Results for 'ecological space'

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  1.  34
    Allocating ecological space.Steve Vanderheiden - 2009 - Journal of Social Philosophy 40 (2):257-275.
  2.  60
    Towards an Integration of the Ecological Space Paradigm and the Capabilities Approach.Wouter Peeters, Jo Dirix & Sigrid Sterckx - 2015 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 28 (3):479-496.
    In order to develop a model of equitable and sustainable distribution, this paper advocates integrating the ecological space paradigm and the capabilities approach. As the currency of distribution, this account proposes a hybrid of capabilities and ecological space. Although the goal of distributive justice should be to secure and promote people’s capabilities now and in the future, doing so requires acknowledging that these capabilities are dependent on the biophysical preconditions as well as inculcating the ethos of (...)
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  3.  8
    Population dynamics in ecological space and time.Timothy H. Keitt - 1997 - Complexity 3 (1):58-58.
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  4. Human Rights Versus Emissions Rights: Climate Justice and the Equitable Distribution of Ecological Space.Tim Hayward - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (4):431-450.
    Arguing that issues of both emissions and subsistence should be comprehended within a single framework of justice, the proposal here is that this broader framework be developed by reference to the idea of "ecological space.".
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  5.  13
    Political space of ecological citizenship.Jelena Vasiljevic - 2012 - Filozofija I Društvo 23 (1):102-111.
    This paper examines the concept of ecological citizenship by looking at two sets of arguments. Those justifying the concept itself, and those criticizing the need to devise a new concept of citizenship and political community in relation to ecological problems. The paper argues for a shift in focus: instead of searching for a new concept of citizenship, we should adopt a different perspective capable of capturing the explanatory potentials of citizenship-related notions - especially citizenship action and political (...) in which it is constituted - in the context of contemporary global ecological problems. (shrink)
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  6. Moral Ecology, Disabilities, and Human Agency špace 1pc 2018 Wade Memorial Lecture.Kevin Timpe - 2019 - Res Philosophica 96 (1):17-41.
    This paper argues that human agency is not simply a function of intrinsic properties about the agent, but that agency instead depends on the ecology that the agent is in. In particular, the paper examines ways that disabilities affect agency and shows how, by paying deliberate attention to structuring the social environment around people with disabilities, we can mitigate some of the agential impact of those disabilities. The paper then argues that the impact of one’s social environment on agency isn’t (...)
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  7.  20
    Space, place and ecology: Doing ecofeminist urban theology in Gauteng.Annalet Van Schalkwyk - 2014 - HTS Theological Studies 70 (3):01-13.
    The basic motivation for this article is to explore the critical, yet hopeful vision which urban theologians - and specifically ecofeminist urban theologians - have for justice, reconciliation and abundance of life in urban Gauteng. This requires that urban spatiality, with its conflicting sides in a rampantly capitalist Gauteng, needs to be understood. It also requires an understanding of how urbanity and ecology may - yet so often do not - overlap. According to ecofeminist theologian Anne Primavesi, space and (...)
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  8.  81
    Evolution in Space and Time: The Second Synthesis of Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, and the Philosophy of Biology.Mitchell Ryan Distin - 2023 - Self-published because fuck the leeches of Big Publishing.
    Change is the fundamental idea of evolution. Explaining the extraordinary biological change we see written in the history of genomes and fossil beds is the primary occupation of the evolutionary biologist. Yet it is a surprising fact that for the majority of evolutionary research, we have rarely studied how evolution typically unfolds in nature, in changing ecological environments, over space and time. While ecology played a major role in the eventual acceptance of the population genetic viewpoint of evolution (...)
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  9.  48
    Conceptual space as a connection between the constructivist and the ecological approaches in a robot vision system.Antonio Chella - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (1):100-101.
    The conceptual space< (Gärdenfors 2000) is discussed as a representation structure that connects the constructivist and the ecological vision subsystems in an operating autonomous robot based on computer vision.
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  10.  14
    Political space of ecological citizenship.Jelena Vasiljevic - 2012 - Filozofija I Društvo 23 (1):102-111.
    This paper examines the concept of ecological citizenship by looking at two sets of arguments. Those justifying the concept itself, and those criticizing the need to devise a new concept of citizenship and political community in relation to ecological problems. The paper argues for a shift in focus: instead of searching for a new concept of citizenship, we should adopt a different perspective capable of capturing the explanatory potentials of citizenship-related notions - especially citizenship action and political (...) in which it is constituted - in the context of contemporary global ecological problems. (shrink)
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  11. The ecology of cultural space.Marcelo Dascal - 1991 - In Cultural Relativism and Philosophy: North and Latin American Perspectives. E.J. Brill. pp. 279--295.
     
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  12.  9
    Gwangneung Forest from an Ecological Aesthetic Perspective: To Be Reborn as a Space for Special Forest Experiences. 최준호 - 2023 - Journal of the Society of Philosophical Studies 143:83-108.
    본 논문의 목적은 광릉숲이 대중들의 생태미학적 숲체험 공간으로 거듭나야 한다는 사실을 밝히고, 이를 위해서 필요한 것이 무엇인가를 논구하는 것이다. 연구의 결과는 다음과 같다. 먼저 뵈메에 의해 주창된 생태적 자연미학의 관점에서 볼 때, 대중들이 일상에서 몸으로 감지하는 것과 동떨어진 숲은 소외된 숲이라 할 수 있다. 광릉숲이 그 위상에 걸맞은 숲으로 거듭나기 위해서는 대중들이 몸으로 감지하는 것과 동떨어져 있는 이른바 태고의 숲으로 머무는 데서 벗어나야 하며, 동시에 에너지를 충전하는 휴식의 공간으로 그치는 데에서도 벗어나야 한다. 그렇지 않을 경우, 아무리 객관적으로 높은 가치를 지닌 (...)
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  13.  17
    Space of Vulnerability in Poverty and Health: Political Ecology and Biocultural Analysis.Thomas Leatherman - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 33 (1):46-70.
  14.  8
    Ecological Limits and Economic Development: Creating Space.Ramprasad Sengupta (ed.) - 2013 - Oxford University Press India.
    This book presents a comprehensive coverage of the role of ecological constraints in limiting the availability of natural resources for economic development. It discusses in detail the notion of sustainable development, the concept of ecological footprints, and population theory. It also analyses how the development of technology, policies, and institutions can relax these constraints in the context of major resources. The analytical discussion is carried out both at the conceptual and theoretical level and also at the applied level (...)
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  15.  20
    Technoetic space at risk: The development of a hybrid ecology framework for the spatial (re)configuration of the human condition.Carl H. Smith - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (1-2):85-101.
    Hybrid techniques and perceptual technologies that merge the physical and the virtual dimensions of reality are generating a conceptual and experiential working space to reconfigure relationships between the perceiver and the perceived. We are entering a new perceptual paradigm where form, content, and context are merging, generating radical new types of spatial construction. Through the development of hybrid spatial technologies we can now hack the individual’s sense of space and relationship to the world (transforming the subject/object relationship). How (...)
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  16.  5
    Open Space Slow Life and Ecologies of Sensation.Anna Hickey-Moody - 2015 - Feminist Review 111 (1):140-148.
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  17.  11
    Ecology: Its relative importance and absolute irrelevance for a Christian: A Kierkegaardian transversal space for the controversy on eco-theology.Hermen Kroesbergen - 2014 - HTS Theological Studies 70 (1).
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  18. Comparative color vision: Quality space and visual ecology.Evan Thompson - 2000 - In Color Perception: Philosophical, Psychological, Artistic, and Computational Perspectives. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  19.  15
    Ecology of Semiotic Space.Paul Bouissac - 1993 - American Journal of Semiotics 10 (3/4):145-165.
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  20.  17
    Ecology of Semiotic Space.Paul Bouissac - 1993 - American Journal of Semiotics 10 (3-4):145-165.
  21.  14
    Perceptual-Imaginative Space and the Beautiful Ecologies of Rose Lowder's Bouquets.Sarah Cooper - 2020 - Paragraph 43 (3):314-329.
    Experimental filmmaker Rose Lowder is an intricate explorer of perception. Many of her exquisite silent short films feature flowers that are scrutinized frame by frame in shots that appear to have layers, as well as volume, and to quiver between simultaneity and succession. Yet these perceptual palimpsests that present almost too much for the eye to take in also reveal an as yet unexplored relation to imagination. Informed by ecological principles and foregrounding floral beauty, Lowder's Bouquets create a striking (...)
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  22. Ecological Justice and the Extinction Crisis: Giving Living Beings their Due.Anna Wienhues - 2020 - Bristol, Vereinigtes Königreich: Bristol University Press.
    This book defends an account of justice to nonhuman beings – i.e., to animals, plants etc. – also known as ecological or interspecies justice, and which lies in the intersection of environmental political theory and environmental ethics. More specifically, against the background of the current extinction crisis this book defends a global non-ranking biocentric theory of distributive ecological/interspecies justice to wild nonhuman beings, because the extinction crisis does not only need practical solutions, but also an account of how (...)
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  23.  52
    Space and color: Toward an ecological phenomenology. [REVIEW]Murata Junichi - 2005 - Continental Philosophy Review 38 (1-2):1-17.
    Against the Newtonian view of color, according to which the world is colorless and colors are subjective sensations, phenomenologists keep insisting that colors are in the world. In order to defend this view of the “being in the world” of colors, this paper tries to elucidate the essential spatiality of colors on the basis of James’s thesis of the intrinsic spatiality of sensation, Katz’s phenomenological description of various spatial characters of color, and Gibson’s ecological optics. The noticeable correspondence between (...)
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  24. Elephants in time and space : evolution and ecology.Raman Sukumar - 2008 - In Christen M. Wemmer & Catherine A. Christen (eds.), Elephants and Ethics: Toward a Morality of Coexistence. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  25.  9
    Romantic Turbulence: Chaos, Ecology, and American Space. Eric Wilson.Laura Dassow Walls - 2001 - Isis 92 (2):407-408.
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  26. Ecologies of Death, Ecologies of Mourning: A Biophilosophy of Non/Living Arts.Marietta Radomska - 2023 - Research in Arts and Education 2023 (2):7-20.
    In the present condition of planetary environmental crises, violence, and war, entire ecosystems are annihilated, habitats turn into unliveable spaces, and shared “more-than-human” vulnerabilities get amplified. Here and now, death and loss become urgent environmental concerns, while the Anthropocene-induced anxiety, anger, and grief are manifested in popular-scientific narratives, art, culture, and activism. Grounded in the theoretical framework of queer death studies, this article explores present grief imaginaries and engagements with more-than-human death, dying, and extinction, as they are interwoven through contemporary (...)
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  27.  10
    Urban ecologies on the edge: making Manila's resource frontier.Kristian Karlo Saguin - 2022 - Oakland, California: University of California Press.
    Laguna Lake, the largest lake in the Philippines, supplies Manila's dense urban region with fish and water while operating as a sink for its stormflows and wastes. Transforming the lake to deliver these multiple urban ecological functions, however, has generated resource conflicts and contradictions that unfold unevenly across space. In Urban Ecologies on the Edge, Kristian Karlo Saguin tracks the politics of resource flows and unpacks the narratives of Laguna Lake as Manila's resource frontier. Provisioning the city and (...)
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  28.  7
    Matthew Gandy, Natura Urbana: Ecological Constellations in Urban Space[REVIEW]Steven Vogel - 2022 - Environmental Ethics 44 (4):383-385.
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  29. Urban ecological citizenship.Andrew Light - 2003 - Journal of Social Philosophy 34 (1):44–63.
    There are many ways to describe cities. As a physical environment, more so than many other environments, they are at least an extension of our present intentions. But cities are not confined to the moment. Built spaces are also in conversation with the past and oriented toward the future as physical manifestations of our values and priorities. But even with all of the ways we have to describe cities we do not normally think of them as in any way akin (...)
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  30. An ecological approach to affective injustice.Joel Krueger - forthcoming - Philosophical Topics.
    There is growing philosophical interest in “affective injustice”: injustice faced by individuals specifically in their capacity as affective beings. Current debates tend to focus on affective injustice at the psychological level. In this paper, I argue that the built environment can be a vehicle for affective injustice — specifically, what Wildman et al. (2022) term “affective powerlessness”. I use resources from ecological psychology to develop this claim. I consider two cases where certain kinds of bodies are, either intentionally or (...)
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  31. Life in Common: Distributive Ecological Justice on a Shared Earth.Anna Wienhues - 2018 - Dissertation, University of Manchester
    This thesis lies in the overlap of environmental political theory and environmental ethics. More specifically, it focuses on the intersection between distributive ecological justice (justice to nature), and environmental justice (distributing environmental goods between humans). Against the backdrop of the current sixth extinction crisis, I address the question of what constitutes a just usage of ecological space. I define ecological space as encompassing environmental resources, benefits provided by ecosystems and physical spaces and when considering its (...)
     
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  32. Ecological Models for Gene Therapy. I. Models for Intraorganismal Ecology.Arnaud Pocheville & Maël Montévil - 2014 - Biological Theory 9 (4):401-413.
    In this paper, we discuss the perspective of intra-organismal ecology by investigating a family of ecological models. We consider two types of models. First order models describe the population dynamics as being directly affected by ecological factors (here understood as nutrients, space, etc). They might be thought of as analogous to Aristotelian physics. Second order models describe the population dynamics as being indirectly affected, the ecological factors now affecting the derivative of the growth rate (that is, (...)
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  33.  30
    Queer Ecologies: Sex, Nature, Politics, Desire.Catriona Mortimer-Sandilands & Bruce Erickson - 2010 - Indiana University Press.
    Treating such issues as animal sex, species politics, environmental justice, lesbian space and "gay" ghettos, AIDS literatures, and queer nationalities, this lively collection asks important questions at the intersections of sexuality and environmental studies. Contributors from a wide range of disciplines present a focused engagement with the critical, philosophical, and political dimensions of sex and nature. These discussions are particularly relevant to current debates in many disciplines, including environmental studies, queer theory, critical race theory, philosophy, literary criticism, and politics. (...)
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  34.  45
    Ecological pragmatics: Values, dialogical arrays, complexity, and caring.Bert Hodges - 2009 - Pragmatics and Cognition 17 (3):628-652.
    This paper explores the hypothesis that first-order linguistic activities are better understood in terms of ecological, values-realizing dynamics rather than in terms of rule-governed processes. Conversing, like other perception-action skills is constrained by multiple values, heterarchically organized. This hypothesis is explored in terms of three broad approaches that contrast with models of language which view it as a cognitive system: conversing as a perceptual system for exploring dialogical arrays ; conversing as an action system for integrating diverse space-time (...)
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  35. Reparation Ecology and Sympathy with the Earth.Suzanne McCullagh - 2021 - In Toward an Eco-social Transition: Transatlantic Environmental Humanities / Hacia una Transición Eco-social: Humanidades Medioambientales desde una perspectiva Transatlántica.
    Amidst increasing concerns about harmful ecological change brought about by human actions upon the earth, environmental thinkers and activists attempt to envision human relations with the earth in new ways. Such thinking, however, frequently comes up against an inability to conceive of the more-than-human world as something towards which we can empathize or sympathize or to which we owe justice. As such, a powerful force in environmental discourse sees this problem as intractable and sees ecological change as a (...)
     
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  36.  33
    Ecological Responsiveness and Corporate Real Estate.John M. Quigley, Nils Kok & Piet M. A. Eichholtz - 2016 - Business and Society 55 (3):330-360.
    Firms’ real estate choices significantly affect their sustainability, due to real estate’s impact on the natural environment. This paper investigates the ecological responsiveness of firms in specific industries by analyzing the decisions these firms make in occupying office space. We analyze the decisions of more than 11,000 tenants to choose office space in green buildings or in, otherwise comparable, conventional buildings nearby. Controlling for building quality and location, we find that corporations in the oil and banking industries, (...)
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  37.  11
    Space in Hand and Mind: Gesture and Spatial Frames of Reference in Bilingual Mexico.Tyler Marghetis, Melanie McComsey & Kensy Cooperrider - 2020 - Cognitive Science 44 (12):e12920.
    Speakers of many languages prefer allocentric frames of reference (FoRs) when talking about small‐scale space, using words like “east” or “downhill.” Ethnographic work has suggested that this preference is also reflected in how such speakers gesture. Here, we investigate this possibility with a field experiment in Juchitán, Mexico. In Juchitán, a preferentially allocentric language (Isthmus Zapotec) coexists with a preferentially egocentric one (Spanish). Using a novel task, we elicited spontaneous co‐speech gestures about small‐scale motion events (e.g., toppling blocks) in (...)
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  38.  6
    The uses of space in early modern history.Paul Stock (ed.) - 2015 - New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The study of space and place is unquestionably becoming an important research focus in the humanities and social sciences. And while there is an expanding body of theoretical work on the importance of these concepts in various disciplines, less attention has been paid to how spatial ideas and approaches can actually be deployed to understand the societies, cultures, and mentalities of the past. In this volume, leading experts explore the uses of space in two respects: how spatial concepts (...)
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  39.  15
    Religion, materialism and ecology.Sigurd Bergmann, Catherine E. Rigby & Peter Scott (eds.) - 2023 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    This timely collection of essays by leading international scholars across religious studies and the environmental humanities advances a lively discussion on materialism in its many forms. While there is little agreement on what 'materialism' means, it is evident that there is a resurgence in thinking about matter in more animated and active ways. The volume explores how debates concerning the new materialisms impinge on religious traditions and the extent to which religions, with their material culture and beliefs in the Divine (...)
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  40.  5
    Re-imagining spaces and places: interdisciplinary essays on the relationship between identity, space, and place.Stefano Rozzoni, Beitske Boonstra & Teresa Cutler-Broyles (eds.) - 2022 - Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing.
    While 'space' and 'place' appear as key concepts in the study of culture, their complexity and mutability require ever-new frameworks when approaching them critically. Including chapters by authors from different fields, career stages, and geopolitical backgrounds, the contributors in this edited collection scrutinize the changing dynamics of space and place in relation to current political, social, and environmental urgencies across the globe. With chapters investigating both real and imaginary spaces and places, the diversified discussions included in this collection (...)
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  41.  1
    An Ecology of Happiness.Teresa Lavender Fagan (ed.) - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    We know that our gas-guzzling cars are warming the planet, the pesticides and fertilizers from farms are turning rivers toxic, and the earth has run out of space for the mountains of unrecycled waste our daily consumption has left in its wake. We’ve heard copious accounts of our impact—as humans, as a society—on the natural world. But this is not a one-sided relationship. Lost in these dire and scolding accounts has been the impact on us and our well-being. You (...)
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  42.  5
    An Ecology of Happiness.Eric Lambin - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    We know that our gas-guzzling cars are warming the planet, the pesticides and fertilizers from farms are turning rivers toxic, and the earth has run out of space for the mountains of unrecycled waste our daily consumption has left in its wake. We’ve heard copious accounts of our impact—as humans, as a society—on the natural world. But this is not a one-sided relationship. Lost in these dire and scolding accounts has been the impact on us and our well-being. You (...)
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  43.  8
    Sacred forests of Asia: spiritual ecology and the politics of nature conservation.Chris Coggins & Bixia Chen (eds.) - 2022 - New York: Routledge.
    Presenting a thorough examination of the sacred forests of Asia, this volume engages with dynamic new scholarly dialogues on the nature of sacred space, place, landscape, and ecology in the context of the sharply contested ideas of the Anthropocene. Given the vast geographic range of sacred groves in Asia, this volume discusses the diversity of associated cosmologies, ecologies, traditional local resource management practices, and environmental governance systems developed during the pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial periods. Adopting theoretical perspectives from political (...)
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  44.  7
    Ecological Location of a Water Source and Spatial Dynamics of Behavior Under Temporally Scheduled Water Deliveries in a Modified Open-Field System: An Integrative Approach.Alejandro León, Varsovia Hernández, Ursula Huerta, Carlos Alberto Hernández-Linares, Porfirio Toledo, Martha Lorena Avendaño Garrido, Esteban Escamilla Navarro & Isiris Guzmán - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    It has been reported in non-contingent schedules that the variety of patterns of behavior is affected by the temporal variation of water deliveries. While temporal variation is accomplished by delivering water at fixed or variable times, spatial variation is usually accomplished by varying the number of dispensers and distance among them. Such criteria do not consider the possible ecological relevance of the location of water dispensers. Nevertheless, it is plausible to suppose that the intersection of the programed contingencies, the (...)
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  45.  98
    Ecology and the Deep Forces of Perestroika.Jean-Robert Raviot - 2002 - Diogenes 49 (194):120-125.
    An oasis of authorized criticism in the 1960s and the 1970s, and a privileged public arena for ‘extreme non-conformist’ intellectuals in the same period, ecology was also the matrix for the national movements which precipitated the end of the decaying party-state at the end of the 1980s and which had been in gestation since the late 1960s. Ideal metaphor for the fall of a system emblematized by the catastrophe at Chernobyl (April 1986), the ecological crisis - the crisis in (...)
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  46.  36
    Ecological Goods that Obligate.Adam Konopka - 2009 - Environmental Ethics 31 (3):245-262.
    Phenomenological resources can be used to develop a nonanthropocentric theory of ecological values that gives rise to an obligation for moral agents. There is logical space in Edmund Husserl’s early theory of value that is inclusive of nonhuman animals and vegetation as members of a life community (Lebensgemeinschaft) possessing ecological characteristics. Within this legal space is a characterization of ecological obligation that is not tied to any single moral law, as it is in deontological ethics (...)
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  47.  16
    Dark Ecology and the Abject.Rebeca Weisman - 2016 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 10 (3).
    I would like to discuss the possibility of a parallactic view of ecology and the environment. There is very little discussion of theoretical approaches to ecocriticism that is not either polarizing dualism or reactionary attempts to dissolve important boundaries between us and the space around us. I draw significantly on the work of Timothy Morton who in turn utilizes new readings of Descartes, Heidegger and other phenomenologists, Marx, and Lacan, among others, to discuss the aesthetic in eco-critique. This has (...)
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  48.  54
    Ecological considerations support color physicalism.James J. Clark - 2003 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (1):24-25.
    We argue that any theory of color physicalism must include consideration of ecological interactions. Ecological and sensorimotor contingencies resulting from relative surface motion and observer motion give rise to measurable effects on the spectrum of light reflecting from surfaces. These contingencies define invariant manifolds in a sensory-spatial space, which is the physical underpinning of all subjective color experiences.
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  49. “Ecology and Technological Enframement: Cities, Networks and the COVID-19 Pandemic” (Alice Cortés as second author).Matthew Crippen - 2022 - In Reclaiming the City.
    Though past commentators have attacked cities as corrupt, dirty places, it is almost too obvious to need stating that a sustainable future depends on them. This is because most people live in cities and because the streamlined use of urban space brings a wide range of efficiencies. Simultaneously, urban living and associated technologies may impact psychology such that people see humans and their cities as outside of nature, which has been shown to reduce concern for the wellbeing of the (...)
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  50. Ecological Finitude as Ontological Finitude: Radical Hope in the Anthropocene.B. Scot Rousse & Fernando Flores - 2018 - In Richard Polt & Jon Wittrock (eds.), The Task of Philosophy in the Anthropocene: Axial Echoes in Global Space. New York: Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 175-192.
    The proposal that the earth has entered a new epoch called “the Anthropocene” has touched a nerve . One unsettling part of having our ecological finitude thrust upon us with the term “Anthropocene” is that, as Nietzsche said of the death of God, we ourselves are supposed to be the collective doer responsible here, yet this is a deed which no one individual meant to do and whose implications no one fully comprehends. For the pessimists about humanity, the implications (...)
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