100 entries most recently downloaded from the set: "" in "Open Repository and Bibliography"

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  1. An Epigenetic Prism to Norms and Values.Kim Hendrickx & Ine Van Hoyweghen - 2018 - Frontiers in Genetics 9.
    In this article, we ask to what extent the specific characteristics of epigenetics may affect the type of questions one can ask about human society. We pay particular attention to the way epigenetic research stirs debate about normative and moral issues. Are these issues implied by scientific evidence as an outcome of research? Or do moral and normative issues also shape how research is done and which problems it addresses? We briefly explore these questions through examples and discussions in scientific (...)
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  2. Sheep do have opinions.Vinciane Despret - 2006 - In Bruno Latour & Peter Weibel (eds.), Making Things Public. Atmospheres of Democracy.
    For the past few years the inhabitants of a hamlet on the outskirts of the village of Ingleton in Yorkshire, England, have been witnessing a strange exercise every morning. A woman, said to have been one of the most renowned primatologists in the English-speaking world, spends her day in a field in front of her house, observing animals that she has put there. As she did during her many years of field work in Africa studying apes, primatologist Thelma Rowell patiently (...)
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  3. Henry David Thoreau: Civil Disobedience.David Lombard, Robert Clark & Cristina Sandru - 2021 - The Literary Encyclopedia.
  4. Thinking with Pictures - The Heuristics of Documents.Maud Hagelstein - 2021 - In Harold Fallon, Benoît Vandenbulcke & Benoît Burquel (eds.), Buero Kofink Schels. In Practice.
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  5. A favourable mathematical point of view on Aristotelian and Scholastic syllogisms.Pascal Gribomont - unknown
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  6. "Intellectual self-defense toolboxes" vs self-preservation. A theoretical draft of a new paradigm for critical media education.Jérémy Hamers - unknown
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  7. Pictures that denounce? In the jungle of calais, banksy and the hearts of cardboard.Damien Darcis - 2019 - Articulo 19.
    In this paper, I would like to question the political power of images in the urban space. To do this, I rely on the confrontation of two types of images displayed in Calais, a city now associated with the "migrant problem". On the one hand, I will study four interventions by street artist Banksy. On the other side, I will analyse images made by anonymous artists, in remote, less visible sites, on the walls, on the doors or on the windows (...)
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  8. Book Review of Louise Economides's The Ecology of Wonder in Romantic and Postmodern Literature.David Lombard - 2021 - The Trumpeter 36 (1).
  9. The Image of Domination. The political stakes of the Sartrean theory of imagination.Fabio Recchia - unknown
  10. Experiencing the a priori.Denis Seron - 2021 - European Journal of Philosophy 31 (2):371-379.
    Brentano clearly asserts, in his Vienna lectures of 1887–1888, that his descriptive psychology is an a priori or “exact” science. Since he rejects Kant's idea of a synthetic a priori, this means that the descriptive psychologist's laws are analytic. My aim in this paper is to clarify and discuss this view. I examine Brentano's epistemology in the Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint and then its later developments. I conclude with a difficulty inherent in Brentano's psychological approach to a priori knowledge.
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  11. Brentano and the ideality of time.Denis Seron - forthcoming - Revista de Filosofia Moderna E Contemporânea 9 (2).
    How is it possible to have present memory experiences of things that, being past, are no longer presently experienced? A possible answer to this long-standing philosophical question is what I call the “ideality of time view,” namely the view that temporal succession is unreal. In this paper I outline the basic idea behind Brentano’s version of the ideality of time view. Additionally, I contrast it with Hume’s version, suggesting that, despite significant differences, it can nonetheless be construed as broadly Humean.
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  12. Interdisciplinary Research in the Field of Conservation: the Role of Analytical Philosophy and Ontology of Art in the Authenticity Assessment.Stéphane Dawans & Claudine Houbart - 2011 - In Claudio D'Amato (ed.), 1st International Congress Rete Vitruvio - Architectural design between teaching and research - Proceedings. pp. 635-644.
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  13. Franz Brentano's critique of free will.Denis Seron - 2020 - In Tobias Keiling & Christopher Erhard (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Phenomenology of Agency. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  14. On Reinach's realism.Denis Seron - forthcoming - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy.
    It is commonly assumed that Adolf Reinach was a full-fledged realist. The aim of this paper is to clarify in what sense Reinach can be called a “realist.” I identify two distinct realisms in Reinach. First, Reinach advocates a metaphysical realism. He defines logic as an ontology of mind-independent states of affaires and seeks to build up a Meinong-style theory of object based on a non-Husserlian understanding of Husserl’s intuition of essences. Second, Reinach also defends an epistemological realism according to (...)
     
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  15. Psychology first!Denis Seron - forthcoming - Studien Zur Österreichischen Philosophie.
    Brentano as well as many of his followers — with notable exceptions, especially Husserl — assigned to psychology a foundational role in the edifice of science, including philosophy. My suggestion in the present paper is that this view is a consequence of Brentano’s theory of intentionality. Brentano’s thesis of the intentionality of the mental, I argue, first and foremost expresses a strong epistemological position about what knowledge in general is: all knowledge, whether inner or outer, has its source in “inner (...)
     
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  16. Empirical investigation of indexical externalism about “social-kind” terms.Philippe De Brabanter & Bruno Leclercq - unknown
    Are there “social kinds” the way there are “natural kinds”? Are social sciences likely to hit upon “essences” the way natural sciences do? Or are all social phenomena purely theoretical constructs? Questions about whether there are natural kinds, what exactly they are and which kinds of phenomena they cover have been the object of heated epistemological and metaphysical debates. We think the issues can be clarified within the limits of the philosophy of language: by looking into what ranges of general (...)
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  17. Using semantic deference to test an extension of indexical externalism beyond natural-kind terms.Philippe De Brabanter & Bruno Leclercq - unknown
    We offer a new outlook on the vexed question of the reference of natural-kind terms. Since Kripke and Putnam, there is a widespread assumption that natural-kind terms function just like proper names: they designate their referents directly and they are rigid designators: their reference is unchanged even in worlds in which the referent lacks some or all the properties associated with it in the actual world, and which are useful to us in identifying that referent. There have, however, been heated (...)
     
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  18. The Fight against Atomism and Pluralism. A Note on the Hegelian Legacy in Bradley.Guillaume Lejeune - unknown
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  19. The intrinsic activity of the brain and its relation to levels and disorders of consciousness.Michele Farisco, Steven Laureys & Katinka Evers - 2017 - Mind and Matter 15 (2).
    Science and philosophy still lack an overarching theory of consciousness. We suggest that a further step toward it requires going beyond the view of the brain as input-output machine and focusing on its intrinsic activity, which may express itself in two distinct modalities, i.e. aware and unaware. We specifically investigate the predisposition of the brain to evaluate and to model the world. These intrinsic activities of the brain retain a deep relation with consciousness. In fact the ability of the brain (...)
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  20. Plato’s Phaedrus as a Manual for Neoplatonic Hermeneutics: Inspired Poetry and Allegory in Proclus.Marc-Antoine Gavray - unknown
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  21. Nature and Taxonomy, Systems of.Thibault De Meyer - 2020 - Encyclopedia of Early Modern Philosophy and the Sciences.
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  22. Facing the Imaginative Challenges of the Anthropocene: A Rhetorical and Narratological Analysis of the Toxic Sublime in Contemporary U.S. Literature.David Lombard - unknown
    In this paper, the sublime is used as the critical lens through which I conduct a rhetorical and narratological analysis of a series of contemporary U.S. literary texts. More specifically, with the aim of exploring new ways of analyzing environmental disruption or “wounds”, this paper examines the limits and affordances of using the “toxic sublime”, a redefinition of the notion of the sublime which emphasizes the tensions between appreciating awe-inspiring materialities and recognizing their toxic and life-threatening potential, but also other (...)
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  23. Toward a Speculative-Pragmatic Sublime: A Narratological Analysis of the Toxic Sublime and the Unnarrated in Contemporary U.S. Literature.David Lombard - 2020 - AM: Art + Media 23.
    This paper provides a close narratological and comparative analysis of Rachel Carson’s short story “A Fable for Tomorrow” and Susanne Antonetta’s memoir Body Toxic: An Environmental Memoir, which both highlight the pragmatic and ecocritical potential of literature as a source of cultural responses to the Anthropocene challenge. Engaging in a critical dialogue with Brian Massumi’s concept of speculative pragmatism as presented in his Semblance and Event: Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts and, more precisely, its aesthetic-political approach, the literary readings (...)
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  24. A Leibnizian Fieldwork: Zebra Stripes and the Monadology.Thibault De Meyer - 2018 - Parallax 24 (4).
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  25. The Reception of Positivism in Whewell, Mill and Brentano.Arnaud Dewalque - 2022 - In Ion Tanasescu, Alexandru Bejinariu, Susan Krantz Gabriel & Constantin Stoenescu (eds.), Brentano and the Positive Philosophy of Comte and Mill: With Translations of Original Writings on Philosophy as Science by Franz Brentano. Berlin: De Gruyter.
    This article compares and contrasts the reception of Comte’s positivism in the works of William Whewell, John Stuart Mill and Franz Brentano. It is argued that Whewell’s rejection of positivism derives from his endorsement of a constructivist account of the inductive sciences, while Mill and Brentano’s sympathies for positivism are connected to their endorsement of an empiricist account. The mandate of the article is to spell out the chief differences between these two rival accounts. In the last, conclusive section, Whewell’s (...)
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  26. Evolution. Lessons from some cooperative ravens.Vinciane Despret & Thom Van Dooren - 2018 - In Lynn Turner, Undine Sellbach & Ron Broglio (eds.), The Edinburgh Companion to Animal Studies.
    Corvids cooperate. Whatever else they might do in the world – squabbling at carcasses or ‘stealing’ other birds’ eggs – they also posses rich social lives that include a broad range of cooperative interactions, from working together to mob predators and rear their young, to sharing food. This chapter focuses on some cooperative ravens and the scientists that study them to explore and challenge the simplistic notion that evolution teaches us that life, at some fundamental level, is inherently selfish and (...)
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  27. EcoDystopia: At the Crossroads of the Apocalypse and the Sublime.David Lombard - unknown
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  28. God as an Effect. The Genesis of A Priori Proof from Duns Scotus to Descartes.Olivier Dubouclez - unknown
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  29. Predicting Attitudes Towards Disorders of Consciousness: a European Survey.Athina Demertzi, Marie-Aurélie Bruno, Didier Ledoux, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse, Olivia Gosseries, Andrea Soddu, Mélanie Boly, Caroline Schnakers, Gustave Moonen & Steven Laureys - unknown
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  30. Time in Renaissance Philosophy.Olivier Dubouclez - 2019 - Encyclopedia of Renaissance Philosophy.
    As a central dimension of the Human experience, the conception of time has undergone deep transformations during the Renaissance period, in relationship with global evolutions in European arts, sciences, and metaphysics. The Aristotelian definition of time as “a number of motion in respect to before and after” was challenged to open the way to an ontological determination of time, independent from motion and connected to the divine structure of beings in the universe. From Ficino to most innovative thinkers like Telesio, (...)
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  31. What is the Difference between a School and a Cloud? Some reflections on Peter Sloterdijk’s Philosophy of Education and Artificial Intelligence.Olivier Dubouclez - unknown
    Although the notion of Artificial Intelligence is not a central topic in Peter Sloteridjk’s philosophy, his conception of “anthropotechnics” may be used to justify the development of Artificial Intelligence within the process of “anthropogenesis”, but also and most importantly to reveal its risks and limitations as far as education is concerned. Indeed, Sloterdijk opposes to Ray Kurweil’s conception of the “cloud” as one operative system of information: even if the interconnected world might one day become a non-dominant vehicle of knowledge, (...)
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  32. Reading the Sublime: Or, What can Rhetoric Mobilizations of the Sublime Do for Narrative (Identity) and Ecocriticism.David Lombard - unknown
    In their introduction to a collection on “Ecocriticism and Narrative Theory”, Erin James and Eric Morel shed a light on perspectives in narrative theory which could significantly expand the scope of considerations — but have yet remained underexploited — in the field of ecocriticism. Among these leads, the critics mention feminist narrative theorist Robyn Warhol’s take on Gerald Prince’s concept of the “disnarrated” — “those passages in a narrative that consider what did not or does not take place” — and (...)
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  33. Consciousness with shutter closed.Denis Seron - unknown
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  34. Opening remarks.Denis Seron - unknown
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  35. Brentano's Case for Optimism.Arnaud Dewalque - 2019 - Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 111 (4):835-847.
    Call metaphysical optimism the view that this world is the best of all possible worlds. This article addresses Franz Brentano’s case for metaphysical optimism. I argue that, although Brentano does not offer any conclusive argument in favour of the latter, he disentangles many related issues which are interesting in their own right. The article has five sections corresponding to five claims, which I argue are central to Brentano’s view, namely: metaphysical optimism is best spelled out as the view that this (...)
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  36. Fictions and Theories of the Posthuman: From Creature to Concept.Carole Guesse - 2019 - Dissertation, Université de Liège
    The posthuman is a multidimensionally hybrid figure: it denotes both the post-biological or technological being that mostly inhabits science-fiction stories as well as the ensuing reconceptualisation of what it means to be human. Even within these conditions, it remains hybrid: posthuman beings are mixes of organic and non- organic materials while posthuman conceptualisations combine philosophical and technological perspectives. This dissertation claims that the profoundly hybrid nature of the posthuman forces its texts – whether fictional or theoretical – to adopt similarly (...)
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  37. Four Exegetical Notes on Plutarch’s Dialogue on Love.Bram Demulder - 2018 - Ploutarkhos 15:21-28.
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  38. The Philosopher Coming Out of the Corner. Philosophical Friendship in Plato’s Gorgias and Some Echoes from Plutarch to Damascius.Bram Demulder - 2017 - Athenaeum: Studii Periodici di Letteratura E Storia 105 (1):43-84.
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  39. A Critique of Meinongian Assumptions.Arnaud Dewalque - 2019 - In Arnaud Dewalque & Venanzio Raspa (eds.), Psychological Themes in the School of Alexius Meinong. De Gruyter. pp. 85-108.
    This article argues that Meinong’s analysis of assumption, while exploring the variety of phenomenological primitives in a more promising way than Brentano did, nevertheless fails to adequately account for the noncommittal character of assumptive attitudes and the difference between assumptive and other neighbouring attitudes. Section 1 outlines an overall framework for the philosophical analysis of assumptions and cognitive attitudes. Section 2 gives an overview of Brentano’s analysis of cognitive attitudes and some difficulties thereof. Section 3 offers a critical examination of (...)
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  40. The Phenomenology of Mentality.Arnaud Dewalque - 2020 - In Denis Fisette, Guillaume Frechette & Hynek Janoušek (eds.), Franz Brentano’s Philosophy after Hundred Years – From History of Philosophy to Reism. New York: Springer. pp. 23-40.
    This chapter offers a phenomenological interpretation of Brentano’s view of mentality. The key idea is that mental phenomena are not only characterized by intentionality; they also exhibit a distinctive way of appearing or being experienced. In short, they also have a distinctive phenomenology. I argue this view may be traced back to Brentano’s theory of inner perception. Challenging the self-representational reading of IP, I maintain the latter is best understood as a way of appearing, that is, in phenomenological terms. Section (...)
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  41. The Psychopathology of Psychopaths [Mad, bad or adapted?].Jérôme Englebert - 2018 - In Giovanni Stanghellini, Matthew Broome, Anthony Vincent Fernandez, Paolo Fusar-Poli, Andrea Raballo & René Rosfort (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Phenomenological Psychopathology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 868-881.
    The objective of my paper is to present a psychopathological conception of psychopathy and compare it with the mainstream nosographic diagnosis. This theoretical essay is informed by clinical situations involving psychopaths who were interviewed in prison or in forensic centres. The method applied a phenomenological psychopathology analysis to the clinical material. I first compare Binswanger’s conception of mania with psychopathic functioning. Patients’ behaviour is similar but the difference relates to the dialectic between the ego and the alter ego. A patient (...)
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  42. End of life decisions – A European perspective.Audrey Wolff - unknown
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  43. Natural Classes in Brentano's Psychology.Arnaud Dewalque - 2018 - Brentano‐Studien: Internationales Jahrbuch der Franz Brentano Forschung 16:111-142.
    This article argues that Brentano’s classification of mental phenomena is best understood against the background of the theories of natural classification held by Auguste Comte and John Stuart Mill. Section 1 offers a reconstruction of Brentano’s two-premise argument for his tripartite classification. Section 2 gives a brief overview of the reception and historical background of the classification project. Section 3 addresses the question as to why a classification of mental phenomena is needed at all and traces the answer back to (...)
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  44. Towards a pragmatic semantics. Dialogue and representation by F. Schlegel and Schleiermacher.Guillaume Lejeune - 2012 - Language and Dialogue 2 (1):156-173.
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  45. Balancing Engagement and Neutrality in Technology Assessment.Pierre Delvenne & Armin Grunwald - 2019 - TATuP. Zeitschrift Für Technikfolgenabschätzung in Theorie Und Praxis 28 (1):71-74.
    At the TA18 conference on “Technology Assessment and Normativity”, held in Vienna in June 2018, an equally spontaneous and memorable controversy arose between Armin Grunwald and Pierre Delvenne concerning the roles of neutrality and democracy in technology assessment, its philosophical foundations, and TA’s obligation to be inclusive. How do TA’s obligation to democracy and its operational neutrality relate to each other, where do they interfere, and what are the practical consequences? And what does this imply for TA’s future? Should we (...)
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  46. Proclus on θεός.Simon Fortier - 2018 - Dionysius 36:111-124.
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  47. A phenomenological argument for realism.Denis Seron - forthcoming - Analecta Hermeneutica: International Institute for Hermeneutics 12.
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  48. Coming to Terms with Materialities : Philosophy Serving Ethics.Florence Caeymaex - unknown
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  49. Moral Subjectivity : Ethics in the Age of Biopolitics.Florence Caeymaex - unknown
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  50. Are comprehension and extension inversely proportional?Bruno Leclercq - unknown
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  51. The golden mountain, the man and the great big elvish warrior. Kripkean and Meinongian readings of definite descriptions in fiction.Bruno Leclercq - unknown
    The neat distinction between objects and concepts which prevails in standard extensional logic seems to be challenged by inexistent objects. Yet modal logics and Meinongian logics offer two very different non-extensional ways of dealing with such objects. While the former somehow stick to the object-concept distinction, the latter overcome it in such a way that objects come to get most of the main features which standardly characterise concepts. Now, just like non-fictional discourse requires distinguishing between a de re and a (...)
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  52. Intentionality and epistemological relativity.Denis Seron - 2018 - Brentano‐Studien: Internationales Jahrbuch der Franz Brentano Forschung 16 (1):207-228.
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  53. Towards an extended indexical externalism. Looking for empirical data.Philippe De Brabanter & Bruno Leclercq - unknown
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  54. Semantic externalism and semantic deference.Philippe De Brabanter & Bruno Leclercq - unknown
    We sketch several variants of so-called “semantic externalism”, which we take to be prototypically embodied by Wittgenstein, Kripke and Burge respectively. Then, drawing inspiration from Putnam, we show how aspects of these different kinds of semantic externalism can be articulated with each other in the case of natural kind terms, and we suggest that this analysis could be extended to a larger set of words. When that is done, we turn to the core part of the paper, which consists in (...)
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  55. Are self-consciousness and introspective knowledge one and the same thing?Bruno Leclercq - unknown
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  56. Foundational mereology as a logical tool for descriptive psychology.Bruno Leclercq - 2021 - In Denis Fisette, Guillaume Frechette & Hynek Janoušek (eds.), Franz Brentano. Springer.
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  57. Meaning and reference in Twardowski, Meinong and Meinongian logicians.Bruno Leclercq - unknown
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  58. Is the content-object distinction universally valid? Meaning and reference in Twardowski and Meinong.Bruno Leclercq - 2021 - In Arnaud Dewalque, Charlotte Gauvry & Sébastien Richard (eds.), Philosophy of Language in the Brentano School: Reassessing the Brentanian Legacy. Palgrave-Macmillan.
    By claiming, against Bolzano, that all presentations have an object on top of their content, even when this object does not actually exist, Twardowski notoriously paved the way for Meinong's "Gegenstandstheorie", which will make place for inexistent objects and their properties. And this provides a very interesting counter-model to the standard account of meaning and reference which is linked to extensional semantics. However, by equating inexistent objects with the sets of their descriptive features, Meinongian formal systems tend to jeopardise the (...)
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  59. Looking for Smaug and the golden mountain.Bruno Leclercq - 2018 - In Bart Van Kerkhove, Karen François, Steffen Ducheyne & Patrick Allo (eds.), Laat ons niet ernstig blijven, Huldeboek voor Jean Paul Van Bendegem. Academia Press. pp. 327-335.
    The neat distinction between objects and concepts which prevails in standard extensional logic seems to be challenged by inexistent objects. Yet modal logics and Meinongian logics offer two very different non-extensional ways of dealing with such objects. While the former somehow stick to the object-concept distinction, the latter overcome it in such a way that objects come to get most of the main features which standardly characterise concepts. Now, just like non-fictional discourse requires distinguishing between a de re and a (...)
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  60. BMCR 2019.04.06 Fortier on Baltzly, Share, Hermias: On Plato 'Phaedrus' 227A–245E.Simon Fortier - 2019 - Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2019.
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  61. About all and nothing.Bruno Leclercq - unknown
    In § 120 of the Wissenschaftslehre, Bernard Bolzano mentions the idea of nothing as a counter-example to the principle of inverse proportionality of the intension and extension of ideas. We’ll here investigate three logical conceptions of such an idea. After having considered the standard conception of nothing as a quantifier, i.e. as a second order property accounting for the extensional vacuity/emptiness of first order properties, we’ll consider two intensional characterizations of the idea of nothing along Meinongian lines. The first one, (...)
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  62. Borderline personality disorder and lived time.Fabian Lo Monte & Jérôme Englebert - 2018 - Evolution Psychiatrique 83 (4).
    Objectives. – Starting from the semiological heterogeneousness of borderline patients, we try to understand the everyday life of such subjects, and to determine the psychopathological structure of Borderline Personality Disorder. Method. – This article’s principal focus is lived time. We explore diverse meanings of the notions of immediacy and instantaneity, considered as key components of borderline patients’ lived time. We also consider other existential concepts from phenomenological psychopathology, such as space, emotion, identity, and the body. Results. – The fragmented self (...)
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  63. Sartre inédit.Grégory Cormann - forthcoming - In Matthew Eshleman, Connie Mui & Christophe Perrin (eds.), Sartrean Mind. Routledge.
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  64. Attitudes towards disorders of consciousness: do Europeans disentangle vegetative from minimally conscious state?Athina Demertzi, Marie-Aurélie Bruno, Didier Ledoux, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse, Olivia Gosseries, Mélanie Boly, Caroline Schnakers, Gustave Moonen & Steven Laureys - unknown
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  65. Anomalous experience of self and world: Administration of EASE and EAWE scales to four subjects with schizophrenia.Jérôme Englebert, François Monville, Caroline Valentiny, Françoise Mossay, Elizabeth Pienkos & Louis Sass - forthcoming - Psychopathology.
    The aim of this paper is to study anomalies of self- and world-experience in schizophrenia from a phenomenological perspective, through the use of the EASE and the EAWE interviews. Four patients with diagnoses of schizophrenia were interviewed with both EASE and EAWE. A qualitative analysis of these interviews was carried out on all the data; quantitative scores were also assigned based on the frequency and intensity of items endorsed by the subjects. For the EASE, subjects endorsed an average frequency of (...)
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  66. Justice in the Marketplace in Early Modern Spain: Saravia, Villalon and the Religious Origins of Economic Analysis. [REVIEW]Wim Decock - 2017 - The Catholic Historical Review 103 (1).
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  67. Brentano and Mauthner on grammatical illusions.Denis Seron - 2021 - In Arnaud Dewalque, Charlotte Gauvry & Sébastien Richard (eds.), Philosophy of Language in the Brentano School: Reassessing the Brentanian Legacy. Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This paper aims to suggest that Brentano’s theory of intentionality, at least in its later formulation, is not only about mind and also belongs to a tradition of deconstructing language that includes prominent figures of Austrian and German philosophy such as Mach, Vaihinger, and Wittgenstein. In order to establish this, the author explores some differences and similarities between this theory and Fritz Mauthner’s critique of language. He argues that the very starting point of both is one and the same fact: (...)
     
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  68. Knowing before Judging. Law and Economic Analysis in Early Modern Jesuit Ethics.Wim Decock - 2018 - Journal of Markets and Morality 21:309-330.
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  69. The Historical Origins of Sartre's Account of Temporality.Grégory Cormann - forthcoming - In Matthew Eshleman, Connie Mui & Christophe Perrin (eds.), Sartrean Mind. Routledge.
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  70. From the particular soul to the World Soul: Some puzzles in Philoponus.Marc-Antoine Gavray - 2019 - In Marc-Antoine Gavray & Christoph Helmig (eds.), World Soul – Anima Mundi: On the Origins and Fortunes of a Fundamental Idea. De Gruyter. pp. 309-331.
    For Platonists after Proclus, the World Soul has become evidence. No need to deepen its examination further, and philosophers as Damascius or Simplicius remain almost silent on the topic. However, the case of John Philoponus appears to be a little different. In facing Proclus regarding the eternity of the World, he addresses the questions of the relation between World Soul and particular souls, but also of the necessity of a World Soul. First, in his Commentary on the De anima, we (...)
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  71. The Toxic Sublime in US Literature: Self, Senses and Environment.David Lombard - manuscript
    In this paper, the “toxic sublime”, will be used as the lens through which I will analyse the material manifestations of how technology operates as a reframing device in conceptualizations and representations of nature in works of US fiction. Special attention will be given to Henry Thoreau's literary and philosophical legacy: Walden will be considered as a foundational matrix for a tradition of nonfiction writing with an interest in reframing the relationship between humans and their techno-natural environment by means of (...)
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  72. Reading the Third Investigation.Aurélien Zincq - manuscript
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  73. What are the Logical Investigations talking about?Aurélien Zincq - manuscript
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  74. Intentionality and the language of appearance.Denis Seron - forthcoming - In Karel Novotný & Cathrin Nielsen (eds.), The World and the Real. Nordhausen: Traugott Bautz.
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  75. Image et connaissance / Image and Knowledge.Maria Giulia Dondero - 2019 - Signata 10.
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  76. One 2 Many '68. Words - Acts - Spaces.Caroline Glorie & Mark Potocnik - unknown
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  77. Out of The Books: Field Philosophy.Vinciane Despret - 2018 - Parallax 24 (4):416-428.
    Many philosophers, from Socrates to William James or Leibniz, have conducted inquiries and constituted what is now called in social sciences, "fields". How can we inherit from them? And what is our specificity, as philosophers, in relation to the practices of the human and social sciences? Based on a field experience that questioned the usual routines of the inquiry, and in particular the practice of anonymity, this article proposes to think about how these routines have some effects both on the (...)
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  78. Being Oneself. Heidegger and Sartre on Personal Identity and Autobiography.Fabio Recchia - unknown
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  79. Color Geometry - Or Color Grammar?Denis Seron - forthcoming - Meinong Studies.
    This article discusses some difficulties of the theory of color propounded by Meinong in his Re-marks on the Color Solid and the Mixture Law of 1903. First, I argue that Meinong’s geometrical approach faces at least three sets of difficulties related to the following assumptions: colors pos-sess a “nature” that can be grasped through intuition; they are separated from each other by continua in color space; there are an infinite number of a priori relations between colors. Second, I confront the (...)
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  80. Techno-Thoreau: Aesthetics, Ecology and the Capitalocene.David Lombard - unknown
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  81. Opinions of Stakeholders about Medico-Ethical Issues stemming from the Care of Patients with Disorders of Consciousness.Audrey Wolff - unknown
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  82. Thoreau and the Capitalocene.David Lombard - 2018 - Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory 4 (2).
    This essay will serve the double purpose of investigating the esthetic dimensions of Thoreau’s environmental philosophy as depicted in his classic memoir Walden while examining the philosophical and political implications of its tendency to break down the boundaries between the natural and the technological landscape. Although critics have tended to identify Thoreau as deeply rooted in an Emersonian transcendentalist and idealist tradition viewing nature as an organized and holistic “whole”, I will argue that Thoreau’s ecophilosophy seeks to reconcile the idealistic (...)
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  83. US Literature and the Toxic Sublime: Technology in the Pastoral Garden.David Lombard - unknown
    As Aldo Leopold writes, the modern man is a “trophy-hunter”, a “motorized ant who swarms the continents before learning to see his own back yard, who consumes but never creates outdoor satisfactions”, and ultimately “dilutes wilderness and artificializes its trophies in the fond belief that he is rendering a public service”. One of the main issues raised in Leopold’s book A Sand County Almanac is that our perception has been altered by modern technologies such as mechanization, which has deprived the (...)
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  84. Affects and politics in classroom: A group-based approach to education.Sophie Wustefeld & Antoine Janvier - unknown
    Group dynamics in the classroom are a fundamental aspect of learning which, it is argued here, has not received sufficient academic interest. Increasingly, however, research on critical and alternative pedagogy is concerned with exploring the benefits of collaborative learning. This paper recalls the insights of two streams of French institutional pedagogy from the 1960s: the clinical and political dimensions of learning, and the benefits of group-based approaches in education. These pedagogies, based on structural analysis of relationships in the classroom, explore (...)
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  85. “Death is the only real utopia”: Adorno and Kluge on television.Cormann Grégory - unknown
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  86. Epistolary Philosophy in the Neoplatonic Tradition.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  87. Human Souls in Animal Bodies: the Theodorean Solution.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  88. The Mechanics of Providence: An Analysis of Questions Three and Four of Proclus’ De decem dubitationes circa providentiam.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  89. Unde Malum: An examination of the Neoplatonic critiques of Manichaeism.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  90. Contemplation according to Hermias of Alexandria.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  91. Olympiodorus and the Teaching of Transmigration.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  92. Reading the Phaedrus at the School of Athens.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  93. The Limits of the Divine in Proclus.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  94. The Unity of the Phaedrus Palinode according to Proclus.Fortier Simon - unknown
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  95. Compte rendu de M.J. Griffin, "Aristotle's Categories in the Early Roman Empire".Gavray Marc-Antoine - 2017 - Antiquité Classique 86.
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  96. The far-wanderer: Proclus on the transmigration of the soul.Simon Fortier - 2018 - Classical Quarterly 68 (1):305-325.
    While commonly referring to us as ‘human’, ‘particular’, or ‘rational’ souls, in one striking passage, Proclus instead describes us asτὸ πολυπλανὲς καὶ μέχρι τοῦ Ταρτάρου κατιὸν καὶ αὖθις ἀνεγειρόμενον παντοῖά τε εἴδη ζωῆς ἀνελίττον ἤθεσί τε χρώμενον ποικίλοις καὶ πάθεσιν ἄλλοτε ἄλλοις καὶ μορφὰς ζῴων ἀλλαττόμενον πολυειδεῖς, δαιμονίας ἀνθρωπίνας ἀλόγους, κατευθυνόμενον δ’ οὖν ὅμως ὑπὸ τῆς Δίκης καὶ εἰς οὐρανὸν ἀπὸ γῆς ἀνατρέχον καὶ εἰς νοῦν ἀπὸ τῆς ὕλης περιαγόμενον κατὰ δή τινας τεταγμένας τῶν ὅλων περιόδους.a far-wanderer, who descends all (...)
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  97. The ethics in the management of patients with disorders of consciousness.Demertzi Athina - 2018 - In Athina Demertzi (ed.), Coma and Disorders of Consciousness. Springer. pp. 225-234.
    The ethical issues accrued from the study and management of patients with disorders of consciousness are variant and multifaceted. The medical, public and legal controversies are partly shaped by how different people think about pain perception and end of life. Uniform ethical frameworks need to be shaped in order to guide clinicians and caregivers in terms of clinical outcome, prognosis and medical management.
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  98. What would animals say if we asked the right questions?Despret Vinciane - 2016 - University of Minnesota Press.
    “You are about to enter a new genre, that of scientific fables, by which I don’t mean science fiction, or false stories about science, but, on the contrary, true ways of understanding how difficult it is to figure out what animals are up to.” -Bruno Latour, form the Foreword Is it all right to urinate in front of animals? What does it mean when a monkey throws its feces at you? Do apes really know how to ape? Do animals form (...)
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