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  1. Hermeneutics and the ‘classic’ problem in the human sciences.Alan R. How - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (3):47-63.
    There has been a longstanding and acrimonious debate in the human sciences over the role played by classic texts. Advocates of the classic insist its value is timeless and rests on the intrinsic superiority of its cognitive insights and aesthetic virtues. Critics, by contrast, argue that the respect accorded the classic is spurious because it conceals the ideological assumptions, tensions and discontinuities of tradition. This paper seeks a solution through the account of ‘the classical’ brought by Hans-Georg Gadamer in Truth (...)
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  • Про еквівалентність перекладу «буття і часу» мартина гайдеґера.Андрій Богачов - 2021 - Sententiae 40 (3):83-91.
    Автор статті розглядає умови і принципи майбутнього українського перекладу «Буття і часу» М. Гайдеґера. Спочатку він визначає принципи слушного перекладу взагалі, а потім висловлює свої міркування щодо перекладу «Буття і часу» на цих принципах. Головний принцип слушного перекладу окреслений як еквівалентність перекладу. У статті йому протиставлено принцип адекватности перекладу. Для роз’яснення умов еквівалентности перекладу «Буття і часу» автор звертається до деяких основних понять цього твору. Серед іншого в статті обґрунтовується те, чому Гайдеґерове поняття Dasein слід перекладати як «єство», а поняття (...)
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  • Emotionology in prose: A study of descriptions of emotions from three literary periods.Matthew P. Spackman & W. Gerrod Parrott - 2001 - Cognition and Emotion 15 (5):553-573.
    Descriptions of emotion incidents were extracted from classic American novels of the Romantic, Victorian, and Modern Periods. These descriptions were then rated by respondents on scales relevant to attribution of responsibility for emotions. It was found that ratings of the emotion descriptions differed across the three literary periods, with descriptions from the Romantic Period being rated most intense and most appropriate, descriptions from the Victorian Period as least intense, and descriptions from the Modern Period as least appropriate. In addition, it (...)
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  • Emotionology in prose: A study of descriptions of emotions from three literary periods.Matthew P. Spackman & W. Gerrod Parrott - 2001 - Cognition and Emotion 15 (5):553-573.
    Descriptions of emotion incidents were extracted from classic American novels of the Romantic, Victorian, and Modern Periods. These descriptions were then rated by respondents on scales relevant to attribution of responsibility for emotions. It was found that ratings of the emotion descriptions differed across the three literary periods, with descriptions from the Romantic Period being rated most intense and most appropriate, descriptions from the Victorian Period as least intense, and descriptions from the Modern Period as least appropriate. In addition, it (...)
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  • Teaching Literature Gay-affirmatively: A homosexual individuation story.Douglas G. Sadownick - 2007 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 6 (2):197-208.
    This article explores the possibility of a `homosexual hermeneutic' by which the great literary works of the western canon can be taught. This `interpretative methodology' is based in the author's own individuation process as gay. The author details his personal journey from engulfment in heteronormativity to the first crisis of his homosexual adolescence whereby he suffers a severe illness and learns, with the help of a teacher, to apprehend the homosexuality hidden in Virgil, Shakespeare, Milton, Spenser and so on. Psychological (...)
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  • Sylvan's Bottle and other Problems.Diane Proudfoot - 2018 - Australasian Journal of Logic 15 (2):95-123.
    According to Richard Routley, a comprehensive theory of fiction is impossible, since almost anything is in principle imaginable. In my view, Routley is right: for any purported logic of fiction, there will be actual or imaginable fictions that successfully counterexample the logic. Using the example of ‘impossible’ fictions, I test this claim against theories proposed by Routley’s Meinongian contemporaries and also by Routley himself and his 21st century heirs. I argue that the phenomenon of impossible fictions challenges even today’s modal (...)
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  • Arte, antropología y museos : orientaciones poscoloniales en los Estados Unidos.Sally Price - 2014 - Endoxa 33:143.
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  • Universal “Music” in the Prose of the Postmodern Era.Valentina Musiy, Artur Malynovskyi, Olena Mizinkina & Iraida Tombulatova - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (1 Sup1):276-299.
    The article focuses on the prose works of several modern writers. All these works are united by the image of the musician and the motive of listening to the music. Thus, the music in the article is considered as an universal.First of all - problems of life and death, the main values of life, the opposition “sacred - infernal”. The purpose of the article is to investigate how the era of postmodern influenced the author's concept of music. In each of (...)
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  • Ecstatic loneliness: black genders and the politics of affect in Mykki Blanco's ‘Loner’.William H. Mosley - 2022 - Feminist Theory 23 (1):76-92.
    The rapper Mykki Blanco is lauded as a trailblazer in the contemporary queer hip hop movement, and it is this reputation that, in part, makes the single of her debut album so curious. The song ‘Loner’ is unequivocally pop and explores health, loneliness, love and sex, echoing Blanco's shifting relationship to gender, genre, sobriety and serostatus. Amidst three key performances of this song, Blanco's consciousness was at various stages of development and they reflect her journey into trans womanhood and through (...)
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  • Useless and Disinterested: How Literature Makes Us Better.Christopher Michaelson - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 7 (2):95-96.
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  • Reading leaders' minds: in search of the canon of 21st century global capitalism. [REVIEW]Christopher Michaelson - 2012 - Asian Journal of Business Ethics 1 (1):47-61.
    This paper explores the values and practices of capitalism and speculates about how they might evolve as twenty-first century global capitalism comes into being. The values embodied by the Westernized canon we have inherited might account for certain shortcomings of capitalism. As economic power shifts away from dominant markets of the recent past, our search for the canon of twenty-first century global capitalism can help shape the values we aspire for our capitalism of the future to embody and to enable.
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  • Morally Differentiating Responsibility for Climate Change Mitigation.Christopher Michaelson - 2011 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 30 (1-2):113-136.
    The ethical tension over whether countries have differentiated responsibilities for climate change mitigation evokes the tale of a master and a man. The one who thinks she is the master is analogous to the wealthier, industrialized nations and their market actors, and the human is the rest of humanity, particularly those citizens of less developed countries. Since 1992, there has been formal, stated agreement that there should be differentiated responsibilities for climate change mitigation between developed and developing nations, but differentiation (...)
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  • Truth in Fiction.Franck Lihoreau (ed.) - 2010 - Ontos Verlag.
    The essays collected in this volume are all concerned with the connection between fiction and truth. This question is of utmost importance to metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophical logic and epistemology, raising in each of these areas and at their intersections a large number of issues related to creation, existence, reference, identity, modality, belief, assertion, imagination, pretense, etc. All these topics and many more are addressed in this collection, which brings together original essays written from various points of view by (...)
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  • Aesthetics and literature: A problematic relation?Peter Lamarque - 2007 - Philosophical Studies 135 (1):27 - 40.
    The paper argues that there is a proper place for literature within aesthetics but that care must be taken in identifying just what the relation is. In characterising aesthetic pleasure associated with literature it is all too easy to fall into reductive accounts, for example, of literature as merely “fine writing”. Belleslettrist or formalistic accounts of literature are rejected, as are two other kinds of reduction, to pure meaning properties and to a kind of narrative realism. The idea is developed (...)
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  • Pearl diving and the exemplary way educational note taking and taking note in education.Morten Timmermann Korsgaard - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory:1-9.
    In this paper, I will explore the experience of noticing/becoming attentive to something in education. What does it mean to take notice of something in an educational way, and how does some...
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  • Pearl diving and the exemplary way educational note taking and taking note in education.Morten Timmermann Korsgaard - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (13):1350-1358.
    In this paper, I will explore the experience of noticing/becoming attentive to something in education. What does it mean to take notice of something in an educational way, and how does something become educationally noteworthy? In order to grasp in more detail the idea of something being noteworthy, I turn to the metaphor of pearl diving – as this appears in the works of Hannah Arendt and Walter Benjamin - and to Martin Wagenschein’s theory of exemplarity. These perspectives helps us (...)
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  • Caring for Literature that Matters? Conceptualizing a Thing-centered Perspective on Literature Education with Rousseau, Deleuze, and Calvino.Wiebe Koopal & Joris Vlieghe - 2022 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (5):529-549.
    This paper primarily aims at conceptualizing a new philosophical approach to literature education, one that we—in the vein of certain pedagogical trends—propose to call “thing-centered”. Point of departure is the ongoing confrontation with a two-sided educational problem: on the one hand, the confrontation with the steady decline of younger generations’ engagements with ‘classical’ literature; on the other hand, that with the unsatisfactory answers which either accept this development, in light of the world’s irresistible digitization, or try overcoming it through a (...)
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  • The university as microcosm.Byron Kaldis - 2009 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 41 (5):553-574.
    This paper puts forward the model of 'microcosm-macrocosm' isomorphism encapsulated in certain philosophical views on the form of university education. The human being as a 'microcosm' should reflect internally the external 'macrocosm'. Higher Education is a socially instituted attempt to guide human beings into forming themselves as microcosms of the whole world in its diversity. By getting to know the surrounding world, they re-enact it intellectually. Such a re-enacting is a guiding theme in certain philosophies of education studied here. It (...)
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  • The University as Microcosm.Byron Kaldis - 2009 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 41 (5):553-574.
    This paper puts forward the model of ‘microcosm‐macrocosm’ isomorphism encapsulated in certain philosophical views on the form of university education. The human being as a ‘microcosm’ should reflect internally the external ‘macrocosm’. Higher Education is a socially instituted attempt to guide human beings into forming themselves as microcosms of the whole world in its diversity. By getting to know the surrounding world, they re‐enact it intellectually. Such a re‐enacting is a guiding theme in certain philosophies of education studied here. It (...)
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  • Nietzsche’s response to David Strauss: a case study in the Nietzschean practice of enmity.Mark Higgins - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    This article argues for an interpretation of David Strauss: the Confessor and the Writer as embodying the key components of the Nietzschean practice of conflict with a ‘worthier’ enemy. These are carefully considered under the headings of ‘agonism’, ‘imitation’, and a propulsion towards ‘escalation’, that is, beckoning a response from other, would-be, ‘worthier’ enemies. Adding to the standard ‘cultural’ explanation for the origins of the Strauss essay, this article explores the polemical ‘assassination’ of Strauss as ultimately ordered towards assuming Strauss’ (...)
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  • The disunity of aesthetics: A response to J. G. A. Pocock.Casey Haskins - 2005 - Common Knowledge 11 (2):326-348.
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  • On Truth and Lie in the Object-Oriented Sense.Graham Harman - 2022 - Open Philosophy 5 (1):437-463.
    This article begins with a treatment of Friedrich Nietzsche’s early essay “On Truth and Lie in the Extra-Moral Sense.” The essay is often read, in the deconstructive tradition, as a showcase example of the impossibility of making a literal philosophical claim: is Nietzsche’s claim that all truth is merely metaphorical itself a true statement, or merely a metaphorical one? The present article claims that this supposed paradox relies on the groundless assumption that all philosophy must ultimately be grounded in some (...)
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  • On Pros and Cons and Bills and Gates: The Heist Film as Pleasure.Julian Hanich - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (3):304-320.
    This article tries to shed light on the multiple, but underrated pleasures of the heist film – a genre that has attracted numerous major directors from Jean-Pierre Melville and Stanley Kubrick to Michael Mann and Steven Soderbergh, but has received limited scholarly attention. I approach the genre from a, broadly, philosophical perspective and draw on thinkers such as Peter Sloterdijk, Georg Simmel, Paul Souriau and Bruno Latour to argue that their emphasis on (1) skillful action and kinaesthetic empathy, (2) smooth (...)
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  • Philology, Education, Democracy.Rebecca Gould - 2012 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 46 (4):57-69.
    Writing of his twinned awakening in depression-era Chicago to the Communist Party and the life of the mind, African American novelist Richard Wright recalled the “new realms of feeling” acquired during the cold winter evenings he spent, after hours of backbreaking labor, reading, or rather devouring, books, for the first time in his life. Thanks to his encounters with Dostoevsky, Proust, Stephen Crane, and Gertrude Stein, an “attitude of watchful wonder” became the new pivot of his life. “Having no claims (...)
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  • Five Classrooms: Different forms of 'democracies' and their relationship to cultural pluralism(s).Michael Glassman & Min Ju Kang - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (4):365-386.
    This paper explores the issue of democracy and the role of the democratic classroom in the development of society in general, and the way in which educators understand and deal with diversity in particular. The first part of the paper explores different meanings of democracy and how they can be manifested in the classroom. We argue that the idea of a ‘democratic classroom’ is far too broad a category; democracy is defined in action and can have realist or pragmatic characteristics, (...)
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  • Citizenship education and character education: Similarities and contrasts.Ian Davies, Stephen Gorard & Nick McGuinn - 2005 - British Journal of Educational Studies 53 (3):341-358.
    We suggest that there is a need for those who seek to explore issues associated with the implementation of citizenship education in England to clarify its specific nature. This can be done, at least in part, through a process of comparison. To that end we review some of the connections and disjunctions between 'character education' and 'citizenship education'. We argue, drawing from US and UK literature but focusing our attention on contexts and issues in England, that there are indeed some (...)
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  • The Wisdom of the Western Canon. [REVIEW]Wayne Cristaudo - 2017 - The European Legacy 22 (4):480-485.
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  • Expanding the Imagination: Mediating the Aesthetic-Political Divide Through the Third Space of Ethics in Literature Education.Suzanne S. Choo - 2021 - British Journal of Educational Studies 69 (1):65-82.
    Recent debates among scholars in Literature education have led to polarizing views about the aims of the subject. The debate reignites ancient quarrels about the aesthetic and political values of literary study and relatedly, the different pedagogical approaches to teaching. In the first part of this paper, I explore the aesthetic-political divide in Literature education paying particular attention to how this was reinforced by New Criticism and Poststructuralist Criticism as these were key movements that have had a significant influence on (...)
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  • Murder by the book: using crime fiction as a bibliotherapeutic resource.Liz Brewster - 2017 - Medical Humanities 43 (1):62-67.
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  • Introduction: The Paradoxes of Marginality.Costica Bradatan & Aurelian Craiutu - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (6):721-729.
    The main focus of this special issue is on marginality, a multifaceted concept that requires a cross-disciplinary approach. The papers selected here deal with marginality in the formation of the epistemic canon (?the mainstream?) and the production of knowledge in the humanities and social sciences. By employing the vocabulary of marginality (?marginal,? ?margins,? ?luminal,? ?threshold,? as well as dichotomies such as ?minor-major,? ?center-periphery?), we propose a shift from a discussion of the canon in terms of just one category of ?marginals? (...)
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  • Judging quality of human achievement.Robin Barrow - 2006 - Education and Culture 22 (1):7-16.
    : This paper defends the commonsense view that judgments about the quality of human achievement in the arts can be true or false and shown to be so by objective reasoning, as against both subjectivist views and, more particularly, the view that they can be quantitatively expressed and scientifically demonstrated. It focuses on Charles Murray's recent attempt to rank-order the great achievers in an objective manner, arguing that it is fundamentally flawed, especially in confusing the quantification of references with an (...)
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  • La construcción del canon y la cuestión del valor literario.Idelber Avelar - 2009 - Aisthesis 46.
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  • Logical Truth / Logička istina (Bosnian translation by Nijaz Ibrulj).Nijaz Ibrulj & Willard Van Orman Quine - 2018 - Sophos 1 (11):115-128.
    Translated from: W.V.O.Quine, W. H. O. (1986): Philosophy of Logic. Second Edition. Harvard University Press. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England, 47-61.
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  • Wisdom and responsible leadership: Aesthetic sensibility, moral imagination, and systems thinking.Sandra Waddock - forthcoming - Aesthetics and Business Ethics.
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  • Spectres of new media technologies: the hope for democracy in the postcolonial public sphere.Ma Diosa Labiste - unknown
    This study is an intervention in postcolonial theorising through a critique of technologies of representation. It examines the effects of technologically-mediated representation in a postcolonial condition that the Philippines has exemplified. New media technologies are mechanisms of representations that embody the logic of spectrality presented in Jacques Derrida’s later work. Spectrality, which brings doubts, ephemerality, and instability to dominant discourses and modes of representation, provides a chance for change.Spectres are effects of technologically-mediated representation that articulate the infinite demand for justice (...)
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  • The Ubiquity of Humanity and Textuality in Human Experience.Daihyun Chung - 2015 - Humanities 4 (4):885-904.
    Abstract: The so-called “crisis of the humanities” can be understood in terms of an asymmetry between the natural and social sciences on the one hand and the humanities on the other. While the sciences approach topics related to human experience in quantificational or experimental terms, the humanities turn to ancient, canonical, and other texts in the search for truths about human experience. As each approach has its own unique limitations, it is desirable to overcome or remove the asymmetry between them. (...)
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  • Reflections on Whitman, Dewey, and Educational Reform.Jim Garrison & Elaine J. O'Quinn - 2006 - Education and Culture 20 (2):6.
  • Reflections on Whitman, Dewey, and educational reform: recovering spiritual democracy in our materialistic times.J. Garrison & E. J. O'Quinn - 2004 - Education and Culture 20 (2):68-77.
  • Teoría impura del derecho: La transformación de la cultura jurídica latinoamericana.Luciana Alvarez - 2006 - Estudios de Filosofía Práctica E Historia de Las Ideas 8:161-163.
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