Results for 'oblivion'

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  1. Ex oblivione : das Féré-Palimpsest : Noten zur Beziehung Friedrich Nietzsche-Charles Féré (1857-1907) (1986).Hans-Erich Lampl - 2014 - In Christian Niemeyer (ed.), Friedrich Nietzsche. Darmstadt: WBG, Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.
     
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  2.  17
    Questa oblivione delle cose. Reflexiones sobre la cosmología de maquiavelo.Marcelo Alberto Barbuto - 2005 - Daimon: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 34:37-51.
    Whithin the critique literature scope there are two standpoints as regards Machiavellian Cosmos: On one hand the traditional standpoint embodied by Leo Straus that has belittled the impact of the forces of nature; whereas on the other hand the standpoint headed by Gennaro Sasso, Miguel Angel Granada y Anthony Parel has interpreted the Machiavellian text concerning the debate between neoplatonics and neoaristotelians The Machiavelli´s overuse of a cosmological schema- wherein the life of the politic bodies is explained through an adequate (...)
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  3.  38
    Against Oblivion and Simple Empiricism.James Williams - 2010 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 5 (11):25-34.
    This article discusses Gilles Deleuze’s article ‘Immanence: a life...’ in relation to two problems. The first is the problem of empirical oblivion, or the way any record of an event involves a forgetting of aspects of that event which may later turn out to be of great significance. The second is the problem of latent significance, that is, of how events missed in the past remain latent and can be - perhaps ought to be–returned to in the future. The (...)
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  4. Blank oblivion, condemned life: John Clare's "obscurity".David Collings - 2019 - In Chris Washington & Anne C. McCarthy (eds.), Romanticism and speculative realism. New York, NY: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  5.  4
    Ex oblivione: Das féré-palimpsest.Hans Erich Lampl - 1986 - Nietzsche Studien 15:225-264.
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  6. The Oblivion of Nietzsche.Victor Mota - manuscript
    A superficial look to some Nietzsche's itens from an anthropological point of view.
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  7. Combating oblivion: the myth of Er as both philosophy's challenge and inspiration.Francisco J. Gonzalez - 2012 - In Catherine Collobert, Pierre Destrée & Francisco J. Gonzalez (eds.), Plato and Myth: Studies on the Use and Status of Platonic Myths. Brill.
  8. The oblivion of human rights (g. Agamben, R. esposito).Agustin Gonzalez Gallego - 2008 - Convivium: revista de filosofía 21:83-97.
     
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  9.  9
    Ex oblivione: Das féré-palimpsest.Hans Erich Lampl - 1986 - Nietzsche Studien 15 (1):225.
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  10.  16
    The oblivion – element of the cultural identity.Simona Mitroiu - 2006 - Cultura 3 (2):97-109.
    Following the distinctions made by Susan Pearce between souvenir collections, fetishism collections and systematic collections, the present study will underline the idea that, for Walter Benjamin, collection was a way to reconnect with the past and to reconstruct an image of what was destroyed. Every object collected by Benjamin was for him a souvenir of the European cultural identity.
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  11.  80
    The Oblivion of the Life-World The Correspondence of Alfred Schutz and Talcott Parsons.Daniela Griselda López - 2012 - Schutzian Research 4:45-64.
    At the beginning of the 1940s in the United States, an exchange of correspondence took place between two of the great thinkers in Sociology, Alfred Schutz and Talcott Parsons. This correspondence dealt with matters which many deemed to be “the greatest central problems in the social sciences.” The reading of these letters leads one to assume that the focus of both authors was on answering how sociology could be appropriately based on the revision of Max Weber’s classical contribution. However, this (...)
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  12.  6
    Oblivion and Invention: Charlemagne and his Wars with the Avars.Florin Curta - 2021 - Frühmittelalterliche Studien 55 (1):61-88.
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  13.  28
    Choosing Oblivion: The Irrationality of Suicide.Karl Schudt - 2002 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 2 (4):609-614.
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  14.  33
    From Oblivion to Post-History: Sublime Othering in Rider Haggard and W. E. B. Du Bois.S. N. Nyeck - 2019 - The European Legacy 24 (6):617-643.
    This article addresses the ways in which art and philosophy have been discursively used to conceptualize critical political changes and frame narratives of liberation by including and excluding primitive consciousness simultaneously. More concretely, it analyzes the contribution of art and philosophy to the understanding of history and post-history through different representations of black bodies, black desires, and black agencies in the novels She (1886) by Rider Haggard and The Quest of the Silver Fleece (1911) by W. E. B. Du Bois. (...)
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  15. Socratic Oblivion and the Siren Songs of Academe: Responding to Anne-Marie Schultz's "Stirring up America's Sleeping Horses".Terrell Taylor & Glenn Trujillo - 2018 - Southwest Philosophy Review 34 (1):23-30.
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  16.  7
    Solace in oblivion: approaches to transcendence in modern Europe.Robert Cowan - 2020 - New York: Peter Lang.
    We live in an era of global anxiety - about rising nationalism, civil and human rights struggles, the ramifications of declining white male hegemony, about driving ourselves and other species toward extinction. So it's no surprise that we also seek transcendence of our material circumstances. But exploring the possibilities of transcendence of our materiality, through religion, philosophy, psychology, and in literature, is not a new feature of thought, art, or action. This book explores approaches to the immanence-transcendence problem in works (...)
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  17.  6
    Relation Memory – Oblivion in Human Existential Experience.Maciej Woźniczka - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:347-366.
    In the introduction, the problem of interpreting memory as the basic category of human existential experience was taken up. The history of philosophical analysis of that category was outlined. Having put forward the definitions, the basic types of memory, appearing in philosophical discourse, were presented. The relation taking place between memory and oblivion was adopted as the basic one for the analysis. The problem of symmetry in the memory – oblivion relation was reflected upon. The existential nature of (...)
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  18.  32
    Memory, History, Oblivion.Paul Ricoeur - 2015 - In Richard Kearney & Brian Treanor (eds.), Carnal Hermeneutics. New York: Fordham. pp. 148-156.
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  19.  9
    From Polarization to Oblivion: A Brief Study on Chronotopes of Incident in Antares by Erico Verissimo.Ana Lúcia Macedo Novroth - 2023 - Bakhtiniana 18 (1):112-139.
    RESUMO Este artigo tem como escopo averiguar alguns dos cronotopos que organizam a narrativa de Incidente em Antares, de Erico Verissimo. Tenciona-se examinar, em especial, de que modo a polarização política e o esquecimento são elementos constitutivos do romance, por essa razão, cronotópicos. O primeiro é um motivo de natureza cronotópica e ocupa um lugar permanente na organização da vida da sociedade (ficcionalizada); o segundo direciona ao epílogo da narrativa e revela o modus operandi e o modus vivendi dos atores, (...)
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  20.  17
    Ordinary Oblivion and the Self Unmoored: Reading Plato’s Phaedrus and Writing the Soul. [REVIEW]David F. Hoinski - 2017 - Ancient Philosophy 37 (1):205-212.
  21. Remembrance and oblivion.Maurice Weyemberg - 1999 - In Joke J. Hermsen & Dana Richard Villa (eds.), The Judge and the Spectator: Hannah Arendt's Political Philosophy. Peeters.
  22.  46
    On the lineage of oblivion: Heidegger, Blanchot, and the fragmentation of truth.Jason Kemp Winfree - 2005 - Research in Phenomenology 35 (1):249-269.
    This paper traces the (de)formative force of Heidegger's thought on Blanchot's writing. In the paper, I attempt to show how the question of nihilism and the question of truth in the work of Heidegger impose on Blanchot what he calls the exigency of the fragment. This exigency arises more specifically from an affinity and attunement in Blanchot's work to Heidegger's sense of Aus-setzen, on the one hand, and a resistance in Blanchot's work to Heidegger's sense of Ent-wurf, on the other. (...)
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  23. Holes of oblivion: The banality of radical evil.Peg Birmingham - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):80-103.
    : This essay offers a reflection on Arendt's notion of radical evil, arguing that her later understanding of the banality of evil is already at work in her earlier reflections on the nature of radical evil as banal, and furthermore, that Arendt's understanding of the "banality of radical evil" has its source in the very event that offers a possible remedy to it, namely, the event of natality. Kristeva's recent work (2001) on Arendt is important to this proposal insofar as (...)
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  24. Marc Augé, Oblivion Reviewed by.Itir Günes - 2006 - Philosophy in Review 26 (1):3-5.
     
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  25. Fame and oblivion.Enrique González González - 2008 - In Charles Fantazzi (ed.), A Companion to Juan Luis Vives. Brill.
  26.  27
    From Oblivion to Memory: A Blueprint for the Amnesty: Mark Freeman: Necessary Evils: Amnesties and the Search for Justice, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2009, 352 pp, ISBN 978-0-521-89525-5. [REVIEW]Mark A. Drumbl - 2012 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 6 (3):467-477.
    This Review Essay examines Mark Freeman’s thoughtful book, Necessary Evils: Amnesties and the Search for Justice. One of the book’s core arguments is that amnesties from criminal prosecution, however unpalatable to liberal legalist sensibilities, should not be entirely purged from the toolbox of post-conflict transitions. Although advancing this argument, Freeman also struggles with it, and ultimately builds a very restrained and heavily technocratic defense of the amnesty. This Review Essay weighs this argument, among others, on its own terms and also (...)
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  27. Marc Auge, Oblivion.I. Gunes - 2006 - Philosophy in Review 26 (1):3.
     
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  28.  4
    Loving in Oblivion : die Marginalisierung bürgerlicher Vaterliebe im Zeitalter der Professionalisierung : eine Kulturhistorische Skizze.Nina Verheyen - 2011 - In Elmar Drieschner & Detlef Gaus (eds.), Liebe in Zeiten Pädagogischer Professionalisierung. Vs Verlag. pp. 157--175.
  29.  26
    Chthonic Restitutions: Madness and Oblivion.Javier Berzal de Dios - 2020 - Substance 49 (3):3-18.
    Abstract. This essay theorizes madness as a chthonic emplacement to dishevel existentially insufficient and detached interpretations of disorder. Reflecting on Nietzsche’s emphasis on poetry over systematic thought, I take up Lorca and Baudelaire’s visceral language on death and the earthly to revisit chthonic myths as expressing an underworld uncontrollable sphere beyond systematicity. Written from the phenomenologically precarious position of my own mental illness, this essay develops a sincere rhetoric to approach the chthonic from within rather than at sterilized distance. This (...)
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  30.  4
    The Implex of Oblivion.Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback - 2022 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 43 (2):285-294.
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  31.  15
    Postmodernism: Memory and oblivion.Ruyu Hung - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1469-1470.
  32.  49
    Holes of Oblivion: The Banality of Radical Evil.Peg Birmingham - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):80-103.
    This essay offers a reflection on Arendt's notion of radical evil, arguing that her later understanding of the banality of evil is already at work in her earlier reflections on the nature of radical evil as banal, and furthermore, that Arendt's understanding of the “banality of radical evil” has its source in the very event that offers a possible remedy to it, namely, the event of natality. Kristeva's recent work on Arendt is important to this proposal insofar as her notion (...)
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  33.  5
    Death: initiation or oblivion of consciousness?A. M. Kadykalo - 2005 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 33:15-24.
    The question of death accompanies a person throughout his life, is his antonym. The problem of the mortality of human beings always raises an eerie interest, the basis of which is, without doubt, the question: what about beyond death? - whether continued existence, or immersion in nothingness. Confirmation of interest in this problem is observed in all societies at different levels of their development, and expressed this interest primarily in the religious outlook of peoples, ethnic groups, etc. At the same (...)
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  34.  5
    The Way of Oblivion:1 Refugees in Italy.Liliana Ellena & Enrica Capussotti - 2003 - Feminist Review 73 (1):148-152.
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  35. The Holes of Oblivion: Arendt and Benjamin on Storytelling in the Age of Totalitarian Destruction.Kai Evers - 2005 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2005 (132):109-120.
     
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  36.  4
    On the Oblivion of ‘Seeing’ in Advaita Vedānta.Hyoyeop Park - 2013 - The Journal of Indian Philosophy 38:191-218.
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  37. Rhythms of Oblivion.Bianca Theisen - 1994 - In Peter J. Burgard (ed.), Nietzsche and the Feminine. University Press of Virginia. pp. 82--103.
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  38.  4
    Rodney Syme: Pharmacological oblivion contributes to and hastens patients’ deaths.Rodney Syme - 1999 - Monash Bioethics Review 18 (2):40-43.
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  39.  4
    Nothing: surprising insights everywhere from zero to oblivion.Jeremy Webb (ed.) - 2014 - New York: The Experiment.
    Incredible discoveries from the fringes of the universe to the inner workings of our mindsÑall from nothing! It turns out that almost nothing is as curiousÑor as enlighteningÑas, well, nothing. What is nothingness? Where can it be found? The writers of the world's top-selling science magazine investigateÑfrom the big bang, dark energy, and the void to superconductors, vestigial organs, hypnosis, and the placebo effectÑand discover that understanding nothing may be the key to understanding everything: What came before the big bang, (...)
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  40.  9
    Wardens and Prisoners of Their Memories: The Need for Autobiographical Oblivion in Highly Superior Autobiographical Memory (HSAM).Daria Baglieri - 2020 - Phenomenology and Mind 18:110-117.
    Human consciousness is a finite entity; therefore, memory must be selective: remembering must also mean being able to forget. In 2006, James McGaugh documented the first known case of hyperthymesia—a syndrome that affects a very limited percentage of the world population. The main symptoms of this mental disorder involve the concept of memory stuck in the past, where the individual is imprisoned by his or her own memories, and any projection towards the future is precluded. The inevitable change produced by (...)
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  41.  76
    Forgetting and the task of seeing: Ordinary oblivion, Plato, and ethics.Jennifer R. Rapp - 2011 - Journal of Religious Ethics 39 (4):680-730.
    The gaps, fissures, and lapses of attention in a life—what I call “ordinary oblivions”—are fertile fragilities that present a compelling source for ethics. Plato, not Aristotle, is the ancient philosopher specially poised to speak to this feature of human life. Drawing upon poet C. K. Williams's idea that forgetting is a “looking away” that makes possible “beginning again,” I present a Platonic approach to ethics as an alternative to Aristotelian or virtue ethics. Plato's Phaedrus is a key source text for (...)
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  42.  3
    The Neuroethics of Memory: From Total Recall to Oblivion.Walter Glannon - 2019 - Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
    The Neuroethics of Memory is a thematically integrated analysis and discussion of neuroethical questions about memory capacity and content, as well as interventions to alter it. These include: how does memory function enable agency, and how does memory dysfunction disable it? To what extent is identity based on our capacity to accurately recall the past? Could a person who becomes aware during surgery be harmed if they have no memory of the experience? How do we weigh the benefits and risks (...)
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  43.  6
    The Holocaust, the Human Corpse and the Pursuit of Utter Oblivion.Filotheos-Fotios Maroudas - 2019 - Conatus 4 (2):105.
    The purpose of this article is to show that the current incineration techniques of corpses are directly related to the Holocaust itself and its purposes. It is the same technique which, in the inhuman years of Nazi atrocities, was developed to be applied massively against the Jewish people and the other groups, because as a method it served and expressed both politically and ideologically the plan of a “final solution:” the final “dis-solution,” the disappearance of the human body even as (...)
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  44.  48
    Trial and punishment: pardon and oblivion.Pablo De Greiff - 1996 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 22 (3):93-111.
    While acknowledging the difficulties, both pragmatic and moral, involved in the efforts to try to punish those involved in atrocious crimes, I try to block the quick move to a policy of pardon and oblivion by interposing a moral commitment to the past that stems from a reflection about the nature of moral deliberation and moral identity. I argue in favor of a policy that is both compatible with such commitment, and practically feasible, one centered around forms of remembrance.
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  45.  47
    Heidegger on the History of Machination: Oblivion of Being as Degradation of Wonder.Mikko Joronen - 2012 - Critical Horizons 13 (3):351 - 376.
    Heidegger’s discussion about the rise of the arbitrary power of “machination” in his late 1930s writings does not just echo his well-known later thinking on technology, but also affords a profound insight to the ontological mechanism of oblivion behind the history of Western thinking of being. The paper shows how this rise of the coercive power of ordering signifies an emergence of historically and spatially significant moment of completion: outgrowth of the early Greek notions of tekhne and phusis in (...)
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  46.  1
    Forgetfulness and Oblivation. Examples of Oblivion on the Legal Plane.Anna Falana-Jafra - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:399-407.
    In colloquial language, as well as in the languages of some sciences (for example, medicine and psychology), oblivion is treated as a synonym of forgetfulness, and thus as the final phase of the process of forgetting – removing specific information from memory. The author tries to show that oblivion is essentially different from forgetfulness, because it is not exhausted in the processes taking place in the human mind, but goes beyond it, eventually manifesting itself in the surrounding reality. (...)
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  47.  28
    Timelessness and Negativity in Awaiting Oblivion: Hegel and Blanchot in Dialogue.Rhonda Khatab - 2005 - Colloquy 10:83-101.
    Set in the minimalist abode of a sparsely furnished hotel room, Awaiting Oblivion narrates the encounter between a man and a woman, anonymously known as Il and Elle, respectively. The plot revolves around their relationship, the nature of which is the concern of their dialogue. Their dialogue intermittently emerges through a narrative voice that is, however, infused with the very same confusion and vacillation as is their own speech. The man and woman are caught in an undulating relation of (...)
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  48.  44
    Signs of Memory and Traces of Oblivion.Simona Mitroiu & Elena Adam - 2009 - Cultura 6 (2):145-158.
    The main objectives of this paper are to analyze the relation between memory and oblivion and their exterior forms to the level of physical and cultural space. The notion of memory places (defined as accumulations of signs of identity and their materializations) is presented in its two manifestations: as memory landmarks (connection points to the collective past) and as memory signs. The distinction is based on the power of memory to remind us who we are, but also what we (...)
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  49.  29
    The Culture at the Crossing between the Memory and the Oblivion.Simona Mitroiu - 2008 - Cultura 5 (1):123-129.
    The culture defines some of the elements that we consider identity guide marks. The continuity of the identity is very closely bonded to these cultural elements.The understanding of the modality to represent the identity is possible through the analysis of some of these cultural elements and of the correlations that these establish in the context of memory and oblivion. This paper analyzes the dynamics of these three elements: memory, identity and oblivion, in literature.
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  50.  15
    Colloquium 4 Mythological Sources of Oblivion and Memory.Diego S. Garrocho - 2020 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 35 (1):105-120.
    In this work, I present a selection of mythological and cultural insights from Ancient Greece that make our ambiguous relationship with memory and oblivion explicit. From Plato to Dante, or from Orphism to Nietzsche, and even today, the experiences of memory and forgetting appear as two sides of one essential nucleus in our cultural tradition in general and in the history of philosophy in particular. I intend to present a panoramic view of the main mythological sources that mention these (...)
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