-192.
  42.  19
    The naturalistic turn in feminist theory: A Marxist-realist contribution.Lena Gunnarsson - 2013 - Feminist Theory 14 (1):3-19.
    After a time dominated by nature-phobia, a naturalistic turn is emerging within feminist theory. Welcoming this new theoretical embrace of nature and sympathising with its insistence that nature is not feminism’s enemy, this article nevertheless points to some problematic features of this turn. Focusing on Elizabeth Grosz’s postmodernist readings of Charles Darwin, I suggest that their emphasis of nature’s dynamic, indeterminate and enabling qualities both implies a politically unmotivated glorification of the dynamic and unruly, and as such obscures the important (...)
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  43.  33
    Critical Realism, Gender and Feminism: Exchanges, Challenges, Synergies.Lena Gunnarsson, Angela Martínez Dy & Michiel van Ingen - 2016 - Journal of Critical Realism 15 (5):433-439.
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  44.  8
    Transforming philosophy: Ein Manifest und weitere Erklärungen.Logi Gunnarsson - 2022 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 70 (5):823-836.
    The aim of the paper is to defend the project of transforming philosophy carried out in my book Vernunft und Temperament. Eine Philosophie der Philosophie. In section 1, I distinguish between five philosophical genres in which transformation plays a role: 1. academic texts in which transformation is simply a topic; 2. texts meant to adequately articulate through their form the transformative experiences of their authors; 3. texts aiming to enable the reader to transform herself; 4. texts on other texts; 5. (...)
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  45.  19
    Why we keep separating the ‘inseparable’: Dialecticizing intersectionality.Lena Gunnarsson - 2017 - European Journal of Women's Studies 24 (2):114-127.
    Disputes about how to understand intersectional relations often pivot around the tension between separateness and inseparability, where some scholars emphasize the need to separate between different intersectional categories while others claim they are inseparable. In this article the author takes issue with the either/or thinking that underpins an unnecessary and unproductive polarization in the debate over the in/separability of intersectional categories. Drawing on Roy Bhaskar’s dialectical critical realist philosophy, the author argues that we can think of intersectional categories as well (...)
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  46. What Is Constituted in Self-Constitution?Logi Gunnarsson - unknown
    A subject who has a self-transformation behind herself—say, a conversion to Catholicism—may say of herself "before transforming myself, I was a different person�. How are we to understand such a claim? Obviously, there is a sense in which the subject takes herself to be the same as before and another sense in which she considers herself to be somebody else now. One possible way of understanding it would be the following: Despite the change involved in the selftransformation, there is enough (...)
     
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  47. Vernunft und Temperament. Eine Philosophie der Philosophie.Logi Gunnarsson - 2020
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  48.  28
    A unidimensional short form of the TMAS.Robert A. Hicks, Jud R. Ostle & Robert J. Pellegrini - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 16 (6):447-448.
  49.  12
    Creative writing as feminist freedom.Ulrika Dahl - 2023 - European Journal of Women's Studies 30 (1):84-89.
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  50. The Ethical Life of Aesthetes.Ulrika Carlsson - 2019 - In Patrick Stokes, Eleanor Helms & Adam Buben (eds.), The Kierkegaardian Mind. New York: Routledge. pp. 135-144.
    Judge Wilhelm’s ethical critique of the aesthetic life, in Either/Or, is usually thought to be devastating. But it is rare for interpreters to consider whether the Judge’s characterization of the aesthetic life-view does justice to Aesthete A’s writings, let alone whether A could give a retort to the ethicist. This paper argues that much of the Judge’s criticism misses its mark. Part of the criticism is better directed at Johannes the Seducer, who cannot necessarily be identified with A. Furthermore, A (...)
     
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