Results for 'formlessness'

143 found
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  1.  35
    The Formless Self (review).Newman Robert Glass - 2004 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 24 (1):300-303.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Formless SelfNewman Robert GlassThe Formless Self. By Joan Stambaugh. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1999. 174 pp.For the past seven years I have been deeply involved in a worldwide experiment in global education. Students in the Comparative Religion and Culture (CRC) Program study the world's great religions for ten-week terms in each of East Asia, South Asia, and the Middle East, totaling one academic year (...)
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  2.  7
    Boring formless nonsense: experimental music and the aesthetics of failure.Eldritch Priest - 2013 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Boring Formless Nonsense intervenes in an aesthetics of failure that has largely been delimited by the visual arts and its avant-garde legacies. It focuses on contemporary experimental composition in which failure rubs elbows with the categories of chance, noise, and obscurity. In these works we hear failure anew. We hear boredom, formlessness, and nonsense in a way that gives new purchase to aesthetic, philosophical, and ethical questions that falter in their negative capability. Reshaping current debates on failure as an (...)
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  3.  59
    The formless self.Joan Stambaugh - 1999 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    The Question of the Self Perhaps the clearest access to the question of the self in Dogen lies in the fascicle of Shobogenzo entitled "Genjo-koan. ...
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  4.  14
    Formless Matter in Gersonides’ Cosmology.Max Wade - 2023 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 26 (1):79-103.
    Gersonides has at times been viewed as an essentially orthodox Aristotelian in his metaphysical views. This designation, however, has been challenged on a number of grounds. This paper examines the way in which Gersonides revises the traditional conception of hylomorphism by positing that matter can exist without form. Motivated by a desire to reconcile Aristotelian natural philosophy with the Ptolemaic astronomical model, formless matter is seen as a necessary entity to posit in order for his cosmological model to be coherent. (...)
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  5.  38
    Formless: ways in and out of form.Patrick Crowley & Paul Hegarty (eds.) - 2005 - New York: Peter Lang.
    The paper in this volume challenge the concept of form and aim to set out, explore and develop different theories and examples of 'the formless'.
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  6. The Formlessness of the Good: Toward a Buddhist Theory of Value.Mark Siderits - 1976 - Dissertation, Yale University
     
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  7.  12
    Formless Matter and Communism.J. A. McWilliams - 1950 - New Scholasticism 24 (2):136-145.
  8.  13
    Pedagogical form, study, and formless formation.Çağlar Köseoğlu & Julien Kloeg - 2023 - Ethics and Education 18 (1):101-109.
    Moving education to Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and the many alternatives during the COVID19-pandemic raised the question of pedagogical form. In a sense, pandemic education in its two-dimensionality was a frictionless, sanitized reduction of education to pure form; it offered a more efficient transfer of knowledge and was marked by a heightened means-to-an-end logic. This has made the informal, unforming and deformational activity that Stefano Harney and Fred Moten call study even more difficult, if not impossible during pandemic education. In this (...)
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  9. Ontological Symmetry in Plato: Formless Things and Empty Forms.Necip Fikri Alican - 2017 - Analysis and Metaphysics 16:7–51.
    This is a study of the correspondence between Forms and particulars in Plato. The aim is to determine whether they exhibit an ontological symmetry, in other words, whether there is always one where there is the other. This points to two questions, one on the existence of things that do not have corresponding Forms, the other on the existence of Forms that do not have corresponding things. Both questions have come up before. But the answers have not been sufficiently sensitive (...)
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  10.  50
    Form and formless: A discussion with the authors of Anticipating China. [REVIEW]Gang Zhang - 2011 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 6 (4):585-608.
    Chinese culture is neither the first problematic thinking (analogy) claimed by the authors of Anticipating China , nor the second one (logical inference). On the one hand, analogies are one of the most remarkable aspects of Chinese thinking, while on the other hand, Yin-Yang, Dao and Fo are all universal codes that could neither be reached by analogy nor by logical inference. In fact, both the first and second problematic thinking share the same world view, taking the world as a (...)
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  11.  8
    Chapter Three. Form, Formlessness, and Rule-Following.Sabina Lovibond - 2002 - In Ethical formation. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 45-64.
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  12. Fragmentation and the Formless Center.David Kolb - manuscript
    Centers have been out of intellectual and political fashion, because they have been often oppressive. We both celebrate and worry about postmodern fragmentation as we enact it in our technology, while fearing hidden centralization. But centering is important. I would like to mull over some issues concerning centers and criticism.
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  13.  8
    Forming the Formless.Morgan Deane - 2013-08-26 - In Kevin S. Decker (ed.), Ender's Game and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 78–88.
    According to the Chinese military philosopher Sunzi, a military commander's actions must be “formless.” Ender Wiggin, in Ender's Game, displays this formlessness in the fact that when we try to analyze his actions we are left with a sense of confusion about his reasoning. Sunzi advocates tactics including strengthening the martial spirit of your own soldiers through rewards and punishments, targeting the enemy's martial spirit through tricks, exploiting their fear and anger to inspire or sap their abilities, and outwitting (...)
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  14.  12
    Praises to a Formless God.Winand M. Callewaert & David N. Lorenzen - 1999 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (1):197.
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  15.  8
    Exercises through formlessness.Hélène Vuillermet - 2021 - Methodos 21.
    Depuis la Renaissance, une série de textes témoignent de l’intérêt des artistes pour l’informe, d’un passage du Traité de la peinture de Léonard de Vinci à Degas, Danse, Dessin de Valéry. Léonard de Vinci, Alexander Cozens ou Paul Valéry proposent des « exercice[s] par l’informe», selon l’expression de Valéry. Il s’agit bien d’« exercice[s] », d’activités répétées pour aiguiser les facultés de l’esprit. Ces exercices s’adressent avant tout aux artistes et plus particulièrement aux dessinateurs et aux peintres ; ils constituent (...)
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  16. Sublimity, ugliness, and formlessness in Kant's aesthetic theory.Theodore A. Gracyk - 1986 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 45 (1):49-56.
  17. Pure existence, formless' infinite being as ultimate reality and meaning. Existential contradictions and a metaphysical solution.G. Helal - 1994 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 17 (1):70-83.
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  18.  63
    The Nameless and Formless Dao as Metaphor and Imagery: Modeling the Dao in Wang Bi’s Laozi.Jude Chua Soo Meng - 2005 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 32 (3):477–492.
  19.  16
    Herbert Read: Formlessness and Form : an Introduction to His Aesthetics.David Thistlewood - 1984 - Routledge & Kegan Paul Books.
    A biographical account of Herbert Read's aesthetics. An excellent introduction to Read's work, it reveals a hidden order and presents a context which would have been familiar to Read's original readership but which is often indistinct today.
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  20.  5
    Herbert Read: Formlessness and Form, an Introduction to His Aesthetics.Philip Meeson & David Thistlewood - 1986 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 20 (2):107.
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  21.  14
    Wind eggs and false conceptions: thinking with formless births in seventeenth-century European natural philosophy.Paige Donaghy - 2022 - Intellectual History Review 32 (2):197-218.
    In early modern European natural philosophy and medicine, scholars encountered the problem of the “formless birth” in their studies into generation, alongside “monstrous” and “perfect” births. Such formless births included the hen’s egg, the unformed bear cub, and the human false conception – said to be shapeless lumps of moving flesh – and these types of conceptions influenced how natural philosophers, like William Harvey and Jan Baptiste van Lamzweerde, approached experiments on, or explanations of, generation. This article suggests that the (...)
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  22. The Excess Visibility of an Invisible Sex or the Privileges of the Formless.Claire Nahon - 2004 - In Kelly Oliver & Lisa Walsh (eds.), Contemporary French Feminism. Oxford University Press. pp. 159.
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  23.  17
    Jaime Rodríguez Matos, Writing of the Formless. José Lezama Lima and the End of Time, New York, Fordham University Press, 2017.Djurdja Trajković - 2018 - Filozofija I Društvo 29 (3):469-470.
    Jaime Rodríguez Matos, Writing of the Formless. José Lezama Lima and the End of Time, New York, Fordham University Press, 2017. Djurdja Trajković.
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  24. "Herbert Read: Formlessness and Form": David Thistlewood. [REVIEW]Philip Meeson - 1985 - British Journal of Aesthetics 25 (1):71.
     
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  25.  5
    Krauss' Critique of Postmodernism Sculptures by Bataille's Formlessness Theory.ByungKil Choi - 2011 - 동서철학연구(Dong Seo Cheol Hak Yeon Gu; Studies in Philosophy East-West) 59:139-161.
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  26. Diderot's Ontology Between Form and Formlessness.Miha Marek - 2011 - Filozofski Vestnik 32 (1):51 - +.
     
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  27. ''While being as infinite is formless, being as infinite is not concrete: A reply to Georges Hélal's' Pure Existence, formless infinite being as ultimate reality and meaning'(URAM 17: 70-83). [REVIEW]J. A. Bracken - 1996 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 19 (2):156-157.
     
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  28.  71
    Concepts of the Body in the Zhuangzi.Deborah A. Sommer - 2010 - In Victor Mair (ed.), Experimental Essays on Zhuangzi, 2d ed. Three Pines Press. pp. 212-228.
    The Zhuangzi is one of the richest early Chinese sources for exploring conceptualizations of the visceral human form. Zhuangzi presents the human frame as a corpus of flesh, organs, limbs, and bone; he dissects it before the reader's eyes, turning it inside out and joyfully displaying its fragmented joints, sundered limbs, and beautifully monstrous mutations. This body is a site of immolation and fragmentation that ultimately evokes a larger wholeness and completeness. Drawing and quartering the body, Zhuangzi paradoxically frees it (...)
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  29.  11
    The Concept of Aesthetics of Ugliness Exemplified by the Art of Radical Informel Abstraction.Barbara Gaj Ristić - 2022 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 42 (4):775-788.
    In the art of radical Informel, we encounter works with emphasised non-pictoriality, non-semantics and non-referentiality, as well as a tendency towards entropy, layering and the disintegration of form through destructive processes such as deformation, perforation, incision, scratching, the accumulation of structures and masses, fragmentation, stripping and burning. In this paper, theoretical models of interpretation for the art of radical Informel are pointed out through the concepts of the aesthetics of ugliness, i.e. brutal aesthetics, such as (1) deformation, (2) disfiguration, (3) (...)
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  30.  27
    A nuanced critical realist approach to educational policy and practice development: Redefining the nature of practitioners’ agency.Jean Pierre Elonga Mboyo - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (8):815-828.
    In an age of nationalisation of international educational policy, or vice versa, the politics and conflicts behind such policies often take centre stage to the detriment of professional expertise. In response, this article develops a nuanced critical realism to propose a practice-based development and implementation of educational policy reforms. Based on empirical reports of head teachers’ subversive practice, the article concludes by highlighting that professional expertise is a central component, dubbed ‘formless capability’, that all stakeholders use to turn policy intentions (...)
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  31.  6
    La déformation : Bataille et l'irreprésentable.Nicola Apicella - 2020 - Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 22 (1):101-116.
    The deformation: Bataille and the irrepresentable The present article is focused on the interactions of matter and form in the writings of Georges Bataille. Starting with the notion of "formless" that he outlined in the journal Documents and through Georges Didi-Huberman's text on the "formless resemblance", we will try to show how, in Bataille's work, high and low respond to each other and intertwine to generate a "spastic" device of deformation that allows the desire to reshape the writing and the (...)
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  32.  49
    On the beautiful and the ugly.Herman Parret - 2011 - Trans/Form/Ação 34 (s2):21-34.
    Classical aesthetics sees the experience of the beautiful as an anthropological necessity. But, in fact, the beautiful is rather the central category designating classical art, and one can question the relevance of this category considering contemporary art. The reference term most frequently used for contemporary art is interesting: works of art solicit the interests of my faculties (the cognitiveintellectual, the pragmatic community-oriented moral, the affective aesthetic faculties). It is interesting to notice that the categories of the beautiful and the ugly (...)
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  33.  16
    Conceiving Prime Matter in the Middle Ages: Perception, Abstraction and Analogy.Nicola Polloni - 2023 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 105 (3):414-443.
    In its formlessness and potentiality, prime matter is a problematic entity of medieval metaphysics and its ontological limitations drastically affect human possibility of conceiving it. In this article, I analyse three influential strategies elaborated to justify an epistemic access to prime matter. They are incidental perception, negative abstraction, and analogy. Through a systematic and historical analysis of these procedures, the article shows the richness of interpretations and theoretical stakes implied by the conundrum of how prime matter can be known (...)
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  34.  16
    The adventure of French philosophy.Alain Badiou - 2005 - Brooklyn, NY: Verso. Edited by Bruno Bosteels.
    Badiou explores the exponentially rich and varied world of French philosophy in a number of groundbreaking essays, published her for the first time in English or in a revised translation. Included are the often-quoted review of Louis Althussers's canonical works For Marks and Reading Capital and the scathing critique of 'potato fascism' in Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guttari's A Thousand Plateus. There are also talks on Michel Foucault and Jean-Luc Nancy, and reviews of the work of Jean-François Lyotard and Barbara (...)
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  35.  3
    Трансформація категорії «потворне» в межах постнекласичного естетичного дискурсу.Yevheniya Butsykina - 2016 - Multiversum. Philosophical Almanac:146-154.
    В статті здійснюється спроба історичного та концептуального аналізу трансформації естетичної категорії потворного в поняття безформного та мерзенного, яка відображає загальне перетворення естетичного дискурсу та його перехід у постнекласичну добу. Поняття безформного розглядається в контексті концепції низького матеріалізму Ж. Батая. Поняття мерзенного (та ницості) досліджується крізь призму ідеї Ю. Крістєвої та Р. Краусс на прикладі творчості С. Шерман та В. Ралко. Лінія трансформації класичної естетичної категорії надає можливість вибудовування нового етапу розвитку вітчизняної естетичної думки на основі синтезу «мерзенного» та феміністичного мистецтва.
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  36. The Cell and Protoplasm as Container, Object, and Substance, 1835–1861.Daniel Liu - 2017 - Journal of the History of Biology 50 (4):889-925.
    (Recipient of the 2020 Everett Mendelsohn Prize.) This article revisits the development of the protoplasm concept as it originally arose from critiques of the cell theory, and examines how the term “protoplasm” transformed from a botanical term of art in the 1840s to the so-called “living substance” and “the physical basis of life” two decades later. I show that there were two major shifts in biological materialism that needed to occur before protoplasm theory could be elevated to have equal status (...)
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  37.  28
    The 2005 Meeting of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies.Frances S. Adeney - 2006 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 26 (1):181-182.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The 2005 Meeting of the Society for Buddhist-Christian StudiesFrances S. Adeney, SecretaryThe annual meeting of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies was held in Philadelphia on November 18, 2005. The theme of the program was visual and aural expressions in Christianity and Buddhism and their relationship to religious practice.The focus of the first session was visual images of sacred art. Victoria Scarlett presented the paper "The Iconography of Compassion: Visualizing (...)
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  38.  27
    Logos in Heidegger’s Philosophy of Language.Barbara Warnick - 1979 - Philosophy Research Archives 5:660-675.
    This paper provides an account of the development of the logos concept in Heidegger’s writings on language and examines the implications of logos for a philosophy of language. In Being and Time/ Heidegger described logos as prelanguage, a preliminary perception of the world which often finds expression in verbal communication. This view is made clear by Heidegger's account of the act of speaking in which formless prior understanding (logos) is shaped into verbal expression. Heidegger's analysis of the communicative act in (...)
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  39.  40
    La conception stoïcienne de la matière.Bernard Besnier - 2003 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 1 (1):51-64.
    La physique stoïcienne est plus un corporatisme qu'un matérialisme. Est corps tout ce qui est capable d'action ou de passion. En face du mixte actif qu'est le pneuma, ce que l'on appelle matière a pour caractères l'absence de forme et de qualité, l'immobilité et l'inertie ; cette matière fonctionne cependant comme support de qualités, d'où son assimilation fréquente à la fonction hypokeimenon qui est un des aspects de la première « catégorie » stoïcienne. Ce couple agent/patient se retrouve à différentes (...)
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  40. Mad Speculation and Absolute Inhumanism: Lovecraft, Ligotti, and the Weirding of Philosophy.Ben Woodard - 2011 - Continent 1 (1):3-13.
    continent. 1.1 : 3-13. / 0/ – Introduction I want to propose, as a trajectory into the philosophically weird, an absurd theoretical claim and pursue it, or perhaps more accurately, construct it as I point to it, collecting the ground work behind me like the Perpetual Train from China Mieville's Iron Council which puts down track as it moves reclaiming it along the way. The strange trajectory is the following: Kant's critical philosophy and much of continental philosophy which has followed, (...)
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  41.  10
    Nothing to See? Paying Attention in the Dark Environment.Matti Tainio - 2023 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 32 (65-66).
    A cloudy November evening deep in an old forest. It is really dark, and I try to observe my environment. I discern the difference between the treetops and the dark sky and the snow-covered ground. Everything else is formless. My vision is quite useless, and the other senses are weak in these circumstances. Only the background hum is audible and most aromas are erased by the freezing temperature. In a winter outfit, all I can feel is the moving air on (...)
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  42. The mind-body relationship in Pali buddhism: A philosophical investigation.Peter Harvey - 1993 - Asian Philosophy 3 (1):29 – 41.
    Abstract The Suttas indicate physical conditions for success in meditation, and also acceptance of a not?Self life?principle (primarily viññana) which is (usually) dependent on the mortal physical body. In the Abhidhamma and commentaries, the physical acts on the mental through the senses and through the ?basis? for mind?organ and mind?consciousness, which came to be seen as the ?heart?basis?. Mind acts on the body through two ?intimations?: fleeting modulations in the primary physical elements. Various forms of r?pa are also said to (...)
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  43.  3
    The treasury of knowledge.Jamgon Kongtru Lodro Taye - 2012 - Boston, MA: Snow Lion Publications. Edited by Gyurme Dorje.
    Jamgön Kongtrul's encyclopedic Treasury of Knowledge presents a complete account of the major lines of thought and practice that comprise Tibetan Buddhism. Among the ten books that make up this tour de force, Book Six is by far the longest—concisely summarizing the theoretical fields of knowledge to be studied prior to the cultivation of reflection and discriminative awareness. The first two parts of Book Six, contained in this volume, respectively concern Indo-Tibetan classical learning and Buddhist phenomenology. The former analyzes the (...)
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  44.  20
    La matière comme miroir : pertinence et limites d'une image selon Plotin et Proclus.Frédéric Fauquier - 2003 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 1 (1):65-87.
    Si la forme est la condition de toute pensée et si la matière est informe, comment Plotin peut-il la penser ? Le recours à la négation accompagné d'une orientation du regard vers l'extériorité permet de faire signe vers l'informité de la matière ; cette négation cependant ne doit pas conduire à un nom vide, mais à un résidu ; l'image apparaît comme une aide qui évite l'évanouissement de la pensée dans le néant. Plotin développe en particulier l'image du miroir pour (...)
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  45.  27
    "Out of the Order of Number": Benjamin and Irigaray Toward a Politics of Pure Means.Peter D. Fenves - 1998 - Diacritics 28 (1):43-58.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Out of the Order of Number”: Benjamin and Irigaray Toward a Politics of Pure MeansPeter Fenves* (bio)At the heart of the legal orders that arose in conjunction with the Enlightenment idea of law as rules of conduct universally applicable to all those who belong to a properly instituted political body lies a formula for the justification of the violence on which the law depends in order for it to (...)
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  46.  21
    The re-orientation of aesthetics and its significance for aesthetic education. In The turn to aesthetics: an interdisciplinary exchange of ideas in applied and philosophical aesthetics.Alexandra Mouriki & D. Palmer, C. And Torevell - 2008 - Liverpool, UK: Liverpool Hope University Press.
    More and more these days it is asked whether aesthetics is still possible. A question that, given the context and phrasing, seems to direct us towards its answer. Conferences and meetings, books and journal specials examine the issue of aesthetics, talk about rediscovery or return of aesthetics. Well known philosophers and aestheticians underscore the need to reconsider the foundations of aesthetics and set new directions for aesthetics today (Berleant, 2004) or attempt to expand aesthetics beyond aesthetics–like Welsch, for example who (...)
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  47.  6
    The Moral Compass and Mortal Slumber: Divine and Human Reason in the Bibles Moralisées.Antonia Martínez Ruipérez - 2018 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 81 (1):1-34.
    In the thirteenth-century Bibles moralisées there appears a new iconographical type in which God the Father, and figures depicted in moralising illustrations, are shown with a compass. This article argues that these images throw light on the medieval concept of reason and its role in the Divine Economy. In these French Capetian Bibles, the compass is the symbol of divine or human reason, depending on the context where it occurs. When depicted in the scene of Creation in the frontispieces, the (...)
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  48.  7
    How to Explode an Expressive Body.Vladimir Safatle - 2022 - Studia Phaenomenologica 22:189-205.
    This article aims to discuss the gestural character of Chopin’s pianistic writing. We will focus on the set of Etudes pour piano. We expect to show how the notion of musical expression in Romanticism is dependent of a notion of expressive body always in the limit of decomposition. This could show us how musical expression is a privileged space for a better understanding of the dialectical relationship between form and formless.
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  49. The Subject As An Agent Of The Ethical Relations In Emmanuel Lévinas’ Thought.Marta Szabat - 2013 - Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 8 (1):67-80.
    The paper is devoted to the development of Emmanuel Lévinas’ philosophy of the subject as expounded in his Autrement qu’être ou au-délà de l’essence. Levinas claims that the subject is good but emerges from a formless substrate; for this reason it belongs to something which can described as anonymous, dark, ignorant, sensual — the otherness. An attempt to define the structure of the subject as an abstract entity is only possible in virtue of the fact that its form has been (...)
     
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  50.  19
    Buddhist Philosophy and New Testament Theology.Seiichi Yagi - 1999 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 19 (1):165-172.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Buddhist Philosophy and New Testament TheologyYagi SeiichiPrologueBy way of Buddhist-Christian dialogue we Christians can become aware of the latent motifs in our own tradition. The dialogue gives us opportunities to rethink the Christian tradition, not to interpret it from Buddhist viewpoint but, based on these actualized motifs, to find a more adequate interpretation of its own. In this way Buddhist-Christian dialogue is relevant also for the construction of New (...)
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