Results for 'colonial organisms'

992 found
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  1.  11
    Racial formation, coloniality, and climate finance organizations: Implications for emergent data projects in the Pacific.Kirsty Anantharajah - 2021 - Big Data and Society 8 (1).
    This commentary explores the potential consequence of latent racial formation in emergent climate finance data projects and draws from ethnographic research on climate finance governance conducted in Fiji. Climate finance data projects emerging in the Pacific aim to ease the flow of finance from the Global North to the South. These emergent data projects, such as renewable energy resource availability and investment mapping, are imbedded in the climate finance organizations that fund, develop, and use them. Thus, the commentary explores climate (...)
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  2.  24
    Science, Coloniality, and “the Great Rationality Divide”.Malin Ideland - 2018 - Science & Education 27 (7-8):783-803.
    This article aims to analyze how science is discursively attached to certain parts of the world and certain “kinds of people,” i.e., how scientific knowledge is culturally connected to the West and to whiteness. In focus is how the power technology of coloniality organizes scientific content in textbooks as well as how science students are met in the classroom. The empirical data consist of Swedish science textbooks. The analysis is guided by three questions: if and how the colonial history (...)
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  3.  94
    Understanding colonial traits using symbiosis research and ecosystem ecology.Frédéric Bouchard - 2009 - Biological Theory 4 (3):240-246.
    E. O. Wilson (1974: 54) describes the problem that social organisms pose: “On what bases do we distinguish the extremely modified members of an invertebrate colony from the organs of a metazoan animal?” This framing of the issue has inspired many to look more closely at how groups of organisms form and behave as emergent individuals. The possible existence of “superorganisms” test our best intuitions about what can count and act as genuine biological individuals and how we should (...)
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  4. Organisms as Persisters.Subrena E. Smith - 2017 - Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 9 (14).
    This paper addresses the question of what organisms are and therefore what kinds of biological entities qualify as organisms. For some time now, the concept of organismality has been eclipsed by the notion of individuality. Biological individuals are those systems that are units of selection. I develop a conception of organismality that does not rely on evolutionary considerations, but instead draws on development and ecology. On this account, organismality and individuality can come apart. Organisms, in my view, (...)
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  5.  5
    The colonial urochordate Botryllus schlosseri: from stem cells and natural tissue transplantation to issues in evolutionary ecology.Baruch Rinkevich - 2002 - Bioessays 24 (8):730-740.
    The urochordates, whose stem groups may have included the direct predecessors of the chordate line, serve as an excellent model group of organisms for a variety of scientific disciplines. One taxon, the botryllid ascidian, has emerged as the model system for studying allorecognition; this work has concentrated on the cosmopolitan species Botryllus schlosseri. Studies analyzing self–nonself recognition in this colonial marine organism point to three levels of allorecognition, each associated with different outcomes. The first level controls natural allogeneic (...)
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  6.  4
    Between Nationalism, Internationalism and Colonial Quadrillage: The Action Chrétienne en Orient in Mandatory Syria.Philippe Bourmaud - 2022 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 39 (1):30-44.
    Despite growing internationalization, national ties have remained a structural aspect of missionary and humanitarian work. This was especially true of the Interwar period in the Middle East, where colonial powers, independent states and political ideologies competed. The beginnings of the Action Chrétienne en Orient bear witness to this: the ACO, specialized in assistance to Christian Anatolian refugees and missionary work towards Muslims, made strategic use of its national connections. It retained German and Protestant connections, while serving as a formally (...)
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  7.  25
    Utopia of abstraction: Digital organizations and the promise of sovereignty.Max Soar & Tim Corballis - 2022 - Big Data and Society 9 (1).
    Digital organizations form part of the new wave of blockchain technologies, following Bitcoin and related cryptocurrencies. “Utopia ofion” offers an analysis of the utopian promise of digital organizations through a reading of one such project, Colony. We provide a critique of the ideology of Colony's white paper, supplemented by readings of pages from its website, as a member of a genre of texts that promote their products through seemingly neutral, technical descriptions. Colony's texts suggest an abstract, contextless and scaleless organizational (...)
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  8.  5
    Affective Dynamics of Colonial Reform and Modernisation in Antigua, 1815–1835.Sue Thomas - 2013 - Feminist Review 104 (1):24-41.
    In 1815, two benevolent organizations commenced operation in Antigua, the Female Refuge Society based in English Harbour and the Distressed Females’ Friend Society based in St John's. The driving force behind the establishment of the Female Refuge Society, on which the Distressed Females’ Friend Society was modelled, was Anne Hart Gilbert (1768–1834), the earliest known published African-Caribbean woman writer, the agent of the Female Refuge Society. The organizations were run on principle by women and the executive committees were multi-racial. They (...)
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  9.  14
    Exploring Mandam [Comic Talk] as a Unique Form of Political Entertainment in Korea During the Japanese Colonial Period.Kyung Han You - 2017 - Cultura 14 (1):133-150.
    Using a lens of cultural industry approach, this study explores the rise and fall of the political entertainment with a focus on specific moments associated with the trajectory of Korean political entertainment in public setting. A historical overview of Korean political entertainment traces back to the 1930s when Mandam, a unique kind of political satiric talk became popular in 1930s. Mandam played a satiric role in influencing public opinion on political affairs, particularly led by the early generation of Mandam storytellers. (...)
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  10.  15
    ‘Like Embers Hidden in Ashes, or Jewels Encrusted In Stone’: Rāhul Sāṅk tyāyan, Dharmānand KosambĪ And Buddhist Activity In Colonial India.Douglas Ober - 2013 - Contemporary Buddhism 14 (1):134-148.
    Two of the most important modern Indian Buddhist pioneers are the polyglot explorer and Marxist revolutionary, Rāhul Sāṅk tyāyan (1893–1963), and the Pali scholar and Gandhian nationalist, Dharmānand Kosambī (1876–1947). Although best known as scholars of Buddhism, it is their lesser-known personal lives—namely, their political involvement in anti-colonial efforts, social reform projects, and travels abroad—that are of primary focus in this study. Through an examination of their activities and writings, this essay reveals the methods they employed and the networks (...)
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  11.  16
    Young Communist Leagues in the Colonies. Schüller - 1971 - Chinese Studies in History 4 (4):245-249.
    Comrades, the fact that a special report on the activity of the Young Communist International is on the agenda of the Sixth Congress of the Comintern shows that the Congress pays the greatest attention to the youth movement. Nevertheless, the fact must not be passed over in silence that the Communist Parties devote insufficient direction and support to the work of the, youth organizations.
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  12.  12
    Science Fiction as Critique of Science: Organ Transplantation and the Body.Brittany Anne Chozinski - 2016 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 36 (1):58-66.
    Science fiction is often used as a tool with which to think about actual science. While often this is depicted in terms of imaginary future potential, science fiction has also shown itself to be a poignant critique of existing science and a means of exploring our collective anxieties regarding the continued logic of current scientific development. This article explores the science fiction of organ transplantation, as mapped against scientific and medicolegal developments in actual organ transplantation. Explored through the lens of (...)
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  13.  7
    Why do cancer cells metastasize into particular organs?Dario Rusciano & Max M. Burger - 1992 - Bioessays 14 (3):185-194.
    Metastatic spread of tumor cells is one of the most common causes of death in cancer patients. Therefore, elucidation of the molecular mechanisms that underlie the formation of metastatic colonies has been one of the major objectives of cancer research during the last two decades. In this review we will mainly discuss the mechanisms that cause a malignant cell to grow at a given site rather than at other possible sites, taking into account experimental and clinical evidence published on the (...)
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  14. Exquisite Stimulations: Will and Illusion in The Birth of Tragedy.Tracy Colony - 1999 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies:50-61.
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  15. The death of God and the life of being: Heidegger's confrontation with Nietzsche.Tracy Colony - 2011 - In Daniel Dahlstrom (ed.), Interpreting Heidegger: Critical Essays. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 197-216.
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  16. The Future of Technics.Tracy Colony - 2017 - Parrhesia 27:64-87.
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  17. Transformations: Malabou on Heidegger and Change.Tracy Colony - 2015 - Parrhesia 23:103-121.
     
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  18. From Time to Time: Auto-Affection in Derrida’s 1964-65 Heidegger Course.Tracy Colony - 2019 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 27 (1):14-33.
    Derrida always stressed the importance of his engagement with Heidegger and often returned throughout his life to different aspects of Heidegger’s thought. With the recent publication of his 1964-65 course, Heidegger: The Question of Being and History greater insight is now possible into the exact terms of Derrida’s early engagement with Heidegger and the significance he would accord it in the major works of 1967 and beyond. With the reception of this text just beginning, many lines of interpretation are being (...)
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  19. Epimetheus Bound: Stiegler on Derrida, Life, and the Technological Condition.Tracy Colony - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (1):72-89.
    Bernard Stiegler's account of technology as constitutive of the human as such is without precedent. However, Stiegler's work must also be understood in terms of its explicit appropriations from the thought of Jacques Derrida. An important, yet overlooked, context for framing Stiegler's relation to Derrida is the question of nonhuman life thought in terms of différance . As I argue, Stiegler's account does not unfold the most profound implications of Derrida's understanding of nonhuman life as différance . While Stiegler describes (...)
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  20.  87
    Composing Time: Stiegler on Nietzsche, Nihilism and a Possible Future.Tracy Colony - 2022 - In Andrea Rehberg & Ashley Woodward (eds.), Nietzsche and the Politics of Difference. De Gruyter. pp. 33-52.
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  21. Before the abyss: Agamben on Heidegger and the living.Tracy Colony - 2007 - Continental Philosophy Review 40 (1):1-16.
    In his recent book The Open: Man and Animal, Giorgio Agamben examines the relation between the essence of the human and the living in Martin Heidegger’s thought. Focusing on the treatment of this relation in Heidegger’s 1929/30 lecture course “The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics,” Agamben argues that the dimension of the open, which is central to Heidegger’s understanding of the human essence, can be seen as implicitly dependent upon Heidegger’s account of the essence of animality. In this essay, I argue (...)
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  22. Unearthing Heidegger's Roots. On Charles Bambach's Heidegger's Roots : Nietzsche, National Socialism, and the Greeks.Tracy Colony - 2006 - Studia Phaenomenologica 6:439-450.
    Charles Bambach’s recent book Heidegger’s Roots: Nietzsche, National Socialism, and the Greeks traces the themes of rootedness and the earthly in Heidegger’s thought. Focusing on the role of these themes in the major works of the 1930’s, Bambach offers an account of Heidegger’s relation to contemporaneous conservative and National Socialist ideologies. In this review article, I question the fundamental presupposition guiding Bambach’s approach and present specific reservations regarding his use of untranslated material from Heidegger’s Nietzsche lecture courses.
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  23. Attunement and Transition.Tracy Colony - 2008 - Studia Phaenomenologica 8:437-452.
    In this essay, I argue that the scope of Heidegger’s dialog with Hölderlin in Contributions to Philosophy is wider than has often been acknowledged. Traditionally, accounts of this relation have focused solely on tracing Heidegger’s appropriation of Hölderlin’s “flight and arrival of the gods.” In addition to this theme, the relation between Heidegger’s Hölderlin and the project of Contributions should also be framed in light of the specific understanding of attunement which Heidegger developed in his 1934-35 Hölderlin lecture courses. From (...)
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  24.  25
    Anthropocentrism.Tracy Colony - 2012 - Symposium 16 (1):246-250.
  25. Concerning Technology.Tracy Colony - 2009 - Idealistic Studies 39 (1-3):23-34.
    Martin Heidegger’s 1953 lecture “The Question Concerning Technology” has been one of the most influential texts in English language philosophy of technology. However, within this field Heidegger’s understanding of technology is widely seen to be a conventional essentialist account of technological phenomena. In this essay, I argue that a close reading of what Heidegger exactly demarcated as the essence of technology can be seen to limit the degree to which Heidegger’s understanding of technology should be interpreted as a traditional form (...)
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  26.  33
    Dwelling in the Biosphere?Tracy Colony - 1999 - International Studies in Philosophy 31 (1):37-45.
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  27.  34
    Time and the Work of Art: Reconsidering Heidegger's Auseinandersetzung with Nietzsche.Tracy Colony - 2003 - Heidegger Studies 19:81-94.
  28.  11
    The Phenotype as the Level of Selection: Cave Organisms as Model Systems.Thomas C. Kane, Robert C. Richardson & Daniel W. Fong - 1990 - PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 (1):151-164.
    Selection operates at many levels. Some of the most obvious cases are organismic, such as changes in coloration under the influence of predation (cf. Kettlewell 1973; also Endler 1986). It also operates at other levels. Meiotic drive involves selection for a gene, independently of its effect on the organism. At a higher level, there may also be selection for patterns of colony growth in social insects, again under the influence of predation (cf. Wilson 1971). The appropriate level of selection is (...)
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  29. A Matter of Time: Stiegler on Heidegger and Being Technological.Tracy Colony - 2010 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 41 (2):117-131.
  30. Given Time: The Question of Futurity in Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy.Tracy Colony - 2009 - Heythrop Journal 50 (2):284-292.
    Since its publication in 1989, Martin Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy has continued to produce animated debate with regard to the radical sense of futurity which defines and structures this text. In this essay, I first draw into question the common Nietzschean framing of this futurity and argue that the temporality of this futurity should be interpreted within the context of Heidegger's often overlooked descriptions of this coming time as granted by the last god. It is this anticipated gift that can (...)
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  31. Heidegger’s Early Nietzsche Lecture Courses and the Question of Resistance.Tracy Colony - 2004 - Studia Phaenomenologica 4 (1-2):151-172.
    It is well known that Heidegger described his Nietzsche lecture courses as confrontations with National Socialism. Traditionally, this sense of resistance was seen firstly in the fact that Heidegger read Nietzsche at the level of metaphysics and explicitly rejected those ideological appropriations which attempted to reduce Nietzsche’s philosophy to the level of biologism or mere Weltanschauung. This essay argues that the way in which Heidegger framed his interpretation of will to power in his first and second Nietzsche lecture courses can (...)
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  32. Bringing Philosophy Back to Life: Nietzsche and Heidegger’s Early Phenomenology.Tracy Colony - 2014 - Studia Phaenomenologica 14:349-369.
    Most accounts of Heidegger’s relation to Nietzsche have traditionally focused on his famous Nietzsche lecture courses or upon his brief yet highly significant references to Nietzsche in Being and Time. However, with recent English translations of key lecture courses from Heidegger’s early Freiburg period it has become clear that during this time another distinct phase of Heidegger’s long and complex relation to Nietzsche can be identified. In this essay, I first chronicle Heidegger’s earliest references to Nietzsche in the period from (...)
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  33.  76
    Concerning Technology.Tracy Colony - 2009 - Idealistic Studies 39 (1-3):23-34.
    Martin Heidegger’s 1953 lecture “The Question Concerning Technology” has been one of the most influential texts in English language philosophy of technology. However, within this field Heidegger’s understanding of technology is widely seen to be a conventional essentialist account of technological phenomena. In this essay, I argue that a close reading of what Heidegger exactly demarcated as the essence of technology can be seen to limit the degree to which Heidegger’s understanding of technology should be interpreted as a traditional form (...)
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  34.  63
    Telling Silence.Tracy Colony - 2004 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 9 (1):117-136.
    In this article, I argue that the question of divinity provides an important context for reading Heidegger’s initial two Nietzsche lecture courses (1936–37). First,I demonstrate how this often overlooked background can shed light upon the way in which Heidegger understood the meanings of will to power and eternal recurrence in this period. Second, I argue that the related themes of need (Not) and necessity (Notwendigkeit) in these lectures can be seen as an important framework for understanding the relation between Heidegger’s (...)
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  35. Organ donation and transplantation.Human Organs & Substituted Judgement Doctrine - 1984 - Bioethics Reporter 1 (1).
     
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  36.  5
    The Self in Its Worlds: East and West.Troy Wilson Organ - 1988
    Using the term world to mean a creative response to objective reality, this book considers the ways in which Eastern and Western peoples construct their natural, social, aesthetic, and religious worlds. It points the way to a view of Eastern and Western as complementary, rather than contradictory, descriptions.
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  37. The silence of the Buddha.Troy Wilson Organ - 1954 - Philosophy East and West 4 (2):125-140.
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  38.  46
    Anthropocentrism. [REVIEW]Tracy Colony - 2012 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (1):246-250.
  39.  10
    Philosophy and the Self: East and West.Troy Wilson Organ - 1992 - Philosophy East and West 42 (3):536-538.
  40.  2
    An index to Aristotle in English translation.Troy Wilson Organ - 1949 - New York,: Gordian Press.
  41. Crito Apologizes.Troy Wilson Organ - 1957 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 38 (4):366.
  42.  30
    From Those to Whom Much Has Been Given, Much is Expected.Jerry Organ - 2004 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 1 (2):361-415.
  43.  10
    Catholic Social Teaching and Its Impact on American Law.Jerry Organ - 2004 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 1 (2):277-312.
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  44.  32
    Hinduism, Its Historical Development.Troy Wilson Organ - 1976 - Philosophy East and West 26 (3):348-351.
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  45.  14
    Indian Aesthetics: Its Techniques and Assumptions.Troy Organ - 1975 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 9 (1):11.
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  46. Ohio University.Troy Organ - 1995 - In S. Radhakrishnan, Rama Rao Pappu & S. S. (eds.), New Essays in the Philosophy of Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan. Sri Satguru Publications. pp. 6--75.
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  47.  24
    Polarity, a neglected insight in indian philosophy.Troy Organ - 1976 - Philosophy East and West 26 (1):33-39.
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  48.  5
    Philosophy for the Left Hand.Troy Wilson Organ - 1990 - Peter Lang.
    Essays originally published ca. 1949-1989.
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  49. "Physis" [Greek] and "Aphysis" [Greek] in Aristotle.Troy Organ - 1975 - The Thomist 39 (3):475.
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  50.  12
    Radhakrishnan and the Ways of Oneness of East and West.Troy Wilson Organ - 1992 - Philosophy East and West 42 (1):202-202.
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