Results for 'Timothy Morton'

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  1.  76
    The ecological thought.Timothy Morton - 2010 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    The author argues that all forms of life are interconnected and that no being, construct, or object can exist independently from the ecological entanglement, nor does "nature" exist as an entity separate from the uglier or more synthetic elements of life. Realizing this interconnectedness is what the author calls the ecological thought. He investigates the philosophical, political, and aesthetic implications of this interconnectedness.
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  2.  54
    Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World.Timothy Morton - 2013 - Minneapolis: Univ of Minnesota Press.
  3.  14
    Humankind: solidarity with nonhuman people.Timothy Morton - 2017 - New York: Verso.
    Things in common: an introduction -- Life -- Specters -- Subscendence -- Species -- Kindness.
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  4.  11
    Ecology as Text, Text as Ecology.Timothy Morton - 2010 - Oxford Literary Review 32 (1):1-17.
    The further scholarship investigates life forms the less those forms can be said to have a single, independent and lasting identity. The further scholarship delves into texts the less they too can be said to have a single, independent and lasting identity. This similarity is not simply an analogy. Life forms cannot be said to differ in a rigorous way from texts. On many levels and for many reasons, deconstruction and ecology should talk to one another. It is interesting to (...)
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  5.  18
    The Biosphere Which Is Not One: Towards Weird Essentialism.Timothy Morton - 2015 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 46 (2):141-155.
    This essay uses the thought of Luce Irigaray as a very powerful way to imagine what ecological beings such as meadows and whales are like. For reasons given yet implicit in Irigaray's work, it is possible to extend what she argues about woman to include any being whatsoever. In particular, it is shown that to exist is to defy the so-called law of noncontradiction. Various paradoxes demonstrate that in order to care for beings that we consider to be ecological, such (...)
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  6.  16
    Subjunctivity.Timothy Morton & Treena Balds - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (1):29.
    We explore the value of the subjunctive mood as a template for understanding ethical action and the theological ontology that undergirds it. We do this by examining the use of a strange but very precisely used word in the writing of a theologian and minister and poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge: "silly." We do so in the name of exploring the value of contingency, accidentality and abjection to a general theory of ecological thought.
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  7.  53
    Ecologocentrism: Unworking Animals.Timothy Morton - 2008 - Substance 37 (3):73-96.
  8.  29
    She Stood in Tears amid the Alien Corn: Thinking through Agrilogistics.Timothy Morton - 2013 - Diacritics 41 (3):90-113.
  9.  10
    Even the Plague Journal: Everything Is Happening Extracts (1).Timothy Morton & Nicholas Royle - 2023 - Oxford Literary Review 45 (1):123-141.
    These are the first published extracts of a Covid-19 diary, co-written over two years (2020–22). The authors are concerned to both record and analyse the ways in which the Covid-19 pandemic altered the sense and experience of inside and outside, home and world, self and other. Grief—both personal and ecological—is uncircumventable. At the same time, the virus provokes critical thinking on how ‘another life is possible’. Literature and music are key forces in the authors' shared and interweaving reflections.
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  10.  24
    … and the Leg Bone's Connected to the Toxic Waste Dump Bone.Timothy Morton - 2017 - Anthropology of Consciousness 28 (2):135-142.
    Ecological images—the fragile web of life, NASA's “blue marble” Earth, everything being connected—appeal to our love for the planet's being and our faith that there is still hope, if we can just care enough. But this imagery is neither true nor false. In other words, when we visualize these sorts of things, we don't know what we're talking about! We think we do. But what is this wholeness really, are we actually parts of it, and what kind of part? A (...)
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  11.  23
    Dunkle Ökologie Für eine Logik zukünftiger Koexistenz.Timothy Morton - 2018 - Internationales Jahrbuch Für Medienphilosophie 4 (1):251-268.
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  12.  35
    Hyperobjets.Timothy Morton & Laurent Bury - 2018 - Multitudes 3 (3):109-116.
    Le déréglement climatique est sans doute l’exemple le plus dramatique d’« hyperobjet », à savoir d’entités de dimensions temporelles et spatiales si disproportionnées à nos habitudes de perception que nos cadres de pensée et de compréhension s’en trouvent déjoués. Cet article explique ce que sont les hyperobjets et évoque leur impact sur nos modes de pensée ainsi que sur les façons dont nous devons apprendre à coexister. Les hyperobjets nous forcent à prendre en compte l’inséparé.
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  13.  16
    Interview.Timothy Morton & Thiago Pinho - 2022 - Philosophy Now 151:43-45.
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  14.  20
    Third Stone from the Sun.Timothy Morton - 2018 - Substance 47 (2):107-118.
    Picture yourself on a train in a station. The presence or absence of Plasticine porters with looking-glass ties is irrelevant.1 For some reason, the station is called Entity. Entity Junction, in the county of Anywhere.There are two platforms in Entity Junction, and they consist just of the two sides of the concrete sliver on which the very occasional passengers pace up and down—after all, it's just a junction. Rather than having numbers, the platforms have names. As you stand looking out (...)
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  15.  9
    Nothing: three inquires in Buddhism.Marcus Boon, Eric M. Cazdyn & Timothy Morton (eds.) - 2015 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Though contemporary European philosophy and critical theory have long had a robust engagement with Christianity, there has been no similar engagement with Buddhism—a surprising lack, given Buddhism’s global reach and obvious affinities with much of Continental philosophy. This volume fills that gap, focusing on “nothing”—essential to Buddhism, of course, but also a key concept in critical theory from Hegel and Marx through deconstruction, queer theory, and contemporary speculative philosophy. Through an elaboration of emptiness in both critical and Buddhist traditions; an (...)
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  16. Kissing in the Shadow.Paul Thomas & Tim Morton - 2012 - Continent 2 (4):289-334.
    In late August 2012, artist Paul Thomas and philosopher Timothy Morton took a stroll up and down King Street in Newtown, Sydney. They took photographs. If you walk too slowly down the street, you find yourself caught in the honey of aesthetic zones emitted by thousands and thousands of beings. If you want to get from A to B, you had better hurry up. Is there any space between anything? Do we not, when we look for such a (...)
     
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  17.  25
    Commentary on minds, memes, and multiples.Timothy L. S. Sprigge - 1996 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 3 (1):31-36.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Commentary on “Minds, Memes, and Multiples”Timothy Sprigge (bio)In his paper “Minds, Memes and Multiples” Stephen Clark discusses the problem of multiple personality, to some considerable extent in response to Stephen Braude’s recent book First Person Plural, with eloquence, subtlety and some apposite historical references. I am delighted to have been asked to make some comments on it, developing some points I made in discussion when Professor Clark read (...)
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  18. Multigrade predicates.Alex Oliver & Timothy Smiley - 2004 - Mind 113 (452):609-681.
    The history of the idea of predicate is the history of its emancipation. The lesson of this paper is that there are two more steps to take. The first is to recognize that predicates need not have a fixed degree, the second that they can combine with plural terms. We begin by articulating the notion of a multigrade predicate: one that takes variably many arguments. We counter objections to the very idea posed by Peirce, Dummett's Frege, and Strawson. We show (...)
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  19. Objects as Temporary Autonomous Zones.Tim Morton - 2011 - Continent 1 (3):149-155.
    continent. 1.3 (2011): 149-155. The world is teeming. Anything can happen. John Cage, “Silence” 1 Autonomy means that although something is part of something else, or related to it in some way, it has its own “law” or “tendency” (Greek, nomos ). In their book on life sciences, Medawar and Medawar state, “Organs and tissues…are composed of cells which…have a high measure of autonomy.”2 Autonomy also has ethical and political valences. De Grazia writes, “In Kant's enormously influential moral philosophy, autonomy (...)
     
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  20.  46
    Timothy Morton. Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence.Derrick Harris - 2016 - Environmental Philosophy 13 (2):303-306.
  21.  13
    Entrevista com o Filósofo Timothy Morton.Thiago Pinho - 2022 - Revista de Filosofia Aurora 34 (61).
    Hoje tenho o prazer de receber aqui o filósofo Timothy Morton. Timothy Morton é professor na Rice University em Houston, EUA. Ele escreveu mais de quinze livros, como por exemplo: "Hyperobjects: philosophy and ecology after the end of the world”, “Dark ecology”, “Being ecological”, “Ecology without nature” e muitos outros ótimos livros. Ele escreveu mais de 200 ensaios sobre filosofia, ecologia, literatura, música, arte, arquitetura, design e alimentação. Além disso, a obra de Morton foi traduzida (...)
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  22.  41
    The Twofold Limit of Objects: Problematising Timothy Morton’s Rift in Light of Eugenio Trías’s Notion of Limit.Jordi Vivaldi - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):493-516.
    The ontological abyss that separates real objects from sensual objects is one of the central principles of Object-Oriented Ontology (OOO), which has its most explicit and profuse modulation in Timothy Morton’s notion of rift. This article argues that, despite succeeding in explaining the radical difference that inhabits every object, Morton’s rift fails to explain the object’s unification, rendering the overall theory inconsistent. An alternative approach that accounts simultaneously for disjunction and conjunction between essences and appearances can be (...)
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  23.  26
    Timothy Morton. Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence. New York: Columbia University Press, 2016. 208 pp. [REVIEW]Marc Mazur - 2018 - Critical Inquiry 44 (3):602-602.
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  24. Book Review: Timothy Morton’s Being Ecological. [REVIEW]Steven Umbrello - 2019 - Journal of Evolution and Technology 29:19-20.
    A new book by Timothy Morton, Being Ecological, is reviewed. Being Ecological is a project into the ethics and discourse that emerge between speculative realism and ecological politics. This book is intended to build on the object-oriented ontology that Morton has espoused in previous volumes, however with a greater emphasis on the current state and future of ecological discussions. The book's core methodology is to outline the failures of the current modes of discussion environmental and ecological concerns (...)
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  25. Systems and Things: A Response to Graham Harman and Timothy Morton.Jane Bennett - 2012 - New Literary History 43 (2):225-233.
  26.  15
    Ecologia senza natura o ontologia senza storia? Soggetto, ambiente e storicità in Timothy Morton.Renzo Nuti - 2021 - Nóema 12:88-105.
    La riflessione di Timothy Morton si muove all’interno di quel ripensamento del rapporto tra soggetto umano e ambiente – dunque anche dell’umano in generale - che la scienza ecologica è venuta imponendo con sempre maggiore urgenza. A partire da Hyperobjects, tuttavia, Morton si è inserito in quell’ampia ed eterogenea corrente, spesso definita «nuovo materialismo», che nel corso dell’ultimo decennio, sebbene in modi differenti, ha inteso tale ripensamento sempre più come una speculazione eminentemente ontologica: una rinnovata comprensione del (...)
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  27.  93
    THE NADIR OF OOO: FROM GRAHAM HARMAN's TOOLBEING TO TIMOTHY MORTON's REALIST MAGIC: OBJECTS, ONTOLOGY, CAUSALITY.Nathan Brown - 2013 - Parrhesia (17):62-71.
  28.  15
    The Ecological Thought by Timothy Morton, 2010 Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Pressx + 163 pp, $39.95 (hb) $19.95 (pb). [REVIEW]Margaret Meek Lange - 2012 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 29 (4):378-379.
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  29.  13
    Being Ecological. Timothy Morton, 2018 Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. Xlii 172 pp, $15.95. [REVIEW]Gayathri Goel - 2020 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 37 (3):508-510.
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  30.  33
    Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World by Timothy Morton.Brett Bricker - 2015 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 48 (3):359-365.
    Object-oriented ontology has emerged as an academic field primarily devoted to opening inquiry into the relationship between human and nonhuman objects. By treating human and nonhuman things as ontologically coequal, this emerging philosophical school has rejected the correlationist and anthropocentric tendencies of most ethical systems. However, as objects expand and multiply, some become so big that they can’t be seen, understood, or described in the ordinary spatiotemporal sense. Precisely because they are here but cannot be consistently experienced, these unique objects (...)
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  31.  18
    Marcus Boon, Eric Cazdyn, and Timothy Morton, Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism.George Lazopoulos - 2017 - Oxford Literary Review 39 (2):281-285.
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  32.  3
    Book review: Being Ecological by Timothy Morton[REVIEW]Steven Umbrello - 2019 - Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies 29 (1):19-20.
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  33.  24
    Marcus Boon, Eric Cazdyn, and Timothy Morton. Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2015. 296 pp. [REVIEW]R. John Williams - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 43 (1):229-230.
  34.  17
    Morton, Timothy. Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2013. $75.00 ; $24.95 . 240 pp. [REVIEW]Ursula K. Heise - 2015 - Critical Inquiry 41 (2):460-461.
  35.  43
    Intimate Strategies: Morton, Foucault, and the Poetics of Space.Perry Zurn - 2013 - Zetesis 1 (1):94-105.
    Timothy Morton insists that ecology requires intimacy between ecosystems and organisms, living and non-living beings. Paradoxically, Morton suggests that intimacy incurs a sense of strangeness between things. In a similar vein, Michel Foucault, as a predecessor of queer theory, commends human intimacy as an act of resistance against institutionalized sexuality. Such intimacy, Foucault suggests, enhances our sense of strangeness to ourselves. In this essay, I not only grant that queer theory and ecology share an emphasis on intimacy (...)
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  36.  1
    Objetos raros. La ontología de la sintonización en el pensamiento de Tim Morton.Brais González Arribas - 2023 - Eikasia Revista de Filosofía 115:49-70.
    El presente artículo tiene como objetivo principal mostrar de qué modo la concepción de la realidad que mantiene Timothy Morton, basada en una visión peculiar de la noción de objeto tomada de la Ontología Orientada a Objetos de Graham Harman, abre la posibilidad a la fundamentación de un pensamiento ecologista que posee potentes repercusiones en la esfera práctica. Para ello, en primer término, se estudia la categoría de objeto en Morton, el objeto raro o extraño, y, en (...)
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  37.  65
    The biological way of thought.Morton Beckner - 1959 - Berkeley,: University of California Press.
  38.  12
    Bad world music.Timothy D. Taylor - 2004 - In Christopher Washburne & Maiken Derno (eds.), Bad music: the music we love to hate. New York: Routledge. pp. 83.
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  39. On evil.Adam Morton - 2004 - New York: Routledge.
  40. Keys To Infinity.Morton F. Arnsdorf - 1997 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 40 (3):455.
  41.  60
    Function and teleology.Morton Beckner - 1969 - Journal of the History of Biology 2 (1):151-164.
    The view of teleology sketched in the above remarks seems to me to offer a piece of candy to both the critics and guardians of teleology. The critics want to defend against a number of things: the importation of unverifiable theological or metaphysical doctrines into the sciences; the idea that goals somehow act in favor of their won realization; and the view that biological systems require for their study concepts and patterns of explanation unlike anything employed in the physical sciences. (...)
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  42.  35
    Foundations of the Social Sciences.Morton G. White - 1944 - University of Chicago Press.
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  43. To love the tallith more than God.Timothy K. Beal & Tod Linafelt - 2005 - In Yvonne Sherwood & Kevin Hart (eds.), Derrida and religion: other testaments. New York: Routledge.
  44. What is the unity of consciousness?Timothy J. Bayne & David J. Chalmers - 2003 - In Axel Cleeremans (ed.), The Unity of Consciousness. Oxford University Press.
    At any given time, a subject has a multiplicity of conscious experiences. A subject might simultaneously have visual experiences of a red book and a green tree, auditory experiences of birds singing, bodily sensations of a faint hunger and a sharp pain in the shoulder, the emotional experience of a certain melancholy, while having a stream of conscious thoughts about the nature of reality. These experiences are distinct from each other: a subject could experience the red book without the singing (...)
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  45. Vagueness in reality.Timothy Williamson - 2003 - In Michael J. Loux & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), The Oxford handbook of metaphysics. New York: Oxford University Press.
    When I take off my glasses, the world looks blurred. When I put them back on, it looks sharpedged. I do not think that the world really was blurred; I know that what changed was my relation to the distant physical objects ahead, not those objects themselves. I am more inclined to believe that the world really is and was sharp-edged. Is that belief any more reasonable than the belief that the world really is and was blurred? I see more (...)
     
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  46. Reference, inference and the semantics of pejoratives.Timothy Williamson - 2010 - In Joseph Almog & Paolo Leonardi (eds.), The philosophy of David Kaplan. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 137--159.
    Two opposing tendencies in the philosophy of language go by the names of ‘referentialism’ and ‘inferentialism’ respectively. In the crudest version of the contrast, the referentialist account of meaning gives centre stage to the referential semantics for a language, which is then used to explain the inference rules for the language, perhaps as those which preserve truth on that semantics (since a referential semantics for a language determines the truth-conditions of its sentences). By contrast, the inferentialist account of meaning gives (...)
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  47. Putting inference to the best explanation in its place.Timothy Day & Harold Kincaid - 1994 - Synthese 98 (2):271-295.
    This paper discusses the nature and the status of inference to the best explanation. We outline the foundational role given IBE by its defenders and the arguments of critics who deny it any place at all ; argue that, on the two main conceptions of explanation, IBE cannot be a foundational inference rule ; sketch an account of IBE that makes it contextual and dependent on substantive empirical assumptions, much as simplicity seems to be ; show how that account avoids (...)
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  48. Grounding, Conceivability, and the Mind-Body Problem.David Elohim - 2018 - Synthese 195 (2):919-926.
    This paper challenges the soundness of the two-dimensional conceivability argument against the derivation of phenomenal truths from physical truths in light of a hyperintensional, ground-theoretic regimentation of the ontology of consciousness. The regimentation demonstrates how ontological dependencies between truths about consciousness and about physics cannot be witnessed by epistemic constraints, when the latter are recorded by the conceivability—i.e., the epistemic possibility—thereof. Generalizations and other aspects of the philosophical significance of the hyperintensional regimentation are further examined.
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  49.  25
    Reduction, Hierarchies, and Organism.Morton Beckner - 1974 - In Francisco José Ayala & Theodosius Dobzhansky (eds.), Studies in the Philosophy of Biology: Reduction and Related Problems : [papers Presented at a Conference on Problems of Reduction in Biology Held in Villa Serbe, Bellagio, Italy 9-16 September 1972. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 163--76.
  50.  59
    Breathing is coupled with voluntary initiation of mental imagery.Timothy J. Lane - 2022 - NeuroImage 264.
    Previous research has suggested that bodily signals from internal organs are associated with diverse cortical and subcortical processes involved in sensory-motor functions, beyond homeostatic reflexes. For instance, a recent study demonstrated that the preparation and execution of voluntary actions, as well as its underlying neural activity, are coupled with the breathing cycle. In the current study, we investigated whether such breathing-action coupling is limited to voluntary motor action or whether it is also present for mental actions not involving any overt (...)
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