Results for 'mannerism'

67 found
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  1.  28
    Mannerism, Baroque, and Modernism: Deleuze and the Essence of Art.N. Rachlin, R. Scullion & S. van Tuinen - 2014 - Substance 43 (1):166-190.
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  2.  38
    Existentialist mannerism and education.Walter Cerf - 1955 - Journal of Philosophy 52 (6):141-152.
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  3. Mannerism: Islam and Western Art.Rasa Gecaite - 2003 - Dialogue and Universalism 13 (1-2):167-176.
     
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  4.  20
    Mannerism and Anti-Mannerism in Italian Painting.Walter Friedlaender - 1959 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 18 (2):273-274.
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  5.  16
    Some Mannerist Ingenuities in Mystic Poetry.Reuven Tsur - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (5-6):5-6.
    One of the central assumptions of the present study is that mystic or religious poetry not just formulates mystic or religious ideas: it somehow converts theological ideas into religious experience, by verbal means. It somehow seems to reach the less rational layers of the mind by some drastic interference with the smooth functioning of the cognitive system, or by a quite smooth regression from ‘ordinary consciousness’ to some ‘altered state of consciousness’. In this way, the experience is affected not only (...)
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  6.  5
    The philosophy of mannerism: from aesthetics to modal metaphysics.Sjoerd van Tuinen - 2023 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Examining afresh the 16th-century style of mannerism, Sjoerd van Tuinen synthesises philosophy and aesthetics to demonstrate not only the contemporary relevance of mannerism but its broader significance as a form of modal thinking. Beyond a style of art that spurned the balance and proportion of earlier Renaissance painting in favour of compositional instability and tension, this book looks a-historically at mannerism to investigate what it can tell us about continental modal metaphysics, focusing in particular on its artificial (...)
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  7.  44
    Mannerism: The Crisis of the Renaissance and the Origin of Modern Art. Vol. I. Texts; Vol. II, Plates.Dale Riepe - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 27 (1):124-126.
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  8.  7
    Galileo’s Thinking Hand: Mannerism, Anti-Mannerism and the Virtue of Drawing in the Foundation of Early Modern Science.Horst Bredekamp - 2019 - De Gruyter.
    Contemporary biographies of Galilei emphasize, in several places, that he was a masterful draughtsman. In fact, Galilei studied at the art academy, which is where his friendship with Ludovico Cigoli developed, who later became the official court artist. The book focuses on this formative effect – it tracks Galilei’s trust in the epistemological strength of drawings. It also looks at Galilei’s activities in the world of art and his reflections on art theory, ending with an appreciation of his fame; after (...)
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  9.  30
    Nicholas Hilliard and mannerist art theory.John Pope-Hennessy - 1943 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 6 (1):89-100.
  10.  25
    Mannerist vases T. mannack: The late mannerists in athenian vase painting . Pp. XVIII + 153, ills, pls. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2001. Cased, £60. Isbn: 0-19-924089-. [REVIEW]Elizabeth Moignard - 2003 - The Classical Review 53 (01):224-.
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  11. "Mannerism. Style and Mood": Daniel B. Rowland. [REVIEW]A. N. W. Saunders - 1965 - British Journal of Aesthetics 5 (1):101.
     
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  12.  7
    Naturalism and Mannerism in Indian Miniatures.Jane Duran - 2001 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 35 (4):57.
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  13.  5
    Vico and Literary Mannerism: A Study in the Early Vico and His Idea of Rhetoric and Ingenuity.Leo Catana - 1999 - Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften.
    Shows how Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico (1668-1744) picked up ideas on metaphor and ingenuity from the literary rhetoric of the age and turned them into valuable concepts in a general theory of knowledge and the philosophy of history for which he is now mainly known. Also shows how his original position enabled him to criticize Descartes' idea of rationality. Appends translations of relevant passages from contemporary writers. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  14.  15
    Brewing Dissonance: Conceptualizing Mannerism and Baroque in Music with Deleuze.Ceciel Meiborg & Sjoerd van Tuinen - 2014 - Diacritics 42 (3):54-82.
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  15. "The Renaissance and Mannerism outside Italy": Alastair Smart. [REVIEW]George T. Noszlopy - 1972 - British Journal of Aesthetics 12 (4):404.
     
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  16.  22
    The Renaissance and Mannerism in ItalyEugene Delacroix. Selected Letters, 1813-1863The Human Figure in Art from Prehistoric Times to the Present DayWorld Cultural Guides: Paris, London, Rome, VeniceThe Traditional Crafts of Persia. [REVIEW]Alastair Smart, Jean Stewart, Charles Wentinck & Hans E. Wulff - 1972 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 30 (3):408.
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  17.  14
    Vico and Literary Mannerism[REVIEW]Scott Samuelson - 2000 - New Vico Studies 18:111-114.
  18.  15
    Vico and Literary Mannerism[REVIEW]Scott Samuelson - 2000 - New Vico Studies 18:111-114.
  19.  17
    Early Modern Garden Design Concepts and Twentieth Century Royal Gardens in Romania: Peleş Castle and the Mannerist Landscape.Alexandru Mexi - 2017 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 6 (1):181-196.
    Built in between the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century in a mountainous region in Romania, the Peleş Castle and its gardens were conceived according to the mid sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries landscape design principles. Thus, the surrounding landscape, the park and gardens at the royal residence in Sinaia make up an overall image of a Mannerist landscape in which the Villa or, in this case, the castle, is integrated in a complex allegorical, (...)
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  20.  16
    Practice of the Eye and Practice of the Hand: Drawing Practice as a Practice of the Self in the Mannerist Renaissance.Baptiste Tochon-Danguy - 2021 - Methodos 21.
    Cet article se propose d’analyser la notion d’exercice telle qu’elle est pensée dans les traités d’art maniéristes de la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle en Italie ; il procède à une reconstitution des théories de l’exercice ainsi qu’à une explicitation de leurs sources philosophiques (aristotélisme, néoplatonisme…). Pour les maniéristes, l’art est une disposition subjective qui s’acquiert par l’habitude ; la pratique du dessin est supposée apporter à l’artiste une aisance qui concerne autant sa dextérité manuelle que l’acuité de son jugement. (...)
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  21.  8
    Caws, Mary Ann. The Eye in The Text: Essays on Perception, Mannerist To Modern.Elizabeth Higdon - 1982 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 41 (2):221-223.
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  22.  21
    Arnold Hauser, "mannerism: The crisis of the renaissance and the origin of modern art". [REVIEW]William H. Halewood - 1968 - History and Theory 7 (1):90.
  23.  10
    A. Hauser's "Mannerism: The Crisis of the Renaissance and the Origin of Modern Art". [REVIEW]Dale Riepe - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 27 (1):124.
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  24.  67
    The Sublime in Art: Kant, the Mannerist, and the Matterist Sublime.Bart Vandenabeele - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (3):32-49.
    Numerous contemporary artworks are found repellent, even by genuine art lovers, either because they deliberately derange our perception and imagination by an abundance of incoherent representations and stimuli or because they demand that we value seemingly nonsensical objects or all kinds of disgusting materials. Installations, collages, and so-called unassisted ready-mades especially cannot count on too much appreciation, unless the artists in question are sufficiently supported by clever managers who reduce their work to commodities, which then serve merely as illustrations of (...)
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  25.  5
    Horst Bredekamp. Galileo’s Thinking Hand: Mannerism, Anti-Mannerism, and the Virtue of Drawing in the Foundation of Early Modern Science. Translated by Mitch Cohen. ix + 366 pp., abbrev., bibl., index., illus. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2019. €49.95 (cloth). ISBN 9783110520064. [REVIEW]Eileen Reeves - 2020 - Isis 111 (2):390-391.
  26. The origin of concepts.Susan Carey - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Only human beings have a rich conceptual repertoire with concepts like tort, entropy, Abelian group, mannerism, icon and deconstruction. How have humans constructed these concepts? And once they have been constructed by adults, how do children acquire them? While primarily focusing on the second question, in The Origin of Concepts , Susan Carey shows that the answers to both overlap substantially. Carey begins by characterizing the innate starting point for conceptual development, namely systems of core cognition. Representations of core (...)
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  27.  67
    On Movement and the Destruction of Ontology.Thomas Sheehan - 1981 - The Monist 64 (4):534-542.
    Two problems continue to haunt Heideggerian scholarship and to pose needless obstacles to those who seek to enter his thought. One is the almost ritualistic repetition of the master’s terminology—especially at its most manneristic—on the part of his disciples. Another is the tendency, which is found in Heidegger as well as in his disciples, to hypostasize “being” into an autonomous “other” that seems to function on its own apart from entities and from man. Both of these problems gather around Heidegger’s (...)
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  28. Shadows over Shulamith: Giordano Bruno's De umbris idearum (1582) and the Song of Songs.Sergius Kodera - 2015 - Teorie Vědy / Theory of Science 37 (2):187-207.
    This article focuses on the use of one verse from the Biblical Songs of Songs in central passages of Giordano Bruno's first published book on the art of memory. De umbris idearum [On the Shadows of Ideas] not solely aims at improving mnemonic capacities, it also envisages the preconditions and limits of cognition in Bruno's new inifitist cosmology. Taking relevant scholarly literature on the topic as a point of departure, this contribution presents De umbris in the context of Bruno's philosophy (...)
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  29.  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. In the first (...)
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  30.  47
    Ideology and Iconology.Giulio Carlo Argan & Rebecca West - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 2 (2):297-305.
    Is it possible to compose a history of images? It is obvious that history can be composed only from that which is intrinsically historical; history has an order of its own because it interprets and clarifies an order which already exists in the facts. But is there an order in the birth, multiplication, combination, dissolution and re-synthesis of images? Mannerism had discredited or demystified form with its pretense of reproducing an order which does not exist in reality. But is (...)
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  31.  7
    Petrić i Acastos, nastavak prvi.Heda Festini - 2010 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 30 (3):451-456.
    Prethodno, u izlaganju »Petrić i Acastos«, održanom na simpoziju Petrić i renesansne filozofske tradicije 2008. godine, ustanovili smo da je Petrić najbliži platonovsko-novoplatonovsko- pitagorovskom izvorniku, ali je pridonio raščinjavanju klasične etičke vrline , da je vrlo blizak drugom modelu za uspoređivanje, Acastosu I i donekle se približava Acastosu II .S istim trima modelima sada prelazimo na usporedbu u odnosu na pjesničko umijeće, kako je izloženo u petnaest izabranih Petrićevih tekstova u knjizi Ljerke Schiffler Frane Petrić o pjesničkom umijeću . Pitat (...)
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  32.  18
    Brunelleschi's egg: nature, art, and gender in Renaissance Italy.Mary D. Garrard - 2010 - Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press.
    Introduction -- Great Mother Nature -- The gendering of nature as female : from prehistory through the Middle Ages -- Nature and art in the Quattrocento : from pupil to equal -- Technology and the mastery of physical nature : Brunelleschi and Alberti -- Genesis and the reproduction of life : Masaccio and Michelangelo -- The rebirth of Venus and the feminization of beauty : Botticelli -- A balance of power : pictorial metaphors for nature in transition -- Nature's special (...)
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  33.  29
    A Sixteenth-Century Meaning of the Escorial.George Kubler - 1981 - Diogenes 29 (113-114):229-248.
    A quest for meaning characterizes the thought of this century everywhere in humanistic studies, and it is a quest justified by exploring and mapping old and new terrains of which the resources are still uncertain. The Monastery of Escorial today raises so many questions about the traditional ideas with which we treat the history of art in the sixteenth century, that they are the subject of this paper. It is in four parts: the Escorial as Mannerism; as estilo desornamentado, (...)
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  34.  19
    The "l'art pour l'art" Problem.Arnold Hauser & Kenneth Northcott - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 5 (3):425-440.
    EDITORIAL NOTE.—Arnold Hauser died in February 1978 shortly after returning to his native Hungary; he had lived nearly half of his 85 years in a kind of self-imposed exile. He is considered, by those who know his work, to be perhaps the greatest sociologist of art, though his last years were spent in comparative neglect and obscurity. We present here as a testament to the importance of both the critic and the discipline he helped shape a section from the translation (...)
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  35.  36
    The Art of Literature.Arthur Schopenhauer - 1891 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. Edited by T. Bailey Saunders.
    The great pessimist who believed in the best and expected the worst from writers here applies his caustic wit to literature and the literary scene. Schopenhauer's piercing analyses of style, critics, literary values, learning, and genius make this volume a handbook on writing--illuminated by the author's own shining, powerful style. The best way to discover the finest qualities of style and to form a theory of writing, he advises, is not to follow a trendy mannerism, but to study the (...)
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  36.  38
    "Nos faysoms contre Nature...": Fourteenth-Century Sophismata and the Musical Avant Garde.Dorit Esther Tanay - 1998 - Journal of the History of Ideas 59 (1):29.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Nos faysoms contre Nature...”: Fourteenth-Century Sophismata and the Musical Avant GardeDorit TanayThe secular musical repertory of the late fourteenth century has been described in terms of unparalleled rhythmic intricacies, reflecting a conscious tendency to exhaust the scope of free play within the parameter of time in music. 1 Historians of music see in such musical complexity a case of a musical system in disarray, to be explained by patterns (...)
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  37.  39
    The Ways We Wonder “What If?”.Gavriel D. Rosenfeld - 2016 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 10 (3):382-411.
    _ Source: _Volume 10, Issue 3, pp 382 - 411 In this essay, I seek to refine our understanding of historical counterfactuals by classifying them into a new typology. After providing a systematic definition of counterfactuals, I divide them up into five different categories: causal, emotive, temporal, spatial, and manneristic. Within each of these categories, I identify eighteen different types of counterfactuals, which I classify with descriptive names and illustrate with specific examples from recent works of historiography. The different types (...)
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  38.  26
    Gazing Hands and Blind Spots: Galileo as Draftsman.Horst Bredekamp - 2001 - Science in Context 14 (s1):153-192.
    the article deals with the interrelation between galileo and the visual arts. it presents a couple of drawings from the hand of galileo and confronts them with viviani's report that galileo had not only wanted to become an artist in his youth but stayed close to the field of visual arts throughout his lifetime. in the ambiance of these drawings the famous moon watercolors are not in the dark. they represent a very acute and reasonable tool to convince the people (...)
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  39.  4
    H of H and the Combustion of Thought.Laura Jansen - 2023 - Classical Antiquity 42 (2):237-248.
    This piece looks into the atmospheric and catastrophic environments that punctuate H of H: storms, ice-breaks, volcanic eruptions, and nuclear explosions that give the tragic narrative an electrifying edge. It draws attention to a “chemical” poetics at the heart of Carson’s translation technique and thinking about Euripides’ play. This mannerism, also found in Euripides’s “combustible mixture of realism and extremism” (Grief Lessons, blurb), is not exclusive to H of H. It can be detected across Carson’s oeuvre – a tendency (...)
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  40.  27
    The Poetic Structure of the World: Copernicus and Kepler.Fernand Hallyn - 1990 - Zone Books.
    The Poetic Structure of the World is a major reconsideration of a crucial turningpoint in Western thought and culture: the heliocentric revolution of Copernicus and Kepler. FernandHallyn treats the work of these two figures not simply in terms of the history of science orastronomy, but as events embedded in a wider field of images, symbols, texts, and practices. Thesenew representations of the universe, he insists, cannot be explained by recourse to explanations of"genius" or "intuition."Instead, Hallyn investigates the problem of how (...)
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  41.  87
    Denise Scott Brown’s active socioplastics and urban sociology: from Learning from West End to Learning from Levittown.Marianna Charitonidou - 2022 - Urban, Planning and Transport Research 10 (1):131-158.
    The article examines the impact of the study for Levittown of urban sociologist Herbert Gans on Denise Scott Brown’s thought. It scrutinizes Denise Scott Brown, Robert Venturi, and Steven Izenour’s ‘Remedial Housing for Architects or Learning from Levittown’ conducted in collaboration with their students at Yale University in 1970. Taking as its starting point Scott Brown’s endeavour to redefine functionalism in ‘Architecture as Patterns and Systems: Learning from Planning’, and ‘The Redefinition of Functionalism’, which were included in Architecture as Signs (...)
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  42.  20
    Initiating Life: Agamben and the Political Use of Intimacy.Erik Bordeleau - 2017 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31 (3):481-492.
    The form of life is a secret so secret.What does it mean to initiate life? For the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben, the question of initiating life concerns how we conceive of and experiment with the how of a form of life. In short, it involves ways of envisaging an absolutely immanent life on the threshold of its political and ethical intensification. Agamben's whole philosophical project can be described as radical mannerism that foregrounds the question of the way of living. (...)
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  43.  8
    The Portrait of a Miniature Giant.Paul Barolsky - 2021 - Arion 28 (3):157-163.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: The Portrait of a Miniature Giant PAUL BAROLSKY There was a time when the art of the sixteenth -century Florentine painter Agnolo Bronzino was reviled for its aesthetic excesses. Writing in his classic “The Cicerone: An Art Guide to Painting in Italy,” the great nineteenth -century scholar Jacob Burckhardt wrote that “as an historical painter,” Bronzino must “be placed among the Mannerists,” a judgement equivalent to placing him (...)
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  44.  2
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 4, the Early Principate.E. J. Kenney & Wendell Vernon Clausen (eds.) - 1983 - Cambridge University Press.
    'Perfection is finality; finality is death'. The poets and prose writers of the first and early second centuries AD were not deterred by the towering stature of their Augustan predecessors from attempting new and often brilliant variations on the now traditional themes and genres. The so-called 'Silver' Age of Latin literature has tended to be characterized in terms of dismissive or question- begging stereotypes - 'decadent', 'rhetorical', 'baroque', 'mannerist' - as a substitute for close critical argument. From the sympathetic but (...)
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  45.  16
    Onitsura's.Peipei Qiu - 2001 - Philosophy East and West 51 (2):232-246.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Onitsura's Makoto and the Daoist Concept of the NaturalPeipei QiuIn haikai history, Uejima Onitsura (1661-1738) is famous for the following statement concerning the nature of comic linked verse: "Without makoto, there would be no haikai."1 The two Japanese terms used in this statement, haikai and makoto, present an obvious semantic conflict. Makoto in Japanese basically means "truth," "faithfulness," and "genuineness."2haikai, on the other hand, literally means "facetiousness" or "humor." (...)
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  46.  8
    Major Stressors and Coping Strategies of Internal Migrant Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Exploration.Akanksha Srivastava, Yogesh Kumar Arya, Shobhna Joshi, Tushar Singh, Harleen Kaur, Himanshu Chauhan & Abhinav Das - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    COVID-19 forced lockdown in India, leading to the loss of job, crisis of food, and other financial catastrophes that led to the exodus migration of internal migrant workers, operating in the private sector, back to their homes. Unavailability of transport facilities led to an inflicted need to walk back to homes barefooted without lack of any other crucial resources on the way. The woeful state of internal migrant workers walking back, with all their stuff on their back, holding their children, (...)
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  47.  18
    Gazing Hands and Blind Spots: Galileo as Draftsman.Horst Bredekamp - 2000 - Science in Context 13 (3-4):423-462.
    The ArgumentThe article deals with the interrelation between Galileo and the visual arts. It presents a couple of drawings from the hand of Galileo and confronts them with Viviani's report that Galileo had not only wanted to become an artist in his youth but stayed close to the field of visual arts throughout his lifetime. In the ambiance of these drawings the famous moon watercolors are not in the dark. They represent a very acute and reasonable tool to convince the (...)
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  48.  35
    Adult Male-to-Female Transsexualism.Roberto Vitelli - 2015 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 46 (1):33-68.
    Male-to-female transsexualism manifests itself in the form of a discrepancy between the male sex assigned at birth and the subjective experience of belonging to the female gender, which in many cases also involves a somatic transition by cross-sex hormone treatment and genital surgery. Until now, no studies related to MtF transsexualism have been carried out within the framework of a phenomenological/existential approach. This paradigm would make it possible to better articulate the transsexual experience beyond the simplistic diagnostic criteria by which (...)
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  49.  14
    Literal or Liberal: Translating Perception.Mary Ann Caws - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 13 (1):49-63.
    Any even cursory examination of what it is to exchange words about X or to exchange views about Y requires hard thought about what it is to exchange, period. How do we invest in what we give out, and how do we get it back? In kind, or differently moneyed? And, more crucial to the topic into which I am about to make a foolhardy plunge, is there such a thing as free exchange? And if so, what is it worth?How (...)
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  50. Renaissance Symmetry Baroque Symmetry and the Sciences.David H. Darst - 1983 - Diogenes 31 (123):69-90.
    Renaissance and Baroque, two terms unknown in the ages they describe, are now an integral part of the general public's cultural vocabulary. The first encompasses European civilization from the mid-fifteenth century to around 1550, and the second refers to developments in the seventeenth century, with the intervening fifty years forming a period of transition termed Mannerism. Beginning with the appearance of Heinrich Wölfflin's Kunst geschichtliche Grundbegriffe in 1915, these two great epochs of intellectual development have been described quite successfully (...)
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