Results for 'shrapnel wound'

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  1.  79
    Discovering Quantum Causal Models.Sally Shrapnel - 2019 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 70 (1):1-25.
    Costa and Shrapnel have recently proposed an interventionist theory of quantum causation. The formalism generalizes the classical methods of Pearl and allows for the discovery of quantum causal structure via localized interventions. Classical causal structure is presented as a special case of this more general framework. I introduce the account and consider whether this formalism provides a causal explanation for the Bell correlations.
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  2. Causation does not explain contextuality.Sally Shrapnel & Fabio Costa - 2018 - Quantum 2:63.
    Realist interpretations of quantum mechanics presuppose the existence of elements of reality that are independent of the actions used to reveal them. Such a view is challenged by several no-go theorems that show quantum correlations cannot be explained by non-contextual ontological models, where physical properties are assumed to exist prior to and independently of the act of measurement. However, all such contextuality proofs assume a traditional notion of causal structure, where causal influence flows from past to future according to ordinary (...)
     
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  3. Updating the Born Rule.Sally Shrapnel, Fabio Costa & Gerard Milburn - 2018 - New Journal of Physics 20: 053010.
    Despite the tremendous empirical success of quantum theory there is still widespread disagreement about what it can tell us about the nature of the world. A central question is whether the theory is about our knowledge of reality, or a direct statement about reality itself. Current interpretations of quantum theory, regardless of their stance on this question, regard the Born rule as fundamental and add an independent state update (or ‘collapse’) rule to describe how quantum states change upon measurement. In (...)
     
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  4. Quantum Causal Modelling.Fabio Costa & Sally Shrapnel - 2016 - New Journal of Physics 18 (6):063032.
    Causal modelling provides a powerful set of tools for identifying causal structure from observed correlations. It is well known that such techniques fail for quantum systems, unless one introduces 'spooky' hidden mechanisms. Whether one can produce a genuinely quantum framework in order to discover causal structure remains an open question. Here we introduce a new framework for quantum causal modelling that allows for the discovery of causal structure. We define quantum analogues for core features of classical causal modelling techniques, including (...)
     
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  5.  79
    Quantum causal explanation: or, why birds fly south.Sally Shrapnel - 2014 - European Journal for Philosophy of Science 4 (3):409-423.
    It is widely held that it is difficult, if not impossible, to apply causal theory to the domain of quantum mechanics. However, there are several recent scientific explanations that appeal crucially to quantum processes, and which are most naturally construed as causal explanations. They come from two relatively new fields: quantum biology and quantum technology. We focus on two examples, the explanation for the optical interferometer LIGO and the explanation for the avian magneto-compass. We analyse the explanation for the avian (...)
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  6.  11
    Stepping down from mere appearance: Modelling the 'actuality' of time.Sally Shrapnel, Peter W. Evans & Gerard J. Milburn - unknown
    In her paper, 'The Open Universe: Totality, Self-reference and Time', Ismael argues that the agent experience of dynamic time, in which the world comes into being, is more than 'mere appearance'. The key to her argument is that the actual world includes agents (minds) and their corresponding agential (mental) activity, which Ismael describes as 'the crucial step down from 'mere appearance' to actuality'. We present here a model of an agent as a complex physical system with a view to providing (...)
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  7. Miel en el tratamiento de heridas:¿ Creencia O realidad?Wounds Treatment By Honey - forthcoming - Horizonte.
     
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  8.  43
    The Two Sides of Interventionist Causation.Peter W. Evans & Sally Shrapnel - manuscript
    Pearl and Woodward are both well-known advocates of interventionist causation. What is less well-known is the interesting relationship between their respective accounts. In this paper we discuss the different perspectives of causation these two accounts present and show that they are two sides of the same coin. Pearl’s focus is on leveraging global network constraints to correctly identify local causal relations. The rules by which global causal structures are composed from distinct causal relations are precisely defined by the global constraints. (...)
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  9.  12
    Frölich's table of Homeric wounds.Proiemi Throw & Miss Wound Died - 2004 - Classical Quarterly 54:1-17.
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  10.  38
    How clocks define physical time.Peter W. Evans, Gerard J. Milburn & Sally Shrapnel - unknown
    It is the prevailing paradigm in contemporary physics to model the dynamical evolution of physical systems in terms of a real parameter conventionally denoted as 't' ('little tee'). We typically call such dynamical models laws of nature' and t we call 'physical time'. It is common in the philosophy of time to regard t as time itself, and to take the global structure of general relativity as the ultimate guide to physical time, and so consequently the true nature of time. (...)
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  11.  5
    The Vagaries and Vicissitudes of War.I. I. Richard W. Sams - 2023 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 13 (3):170-172.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Vagaries and Vicissitudes of WarRichard W Sams III remember standing in the kitchen of our home on Camp Pendleton—a United States Marine Corps base in Southern California—listening to National Public Radio (NPR) and doing dishes in the fall of 2002. President Bush announced to the world that he was considering a pre-emptive invasion of Iraq on the pretext of Saddam Hussein harboring weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Three (...)
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  12.  10
    A Myth of reading.Alfred Louch - 1996 - Philosophy and Literature 20 (1):218-228.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A Myth Of ReadingAlfred LouchThe Myth of Theory, by William Righter; x 7 224 pp. Cambridge University Press, 1994, $49.95.IThe critics mill about in the welcome break between interminable and terminal conference sessions, eager to see and be seen. William Righter wanders about, listening and telling anyone who stays to listen what he hears, musing all the while on what each of them has done, or tried to do, (...)
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  13. The wounded storyteller: body, illness, and ethics.Arthur W. Frank - 1995 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In At the Will of the Body , Arthur Frank told the story of his own illnesses, heart attack and cancer. That book ended by describing the existence of a "remission society," whose members all live with some form of illness or disability. The Wounded Storyteller is their collective portrait. Ill people are more than victims of disease or patients of medicine they are wounded storytellers. People tell stories to make sense of their suffering when they turn their diseases into (...)
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  14.  5
    Shrapnels: Jacques Derrida’s Theory and Practice.Thomas Telios - 2023 - Symposium 27 (1):77-95.
    Jacques Derrida’s lectures on Theory and Practice leave a lot to be desired from the perspective of historical materialism. Yet, one can nonetheless find in them the germ of a genuine understanding of materialism. More specifically, following the systematic use of the word “enigma” in the text, I show that this term serves as the heu-ristic device for articulating an originally Derridean materialism, one which I name “enigmatic materialism,” and which, I argue, is genuinely collective, insofar as it opposes any (...)
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  15. Wounds and Scars: Deleuze on the Time (and the Ethics) of the Event.Jack Reynolds - 2007 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 1 (2):15.
    This essay examines Deleuze's account of time and the wound in The Logic of Sense and, to a lesser extent, in Difference and Repetition. As such, it will also explicate his understanding of the event, as well as the notoriously opaque ethics of counter-actualisation that are bound up with it, before raising certain problems that are associated with the transcendental and ethical priority that he accords to the event and what he calls the time of Aion. I will conclude (...)
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  16. Wounds and Scars: Deleuze on the Time and Ethics of the Event.Jack Reynolds - 2007 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 1 (2):144-166.
    This paper explores the idea that Deleuze’s oeuvre is best understood as a philosophy of the wound, synonymous with a philosophy of the event. Although this wound/scar typology may appear to be a metaphorical conceit, the motif of the wound recurs frequently and perhaps even symptomatically in many of Deleuze’s texts, particularly where he is attempting to delineate some of the most important differences (transcendental, temporal, and ethical) between himself and his phenomenological predecessors. I raise some some (...)
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  17.  70
    Wounds of self: Experience, word, image, and identity.Mariana Ortega - 2008 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 22 (4):pp. 235-247.
    The article presents a study that aims to bring together the image and the word or ways of knowing through the concept of words and their respective ways to see images. Accordingly, when words are put together, phenomenological insight has been followed which does justice to lived experiences. Moreover, the author stresses the idea of the punctum in words as a wound.
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  18. The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness.Arthur Frank - forthcoming - Ethics.
  19.  9
    Wounded by Reality: Understanding and Treating Adult Onset Trauma.Ghislaine Boulanger - 2007 - Routledge.
    The culmination of three decades of studying and treating survivors of adult onset trauma, _Wounded by Reality_ is the first systematic attempt to differentiate adult onset trauma from childhood trauma, with which it is frequently confused. When catastrophic events overtake adult lives, they often scar the psyche in ways that psychodynamically oriented clinicians struggle to understand. For Ghislaine Boulanger, the enormous challenge of working with these patients is unsurprising. Survivors of major catastrophe, whether a natural disaster, a life-threatening assault, a (...)
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  20.  18
    Unseen Wounds.Fabian Bernhardt - 2021 - Philosophy Today 65 (1):21-36.
    Philosophical interest in vulnerability focusses mainly on normative questions concerning its relevance for moral, political and legal theory. However, beneath these questions there lies another one which is epistemological: How do we gain clear knowledge about another person’s pain and suffering? How do we recognize a wounded life? Drawing primarily on the account of Elaine Scarry, the article aims at showing that the difficulties to apprehend and recognize a life as injured are not only grounded in political and cultural frames, (...)
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  21.  50
    Wounded Bodies, Recovered Bodies: Discourses around female sexual mutilations.Tanella Boni - 2010 - Diogenes 57 (1):15-29.
    This study reviews various discourses around female sexual mutilation from the perspective of the human and social sciences, and also current debates between supporters of the cultural argument and those defending the universality of human rights. An aside about the Dogon myth of world order recorded by Marcel Griaule in Dieu d’eau or Aristotle’s philosophical discourse in the Reproduction of Animals is required in order to widen the debate and see its importance as regards the dignity of the human person. (...)
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  22.  34
    The Wounded Animal: J. M. Coetzee and the Difficulty of Reality in Literature and Philosophy.Stephen Mulhall - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    In 1997, the Nobel Prize-winning novelist J. M. Coetzee, invited to Princeton University to lecture on the moral status of animals, read a work of fiction about an eminent novelist, Elizabeth Costello, invited to lecture on the moral status of animals at an American college. Coetzee's lectures were published in 1999 as The Lives of Animals, and reappeared in 2003 as part of his novel Elizabeth Costello; and both lectures and novel have attracted the critical attention of a number of (...)
  23.  7
    The Wounded Animal: J. M. Coetzee and the Difficulty of Reality in Literature and Philosophy.Stephen Mulhall - 2008 - Princeton University Press.
    In 1997, the Nobel Prize-winning novelist J. M. Coetzee, invited to Princeton University to lecture on the moral status of animals, read a work of fiction about an eminent novelist, Elizabeth Costello, invited to lecture on the moral status of animals at an American college. Coetzee's lectures were published in 1999 as The Lives of Animals, and reappeared in 2003 as part of his novel Elizabeth Costello; and both lectures and novel have attracted the critical attention of a number of (...)
  24.  20
    Anoxia, wound healing, VL30 elements, and the molecular basis of malignant conversion.Garth R. Anderson & Daniel L. Stoler - 1993 - Bioessays 15 (4):265-272.
    Although VL30 retrotransposable elements have been associated with certain cancers for nearly twenty years, because of their expression in rodent malignancies and recombination into murine sarcoma viruses, their causative role, if any, in cancer has been uncertain and enigmatic. Recent findings suggest loss of normal transcriptional control of specific VL30 element expression may make a critical contribution to tumor progression at a step associated with malignant conversion, by bringing into play a cellular program normally involved in wound healing. This (...)
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  25.  5
    Wounds Not Healed by Time: The Power of Repentance and Forgiveness.Solomon Schimmel - 2002 - Oup Usa.
    How should we respond to injuries done to us and to the hurts that we inflict on others? In this thoughtful book, Wounds Not Healed By Time, Solomon Schimmel guides us through the meanings of justice, forgiveness, repentance, and reconciliation. In doing so, he probes to the core of the human encounter with evil, drawing on religious traditions, psychology, philosophy, and the personal experiences of both perpetrators and of victims.
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  26.  35
    The wounds in Iliad 13–16.K. B. Saunders - 1999 - Classical Quarterly 49 (02):345-.
    The wounds inflicted by Homer's warriors fascinate readers, since they are vividly described and often curious or even grotesque. Commentators have struggled to explain some of them since commentaries began: some of the explanations are more curious than the wounds. Not surprisingly, the commentaries have not usually been graced by a high standard of anatomical or, especially, physiological background knowledge, and are often misleading in these respects. When such knowledge is applied, some wounds which have appeared problematic become realistic, but (...)
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  27.  7
    The wounds in Iliad 13–16.K. B. Saunders - 1999 - Classical Quarterly 49 (2):345-363.
    The wounds inflicted by Homer's warriors fascinate readers, since they are vividly described and often curious or even grotesque. Commentators have struggled to explain some of them since commentaries began: some of the explanations are more curious than the wounds. Not surprisingly, the commentaries have not usually been graced by a high standard of anatomical or, especially, physiological background knowledge, and are often misleading in these respects. When such knowledge is applied, some wounds which have appeared problematic become realistic, but (...)
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  28.  15
    The wounds inIliad13–16.K. B. Saunders - 1999 - Classical Quarterly 49 (2):345-363.
    The wounds inflicted by Homer's warriors fascinate readers, since they are vividly described and often curious or even grotesque. Commentators have struggled to explain some of them since commentaries began: some of the explanations are more curious than the wounds. Not surprisingly, the commentaries have not usually been graced by a high standard of anatomical or, especially, physiological background knowledge, and are often misleading in these respects. When such knowledge is applied, some wounds which have appeared problematic become realistic, but (...)
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  29. Touching the wounds of colonial duration: Fanon's anticolonial critical phenomenology.Alia Al-Saji - forthcoming - Southern Journal of Philosophy.
    I counter a tendency in critical phenomenology to read Frantz Fanon as derivative upon, indeed reducible to, other (European) phenomenologies, eliding the originality and contemporaneity of his method. I propose it is time to read phenomenology through Fanon, instead of centering analysis on his assumed debt to Maurice Merleau‐Ponty's body schema. Fanon reconfigures and ungrounds phenomenology in Peau noire, masques blancs (Black Skin, White Masks). I show how he creates his own method through an anticolonial phenomenology of touch and affect (...)
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  30.  17
    A wound on poetry: A reading of pasolini’s teorema.Andrea Nicolini - 2017 - Scienza E Filosofia 18 (18):265-272.
    A WOUND ON POETRY: A READING OF PASOLINI’S TEOREMA Through analyzing Pasolini’s Teorema, the intention of the paper is to suggest that besides a sublimated effervescence that, according to Durkheim, blends people together, there is also another force that does not let itself be sublimated and for this reason checkmates the Symbolic order of society. This force is the death drive, namely the drive that, according to Freud, is beyond the pleasure principle and works against the flourishing of the (...)
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  31.  7
    The Wounds of Jesus Christ on the Cross: Historical Development and Types of Stigmata Understanding in Christianity.Zekiye Sönmez - 2022 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 26 (1):83-100.
    With a crown of thorns on his head, nails in his hands and feet, and a spear wound in his chest, Jesus Christ of Nazareth, who was hanging on the Cross, has occupied Christians for hundreds of years and continues to do so. All Christian faith centres around Jesus, who sacrificed himself on the crucifix for this symbolized event, or "salvation of sinful mankind." In this framework, Christians believe that every human being should imitate the life of Christ as (...)
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  32. Wounded Attachments.Wendy Brown - 1993 - Political Theory 21 (3):390-410.
    If something is to stay in the memory, it must be burned in: only that which never ceases to hurt stays in the memory. Friedrich Nietzsche.
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  33. Opening Wounds for the Sake of National Health.Władysław Bartoszewski - 2001 - Dialogue and Universalism 11 (5-6):17-20.
  34.  55
    The wound in Christ's side.A. A. Barb - 1971 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 34 (1):320-321.
  35.  8
    Wounded in the church.Ray Beeson - 2017 - New Kensington, PA: Whitaker House.
    The pain -- I thought church would be different -- The pain goes so deep -- Where does all this pain come from? -- Nobody sees me -- I feel beat up in church -- I live in shame all the time -- I feel used -- I can't forgive -- The hope -- Will I ever get past the pain? -- Why do I feel so unsafe in church? -- I can't keep up with all the rules -- What's (...)
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  36.  37
    The Wound and Salve of Time.Richard Avramenko - 2007 - Review of Metaphysics 60 (4):779-811.
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  37.  2
    The wounded world: essays on ethics and politics.Saitya Brata Das - 2013 - Delhi: Aakar Books.
  38. Wounded eros.Lee David Perlman - 2011 - In Adrianne Leigh McEvoy (ed.), Sex, Love, and Friendship: Studies of the Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love, 1993-2003. New York, NY: Rodopi.
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  39.  4
    The Wounded Healer: Countertransference From a Jungian Perspective.David Sedgwick - 1994 - Routledge.
    In the years since the publication of _The Wounded Healer_, countertransference has become a central consideration in the analytic process. David Sedgwick’s work was ground-breaking in tackling this difficult topic from a Jungian perspective and demonstrating how countertransference can be used in positive ways. Sedgwick’s extended study of the process candidly presents the analyst’s struggles and shows how the analyst is, as Jung said, "as much in the analysis as the patient". The book extends Jung’s prescient work on countertransference to (...)
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  40.  73
    Open Wounds: Body and Image in Jean-Luc Nancy and Claire Denis.Douglas Morrey - 2008 - Film-Philosophy 12 (1):10-31.
    Body and image are crucial to the elaboration of both Jean-Luc Nancy’s philosophy andClaire Denis’s work in cinema. Nancy’s short book about the body, Corpus ,though it may initially have appeared as a minor work in his œuvre, has since been shown,and notably since the intervention of Jacques Derrida, as the cornerstone of much ofNancy’s late thought. As Derrida demonstrates, Nancy’s interest in the body turnsaround the crucial trope of touch which comes to stand, in his philosophy, as the marker (...)
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  41.  17
    The Wounded Animal: J. M. Coetzee and the Difficulty of Reality in Literature and Philosophy.Stephen Mulhall - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (4):443-445.
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  42.  27
    The Wounds and the Ascended Body : The Marks of Crucifixion in the Glorified Christ from Justin Martyr to John Calvin.Peter Widdicombe - 2003 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 59 (1):137-154.
    The question of whether the ascended and glorified body of Christ retains the marks of the wounds first became an issue of theological importance in the fifth century with the writings of Cyril of Alexandria and it continued to be developed until the Reformation, when both Luther and Calvin rejected the idea. For the patristic and medieval theologians, the enduring reality of the wounds testify to the intimate connnection between the economy of God’s salvific work within the created order and (...)
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  43.  8
    Walking, Wounds and Washing Feet: Pedetic Textures of a Theo-Ethical Response to Migration.Susanna Snyder - 2019 - Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (1):3-19.
    Feet play a crucial role in migration, and experiences of death and hopes for new life are etched into migrants’ soles. In the face of complex and fraught ethical debates that have largely been deontological and teleological in tone, this article employs feet and footwashing as heuristic devices to suggest the need for receiving communities to develop a multi-textured virtue-based response alongside these. Cultivation of a habitus rooted in attention to bodies, service, power subversion, mutuality and confession could lead to (...)
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  44.  2
    Wounds for the Eschaton.Timothy Matthew Collins - 2019 - Listening 54 (3):166-171.
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  45.  9
    Menelaus’ wound.Ellen Oliensis - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (1):35-41.
    The focus of this note is the simile attached to Menelaus’ wound in Iliad 4 and its Virgilian transformation in Aeneid 12. My goal is to flesh out and specify the sense of the Homeric simile; as the parentheses in my title suggest, I call upon Virgil chiefly as a fellow-interpreter. Since an important part of my argument is that the simile only takes on its full significance when considered in its narrative context, I begin by setting the scene.
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  46.  6
    The wounded researcher: research with soul in mind.Robert D. Romanyshyn - 2013 - New York, NY: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    The Wounded Researcher addresses the crises of epistemological violence when we fail to consider that a researcher is addressed by and drawn into a work through his or her complexes. Using a Jungian-Archetypal perspective, this book argues that the bodies of knowledge we create degenerate into ideologies, which are the death of critical thinking, if the complexity of the research process is ignored. Writing with soul in mind invites us to consider how we might write down the soul in writing (...)
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  47.  93
    The Wounded Lion – Ageism and Masculinity in the Israeli Film Industry.Shlomit Aharoni Lir & Liat Ayalon - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    One of the intriguing issues connected to power relations in the world of cinema that has yet to be adequately explored is what has happened over the years concerning the dominance and privilege of masculinity as signifying preferred social status. This qualitative study explores this subject based on transcribed semi-structured interviews with 13 award-winning Israeli directors over the age of 55. The research examines two questions: How has the film industry changed its relation to leading, award-winning film directors as they (...)
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  48.  9
    Wounded planet: how declining biodiversity endangers health and how bioethics can help.Henk A. M. J. Ten Have - 2019 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Global bioethics and the environment -- Biodiversity -- Health -- Disease -- Drugs -- Food -- Water -- Global bioethics in practice.
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  49.  11
    Touching Wounds.Annette-Carina van der Zaag - 2022 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 12 (1-2):37-55.
    What if our politics are shaped by the texture of wounds rather than the identity of selves? What possible future will have been opened up by posing that very question? I take up Eve Sedgwick’s invitation to begin with stigma “as a near-inexhaustible source of transformational energy” for a transformative queer politics and elaborate Sedgwick’s attention to spoiled identity through Hortense Spiller’s conceptualization of the flesh. The flesh substantiates the grounds for a materialist ontology that begins with stigma, the materiality (...)
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  50.  11
    Touching Wounds: On the Fugitivity of Stigma.Annette-Carina van der Zaag - 2022 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 12 (1):37-55.
    Abstract:What if our politics are shaped by the texture of wounds rather than the identity of selves? What possible future will have been opened up by posing that very question? I take up Eve Sedgwick’s invitation to begin with stigma “as a near-inexhaustible source of transformational energy” for a transformative queer politics and elaborate Sedgwick’s attention to spoiled identity through Hortense Spiller’s conceptualization of the flesh. The flesh substantiates the grounds for a materialist ontology that begins with stigma, the materiality (...)
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