Search results for 'Michel Rosier' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Michel Rosier (1986). Otto Neurath Et la Critique du Pseudo-Rationalisme (Leçons Épistémologiques des Sciences Sociales). Dialogue 25 (04):675-.score: 120.0
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  2. Michel Rosier (1995). Éthique Et Économie Amartya Sen Traduit de l'Anglais Par Sophie Marnat Collection «Philosophie Morale» Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1993, 368 P. [REVIEW] Dialogue 34 (03):650-.score: 120.0
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  3. Jan G. Michel & Michael Kober (2011). John Searle. mentis.score: 60.0
    John Searle zählt zweifellos zu den weltweit wichtigsten und einflussreichsten Denkern der Gegenwart. Seine grundlegenden und nachhaltigen Beiträge zur Sprachphilosophie, zur Philosophie des Geistes, zur Handlungstheorie und zur Sozialphilosophie werden weit über die Grenzen des Fachs Philosophie hinaus wahrgenommen und gehören vielfach zum Standardrepertoire wissenschaftlicher Forschung und Lehre. -/- Michael Kober und Jan G. Michel bieten in diesem Buch eine übersichtliche sowie gut verständliche, aber auch kritische Einführung in das Gesamtwerk John Searles: Neben einer sehr persönlichen biographischen Notiz und (...)
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  4. Vicki A. Michel (1995). Suicide by Persons with Disabilities Disguised as the Refusal of Life-Sustaining Treatment. HEC Forum 7 (2-3):122-131.score: 30.0
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  5. Jacques Paillard, F. Michel & C. E. Stelmach (1983). Localization Without Content: A Tactile Analogue of "Blind Sight". Archives of Neurology 40:548-51.score: 30.0
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  6. Patrick Amar, Pascal Ballet, Georgia Barlovatz-Meimon, Arndt Benecke, Gilles Bernot, Yves Bouligand, Paul Bourguine, Franck Delaplace, Jean-Marc Delosme, Maurice Demarty, Itzhak Fishov, Jean Fourmentin-Guilbert, Joe Fralick, Jean-Louis Giavitto, Bernard Gleyse, Christophe Godin, Roberto Incitti, François Képès, Catherine Lange, Lois Le Sceller, Corinne Loutellier, Olivier Michel, Franck Molina, Chantal Monnier, René Natowicz, Vic Norris, Nicole Orange, Helene Pollard, Derek Raine, Camille Ripoll, Josette Rouviere-Yaniv, Milton Saier, Paul Soler, Pierre Tambourin, Michel Thellier, Philippe Tracqui, Dave Ussery, Jean-Claude Vincent, Jean-Pierre Vannier, Philippa Wiggins & Abdallah Zemirline (2002). Hyperstructures, Genome Analysis and I-Cells. Acta Biotheoretica 50 (4).score: 30.0
    New concepts may prove necessary to profit from the avalanche of sequence data on the genome, transcriptome, proteome and interactome and to relate this information to cell physiology. Here, we focus on the concept of large activity-based structures, or hyperstructures, in which a variety of types of molecules are brought together to perform a function. We review the evidence for the existence of hyperstructures responsible for the initiation of DNA replication, the sequestration of newly replicated origins of replication, cell division (...)
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  7. Irene Rosier (1985). Relatifs Et Relatives Dans Les Traités Terministes Des XIIe Et XIIIe siècLes. Vivarium 23 (1):1-22.score: 30.0
  8. Virgil Michel (1938). Christian Social Reconstruction. Ethics 48 (3):444-446.score: 30.0
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  9. George F. Michel (2003). Ontogenetic Constraints on the Evolution of Right-Handedness. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (2):234-235.score: 30.0
    Ontogenetic factors constrain the evolution of species-typical traits. Because human infants are born “prematurely” relative to other primates, the development of handedness during infancy can reveal important ontogenetic influences on handedness that may have contributed to the evolution of the human species-typical trait of a population-level right-hand dominance.
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  10. Alain Michel (2003). Géométrie Et Philosophie: De Thabit Ibn Qurra à Ibn Al-Haytham. Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 13 (2):311-315.score: 30.0
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  11. Virgil Michel (1939). Liberalism Yesterday and Tomorrow. Ethics 49 (4):417-434.score: 30.0
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  12. Virgil Michel (1927). Why Scholastic Philosophy Lives. Philosophical Review 36 (2):166-173.score: 30.0
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  13. George F. Michel (2001). What is Embodied: “A-Not-B Error” or Delayed-Response Learning? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (1):54-55.score: 30.0
    The procedures used to ensure reliable occurrences of the A-not-B error distort and miss essential features of Piaget's original observations. A model that meshes a mental event, highly restricted by testing procedures, to the dynamics of bodily movement is of limited value. To embody more than just perseverative reaching, the formal model must incorporate Piaget's essential features.
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  14. Irène Rosier & Bruno Roy (1990). Grammaire Et Liturgie Dans Les "Sophismes" du XIIe Siècle. Vivarium 28 (2):118-135.score: 30.0
  15. Daniel Lehmann, B. Henggler, M. Koukkan & M. Michel (1993). Source Localization of Brain Electric Field Frequency Bands During Conscious, Spontaneous Visual Imagery and Abstract Thought. Cognitive Brain Research 1:203-20.score: 30.0
     
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  16. George F. Michel (1999). A Holistic Developmental Theory Requires Better Research Techniques. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (5):899-900.score: 30.0
    Research pragmatics, not a defective conceptual framework, supports modern biological reductionism. Conducting research to reveal the casual web underlying the multiple developmental pathways leading to any species-specific characteristic requires better research techniques than those commonly used. It takes much patience, time, and effort to gain even small glimpses of an answer to any developmental question.
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  17. Virgil Michel (1927). An Organic Superpersonality? Philosophical Review 36 (2):178-180.score: 30.0
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  18. Virgil George Michel (1981). Liberal Education: Essays on the Philosophy of Higher Education. Office of Academic Affairs, Saint John's University.score: 30.0
     
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  19. Paul Henri Michel (1973). The Cosmology of Giordano Bruno. Ithaca, N.Y.,Cornell University Press.score: 30.0
  20. Vicki Michel (1993). The Ethics Committee as a "Community of Concern": A Reflection Onthe Accountability of Bioethics Committees and Consultants. HEC Forum 5 (4):246-250.score: 30.0
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  21. Thomas Michel (2005). The Ethics of Pardon and Peace : A Dialogue of Ideas Between the Thought of Pope John II and the Risale-I Nur. In Ian S. Markham & İbrahim Özdemir (eds.), Globalization, Ethics, and Islam: The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. Ashgate Pub..score: 30.0
     
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  22. Virgil Michel (1936). The Mind-Body Problem. Philosophical Review 45 (6):611.score: 30.0
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  23. Claudine Michel (1996). Tapping the Wisdom of the Ancestors: An Attempt to Recast Vodou and Morality Through the Voice of Mama Lola and Karen Mccarthy Brown. University of Massachusetts, William Monroe Trotter Institute.score: 30.0
     
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  24. Albert Newen, Kai Vogeley & Christoph Michel (2010). Self, Other and Memory: A Preface. Consciousness and Cognition 19 (3):687-689.score: 20.0
  25. Christoph Michel & Albert Newen (2010). Self-Deception as Pseudo-Rational Regulation of Belief. Consciousness and Cognition 19 (3):731-744.score: 20.0
    Self-deception is a special kind of motivational dominance in belief-formation. We develop criteria which set paradigmatic self-deception apart from related phenomena of automanipulation such as pretense and motivational bias. In self-deception rational subjects defend or develop beliefs of high subjective importance in response to strong counterevidence. Self-deceivers make or keep these beliefs tenable by putting prima-facie rational defense-strategies to work against their established standards of rational evaluation. In paradigmatic self-deception, target-beliefs are made tenable via reorganizations of those belief-sets that relate (...)
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  26. Heidi Verhoef & Claudine Michel (1997). Studying Morality Within the African Context: A Model of Moral Analysis and Construction. Journal of Moral Education 26 (4):389-407.score: 20.0
    Abstract For centuries researchers have studied the universality of matters of ethics and morality. Now, the challenge is to make theoretical contributions which account not only for the universals, but also for the life conditions and cultural circumstances of various people in different societies. This paper attempts to capture the essence of morality and ethics in the African context and to elucidate forms of moral wisdom and behaviour grounded in the web of the African community.
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  27. P. -H. Michel (1962). Calliope and Psyche or Style and Man. Diogenes 10 (38):25-44.score: 20.0
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  28. Gelya Frank, Leslie J. Blackhall, Sheila T. Murphy, Vicki Michel, Stanley P. Azen, Haydee Mabel Preloran & Carole H. Browner (2002). Ambiguity and Hope: Disclosure Preferences of Less Acculturated Elderly Mexican Americans Concerning Terminal Cancer—A Case Story. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (02).score: 20.0
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  29. Sheila T. Murphy, Joycelynne M. Palmer, Stanley Ken, Gelya Frank, Vicki Michel & Leslie J. Blackhall (1996). Ethnicity and Advance Care Directives. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 24 (2):108-117.score: 20.0
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  30. P. -H. Michel (1957). Renaissance Cosmologies. Diogenes 5 (18):93-107.score: 20.0
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  31. L. A. Michel (2002). Is Surgical Mystique a Myth and Double Standard the Reality? Medical Humanities 28 (2):66-70.score: 20.0
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  32. M. Quigley, M. Brazier, R. Chadwick, M. N. Michel & D. Paredes (2008). The Organs Crisis and the Spanish Model: Theoretical Versus Pragmatic Considerations. Journal of Medical Ethics 34 (4):223-224.score: 20.0
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  33. P. -H. Michel, D. Bennett & V. A. Velen (1964). Problems of Artistic Creation: The Lesson of the Renaissance. Diogenes 12 (46):25-53.score: 20.0
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  34. P. -H. Michel (1954). Reviews : Dante Humaniste by Augustin Renaudet Paris: 'Les belLes Lettres', 1952 ('Les Classiques de l'Humanism', Published Under the Patronage of l'Association Guillaume Bude. Etudes, 1). [REVIEW] Diogenes 2 (8):120-123.score: 20.0
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  35. Michael Staudigl (2012). From the “Metaphysics of the Individual” to the Critique of Society: On the Practical Significance of Michel Henry's Phenomenology of Life. Continental Philosophy Review 45 (3):339-361.score: 18.0
    This essay explores the practical significance of Michel Henry’s “material phenomenology.” Commencing with an exposition of his most basic philosophical intuition, i.e., his insight that transcendental affectivity is the primordial mode of revelation of our selfhood, the essay then brings to light how this intuition also establishes our relation to both the world and others. Animated by a radical form of the phenomenological reduction, Henry’s material phenomenology brackets the exterior world in a bid to reach the concrete interior transcendental (...)
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  36. Olivier Ducharme (2012). Le Concept d'Habitus Chez Michel Henry. Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2):42-56.score: 18.0
    Cet article cherche à rendre compte de la signification du concept d'habitus que nous retrouvons chez Michel Henry en tentant de le situer par rapport aux principaux concepts qui sont au fondement de la phénoménologie matérielle.
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  37. Jan Cerny (2012). L'individu comme problème phénoménologique chez Hannah Arendt et Michel Henry. Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2):19-41.score: 18.0
    Cette étude, dans un premier temps, apporte des preuves à la possibilité d’interpréter la pensée politique de Hannah Arendt comme un projet phénoménologique original dont le but est d’élever l’apparence de la personne au rang de mode unique de l’apparaître. Puis elle présente brièvement la phénoménologie matérielle de Michel Henry dans laquelle le Soi individuel joue un rôle tout aussi central, puisqu’il est la condition de l’apparence de la vie et le fondement de tout apparaître. En conclusion, l’étude esquisse (...)
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  38. Orazio Irrera (2013). Parrēsia Ed Exemplum. La Parrēsia E I Regimi Aleturgici Dell'exemplum a Partire da L'ermeneutica Del Soggetto di Michel Foucault. Nóema (4-1).score: 18.0
    Questo articolo cerca di esplorare il rapporto tra parrēsia ed exemplum negli ultimi Corsi al Collège de France di Michel Foucault. A partire da L’ermeneutica del soggetto , viene analizzato il campo semantico e pratico relativo alla direzione di coscienza stoica ed epicurea, in cui Foucault oppone la parrēsia all’adulazione e alla retorica per collocarla invece all’interno di un’importante serie di concetti: la paradosis (la trasmissione dei discorsi di verità), il kairos (il momento giusto, la circostanza opportuna) e l’exemplum (...)
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  39. Mehmet Karabela (2012). Archives and the Event of God: The Impact of Michel Foucault on Philosophical Theology David Galston Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2011, 166 Pp., $ 75.00 Cloth. [REVIEW] Dialogue 51 (1):173-176.score: 15.0
  40. João Paulo Ayub da Fonseca (2012). Considerações sobre a constituição do sujeito do cuidado de si no pensamento de Michel Foucault. Veritas – Revista de Filosofia da Pucrs 57 (1).score: 15.0
    O texto pretende discutir a maneira como Foucault trabalha o problema da constituição do sujeito do cuidado de si – tema que tomou conta de seus últimos livros, cursos, entrevistas e conferências. A problematização deste sujeito e das “técnicas de si” que o constitui surgem na obra do autor a partir do momento em que Foucault reorienta as suas pesquisas sobre as relações de poder ao final dos anos 70, dando início às investigações sobre as formas de governar (governo dos (...)
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  41. Amy Allen (2000). The Anti-Subjective Hypothesis: Michel Foucault and the Death of the Subject. Philosophical Forum 31 (2):113–130.score: 12.0
    The centerpiece of the first volume of Michel Foucault’s History of Sexuality is the analysis of what Foucault terms the “repressive hypothesis,” the nearly universal assumption on the part of twentieth-century Westerners that we are the heirs to a Victorian legacy of sexual repression. The supreme irony of this belief, according to Foucault, is that the whole time that we have been announcing and denouncing our repressed, Victorian sexuality, discourses about sexuality have actually proliferated. Paradoxically, as Victorian as we (...)
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  42. Dan Zahavi, Subjectivity and Immanence in Michel Henry.score: 12.0
    One of Michel Henry’s persistent claims has been that phenomenology is quite unlike positive sciences such as physics, chemistry, biology, history, and law. Rather than studying particular objects and phenomena phenomenology is a transcendental enterprise whose task is to disclose and analyse the structure of manifestation or appearance and its very condition of possibility.
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  43. Frederick M. Dolan (2005). The Paradoxical Liberty of Bio-Power: Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault on Modern Politics. Philosophy and Social Criticism 31 (3):369-380.score: 12.0
    For Hannah Arendt, spontaneous, ‘initiatory’ human action and interaction are suppressed by the normalizing pressures of society once ‘life’ - that is, sheer life - becomes the primary concern of politics, as it does, she finds, in the modern age. Arendt’s concept of the social is indebted to Martin Heidegger’s analysis of everyday Dasein in Being and Time , and contemporary political philosophers inspired by Heidegger, such as Jean-Luc Nancy, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, and Giorgio Agamben, tend to reproduce her account of (...)
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  44. James Williams (2008). Gilles Deleuze and Michel Henry: Critical Contrasts in the Deduction of Life as Transcendental. Sophia 47 (3).score: 12.0
    To address the theological turn in phenomenology, this paper sets out critical arguments opposing the theist phenomenology of Michel Henry and Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy of the event. Henry’s phenomenology has been overlooked in recent commentaries compared with, for example, Jean-Luc Marion’s work. It will be shown here that Henry’s philosophy presents a detailed novel turn in phenomenology structured according to critical moves against positions developed from Husserl, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty. This demonstration is done through a strong contrast with Deleuze (...)
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  45. Jeremy H. Smith (2006). Michel Henry's Phenomenology of Aesthetic Experience and Husserlian Intentionality. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 14 (2):191 – 219.score: 12.0
    In Voir l'invisible Michel Henry applies his philosophy of autoaffection (which is both inspired by, and critical of, Husserl) to the realm of aesthetics. Henry claims that autoaffection, as non-objective experience, is essential not only to self-experience, but also to the experience of objects and their qualities. Intentionality tempts us to experience objects merely from the 'outside', but aesthetic experience returns us to the inner life of objects as a lived experience. On the basis of an examination of Henry's (...)
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  46. Gary Gutting (1989). Michel Foucault's Archaeology of Scientific Reason. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    This is an important introduction to and critical interpretation of the work of the major French thinker, Michel Foucault. Through comprehensive and detailed analyses of such important texts as The History of Madness in the Age of Reason, The Birth of the Clinic, The Order of Things, and The Archaeology of Knowledge, the author provides a lucid exposition of Foucault's "archaeological" approach to the history of thought, a method for uncovering the "unconscious" structures that set boundaries on the thinking (...)
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  47. Sara Mills (2003). Michel Foucault. Routledge.score: 12.0
    It is impossible to imagine contemporary critical theory without the work of Michel Foucault. His radical reworkings of the concepts of power, knowledge, discourse and identity have influenced the widest possible range of theories and impacted upon disciplinary fields from literary studies to anthropology. Aimed at students approaching Foucault's texts for the first time, this volume offers: * an examination of Foucault's contexts * a guide to his key ideas * an overview of responses to his work * practical (...)
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  48. I. Hacking (2010). The Question of Culture: Giulio Preti's 1972 Debate with Michel Foucault Revisited. Diogenes 56 (4):81-85.score: 12.0
    Ian Hacking sets out a parallel between Michel Foucault’s thought and that of Giulio Preti based on the debate between them that took place in 1971. This is the speech given at the award of the ‘Giulio Preti’ Prize in November 2008.
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  49. Ann Hartle (2003). Michel De Montaigne: Accidental Philosopher. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    Michel de Montaigne, the inventor of the essay, has always been acknowledged as a great literary figure but has never been thought of as a philosophical original. This book is the first to treat Montaigne as a serious thinker in his own right, taking as its point of departure Montaigne's description of himself as 'an unpremeditated and accidental philosopher'. Whereas previous commentators have treated Montaigne's Essays as embodying a skepticism harking back to classical sources, Ann Hartle offers a fresh (...)
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  50. Stéphane Legrand (2008). “As Close as Possible to the Unlivable”: (Michel Foucault and Phenomenology). Sophia 47 (3).score: 12.0
    This article aims at showing that in spite of Michel Foucault’s violent rejection of phenomenology, this discipline never ceased to bear a crucial significance for his archaeological and genealogical analyses, in that it can be construed as a symptom indicating the most serious challenge that the contemporary philosophy has to meet: thinking together Experience and Knowledge. The author intends to prove, by resorting to the Marxian concept of ‘objectively necessary appearance’, that Foucault’s main opposition to phenomenology stems from his (...)
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  51. Finn Daniel Raaen (2011). Autonomy, Candour and Professional Teacher Practice: A Discussion Inspired by the Later Works of Michel Foucault. Journal of Philosophy of Education 45 (4):627-641.score: 12.0
    Autonomy is considered to be an important feature of professionals and to provide a necessary basis for their informed judgments. In this article these notions will be challenged. In this article I use Michel Foucault's deconstruction of the idea of the autonomous citizen, and his later attempts to reconstruct that idea, in order to bring some new perspectives to the discussion about the foundation of professionalism. The turning point in Foucault's discussion about autonomy is to be found in his (...)
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  52. Joseph Rivera (2011). Generation, Interiority and the Phenomenology of Christianity in Michel Henry. Continental Philosophy Review 44 (2):205-235.score: 12.0
    In this paper I focus on a central phenomenological concept in Michel Henry’s work that has often been neglected: generation. Generation becomes an especially important conceptual key to understanding not only the relationship between God and human self but also Henry’s adoption of radical interiority and his critical standpoint with respect to much of the phenomenological tradition in which he is working. Thus in pursuing the theme of generation, I shall introduce many phenomenological-theological terms in Henry’s trilogy on Christianity (...)
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  53. Jeremy Ahearne (1995). Michel De Certeau: Interpretation and its Other. Stanford University Press.score: 12.0
    This is the first book in any language to deal comprehensively with the work of Michel de Certeau, the author of one of the most important, influential, and diverse bodies of scholarship and cultural theory to emerge from Europe during the exciting decades after the late Sixties. It is designed as a guide to draw out, not only the exceptional range, but the overall coherence of his approach. The author focuses on Certeau's major writings: on contemporary French historiography, the (...)
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  54. Thomas Berker (2011). Michel Callon, Pierre Lascoumes and Yannick Barthe, Acting in an Uncertain World: An Essay on Technical Democracy. Minerva 49 (4):509-511.score: 12.0
    Michel Callon, Pierre Lascoumes and Yannick Barthe, Acting in an Uncertain World: An Essay on Technical Democracy Content Type Journal Article Category Book Review Pages 509-511 DOI 10.1007/s11024-011-9186-y Authors Thomas Berker, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture, Centre for Technology and Society, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 7491 Trondheim, Norway Journal Minerva Online ISSN 1573-1871 Print ISSN 0026-4695 Journal Volume Volume 49 Journal Issue Volume 49, Number 4.
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  55. Bregham Dalgliesh, Enlightenment Contra Humanism: Michel Foucault's Critical History of Thought.score: 12.0
    In this dissertation I claim that Michel Foucault is a pro-enlightenment philosopher. I argue that his critical history of thought cultivates a state of being autonomous in thought and action which is indicative of a kantian notion of maturity. In addition, I contend that, because he follows a nietzschean path to enlightenment, Foucault’s elaboration of freedom proceeds from his critique of who we are, which includes a rejection of humanism’s experiential limits. At the same time, and perhaps most importantly, (...)
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  56. Daniel M. Goldstein (2003). Reproductive Technologies of the Self: Michel Foucault and Meta-Narrative-Ethics. Journal of Medical Humanities 24 (3/4):229-240.score: 12.0
    This paper presents a direction for narrative ethics based on ethical ideas found in the works of Michel Foucault. Narrative ethics is understood here at the meta-level of cultural discourse to see how the moral subject is constituted by the discursive practices that structure the contemporary debate on reproductive technologies. At this level it becomes meta-narrative-ethics. After a theoretical discussion, this paper uses two literary narratives representing the polarized views in the debate to show how the moral subject may (...)
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  57. Grégori Jean (2011). Quand peut un corps? Corporéité, affectivité et temporalité chez Michel Henry. Studia Phaenomenologica 11:327-344.score: 12.0
    One of Michel Henry’s major contributions to the phenomenology of the body consists in his proposal, based on his reading of Maine de Biran, to understand the subjective corporeity from the angle of the ability of action. Subjective corporeity acquires its ontological autonomy and its reality only through its own temporality. In reference to several unpublished texts, this article tries to clarify the nexus between ability and time, and thus to emphasize the crucial importance of the past for a (...)
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  58. Michel Dufour (1970). Les Écrits de Sartre, Chronologie, Bibliographie Commentée. Par Michel Contat Et Michel Rybalka. Gallimard, NRF, Paris, 1970. 788 Pages. [REVIEW] Dialogue 9 (02):279-282.score: 12.0
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  59. Mathias Grote & Pierre-Olivier Méthot (2012). Michel Morange: La Vie, l'Évolution Et L'Histoire. Metascience 21 (2):507-508.score: 12.0
    Michel Morange: La vie, l’évolution et l’histoire Content Type Journal Article Category Book Notice Pages 1-2 DOI 10.1007/s11016-011-9595-4 Authors Mathias Grote, Institut für Philosophie, Literatur- Wissenschafts- und Technikgeschichte, Technische Universität Berlin, Straße des 17. Juni 135, 10623 Berlin, Germany Pierre-Olivier Méthot, ESRC Centre for Genomics and Society (Egenis), University of Exeter, Byrne House, St German’s Road, Exeter, EX4 4PJ UK Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  60. Michel Bourdeau (2008). La Passion du Réel, la Philosophie Devant les Sciences Laurent-Michel Vacher Préface d'Yves Gingras Collection «Petite Collection» Montréal, Liber, 2006, 231 P. [REVIEW] Dialogue 47 (01):194-.score: 12.0
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  61. Razvan Amironesei (2011). La déprise de soi chez Michel Foucault comme pratique d'écriture et enjeu de l'identité subjective. Symposium 15 (1):146-169.score: 12.0
    Chez les commentateurs de l’oeuvre de Michel Foucault, le concept de sujet est communément analysé en termes de processus historiques de subjectivation. Contrairement à ce type d’analyse, l’enjeu de ce travail est de montrer l’émergence d’une problématique de la désubjectivation à partir de la notion foucaldienne de déprise de soi. Il s’agit de montrer d’abord que cette notion aménage à la fois la dispersion et l’effacement de l’auteur. Deuxièmement, la conceptualisation de la déprise sera traitée à travers l’analyse de (...)
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  62. Rémy Gagnon (2010). La Philosophie De La Chair De Michel Henry. Vers Une Onto-Phénoménologie De L'Individualité. Symposium 14 (2):66-77.score: 12.0
    Cet article souhaite élucider la philosophie de la chair développée par Michel Henry. Il s’agit de voir comment Henry parvient à penser la chair comme la possibilité principielle de l’individualité. Nous voulons montrer que la démarche henryenne repose non seulement sur une mise en question des canons de l’apparaître, mais également sur la conviction que le problème de l’individualité trouve sa solution dans une expérience charnelle radicale de soi-même permettant d’opérer un repli en-deçà du corps chosifié de la phénoménologie (...)
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  63. Gert Goeminne (forthcoming). Who is Afraid of the Political? A Response to Robert Scharff and Michel Puech. Foundations of Science:1-6.score: 12.0
    In their respective commentaries to my article “Postphenomenology and the Politics of Sustainable Technology” both Robert Scharff and Michel Puech take issue with my postphenomenological inroad into the politics of technology. In a first step I try to accommodate the suggestions and objections raised by Scharff by making my account of the political more explicit. Consequently, I argue how an antagonistic relational conceptualisation of the political allows me to address head on Puech’s plea to leave politics behind and move (...)
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  64. Frédéric Seyler (2009). Michel Henry et la critique du politique. Studia Phaenomenologica 9:351-377.score: 12.0
    Does Michel Henry’s Phenomenology of life include an ethical and political dimension? It appears that the writings about Marx already include such aspects, especially in reference to the problem of social determinism. More generally, however, our attention must be focused on what Henry calls the transcendental genesis of politics which accounts for the lack of autonomy of the political field, just like in the case of economics. Politics may then be analyzed against that background, for instance in the writings (...)
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  65. José Ruiz Fernández (2009). Logos and Immanence in Michel Henry's Phenomenology. Studia Phaenomenologica 9:83-95.score: 12.0
    In this paper, I will reflect on the place of language within Michel Henry’s phenomenology. I will claim that Michel Henry’s position provokes an architectonic problem in his conception of phenomenology and I will discuss how he tried to solve it. At the end of the essay, I will try to clarify what I believe to be the ultimate root of that problem involving language.
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  66. Clare O'Farrell (2005). Michel Foucault. Sage Publications.score: 12.0
    "Clare O'Farrell is to be congratulated on producing a truly magnificent book on the work of Michel Foucault. There are details, insights and observations that will engage the specialist and there is an extensive documentation of Foucault's output. If there is a more comprehensive book on Foucault's work I have yet to see it. I anticipate those teaching and taking courses on Foucault's work will find Clare O'Farrell's book to be an invaluable resource'" - Barry Smart, University of Portsmouth (...)
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  67. Julia Scheidegger (2009). Michel Henrys Lebensphänomenologie als Hermeneutikkritik. Studia Phaenomenologica 9:59-82.score: 12.0
    This essay tries to show how Michel Henry’s Phenomenology of Life can be understood as a valuable criticism of hermeneutical philosophy and especially of hermeneutical phenomenology in the manner Martin Heidegger and Paul Ricoeur had conceptualized it. Using Michel Henry’s concept of phenomenological distance, it will be shown here that on the basis of every hermeneutics there lies the classical topos of the auctorial intention that was once gained by the interpretation of texts and is simply ontologized by (...)
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  68. Graham Giles (forthcoming). The Concept of Practice, Enlightenment Rationality and Education: A Speculative Reading of Michel de Certeau's The Writing of History. Educational Philosophy and Theory.score: 12.0
    This article proposes a reading of Michel de Certeau's The Writing of History which derives an understanding of the concept of practice as authoritative to the establishment and development of Enlightenment rationality. It is seen as a new form of legitimation established in the redeployment of religious ‘formalities’ in early modernity, supportive of the ostensible deliverance of the projects of reason. Subversive of its moral and ideological operations and geneses, this is an understanding of practice whose subject is the (...)
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  69. Pamela Ann N. Jose (2013). An Analysis of Michel Foucault's Conception of Truth. Iamure International Journal of Literature, Philosophy and Religion 2 (1).score: 12.0
    Richard Rorty claims that philosophy can either be seen as a practice whose primary goal is to show the interrelationship between the different practices in our society or as a discipline whose main aim is to discover the essence of the objects we posit as well as the normative concepts we employ in different discourses. Michel Foucault’s works have usually been associated with the initial characterization of philosophy mentioned above. However, in what follows, I demonstrate how Foucault’s general theme, (...)
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  70. Iain Macdonald (2012). L'égalité, le Possible Et Ce Que les «Hommes Devraient “Pouvoir Être”» : Sur La Gauche Et l'Égalité de Jean-Michel Salanskis. Dialogue 51 (2):247-257.score: 12.0
    ABSTRACT: Jean-Michel Salanskis surveys a number of well-known principles of leftist thought in order to criticize certain illusions to which it falls prey, but also in order to renew its most essential motivation: the search for equality. However, in so doing, Salanskis deploys an ambiguous and problematic notion of possibility that threatens the coherence of his project. The present study analyzes aspects of Salanskis’ book, taking possibility as a guiding thread, and proposes adjustments that may help to avoid certain (...)
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  71. Kenneth Minogue (1989). Can Radicalism Survive Michel Foucault? Critical Review 3 (1):138-154.score: 12.0
    FOUCAULT: A CRITICAL READER Edited by David Couzens Hoy New York: Basil Blackwell, 1986. 246pp., $45.00 ($14.95 paper) MICHEL FOUCAULT by Mark Cousins and Althar Hussain New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984. 278pp., $27.95 ($11.95 paper).
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  72. Mihail Neamţu (2001). „Născut, iar nu făcut“ Note despre filozofia Revelaţiei la Michel Henry. Studia Phaenomenologica 1 (3-4):391-416.score: 12.0
    This paper guides the Romanian reader through a variety of discussions surrounding the central themes of Michel Henry’s latest books (C’est moi la Vérité,1996; Incarnation, 2000). Basically, it aims to present the principles of the phenomenology of Life in Henry’s thought, focusing on the status of the apparition, and of truth, both of which are to be understood not as the ontic relation of adaequatio, but as the self-revelation of Life in the immanence of each non-intentional experience. My review-article (...)
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  73. Frédéric Seyler (2012). From Life to Existence: A Reconsideration of the Question of Intentionality in Michel Henry's Ethics. Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2):98-115.score: 12.0
    Michel Henry has renewed our understanding of life as immanent affectivity: life cannot be reduced to what can be made visible; it is – as immanent and as affectivity – radically invisible. However, if life (la vie) is radically immanent, the living (le vivant ) has nonetheless to relate to the world: it has to exist . But, since existence requires and includes intentional components, human reality – being both living and existing – implies that immanence and intentionality be (...)
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  74. Lisa Downing (2008). The Cambridge Introduction to Michel Foucault. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    French philosopher and historian Michel Foucault is essential reading for students in departments of literature, history, sociology and cultural studies. His work on the institutions of mental health and medicine, the history of systems of knowledge, literature and literary theory, criminality and the prison system, and sexuality, has had a profound and enduring impact across the humanities and social sciences. This introductory book, written for students, offers in-depth critical and contextual perspectives on all of Foucault's major published works. It (...)
     
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  75. Jean-Baptiste Dussert (2012). Literary Practice According to Michel Henry: A Philosophical Introduction to His Novels. Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2):139-153.score: 12.0
    Quoique l'auteur de quatre romans, dont l'un a été couronné par l'un des prix littéraires les plus prestigieux, Michel Henry n'a jamais véritablement formulé une esthétique du roman. L'objet de cet article est, après une étude détaillée de son concept de vie, de tenter de saisir quelle place la pratique littéraire pouvait avoir au sein de son système. Autrement dit, elle s'interroge sur la possibilité de fonder sa création littéraire sur sa réflexion philosophique.
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  76. Michel Foucault, Luther H. Martin, Huck Gutman & Patrick H. Hutton (eds.) (1988). Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault. University of Massachusetts Press.score: 12.0
  77. Marie-Christine Granjon (ed.) (2005). Penser Avec Michel Foucault: Théorie Critique Et Pratiques Politiques. Karthala.score: 12.0
    L'œuvre de Michel Foucault, à l'écart des modes intellectuelles de son temps, et à la croisée de la philosophie et de l'histoire, ne propose ni vision globale du monde ni théorie générale de la société.
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  78. Christina M. Gschwandtner (2012). What About Non-Human Life? An "Ecological" Reading of Michel Henry's Critique of Technology. Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2):116-138.score: 12.0
    This paper takes its departure from Michel Henry’s criticism of a technological view that “extends its reign to the whole planet, sowing desolation and ruin everywhere” ( I am the Truth , 271). It argues that although Henry’s critique of technology is helpful and important, it does not go far enough, inasmuch as it excludes all non-human beings from the Truth of “Life” he advocates against the destructive truths of technology and therefore cannot fully articulate the way in which (...)
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  79. Rafael Haddock-Lobo (2008). História da loucura de Michel Foucault como uma “história do outro”. Veritas – Revista de Filosofia da Pucrs 53 (2).score: 12.0
    The aim of this paper is focused on presenting the method of historical analysis built by Michel Foucault in his book Histoire de la Folie à l’Âge Classique as a “History of the Other”. Such term appears for the first time at Les Mots et les Choses’s Preface, in which Foucault analyses his method in the quoted book on madness (but also in La Naissance de la Clinique). In this sense, firstly we have to verify the hypothesis of this (...)
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  80. Philipp Haueis (2012). Apollinian Scientia Sexualis and Dionysian Ars Erotica?: On the Relation Between Michel Foucault's History of Sexuality and Friedrich Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy. Journal of Nietzsche Studies 43 (2):260-282.score: 12.0
    In a variety of Michel Foucault's writings, one can recognize the fundamental influence that the work of Friedrich Nietzsche had on the method of the French philosopher and historian, even though Nietzsche is only rarely mentioned in direct references. The most obvious influence can be seen in Foucault's adaption of the genealogical method, which he theoretically explores in his essay "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History." Scholarship acknowledges this adaptation but otherwise restricts the application of Nietzschean concepts to Foucault's writings to central (...)
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  81. Karl Hefty (2012). Book Review: Jeffrey Hanson and Michael R. Kelly, Eds. Michel Henry: The Affects of Thought. [REVIEW] Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2):203-207.score: 12.0
    A review of Jeffrey Hanson and Michael R. Kelly, eds., Michel Henry: The Affects of Thought (London: Continuum, 2012), 177 pp.
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  82. Jean-François Lavigne, Jean-Marie Brohm & Roland Vaschalde (eds.) (2006). Michel Henry: Pensée de la Vie Et Culture Contemporaine: Actes du Colloque International de Montpellier, 3-5 Décembre 2003. [REVIEW] Beauchesne.score: 12.0
    Le colloque international de Montpellier - " Michel Henry. Phénoménologie de la vie et culture contemporaine " - a tenu à rendre hommage à cette œuvre novatrice qui a ouvert de nombreux horizons de recherche.
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  83. Marcelo Raffin (2008). La imbricación vida-poder en las filosofías de Michel Foucault y Giogio Agamben. Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 50:961-967.score: 12.0
    Esta ponencia pretende hacer explícita la particular relación que Michel Foucault y Giorgio Agamben postulan entre la vida y el poder como una relación de imbricación por la cual el poder siempre ha dado forma a la vida, en el sentido de lo viviente, apresándola bajo modalizaciones específicas y, por esta vía, propone asimismo una hermenéutica de las formas contemporáneas del sujeto a partir de la relación señalada. A tal fin, se revisará la forma particular en que la vida (...)
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  84. Barry Smart (ed.) (1994). Michel Foucault: Critical Assessments. Routledge.score: 12.0
    Without doubt Michel Foucault was one of the 20th century's towering intellectuals. His work on organization of knowledge, sexuality, power, discipline, medicine, madness, identity, and politics has left an idelible mark on contemporary thinking in these fields. Edited by one of the world's most distinguished Foucault scholars, Barry Smart, this collection sets Foucault's work in the the appropriate historical and intellectual context by orgaizing the material thematically with introductions that quide the reader through the complexities of the essays. These (...)
     
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  85. Michel Troper & Denys de Béchillon (eds.) (2006). L'architecture du Droit: Mélanges En l'Honneur de Michel Troper. Economica.score: 12.0
     
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  86. Nancy Fraser (1985). Michel Foucault: A "Young Conservative"? Ethics 96 (1):165-184.score: 9.0
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  87. Ian Hacking (1979). Michel Foucault's Immature Science. Noûs 13 (1):39-51.score: 9.0
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  88. Louis A. Sass (2008). Michel Foucault and the Contradictions of Modern Thought. Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 28 (2):323-335.score: 9.0
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  89. Karen Vintges (2001). 'Must We Burn Foucault?' Ethics as Art of Living: Simone de Beauvoir and Michel Foucault. Continental Philosophy Review 34 (2):165-181.score: 9.0
    The title of this article refers to Beauvoir's essay Must We Burn De Sade? (1953/1952). Analogous to Beauvoir's essay on Sade, this article is something of an apology for Foucault. I use Beauvoir's essay on Sade to discuss Foucault's concept of ethics as an art of living. I conclude that the final Foucault's thought on ethics can be labelled a post-existentialism, combining postmodern thinking and the issues of freedom and commitment in an inspiring way. I argue, however, that the (...)
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  90. Christina Hendricks (2008). Foucault's Kantian Critique: Philosophy and the Present. Philosophy and Social Criticism 34 (4):357-382.score: 9.0
    In several lectures, interviews and essays from the early 1980s, Michel Foucault startlingly argues that he is engaged in a kind of critical work that is similar to that of Immanuel Kant. Given Foucault's criticisms of Kantian and Enlightenment emphases on universal truths and values, his declaration that his work is Kantian seems paradoxical. I agree with some commentators who argue that this is a way for Foucault to publicly acknowledge to his critics that he is not, as some (...)
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  91. Ingerid S. Straume & J. F. Humphrey (eds.) (2011). Depoliticization. The Political Imaginary of Global Capitalism. NSU Press.score: 9.0
    Depoliticization: The Political Imaginary of Global Capitalism follows in the path blazed by Hannah Arendt and Cornelius Castoriadis, where politics is seen as a mode of freedom; the possibility for individuals to consciously and explicitly create the institutions of their own societies. Starting with such problem as: What is capital? How can we characterize the dominant economic system? What are the conditions for its existence, and how can we create alternatives?, the articles examine the central institutions of modern Western societies, (...)
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  92. Bob Robinson, Michel Foucault: Ethics.score: 9.0
    Entry for the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, at http://www.iep.utm.edu/fouc-eth/, includes discussion of Foucault's turn to ethics, conception of ethical relations, care of the self, and the connection between his critical philosophy and conception of ethics.
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  93. Dan Zahavi (1999). Michel Henry and the Phenomenology of the Invisible. Continental Philosophy Review 32 (3):223-240.score: 9.0
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  94. Marli Huijer (1999). The Aesthetics of Existence in the Work of Michel Foucault. Philosophy and Social Criticism 25 (2):61-85.score: 9.0
    Foucault's analysis of an aesthetics of existence is presented as an instrument to practice ethical thought without the presupposition of an autonomous subject. The implications of Foucault's aesthetics of existence for ethical thought are traced to the work of Nietzsche. In Foucault's work, experiences of oneself are not a given, but are constituted in power relations and true-and-false games. In the interplay of truths and power relations, the individual constitutes a certain relationship to him- or herself. Foucault designated the relation (...)
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  95. William E. Connolly (1993). Beyond Good and Evil: The Ethical Sensibility of Michel Foucault. Political Theory 21 (3):365-389.score: 9.0
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  96. Gary Gutting, Michel Foucault. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 9.0
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  97. T. J. Berard (1999). Michel Foucault, the History of Sexuality, and the Reformulation of Social Theory. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 29 (3):203–227.score: 9.0
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  98. Béatrice Han-Pile (2009). Review of Michel Foucault, Introduction à l'Anthropologie (Published in One Volume with Foucault's Translation of Emmanuel Kant's Anthropologie d'Un Point De Vue Pragmatique). [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (3).score: 9.0
  99. Roger Deacon (2002). Truth, Power and Pedagogy: Michel Foucault on the Rise of the Disciplines. Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (4):435–458.score: 9.0
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  100. Nancy Luxon (2004). Truthfulness, Risk, and Trust in the Late Lectures of Michel Foucault. Inquiry 47 (5):464 – 489.score: 9.0
    This paper argues that Foucault's late, unpublished lectures present a model for evaluating those ethical authorities who claim to speak truthfully. In response to those who argue that claims to truth are but claims to power, I argue that Foucault finds in ancient practices of parrhesia (fearless speech) a resource by which to assess modern authorities' claims in the absence of certain truth. My preliminary analytic framework for this model draws exclusively on my research of his unpublished lectures given at (...)
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