Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. Book review: Warsaw Housing Cooperative: City in Action. [REVIEW]Franciszek Chwałczyk - 2022 - Thesis Eleven 168 (1):128-133.
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • ‘Being Urban’ in the Context of Global Urbanization: The Case of India.Subhadra Mitra Channa - 2016 - Sage Journals: Diogenes 63 (3-4):123-130.
    Diogenes, Ahead of Print. Western intellectual sources have dominated the social sciences to an extent that most definitions originate from a Eurocentric meaning system; words like urban, wild, nature, and culture being no exception. This paper interrogates and makes a critical assessment of what urban may mean in a non-western context, taking Delhi, the capital of India, as an example. It demonstrates that the meaning of a phrase, ‘being urban’, can only be understood in its historical, social/cultural, and political context; (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • ‘Being Urban’ in the Context of Global Urbanization: The Case of India.Subhadra Mitra Channa - 2016 - Sage Journals 63 (3-4):123-130.
    Diogenes, Ahead of Print. Western intellectual sources have dominated the social sciences to an extent that most definitions originate from a Eurocentric meaning system; words like urban, wild, nature, and culture being no exception. This paper interrogates and makes a critical assessment of what urban may mean in a non-western context, taking Delhi, the capital of India, as an example. It demonstrates that the meaning of a phrase, ‘being urban’, can only be understood in its historical, social/cultural, and political context; (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Faust and the ethos of business: A report from grand rapids, ciudad juarez, and muskegon. [REVIEW]Barry Castro - 1999 - Journal of Business Ethics 19 (2):181 - 191.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • City and space: a hermeneutic perspective.Yobany Serna Castro - 2022 - Perseitas 11:475-500.
    This paper presents a philosophical reflection on the city and the space. It proposes a different interpretation of the city, shifting the traditional focus on the historical and time-related aspects to a consideration of the space as a central category of analysis. This perspective seeks to define what a city is and to understand the different dynamics and processes that influence its constitution, development, transformation, or disappearance. In contrast to the traditional approach focused on the city with a temporal perspective, (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The Road to Necropolis: Technics and Death in the Philosophy of Lewis Mumford.Gregory Morgan Swer - 2003 - History of the Human Sciences 16 (4):39-59.
    The purpose of this article is to explore the close link between technology and death in the philosophical writings of Lewis Mumford. Mumford famously argued that throughout the history of western civilization we find intertwined two competing forms of technics; the democratic biotechnic form and the authoritarian monotechnic form. The former technics were said to be strongly compatible with an organic form of life while the latter were said to be allied to a mechanical power complex. What is perhaps less (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • The Emotional Mind: the affective roots of culture and cognition.Stephen Asma & Rami Gabriel - 2019 - Harvard University Press.
    Tracing the leading role of emotions in the evolution of the mind, a philosopher and a psychologist pair up to reveal how thought and culture owe less to our faculty for reason than to our capacity to feel. Many accounts of the human mind concentrate on the brain’s computational power. Yet, in evolutionary terms, rational cognition emerged only the day before yesterday. For nearly 200 million years before humans developed a capacity to reason, the emotional centers of the brain were (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   12 citations  
  • The Magistrate is the Muse: Law and Visual Economy in Bangkok. [REVIEW]Noah Viernes - 2014 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 27 (1):27-46.
    Governmentality is a spatial formation negotiated within historically-constituted political landscapes. In Bangkok, this spatialization of power is manifested in the militarization of urban life and the protocols of security procedure, but also in anti-government protests and an increasingly politicized visual culture. The memory and meaning of the city’s streets exist as an overlooked legibility that challenges the visual strategies of government control. Monuments, travel routes, and other public sites of national recognition now compete in an extended urban arena of images, (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • What is a City?Achille C. Varzi - 2019 - Topoi 40 (2):399-408.
    Cities are mysteriously attractive. The more we get used to being citizens of the world, the more we feel the need to identify ourselves with a city. Moreover, this need seems in no way distressed by the fact that the urban landscape around us changes continuously: new buildings rise, new restaurants open, new stores, new parks, new infrastructures… Cities seem to vindicate Heraclitus’s dictum: you cannot step twice into the same river; you cannot walk twice through the same city. But, (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  • The Meaning of the Global City: Jacques Ellul’s Continued Relevance to 21st-Century Urbanism.Noah Toly - 2012 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 32 (3):231-240.
    Jacques Ellul’s book, The Meaning of the City, widely recognized as one of the most important twentieth century theological reflections on the city, was also one of his most controversial scholarly contributions. Many urbanists interpreted the book as demeaning the city and diminishing the importance of urban policy, planning, design, architecture, and activism at a time when cities around the world had experience profound crises. This article reexamines The Meaning of the City and its relevance to twenty-first century urbanism.
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Cities, states, and trust networks: chapter 1 of Cities and States in World History. [REVIEW]Charles Tilly - 2010 - Theory and Society 39 (3-4):265-280.
  • Cities and states in geohistory.Edward W. Soja - 2010 - Theory and Society 39 (3-4):361-376.
  • The Polyopticon: a diagram for urban artificial intelligences.Stephanie Sherman - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (3):1209-1222.
    Smart city discourses often invoke the Panopticon, a disciplinary architecture designed by Jeremy Bentham and popularly theorized by Michel Foucault, as a model for understanding the social impact of AI technologies. This framing focuses attention almost exclusively on the negative ramifications of Urban AI, correlating ubiquitous surveillance, centralization, and data consolidation with AI development, and positioning technologies themselves as the driving factor shaping privacy, sociality, equity, access, and autonomy in the city. This paper describes an alternative diagram for Urban AI—the (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Aesthetics of Urban Design.Ken-Ichi Sasaki - 2012 - Diogenes 59 (1-2):63-72.
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Biofiliška architektūra: galimybės ir trikdžiai.Almantas Samalavičius - 2020 - Logos: A Journal, of Religion, Philosophy Comparative Cultural Studies and Art 105.
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Imagining cities, others: Strangers, contingency and fear.John Rundell - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 121 (1):9-22.
    This paper explores the constellation of fear and the social forces, assumptions and images that construct it. The paper’s underlying presupposition is that there are many locations for fear that run parallel to one another in modernity, one of which will be discussed here – the city. It begins by exploring two images and ideas of the city, around which the social theoretical tradition has revolved, both of which are linked in some way to the ideal of the metropolis and (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Relocating Energy in the Social Commons: Ideas for a Sustainable Energy Utility.Colin Ruggero, Cecilia Martinez & John Byrne - 2009 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 29 (2):81-94.
    Climate change, rising energy costs, and other dilemmas raise the prospect for major change in energy-ecology-society relations. Two prominent proposals for change include: a nuclear power renaissance; and mega-scale renewable energy development. Both suggest that modern society will receive a rising stream of less CO2-rich kilowatt-hours, so that increased energy consumption and economic growth can continue. The article doubts these CO2 claims and finds both options lead to deepening unsustainability and environmental injustice. A third approach is proposed. A new institutional (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Placing the food system on the urban agenda: The role of municipal institutions in food systems planning. [REVIEW]Kameshwari Pothukuchi & Jerome L. Kaufman - 1999 - Agriculture and Human Values 16 (2):213-224.
    Food issues are generally regarded as agricultural and rural issues. The urban food system is less visible than such other systems as transportation, housing, employment, or even the environment. The reasons for its low visibility include the historic process by which issues and policies came to be defined as urban; the spread of processing, refrigeration, and transportation technology together with cheap, abundant energy that rendered invisible the loss of farmland around older cities; and the continuing institutional separation of urban and (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   13 citations  
  • Aesthetics of Urban Design.Heinz Paetzold - 2012 - Diogenes 59 (1-2):63-72.
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Perth as a ‘big’ city: Reflections on urban growth.Peter Newman - 2016 - Thesis Eleven 135 (1):139-151.
    The bigness of cities has attracted much attention from urban academics and professionals whose perspective may be divided into two camps: productive science using agglomeration-based analysis or impact science using anxiety-based analysis. The two approaches need to be joined in order to resolve issues of urban ‘bigness’, and in this article the growth of Perth is used to illustrate the potential and challenges of this integration.
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • American Civilization.Peter Murphy - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 85 (1):64-92.
    Autopoietic societies have produced three major images of civilization: the Greco-Roman, the Eurocentric Western, and the Settler Society type. The most important incarnation of the latter to date has been America. This article explores the deep-going differences between American and European ideas of civilization. It examines how the American kind of autopoietic civilization expresses itself in preternaturally distinctive conceptualizations of nature and freedom, life and death, order and chaos, city and ecumene. The article discusses the political and social implications of (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Privacy, Neuroscience, and Neuro-Surveillance.Adam D. Moore - 2017 - Res Publica 23 (2):159-177.
    The beliefs, feelings, and thoughts that make up our streams of consciousness would seem to be inherently private. Nevertheless, modern neuroscience is offering to open up the sanctity of this domain to outside viewing. A common retort often voiced to this worry is something like, ‘Privacy is difficult to define and has no inherent moral value. What’s so great about privacy?’ In this article I will argue against these sentiments. A definition of privacy is offered along with an account of (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Privacy, public health, and controlling medical information.Adam D. Moore - 2010 - HEC Forum 22 (3):225-240.
    This paper argues that individuals do, in a sense, own or have exclusive claims to control their personal information and body parts. It begins by sketching several arguments that support presumptive claims to informational privacy, turning then to consider cases which illustrate when and how privacy may be overridden by public health concerns.
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Privacy, Interests, and Inalienable Rights.Adam D. Moore - 2018 - Moral Philosophy and Politics 5 (2):327-355.
    Some rights are so important for human autonomy and well-being that many scholars insist they should not be waived, traded, or abandoned. Privacy is a recent addition to this list. At the other end of the spectrum is the belief that privacy is a mere unimportant interest or preference. This paper defends a middle path between viewing privacy as an inalienable, non-waivable, non-transferrable right and the view of privacy as a mere subjective interest. First, an account of privacy is offered (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • The Nature of Artifacts.Michael Losonsky - 1990 - Philosophy 65 (251):81 - 88.
    In Book II, Chapter 1 of the Physics Aristotle attempts to distinguish natural objects from artifacts. He begins by stating that a natural object ‘has in itself a source of change and staying unchanged, whether in respect of place, or growth and decay, or alteration’. But this is not sufficient to distinguish natural objects from artifacts. As he points out later, a wooden bed, for example, can rot or burn, and this is surely a change whose source is, in part, (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   12 citations  
  • Edge City: Reflections on the Urbanocene and the Plantatiocene.Eduardo Mendieta - 2019 - Critical Philosophy of Race 7 (1):81-106.
    Humans built cities, but cities are where we become civil, civilized, and civically minded; we are thus products of cities. Cities are also ubiquitous in the human experience. Yet, the last two hundred years witnessed an unprecedented mega-urbanization of humanity. In 2007, or so, it was announced that more humans now lived in cities than in the countryside. This article aims to analyze the new pattern of mega-urbanization in the twenty-first century, a century that brings extreme challenges: demographic growth (9 (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Imagining ayodhyā: Utopia and its shadows in a hindu landscape. [REVIEW]Philip Lutgendorf - 1997 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 (1):19-54.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Technology and Institutions: A Critical Appraisal of GIS in the Planning Domain.Raul P. Lejano - 2008 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 33 (5):653-678.
    GIS has captured planning practice to an unprecedented degree, and this article on how it reconfigures and is configured by institutional context. The author inquires into GIS as a technology for incorporating knowledge into institutional use and includes five propositions: GIS's efficiencies in data processing allows it unprecedented facility and scope of analysis, its use increases alienation, its mimetic language furthers its role in planning, its logic appears rational—purposive, but it conceals an underlying normative logic, and its most profound effect (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Detroit Bike City and the Reconstitution of Community.D. R. Koukal - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):716-729.
    In recent years a burgeoning bicycle culture has reanimated the city of Detroit. The following essay analyzes this reanimation through the themes of embodiment, mobility, spatiality, and the intersubjective creation of place, using the techniques of phenomenology. The description that emerges is an evolving social ontology with implications for cities like Detroit. In such cities any plan for re-urbanization must re-conceptualize both transportation schemas and public space on terrain once dominated by the automobile. The provisional phenomenological description on offer here (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The semiotic dimensions of vertical social (self)classification.Ágnes Kapitány & Gábor Kapitány - 2015 - Semiotica 2015 (205):243-260.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Semiotica Jahrgang: 2015 Heft: 205 Seiten: 243-260.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • What is the message of the robot medium? Considering media ecology and mobilities in critical robotics research.Julia M. Hildebrand - 2022 - AI and Society 37 (2):443-453.
    This article makes the case for including frameworks of media ecology and mobilities research in the shaping of critical robotics research for a human-centered and holistic lens onto robot technologies. The two meta-disciplines, which align in their attention to relational processes of communication and movement, provide useful tools for critically exploring emerging human–robot dimensions and dynamics. Media ecology approaches human-made technologies as media that can shape the way we think, feel, and act. Relatedly, mobilities research highlights various kinds of influential (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • La distancia que nos une. Distancia y soledad en el mundo digital hiperconectado.Antonio Gutiérrez-Pozo - 2022 - Cuadernos de Filosofía Latinoamericana 43 (126).
    La videosfera en que consiste el mundo es realmente una videocracia, un sistema de control y dominio que, mediante la información digital obtenida sobre nosotros, acaba con nuestra libertad. La causa de este fenómeno es nuestro afán por la seguridad. La democracia de la libertad ha sido superada por la democracia de la seguridad, por la ciberdemocracia. Hoy todo es a distancia, también la comunidad humana. La distancia es paradójicamente lo único que hoy nos une. La comunidad actual solo puede (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Playing for All in the City: Women's Drama.Alison Findlay - 2010 - Feminist Review 96 (1):41-57.
    English women's drama was crucially shaped by the city between 1660 and 1705, the period when female actors and playwrights first entered the professional theatre. This article uses selected scenes from the comedies of Elizabeth Polwhele, Aphra Behn and Susanna Centlivre to examine how women coped with the high-risk strategy of participating in commercial theatre and the vast circulation of trade which grew up around the City, a flamboyant sign of high capitalism. On one hand, the city represents movement, a (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The Renewable City: Dawn of an Urban Revolution.Peter Droege - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (2):141-150.
    A vexing modern conundrum is to be solved. The use of oil, gas, and coal is extremely short-lived as a historical phenomenon: a mere blink of an eye at a little more than 1% of total urban history of 10,000 years to-date. Yet current urban civilization is almost entirely based on it. And the fossil-fuel economy poses not only a massive security risk, it also lies at the root of the vast majority of urban sustainability problems. Fresh water depletion, air (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Relational ethnography.Matthew Desmond - 2014 - Theory and Society 43 (5):547-579.
  • Gender myth and the mind-city composite: from Plato’s Atlantis to Walter Benjamin’s philosophical urbanism.Abraham Akkerman - 2012 - GeoJournal (in Press; Online Version Published) 78.
    In the early twentieth century Walter Benjamin introduced the idea of epochal and ongoing progression in interaction between mind and the built environment. Since early antiquity, the present study suggests, Benjamin’s notion has been manifest in metaphors of gender in city-form, whereby edifices and urban voids have represented masculinity and femininity, respectively. At the onset of interaction between mind and the built environment are prehistoric myths related to the human body and to the sky. During antiquity gender projection can be (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Environmental ethics.Andrew Brennan - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Environmental ethics is the discipline in philosophy that studies the moral relationship of human beings to, and also the value and moral status of, the environment and its nonhuman contents. This entry covers: (1) the challenge of environmental ethics to the anthropocentrism (i.e., humancenteredness) embedded in traditional western ethical thinking; (2) the early development of the discipline in the 1960s and 1970s; (3) the connection of deep ecology, feminist environmental ethics, and social ecology to politics; (4) the attempt to apply (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   43 citations  
  • Moving Circles: mobile media and playful identities.M. L. Langdee - unknown
    The mobile phone has become part of our everyday lives with astonishing speed. Over four billion people now have access to mobile phones, and this number keeps increasing. Mobile media technologies shape how we communicate with each other, and relate to the world. This raises questions about their influence on identity. Medium-specific properties and user-practices challenge the idea that we understand ourselves through stories. It is proposed that the notion of play sheds new light on how technologies shape identities. The (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Of Bricks and Freight Containers: Notes on the Genealogy of Symbols in the Experience of the Moderns.Marius Ion Benta - 2022 - International Political Anthropology 15 (1):27-35.
    This paper is an exploration of the multiple meanings that the invention of the brick – this simple artefact that has permitted the raising of complex and durable buildings – has brought to civilisation and to humans in their relationship with the world. I suggest that bricks may have brought a number of novel experiences to society, whose meanings are important for the understanding of the modern condition and its emphasis on rationalism, replicability, precision, standardisation and modularity among other principles. (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Building Beauty: Kantian aesthetics in a time of dark ecology.K. August - unknown
    In the aftermath of a normalized Foucaultian world with an all encompassing web of biopower, one remaining hope is to cultivate nimbleness. Nimbleness is an embodied aesthetic sensitivity to the material presence. Cultivating nimbleness is a particular style of cultivation; it is to willfully gather together one’s self in the wake of a formative force far richer than the derivative web of living power relationships of human embeddness within a horizon of social, economical, political and historical subjectivating power relations; which (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The City as the (Anti)Structure: Fearscapes, social movement, and protest square.Asma Mehan - 2020 - Lo Squaderno 1 (57):53-56.
    The fear of the other is the main focus of this paper, which analyse Tehran protest squares as inside-out spaces where the state attempts to maintain some form of control, and where the public attempts to occupy it. The fear of ‘others’ can lead to exclusion from the public space of those who are seen as threatening. This process of ‘otherness’ renders fear as an arena of conflict and highlights the political utility of fear by particular groups and individuals.
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Close-knit Cities.Jason Matteson - 2016 - Interdisciplinary Environmental Review 17 (2):73-86.
    Aristotle rightly holds that the constitution of a city is not entirely captured by its written documents or official political structures. More fundamentally, the constitution of a city is made up of its real and deep habits, customs, relations, expectations, aspirations, and ideals of the people who live there. The aim here is to articulate five values that together constitute what I will call close-knit cities: a) ecological resiliency; b) intimate proximity; c) social heterogeneity; d) fairness; e) social trust. I (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark