Results for 'control societies'

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  1.  16
    Benjaminian Reminiscences in Deleuze’s and Daney’s Dialogue about Images in Control Societies.Aline Wiame - 2023 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 69:49-69.
    This article examines Gilles Deleuze’s 1986 letter to French film critic Serge Daney about cinema, television, and images in control societies through a Benjaminian lens. While neither Deleuze nor Daney deeply engage with Walter Benjamin’s thought, I argue that the ideas or dialectical images constructed by the German thinker are crucial to better understand Deleuze’s and Daney’s thoughts regarding the threatened death of modern cinema in the 1980s because of the predominance of television as a control apparatus. (...)
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  2.  88
    Spinning in the NAPLAN Ether: 'Postscript on the Control Societies' and the Seduction of Education in Australia.Ian Cook & Greg Thompson - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (4):564-584.
    This paper applies concepts Deleuze developed in his ‘Postscript on the Societies of Control’, especially those relating to modulatory power, dividuation and control, to aspects of Australian schooling to explore how this transition is manifesting itself. Two modulatory machines of assessment, NAPLAN and My Schools, are examined as a means to better understand how the disciplinary institution is changing as a result of modulation. This transition from discipline to modulation is visible in the declining importance of the (...)
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  3. Religion in a Controlled Society.E. L. Allen - 1942 - Hibbert Journal 41:24.
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  4.  9
    Identity crisis and social dissociation in control societies.Mikhail Mikhailovich Abramychev & Bogdan Yurievich Gromov - 2022 - Философия И Культура 7:96-108.
    The article is devoted to the problem of the naming crisis of modern society. The sequences by which the social and cultural history of the West is ordered, represented by the evolution of economics, technology, religion, forms of capital and wealth, communications, following the technological acceleration of time, coexist with each other, compete for primacy, creating a society of atomized subjects who have ceased to understand their place in the history of society. This situation is described in the article as (...)
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  5.  4
    The 4th Industrial Revolution and the Future of Democracy - Inability to Think and the Control Society -. 이충한 - 2018 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 91:289-312.
    이 글은 4차 산업혁명과 민주주의의 관계에 대한 철학적 해명을 시도하는데 목적을 둔다. 특히 4차 산업혁명이라는 시대적 현상의 토대에 위치하는 인터넷, 인공지능 알고리즘, 빅데이터 등과 같은 과학기술이 시민의 삶과 민주주의에 미치는 영향들을 비판적으로 검토하는데 초점을 맞춘다. 4차 산업혁명은 산업 전반의 패러다임의 전환에 대한 근래의 시대적 규정이다. 그러나 이러한 규정이 과연 적절한 것인지의 문제는 여전히 열려있다. 역사적으로 볼 때 산업혁명이라는 개념은 증기기관, 전기, 컴퓨터 같은 새로운 기술이 생산과 소비의 변화를 단기간에 혁명적으로 불러오고 사회문화적 지형의 변화를 동반하는 시기에 적용되었다. 때문에 이미 컴퓨터와 인터넷을 (...)
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  6.  24
    Jackson Pollock’s Flight from Law and Code: Theses on Responsive Choice and the Dawn of Control Society. [REVIEW]Ronnie Lippens - 2011 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 24 (1):117-138.
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  7.  12
    Gilles Deleuze's societies of control: Implications for mental health nursing and coercive community care.Etienne Paradis-Gagné & Dave Holmes - 2022 - Nursing Philosophy 23 (2):e12375.
    Since the era of deinstitutionalisation, many clinical approaches have emerged to enable the care and treatment of people suffering from mental illness. In recent years, the use of coercive approaches in the community (e.g., outpatient commitment or community treatment orders) has also increased internationally. Although nurses' role regarding these coercive approaches is central and significant, few empirical and theoretical writings have tackled this controversial nursing practice. The purpose of this paper is to analyse coercive nursing care through the lens of (...)
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  8.  11
    “WEIRD” societies still value (even needless) self-control and self-sacrifice.Christopher Y. Olivola - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e312.
    Some aspects of moral disciplining theory (MDT) – the association between cooperation and self-control; the notion that people and societies value sacrifice and costly prosocial behaviors – are well supported. However, other aspects of MDT – the association between religion/religiosity and cooperation; the notion that sacrifice and costly prosocial behaviors are no longer valued in “western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic” (WEIRD) societies – are inconsistent with existing evidence.
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  9.  8
    Freedom in the Society of Control: Ethical challenges.Yevhen Laniuk - 2020 - Ethics and Bioethics (in Central Europe) 10 (3-4):203-220.
    The Society of Control is a philosophical concept developed by Gilles Deleuze in the early 1990s to highlight the transition from Michel Foucault’s Disciplinary Society to a new social constitution of power assisted by digital technologies. The Society of Control is organized around switches, which convert data, and, in this way, exercise power. These switches take data inputs (digitized information about individuals) and transform them into outputs (decisions) based on their pre-programmed instructions. I call these switches “automated decision-making (...)
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  10.  23
    Religion, Society and the State in Arabia: The Hijaz under Ottoman Control, 1840-1908.Mary C. Wilson & William Ochsenwald - 1988 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 (4):665.
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  11.  35
    Social control in two hedonic societies.Margaret Power - 1992 - World Futures 35 (1):71-86.
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  12.  98
    Civil Society and Tobacco Control in Indonesia: The Last Resort.Harsman Tandilittin & Christoph Luetge - 2013 - Open Ethics Journal 7 (1):11-18.
    In many countries around the world, the mechanisms of civil society have become very commonplace. Large companies are under constant pressure from civil society organizations to change their policies, strategies and approaches. The tobacco industry in particular is under heavy pressure in many parts of the world. Smoking has been prohibited in many public as well as private or semi-private areas in a large number of countries. However, while smoking as an addiction seems to be declining in some countries, in (...)
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  13. Control, market, and industrial-society.P. Vanparijis - 1991 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 89 (81):36-46.
  14.  20
    The Control of a Healthy Society: Institutionalizing Statistics in the 19thCentury.Ida H. Stamhuis & Hanne Andersen - 2007 - Centaurus 49 (4):257-257.
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  15. Deleuze’s Postscript on the Societies of Control Updated for Big Data and Predictive Analytics.James Brusseau - 2020 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 67 (164):1-25.
    In 1990, Gilles Deleuze publishedPostscript on the Societies of Control, an introduction to the potentially suffocating reality of the nascent control society. This thirty-year update details how Deleuze’s conception has developed from a broad speculative vision into specific economic mechanisms clustering around personal information, big data, predictive analytics, and marketing. The central claim is that today’s advancing control society coerces without prohibitions, and through incentives that are not grim but enjoyable, even euphoric because they compel individuals (...)
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  16.  7
    The American Society for the Control of Cancer in the Portuguese Institute of Oncology's Bulletin : Rethinking nationalism.Beatriz Medori - 2021 - Centaurus 63 (4):779-803.
    The purpose of this paper is to trace the American Society for the Control of Cancer's (ASCC) influence on the Portuguese Institute of Oncology's (IPO) Bulletin. The time period featured is from 1934 to 1940, which spans the first two decades of the newly formed Portuguese dictatorship, known as the Estado Novo (1933–1974). The analysis of the ASCC's “imprint” on the IPO's Bulletin aims to shed new light on how American culture influenced Portugal, from its first appearance at the (...)
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  17. Review of The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society.[author unknown] - 1986
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  18. Epistemic Paternalism: Communication Control in Law and Society.Alvin I. Goldman - 1991 - Journal of Philosophy 88 (3):113-131.
  19.  7
    Cruel Compassion: Psychiatric Control of Society's Unwanted.Thomas Szasz - 1994 - Wiley.
    Obsessed with the twin beliefs that misbehavior is a medical disorder and that the duty of the state is to protect adults from themselves, we have replaced criminal-punitive sentences with civil-therapeutic 'programs.' The result is the relentless loss of individual liberty, erosion of personal responsibility, and destruction of the security of persons and property - symptoms of the transformation of a Constitutional Republic into a Therapeutic State, unconstrained by the rule of law.
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  20. Societies of Disindividuated Hyper-Control: On the Question of a New Pharmakon. [REVIEW]Ekin Erkan - 2019 - Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge 35.
    Drawing on Adorno and Horkheimer's oft-quoted 1944 essay, “The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception,” Bernard Stiegler’s The Age of Disruption affirms that the Frankfurt School duo scrupulously envisaged a “new kind of barbarism,” or an inversion of modernity’s Enlightenment project illustrated by our contemporary political semblance. Surveying the critical social fissures that index contemporary Western civil society—from 9/11 to the 2002 Nanterre massacre and the 2015 Charlie Hebdo shooting—Stiegler diagnoses that our epoch is plagued by the “absence of epoch,” (...)
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  21.  56
    Plan and control - Towards a cultural history of the information society.F. Webster & K. Robins - 1988 - Theory and Society 18 (3):323-351.
  22. Living by Algorithm: Smart Surveillance and the Society of Control.Sean Erwin - 2015 - Humanities and Technology Review 34:28-69.
    Foucault’s disciplinary society and his notion of panopticism are often invoked in discussions regarding electronic surveillance. Against this use of Foucault, I argue that contemporary trends in surveillance technology abstract human bodies from their territorial settings, separating them into a series of discrete flows through what Deleuze will term, the surveillant assemblage. The surveillant assemblage and its product, the socially sorted body, aim less at molding, punishing and controlling the body and more at triggering events of in- and ex-clusion from (...)
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  23.  3
    Theorizing Irregular Migration: The Control of Spatial Mobility in Differentiated Societies.Giuseppe Sciortino & Martina Cvajner - 2010 - European Journal of Social Theory 13 (3):389-404.
    This article claims that the study of irregular migration may be a strategic research material for the development of an adequate understanding of contemporary society. The field, however, suffers not only from a lack of reliable empirical data, but also from endemic undertheorizing. The article shows how the attempt to develop an understanding of irregular migration from within a general theory of modern society has positive consequences both for the clarification of the problems and for the design of research programs (...)
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  24.  19
    The Idiot in Societies of Control.Philippe Mengue - forthcoming - Theory and Event 16 (3).
  25.  14
    Discipline, Control or Rhythm ?Pascal Michon - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    A shorter version of this text was presented in the Symposium « Thinking Together – The Politics of Time » – MAERZMUSIK Festival – Berlin – 20-29 March 2015.: In Pourparlers, in the early 1990s, Deleuze put forward the idea that contemporary societies are not, as societies in 19th and early 20th centuries analyzed by Foucault, « disciplinary societies », but « control societies » that do not work « by confinement, but by continuous (...) and instant communication ». 25 years later, the - Comment penser le pouvoir dans le monde contemporain? (shrink)
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  26.  6
    Simondon, Control and the Digital Domain.Juho Rantala & Mirka Muilu - forthcoming - Theory, Culture and Society.
    Deleuze put forth a description of fluid control in computerized society in his text ‘Postscript on Control Societies’. With the help of the philosophy of Gilbert Simondon, we can broaden and complexify this view and understand digital systems through the concept of modulation. These modulatory systems intervene in human individuation by controlling individuals as ‘dividuals’. In contemporary digital technologies, like blockchain platforms, the modulatory dividual control can be fierce and even total. Simondon’s concepts of pre-individual, individuation, (...)
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  27.  35
    Governmentality and My School: School Principals in Societies of Control.Richard Niesche - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (2):133-145.
    The introduction of new accountabilities and techniques of government for the purposes of educational reform have created new complexities and tensions for school leadership. Policies such as the publishing of league tables in the UK, high stakes testing in the US and the introduction of the My School website in Australia are particularly significant for school principals. In this article I appeal to the work of Foucault and Deleuze to provide an alternate approach to understanding how principals are constituted as (...)
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  28. Identidad y poder en las sociedades de control.Antonio Tudela Sancho - 2009 - Revista de Filosofía (Venezuela) 61 (1):7-37.
    La finalidad del presente ensayo consiste en partir de las nociones interrelacionadas de "capitalismo mundial integrado" (Guattari) y de "sociedad de control" (Deleuze) para intentar una deriva que cruce géneros, épocas y nombres propios: de la filosofía al cine y a la poesía (caminos de ida y vuelta), de Benjamin a Serres pasando por Homero, Kavafis, Cioran o Godard, del tardío imperio romano y sus incertidumbres a la imprecisión de nuestro propio tiempo. Posiblemente, pensar hoy la identidad humana sea (...)
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  29.  14
    Deleuze Against Control: Fictioning to Myth-Science.Simon O’Sullivan - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (7-8):205-220.
    Through recourse to Gilles Deleuze’s short polemical essay ‘Postscript on Control Societies’ and the accompanying interview on ‘Control and Becoming’, this article attempts to map out the conceptual contours of an artistic war machine that might be pitched against control and also play a role in the more ethico-political function of the constitution of a people. Along the way a series of other Deleuzian concepts are introduced and outlined – with an eye to their pertinence for (...)
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  30. The cultural scripts of control and individualization: Consequences for growing up during adolescence in modern societies.Helmut Fend - 2000 - In Walter J. Perrig & Alexander Grob (eds.), Control of Human Behavior, Mental Processes, and Consciousness: Essays in Honor of the 60th Birthday of August Flammer. Erlbaum. pp. 449.
     
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  31.  4
    Introduction.The Control of Knowledge in Islamic Societies.Maribel Fierro - 2014 - Al-Qantara 35 (1):127-134.
  32.  19
    Sex and Society in Islam. Birth Control before the Nineteenth Century.Charles Issawi & Basim F. Musallam - 1985 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 105 (2):362.
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  33.  12
    The genetic control of development: Joint BSDB/genetical society meeting, 19th‐21st March 1997, Warwick.Simon Bullock - 1997 - Bioessays 19 (6):531-532.
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  34.  15
    Computers and control in society.Arthur W. Burks - unknown
  35.  7
    Culture Control Critique: Allegories of Reading the Present.Frida Beckman - 2016 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Culture Control Critique is an attempt to address the current crisis in cultural critique, situate it in relation to what it sees as a powerful tendency toward political allegory in contemporary Anglo-American mainstream culture, and analyse how this tendency can be understood in relation to the totalizing tendencies of control society.
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  36.  29
    The control of information.John Durham Peters - 1987 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 1 (4):5-23.
    THE CONTROL REVOLUTION: TECHNOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC ORIGINS OF THE INFORMATION SOCIETY by James R. Beniger Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1986. 493 pp., $25.00.
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  37.  11
    Debt and sad affects in the society of control.Iwona Młoźniak - 2018 - Conatus 2 (2):49.
    The article presents an analysis of the notion of debt in the context of Deleuzean philosophy of affect. The interpretation presented on the following pages is “indebted” to Lazzarato’s conception of the notion of debt as a figure of subjectivity typical for capitalism. Debt is understood as an assemblage of sad passions and considered in relation to social transformations, that have led to contemporary societies of control. The article shows the connection between the concept of debt and the (...)
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  38.  13
    Freedom and control in the digital age.Alkim Erol - 2019 - Human Affairs 30 (4):570-576.
    Many conceive information and communications technologies (ICT) as providing a free space which bolsters the freedom of individuals. This is because the technologies, and the ways we use them, are thought to be grounded in consent given by individuals. However, it will be argued that individuals, by their own self-regulated consent-based actions when using ICT, are actually alleviating their own individual freedoms. This novel phenomenon, which Deleuze and Guattari have drawn our attention to, is a consequence of the de-territorialization and (...)
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  39.  26
    The anthropocentrism thesis: (mis)interpreting environmental values in small-scale societies.David Samways - forthcoming - Environmental Values.
    In both radical and mainstream environmental discourses, anthropocentrism (human centredness) is inextricably linked to modern industrial society's drive to control and dominate nature and the generation of our current environmental crisis. Such environmental discourses frequently argue for a retreat from anthropocentrism and the establishment of a harmonious relationship with nature, often invoking the supposed ecological harmony of indigenous peoples and/or other small-scale societies. In particular, the beliefs and values of these societies vis-à-vis their natural environment are taken (...)
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  40.  24
    Book reviews: The Society of Cells : Cancer and Control of Cell Proliferation_ and _ What Genes Can't Do[REVIEW]Adam S. Wilkins - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (8):926-927.
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  41.  24
    Icons of control: Deleuze, signs, law.Nathan Moore - 2007 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 20 (1):33-54.
    This paper is broadly concerned with Deleuze’s distinction between ‚la loi et les lois’ on the one hand, and jurisprudence on the other. Jurisprudence is the␣creative action of legal practice, the process by which it is forced to think constructively and anew. In such circumstances legal thought is akin to Deleuze’s concept of the event. I explore the distinction between law and jurisprudence by way of Deleuze’s comments on control societies, arguing that, under control, law ceases to (...)
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  42. Computational frameworks for zoonotic disease control in Society 5.0: opportunities, challenges and future research directions. [REVIEW]Anil Kumar Bag & Diganta Sengupta - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-30.
    This study investigates the intersection of existing computational frameworks for zoonotic disease control within the emerging societal paradigm, Society 5.0. Technologies in human-centric computing can facilitate real-time data collection and analysis, enabling early detection and rapid response to zoonotic disease outbreaks, thereby enhancing surveillance and containment efforts for public health protection. It aims to explore challenges and opportunities within these frameworks and delineate future research directions to serve as a benchmark. Conducting a three-layered analysis, the study identifies high-level technologies, (...)
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  43.  4
    11. Philosophy and Control.Paul Patton - 2018 - In Frida Beckman (ed.), Control Culture: Foucault and Deleuze After Discipline. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 193-210.
    In Dialogues Deleuze argued that the history of philosophy has always been a repressive agent in philosophy, ‘A formidable school of intimidation which manufactures specialists in thought – but which also makes those who stay outside conform all the more to this specialism which they despise. An image of thought called philosophy has been formed historically and it effectively stops people from thinking’ (Dialogues II, 13). His reference to the ‘image of thought’ speaks to one of the important ways in (...)
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  44.  35
    From control to values-based management and accountability.Peter Pruzan - 1998 - Journal of Business Ethics 17 (13):1379-1394.
    In recent years a series of developments in apparently loosely coupled domains have contributed to the development of new and vital perspectives on how to manage complex social systems such as corporations. These developments include improved communications technologies, increased awareness by constituencies of their potentials for influencing corporate behaviour, increased complexity and reduced transparency in large, heterogeneous organisations, a corresponding reduction in the capacity of traditional accounting and reporting systems to reflect organisational performance, new demands from employees as to their (...)
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  45.  28
    Birth Control in the Shadow of Empire: The Trials of Annie Besant, 1877–1878.Mytheli Sreenivas - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (3):509.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 41, no. 3. © 2015 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 509 Mytheli Sreenivas Birth Control in the Shadow of Empire: The Trials of Annie Besant, 1877–1878 In March 1877, two London activists provoked a debate about poverty and overpopulation that reverberated across metropole and colony. These activists, Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh, republished a book by the American physician Charles Knowlton that outlined methods to prevent conception. (...)
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  46.  63
    The Ethics of Online Controlled Experiments (A/B Testing).Andrea Polonioli, Riccardo Ghioni, Ciro Greco, Prathm Juneja, Jacopo Tagliabue, David Watson & Luciano Floridi - 2023 - Minds and Machines 33 (4):667-693.
    Online controlled experiments, also known as A/B tests, have become ubiquitous. While many practical challenges in running experiments at scale have been thoroughly discussed, the ethical dimension of A/B testing has been neglected. This article fills this gap in the literature by introducing a new, soft ethics and governance framework that explicitly recognizes how the rise of an experimentation culture in industry settings brings not only unprecedented opportunities to businesses but also significant responsibilities. More precisely, the article (a) introduces a (...)
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  47.  17
    Social control and the institutionalization of human rights as an ethical framework for media and ICT corporations.Katharine Sarikakis, Izabela Korbiel & Wagner Piassaroli Mantovaneli - 2018 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 16 (3):275-289.
    Purpose This paper is concerned with the place of human rights in the process of technological development but specifically as this process is situated within the corporate-technological complex of modern digital communications and their derivatives. This paper aims to argue that expecting and institutionalizing the incorporation of human rights in the process of technological innovation and production, particularly in the context of global economic actors, constitutes a necessary act if we want to navigate the immediate future of artificial intelligence and (...)
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  48.  60
    Moral control and ownership in AI systems.Raul Gonzalez Fabre, Javier Camacho Ibáñez & Pedro Tejedor Escobar - 2021 - AI and Society 36 (1):289-303.
    AI systems are bringing an augmentation of human capabilities to shape the world. They may also drag a replacement of human conscience in large chunks of life. AI systems can be designed to leave moral control in human hands, to obstruct or diminish that moral control, or even to prevent it, replacing human morality with pre-packaged or developed ‘solutions’ by the ‘intelligent’ machine itself. Artificial Intelligent systems (AIS) are increasingly being used in multiple applications and receiving more attention (...)
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  49.  14
    Controlling the field of academic economics in Hungary, 1953–1976.György Péteri - 1996 - Minerva 34 (4):367-380.
    On the basis of these findings, I suggest that the structure and organisation of the field of Hungarian economics under state socialism should be described as a case of “partitioned bureaucracy”.9 The compromise between research economists and the political elite in the New Course era between 1953 and 195510 survived the post-1956 reaction in so far as political economy, with its predominantly legitimatory and ideological functions, remained partitioned from the other sectors in the field through the remainder of the state-socialist (...)
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  50. Control discursivo: la negación de la multiplicidad.Magaly Vega Rodríguez - 2010 - Logos: Revista de la Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades 17:31-47.
    To understand the negative effect in the discursive multiplicity, it’s necessary to comprehend that the production of knowledge is not a free and natural exercise of the human spirit but a series of codes and rules of formation that leads to the production of speeches. That is the reason why we will take in high consideration Focault’s studies in the control of speeches. By doing this we will be capable to understand the way that subjects of knowledge, the epistemes (...)
     
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