Results for 'Mickey Weinberg'

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  1.  28
    Whose Doctorate is it Anyway? Guidelines for an Agreement Between Adviser and Doctoral Student Regarding the Advisement Process and Intellectual Property Rights.Ora Gilbar, Zeev Winstok, Mickey Weinberg & Orit Bershtling - 2013 - Journal of Academic Ethics 11 (1):73-80.
    The process of advisement in the research of a doctoral dissertation is prolonged and harbors a variety of ethical aspects and issues. In some cases it gives rise to dissatisfaction on the part of both advisor and student regarding the process itself and/or the publication of the dissertation. To ameliorate these problems, the Dissertation Committee of the School of Social Work at the University of Haifa recently set out guidelines for both advisor and doctoral student, in accordance with which both (...)
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  2. Normativity and epistemic intuitions.Jonathan M. Weinberg, Shaun Nichols & Stephen Stich - 2001 - Philosophical Topics, 29 (1-2):429-460.
    In this paper we propose to argue for two claims. The first is that a sizeable group of epistemological projects – a group which includes much of what has been done in epistemology in the analytic tradition – would be seriously undermined if one or more of a cluster of empirical hypotheses about epistemic intuitions turns out to be true. The basis for this claim will be set out in Section 2. The second claim is that, while the jury is (...)
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  3.  32
    “You Got Me Into This…”: Procreative Responsibility and Its Implications for Suicide and Euthanasia.Rivka Weinberg - 2015 - In Michael Cholbi & Jukka Varelius (eds.), New Directions in the Ethics of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 167-180.
    This paper investigates connections between procreative ethics and the ethics of suicide and euthanasia. While there are good reasons for distinguishing between lives worth starting and lives worth continuing, I argue that those reasons provide no reason for denying that there is a relationship between procreative and end of life ethics. Regarding euthanasia/assisted suicide, we might think it too demanding to ask parents to help euthanize their terminally ill, suffering child, but had the parents not procreated, thereby exposing their child (...)
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  4.  41
    Sir Gawain & The Green Knight.Mickey Sweeney - 2002 - Mediaevalia 23:137-157.
  5.  42
    What to Buy? On the Complexity of Being a Critical Consumer.Mickey Gjerris, Christian Gamborg & Henrik Saxe - 2016 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 29 (1):81-102.
    This article criticises the notion that critical/political/ethical consumerism can solve issues related to sustainability and food production. It does this by analysing the complexity of the concept of sustainability as related to food choices. The current trend of pursuing a sustainable food production through critical purchase decisions rather than through regulation is shown to be problematic, as shopping for a more sustainable food system might be much harder than initially believed due to the conflicting values and inherent trade-offs entailed in (...)
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  6.  75
    Willed Blindness: A Discussion of Our Moral Shortcomings in Relation to Animals.Mickey Gjerris - 2015 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 28 (3):517-532.
    This article describes how we seem to live in a willed blindness towards the effects that our meat production and consumption have on animals, the environment and the climate. A willed blindness that cannot be explained by either lack of knowledge or scientific uncertainty. The blindness enables us to see ourselves as moral beings although our lack of reaction to the effects of our actions tells another story. The article describes the consequences of intensive meat production and consumption to animal (...)
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  7.  23
    Expression of Basic Emotions in Pictures by German and Vietnamese Art Therapy Students – A Comparative, Explorative Study.Alexandra Danner-Weinberger, Katharina Puchner, Margrit Keckeis, Julia Brielmann, Minh Thuy Thi Tri, The Huy Le Hoang, Luan Huynh Nguyen, Nikolai Köppelmann, Edit Rottler, Harald Gündel & Jörn von Wietersheim - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  8. David Weinberger -- a phenomenology of nuclear weapons.David Weinberger - 1984 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 10 (3-4):95-105.
  9.  26
    Household food waste in Nordic countries: Estimations and ethical implications.Mickey Gjerris & Silvia Gaiani - 2013 - Etikk I Praksis - Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics 1 (1):6-23.
    This study focuses on food waste generated by households in four Nordic countries: Finland, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Based on existing literature we present comparable data on amounts and monetary value of food waste; explanations for food waste at household level; a number of public and private initiatives at national levels aiming to reduce food waste; and a discussion of ethical issues related to food waste with a focus on possible contributions from ecocentric ethics. We argue that reduction of food (...)
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  10. Moderate Epistemic Relativism and Our Epistemic Goals.Jonathan M. Weinberg - 2007 - Episteme 4 (1):66-92.
    Although radical forms of relativism are perhaps beyond the epistemological pale, I argue here that a more moderate form may be plausible, and articulate the conditions under which moderate epistemic relativism could well serve our epistemic goals. In particular, as a result of our limitations as human cognizers, we find ourselves needing to investigate the dappled and difficult world by means of competing communities of highly specialized researchers. We would do well, I argue, to admit of the existence of unresolvable (...)
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  11. Nuclear Dialogues.David Weinberger - 1987
     
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  12.  13
    The Rhythm of Echoes and Echoes of Violence.Mickey Vallee - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (1):97-114.
    This paper contributes to non-ocularcentric theory and theorizing by way of a methodological application and extension of Henri Lefebvre’s Rhythmanalysis. It explores the cultural dynamics of echoes and history, using as an instrumental case study Steve Reich’s 1966 tape-loop composition, Come Out, to elucidate the ambivalent and contradictory relations of time, temporality, and possibility. While the focus is primarily on the text of Come Out and its context of police brutality and civil rights, it moreover contributes to an enriched and (...)
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  13. Analytic epistemology and experimental philosophy.Joshua Alexander & Jonathan M. Weinberg - 2006 - Philosophy Compass 2 (1):56–80.
    It has been standard philosophical practice in analytic philosophy to employ intuitions generated in response to thought-experiments as evidence in the evaluation of philosophical claims. In part as a response to this practice, an exciting new movement—experimental philosophy—has recently emerged. This movement is unified behind both a common methodology and a common aim: the application of methods of experimental psychology to the study of the nature of intuitions. In this paper, we will introduce two different views concerning the relationship that (...)
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  14.  15
    Doing nothing does something: Embodiment and data in the COVID-19 pandemic.Mickey Vallee - 2020 - Big Data and Society 7 (1).
    The COVID-19 pandemic redefines how we think about the body, physiologically and socially. But what does it mean to have and to be a body in the COVID-19 pandemic? The COVID-19 pandemic offers data scholars the unique opportunity, and perhaps obligation, to revisit and reinvent the fundamental concepts of our mediated experiences. The article critiques the data double, a longstanding concept in critical data and media studies, as incompatible with the current public health and social distancing imperative. The data double, (...)
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  15. The three teachings of biotechnology.Mickey Gjerris - 2008 - In Kenneth H. David & Paul B. Thompson (eds.), What Can Nanotechnology Learn From Biotechnology?: Social and Ethical Lessons for Nanoscience From the Debate Over Agrifood Biotechnology and Gmos. Elsevier/Academic Press.
     
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  16.  12
    When Gendered Logics Collide: Going Public and Restructuring in a High-Tech Organization.Ethel L. Mickey - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (4):509-533.
    Gender scholars argued that gendered organizations theory needs updating as organizational logic has shifted amid neoliberal workplace transformations. This qualitative case study of a high-tech firm reveals how features of the traditional work logic remain resilient. I analyze the gendered implications of a high-tech startup restructuring and going public, finding the flexible organization to bureaucratize, implementing specialized jobs and a hierarchy with standardized career ladders. Going public creates conflicting gendered logics that place women at a structural disadvantage, relegating them to (...)
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  17.  18
    Technology, Embodiment, and Affect in Voice Sciences: The Voice is an Imaginary Organ.Mickey Vallee - 2017 - Body and Society 23 (2):83-105.
    This article is interested in ‘voice imaging’ as a technical field through which people experience new relations between organic and inorganic forms of life. Grounded in a study of voice imaging in historical and contemporary scientific research, the article applies and expands on Bernard Stiegler’s ‘General Organology’, with an eye to understanding the voice as a dynamic capacity for volition. By exploring the scientific research into voice imaging, the article argues that the voice, as a cultural image, is an imaginary (...)
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  18. Accentuate the Negative.Joshua Alexander, Ronald Mallon & Jonathan M. Weinberg - 2010 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 1 (2):297-314.
    Our interest in this paper is to drive a wedge of contention between two different programs that fall under the umbrella of “experimental philosophy”. In particular, we argue that experimental philosophy’s “negative program” presents almost as significant a challenge to its “positive program” as it does to more traditional analytic philosophy.
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  19.  10
    Disappearing into Thick Aēr : The Function of Aēr in homer and Anaximenes.Benjamin Folit-Weinberg - 2023 - American Journal of Philology 144 (2):183-219.
    Aēr in Homer has rarely been discussed; the few studies that do exist focus on the word's semantics and scope of reference. This article proposes that we focus instead on how aēr works and what aēr does, both to characters within the Iliad and the Odyssey and, especially, for the poet responsible for composing them. First, I argue that aēr offers the poet a stratagem for navigating complex narrative demands and that it is best understood primarily in terms of the (...)
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  20.  33
    Journal of Moral Education referees in 2007.James Arthur, Mickey Bebeau, Roger Bergman, Lawrence Blum, Tonia Bock, Sandra Bosacki, Daan Brugman, Neil Burtonwood, David Carr & Kaye Cook - 2008 - Journal of Moral Education 37 (2):275-277.
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  21.  19
    Electromyography and lipreading in the detection of verbal rehearsal.John L. Locke & Mickey Ginsburg - 1975 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 5 (3):246-248.
  22.  9
    The Moral Justification Behind a Climate Tax on Beef in Denmark.Anne Lykkeskov & Mickey Gjerris - 2017 - Food Ethics 1 (2):181-191.
    This paper discusses the moral justification behind placing a tax on foods in correlation with their greenhouse gas emissions. The background is a report from 2016 by the Danish Council of Ethics promoting a national tax on the consumption of meat from ruminants as an initial step to curb the 19–29% of total anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions stemming from the food sector. The paper describes the contribution of food production and consumption to climate change and how a change in diet, (...)
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  23.  9
    Homer, Parmenides, and the Road to Demonstration.Benjamin Folit-Weinberg - 2022 - Cambridge University Press.
    It is widely agreed that Parmenides invented extended deductive argumentation and the practice of demonstration, a transformative event in the history of thought. But how did he manage this seminal accomplishment? In this book, Benjamin Folit-Weinberg finally provides an answer. At the heart of this story is the image of the hodos, the road and the journey. Brilliantly deploying the tools and insights of literary criticism, conceptual history, and archaeology, Folit-Weinberg illuminates how Parmenides adopts and adapts this image (...)
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  24.  40
    John Locke. [REVIEW]Julius R. Weinberg - 1940 - Philosophical Review 49 (1):83-85.
  25. Accentuate the Negative.Joshua Alexander, Ronald Mallon & Jonathan M. Weinberg - 2013 - In Joshua Knobe & Shaun Nichols (eds.), Experimental Philosophy: Volume 2. Oxford University Press USA.
    There are two ways of understanding experimental philosophy's process of appealing to intuitions as evidence for or against philosophical claims: the positive and negative programs. This chapter deals with how the positivist method of conceptual analysis is affected by the results of the negative program. It begins by describing direct extramentalism, semantic mentalism, conceptual mentalism, and mechanist mentalism, all of which argue that intuitions are credible sources of evidence and will therefore be shared. The negative program challenges this view by (...)
     
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  26. Metaskepticism: Meditations in ethnoepistemology.Shaun Nichols, Stephen Stich & Jonathan M. Weinberg - 2003 - In S. Luper (ed.), The Skeptics. Ashgate. pp. 227--247.
    Throughout the 20th century, an enormous amount of intellectual fuel was spent debating the merits of a class of skeptical arguments which purport to show that knowledge of the external world is not possible. These arguments, whose origins can be traced back to Descartes, played an important role in the work of some of the leading philosophers of the 20th century, including Russell, Moore and Wittgenstein, and they continue to engage the interest of contemporary philosophers. (e.g., Cohen 1999, DeRose 1995, (...)
     
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  27.  8
    The Language of Roads and Travel in Homer: Hodos_ and _Keleuthos.Benjamin Folit-Weinberg - 2022 - Classical Quarterly 72 (1):1-24.
    The aim of this article is to map the relationship between the main words that comprise the Homeric lexicon of roads, journeys, paths and travel. The central task is to explore the relationship between the words hodos and keleuthos; along the way, the article will also address other terms that appear less frequently, such as atarp(it)os and poros. The article first teases out a difference in sense between keleuthos in the singular and in the plural. The discussion of keleuthos provides (...)
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  28. Philosophie huldigt dem Recht.Wilhelm Schaup-Weinberg (ed.) - 1968 - Zürich,: Europa Verlag.
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  29. Experimental Epistemology.Weinberg Jonathan - 2010 - In Sven Bernecker & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), Routledge Companion to Epistemology. New York: Routledge. pp. 823-835.
     
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  30.  35
    Communicating Identifiability Risks to Biobank Donors.T. J. Kasperbauer, Mickey Gjerris, Gunhild Waldemar & Peter Sandøe - 2018 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 27 (1):123-136.
    Recent highly publicized privacy breaches in health care and genomics research have led many to question whether current standards of data protection are adequate. Improvements in de-identification techniques, combined with pervasive data sharing, have increased the likelihood that external parties can track individuals across multiple databases. This paper focuses on the communication of identifiability risks in the process of obtaining consent for donation and research. Most ethical discussions of identifiability risks have focused on the severity of the risk and how (...)
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  31.  8
    On the Verge of a Planetary Civilization: A Philosophy of Integral Ecology.Sam Mickey - 2014 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    On the Verge of a Planetary Civilization: A Philosophy of Integral Ecology draws on the work of Gilles Deleuze, and his contemporaries and successors, in order to explore the ecological problems facing our globally interconnected civilization.
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  32.  6
    Animal, Body, Data: Starling Murmurations and the Dynamic of Becoming In-formation.Mickey Vallee - 2021 - Body and Society 27 (2):83-106.
    The aim of this article is to demonstrate that data modelling is becoming a crucial, if not dominant, vector for our understanding of animal populations and is consequential for how we study the affective relations between individual bodies and the communities to which they belong. It takes up the relationship between animal, body and data, following the datafication of starling murmurations, to explore the topological relationships between nature, culture and science. The case study thus embodies a data journey, invoking the (...)
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  33. A little piece of the reel: prosthetic vocality and the obscene surplus of record production.Mickey Vallee - 2014 - In Matthew Flisfeder & Louis-Paul Willis (eds.), Zizek and Media Studies: A Reader. Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  34. Incorporeal transformations in truth and reconciliation : a posthuman approach to transitional justice.Mickey Vallee - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald (eds.), From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  35. Incorporeal transformations in truth and reconciliation : a posthuman approach to transitional justice.Mickey Vallee - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald (eds.), From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  36.  15
    The Science of Listening in Bioacoustics Research: Sensing the Animals' Sounds.Mickey Vallee - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (2):47-65.
    Bioacoustics is an interdisciplinary field bridging biological and acoustic sciences, which uses sound technologies to record, preserve, and analyse large datasets of animal communications. But it is also a world, made of the meanings created through inter- and intra-species communication. This article empirically explores a variety of bioacoustics research, including interviews with researchers, as part of a broader qualitative study, in order to theorize the expanding sense and sensation of a global biosphere and sonic data. By giving a sustained and (...)
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  37.  19
    The Take and the Stutter: Glenn Gould's Time Synthesis.Mickey Vallee - 2015 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 9 (4):558-577.
    In A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari refer to Glenn Gould as an illustration of the third principle of the rhizome, that of multiplicity: ‘When Glenn Gould speeds up the performance of a piece, he is not just displaying virtuosity, he is transforming the musical points into lines, he is making the whole piece proliferate’ (1987: 8). In an attempt to make sensible their ostensibly modest statement, I proliferate the relationships between Glenn Gould's philosophy of sound recording, Deleuze's theory of (...)
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  38. Thinking about the Liar, Fast and Slow.Robert Barnard, Joseph Ulatowski & Jonathan Weinberg - 2017 - In Bradley Armour-Garb (ed.), Reflections on the Liar. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 39-70.
    The liar paradox is widely conceived as a problem for logic and semantics. On the basis of empirical studies presented here, we suggest that there is an underappreciated psychological dimension to the liar paradox and related problems, conceived as a problem for human thinkers. Specific findings suggest that how one interprets the liar sentence and similar paradoxes can vary in relation to one’s capacity for logical and reflective thought, acceptance of certain logical principles, and degree of philosophical training, but also (...)
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  39. Context, Development, and Digital Media: Implications for Very Young Adolescents in LMICs.Lucía Magis-Weinberg, Ahna Ballonoff Suleiman & Ronald E. Dahl - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The rapidly expanding universe of information, media, and learning experiences available through digital technology is creating unique opportunities and vulnerabilities for children and adolescents. These issues are particularly salient during the developmental window at the transition from childhood into adolescence. This period of early adolescence is a time of formative social and emotional learning experiences that can shape identity development in both healthy and unhealthy ways. Increasingly, many of these foundational learning experiences are occurring in on-line digital environments. These expanding (...)
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  40.  8
    New materialism and theology.Sam Mickey - 2022 - Boston: Brill.
    Juxtaposing theological inquiry with the philosophical movement of new materialism, Sam Mickey reflects on questions of human embodiment, nonhuman agency, technological innovation, and possible futures for humankind. New Materialism and Theology opens several pathways for thinking about what really matters.
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  41. Practices make perfect: On minding methodology when mooting metaphilosophy.Joshua Alexander & Jonathan Weinberg - forthcoming - Oxford Studies in Experimental Philosophy.
    In this paper, we consider two different attempts to make an end run around the experimentalist challenge to the armchair use of intuitions: one due to Max Deutsch and Herman Cappelen, contending that philosophers do not appeal to intuitions, but rather to arguments, in canonical philosophical texts; the other due to Joshua Knobe, arguing that intuitions are so stable that there is in fact no empirical basis for the experimentalist challenge in the first place. We show that a closer attention (...)
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  42.  51
    Guest Editors' Introduction.Sam Mickey & Elizabeth McAnally - 2012 - World Futures 68 (2):77 - 81.
    World Futures, Volume 68, Issue 2, Page 77-81, February-March 2012.
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  43.  75
    Planetary Love: Ecofeminist Perspectives on Globalization.Sam Mickey & Kimberly Carfore - 2012 - World Futures 68 (2):122 - 131.
    This article draws on three ecofeminist theorists (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Val Plumwood, and Donna Haraway) in order to criticize the dominant model of globalization, which oppresses humans and the natural environment, and propose an alternative globalization grounded in planetary love. Rather than affirming or opposing the globalization, planetary love acknowledges its complicity with the neocolonial tendencies of globalization while aiming toward another globalization, a more just, peaceful, and sustainable globalization. In this context, love is characterized by non-coercive, mutually transformative contact, (...)
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  44.  20
    Logik der Forschung: Zur Erkenntnistheorie der modernen Naturwissenschaft. [REVIEW]Julius Rudolph Weinberg - 1936 - Philosophical Review 45 (5):511-514.
  45.  10
    Coexistentialism and The Unbearable Intimacy of Ecological Emergency.Sam Mickey - 2016 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    Renewing existentialism -- Existentialist legacies -- After God, after nature -- Remaining exposed -- Roundness -- Interlude -- After humanism -- Looking good -- Becoming worldly -- Askesis: shut up and train! -- Indications of an axial age -- Coda.
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  46.  71
    Cosmological Postmodernism in Whitehead, Deleuze, and Derrida.Sam Mickey - 2008 - Process Studies 37 (2):24-44.
    This essay presents some points of dialogue between process thinking and post-structuralism, particularly in light of the metaphysical cosmology of Alfred North Whitehead and the post-structuralist philosophies of Gilles Deleuze and Jacques Derrida. This dialogue facilitates the emergence of a cosmological postmodernism. Through the creation of concepts that situate the human within the networks, processes, and mutually constitutive restions of the cosmos, cosmo logical postmodernism re-envisions the worldview of modernity and overcomes its reification and dichotomization of the human and the (...)
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  47.  26
    Gerard Kuperus. Ecopolitical Homelessness: Defining Place in an Unsettled World.Sam Mickey - 2018 - Environmental Philosophy 15 (1):125-128.
  48.  17
    Matthias Fritsch. Taking Turns with the Earth: Phenomenology, Deconstruction, and Intergenerational Justice.Sam Mickey - 2019 - Environmental Philosophy 16 (1):223-225.
  49.  75
    On the Function of the Epoche in Phenomenological Interpretations of Religion.Samuel Mickey - 2008 - PhaenEx 3 (1):56-81.
    This essay presents an inquiry into the phenomenological epoche , specifically with a view to the function of the epoche in efforts to interpret sacred or religious meaning. Reflecting on contributions from phenomenology, hermeneutics, and deconstruction, with particular attention to the phenomenology of religion developed by Gerardus Van der Leeuw, I argue that the epoche can be defined in terms of hospitable restraint. By holding the presuppositions of one’s unique historical horizon in abeyance (e.g., presuppositions regarding the historical development of (...)
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  50.  25
    Touching Without Touching: Objects of Post- Deconstructive Realism and Object-Oriented Ontology.Sam Mickey - 2018 - Open Philosophy 1 (1):290-298.
    This paper presents a juxtaposition of the understanding of objects in Jean-Luc Nancy’s postdeconstructive realism and Graham Harman’s object-oriented ontology, particularly with reference to their respective notions of touch. Nancy incorporates a tension between the phenomenological accounts of touch and embodiment given by Merleau-Ponty, who focuses on the relationality of the flesh, and Levinas, who focuses more on non-relational alterity. Furthermore, Nancy does not accept the anthropocentric assumptions whereby phenomenology accounts for objects insofar as they correlate to human existence. Following (...)
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