Results for 'Mick Smith'

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  1.  55
    Environmental Anamnesis: Walter Benjamin and the Ethics of Extinction.Mick Smith - 2001 - Environmental Ethics 23 (4):359-376.
    Environmentalists often recount tales of recent extinctions in the form of an allegory of human moral failings. But such allegories install an instrumental relation to the past’s inhabitants, using them to carry moralistic messages. Taking the passenger pigeon as a case in point, I argue for a different, ethical relation to the past’s inhabitants that conserves something of the wonder and “strangeness of the Other.” What Walter Benjamin refers to as the “redemptive moment” sparks a recognition of the Other that (...)
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  2.  16
    Avalanches and Snowballs A Reply to Arne Naess.Mick Smith - 2001 - Environmental Ethics 23 (2):223-224.
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  3.  12
    Edward Hyams: Ecology and Politics 'Under the Vine'.Mick Smith - 2011 - Environmental Values 20 (1):95-119.
    This paper offers an assessment of the agricultural eco-politics of Edward Hyams, novelist, gardener, historian, broadcaster and anarchist. It focuses in particular on his collaboration with the conservative writer on rural England, and founding member of the Soil Association, H.J. Massingham which resulted in a book, Prophecy of Famine — a fundamental critique of the effects of industrial capitalism on farming and a call for agricultural self-sufficiency and soil conservation. This collaboration between two writers with very different political views raises (...)
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  4. Repetition and difference: Lefebvre, le corbusier and modernity's (im)moral landscape.Mick Smith - 2001 - Ethics, Place and Environment 4 (1):31 – 44.
    If, as Lefebvre argues, every society produces its own social space, then modernity might be characterized by that (anti-)social and instrumental space epitomized and idealized in Le Corbusier's writings. This repetitively patterned space consumes and regulates the differences between places and people; it encapsulates a normalizing morality that seeks to reduce all differences to an economic order of the Same. Lefebvre's dialectical conceptualization of 'difference' can both help explain the operation of this (im)moral landscape and offer the possibility of alternative (...)
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  5.  75
    To speak of trees: Social constructivism, environmental values, and the future of deep ecology.Mick Smith - 1999 - Environmental Ethics 21 (4):359-376.
    The power and the promise of deep ecology is seen, by its supporters and detractors alike, to lie in its claims to speak on behalf of a natural world threatened by human excesses. Yet, to speak of trees as trees or nature as something worthy of respect in itself has appeared increasingly difficult in the light of social constructivist accounts of “nature.” Deep ecology has been loath to take constructivism’s insightsseriously, retreating into forms of biological objectivism and reductionism. Yet, deep (...)
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  6. Wittgenstein and Irigaray: Gender and Philosophy in a Language (Game) of Difference.Joyce Davidson & Mick Smith - 1999 - Hypatia 14 (2):72 - 96.
    Drawing Wittgenstein's and Irigaray's philosophies into conversation might help resolve certain misunderstandings that have so far hampered both the reception of Irigaray's work and the development of feminist praxis in general. A Wittgensteinian reading of Irigaray can furnish an anti-essentialist conception of "woman" that retains the theoretical and political specificity feminism requires while dispelling charges that Irigaray's attempt to delineate a "feminine" language is either groundlessly utopian or entails a biological essentialism.
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  7.  46
    Against the enclosure of the ethical commons: Radical environmentalism as an “ethics of place”.Mick Smith - 1997 - Environmental Ethics 19 (4):339-353.
    Inspired by recent anti-roads protests in Britain, I attempt to articulate a radical environmental ethos and, at the same time, to produce a cogent moral analysis of the dialectic between environmental destruction and protection. In this analysis, voiced in terms of a spatial metaphoric, an “ethics of place,” I seek to subvert the hegemony of modernity’s formal systematization and codification of values whilestill conserving something of modernity’s critical heritage: to reconstitute ethics in order to counter the current enclosure of the (...)
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  8.  29
    Shadow and shade: The ethopoietics of enlightenment.Mick Smith - 2003 - Ethics, Place and Environment 6 (2):117 – 130.
    Modern Western thought and culture have envisaged their task in terms of a metaphorics, a metaphysics and a technics of 'enlightenment'. However, the ethical and environmental implications of this determination to dispel all shadows have become increasingly pernicious as modernity both extends and alters the conceptualization and employment of (a now artificial) light as a tool of discovery and control. Drawing on the work of Foucault and Benjamin amongst others, this paper seeks to illustrate, through a critical ethopoietics, the 'speculative (...)
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  9.  12
    ‘It Makes My Skin Crawl...’: The Embodiment of Disgust in Phobias of ‘Nature’.Mick Smith & Joyce Davidson - 2006 - Body and Society 12 (1):43-67.
    Specific phobias of natural objects, such as moths, spiders and snakes, are both common and socially significant, but they have received relatively little sociological attention. Studies of specific phobias have noted that embodied experiences of disgust are intimately associated with phobic reactions, but generally explain this in terms of objective qualities of the object concerned and/or evolutionary models. We draw on the work of Kolnai, Douglas and Kristeva to provide an alternative phenomenological and culturally informed account of the complex links (...)
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  10.  11
    ‘It Makes My Skin Crawl...’: The Embodiment of Disgust in Phobias of ‘Nature’.Mick Smith & Joyce Davidson - 2006 - Body and Society 12 (1):43-67.
    Specific phobias of natural objects, such as moths, spiders and snakes, are both common and socially significant, but they have received relatively little sociological attention. Studies of specific phobias have noted that embodied experiences of disgust are intimately associated with phobic reactions, but generally explain this in terms of objective qualities of the object concerned and/or evolutionary models. We draw on the work of Kolnai, Douglas and Kristeva to provide an alternative phenomenological and culturally informed account of the complex links (...)
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  11.  35
    Worldly (In)Difference and Ecological Ethics.Mick Smith - 2007 - Environmental Ethics 29 (1):23-41.
    The natural world’s myriad differences from human beings, and its apparent indifference to human purposes and ends, are often regarded as problems an environmental ethics must overcome. Perhaps, though, ecological ethics might instead be re-envisaged as a form of other-directed concern that responds to just this situation. That is, the recognition of worldly (in)difference might actually be regarded as a precondition for, and opening on, any contemporary ethics, whether human or ecological. What is more, the task of ethics might be (...)
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  12.  24
    Worldly (In)Difference and Ecological Ethics: Iris Murdoch and Emmanuel Levinas.Mick Smith - 2007 - Environmental Ethics 29 (1):23-41.
    The natural world’s myriad differences from human beings, and its apparent indifference to human purposes and ends, are often regarded as problems an environmental ethics must overcome. Perhaps, though, ecological ethics might instead be re-envisaged as a form of other-directed concern that responds to just this situation. That is, the recognition of worldly (in)difference might actually be regarded as a precondition for, and opening on, any contemporary ethics, whether human or ecological. What is more, the task of ethics might be (...)
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  13.  40
    The State of Nature: The Political Philosophy of Primitivism and the Culture of Contamination.Mick Smith - 2002 - Environmental Values 11 (4):407-425.
    The ' state of nature ' could be understood in two senses; both in terms of its nature 's current condition and of that unmediated and pre-contractual relation between humanity and the environment posited by political philosophers like Locke and Rousseau and now championed by anarcho- primitivism. Primitivism is easily dismissed as an extreme, naïve and impractical form of radical environmentalism but its emergence signifies contemporary disaffection with the ideology of 'progress' so central to modernity and capitalism. This paper offers (...)
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  14.  23
    Citizens, Denizens and the Res Publica: Environmental Ethics, Structures of Feeling and Political Expression.Mick Smith - 2005 - Environmental Values 14 (2):145 - 162.
    Environmental ethics should be understood as a radical project that challenges the limits of contemporary ethical and political expression, a limit historically defined by the concept of the citizen. This dominant model of public being, frequently justified in terms of a formal or procedural rationally, facilitates an exclusionary ethos that fails to properly represent our concerns for the non-human world. It tends to regard emotionally mediated concerns for others as a source of irrational and subjective distortions in an otherwise rationally (...)
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  15.  12
    Andrew Biro, ed.: Critical Ecologies: The Frankfurt School and Contemporary Environmental Crisis.Mick Smith - 2013 - Environmental Ethics 35 (2):247-250.
  16.  16
    Cheney and the myth of postmodernism.Mick Smith - 1993 - Environmental Ethics 15 (1):3-17.
    I draw critical parallels between Jim Cheney’s work and various aspects of modernism, which he ignores or misrepresents. I argue, first, that Cheney’s history of ideas is appallingly crude. He amalgamates all past Western philosophical traditions, irrespective of their disparate backgrounds and complex interrelationships, under the single heading, modern. Then he posits a radical epistemological break between a deluded modernism—characterized as foundationalist, essentialist, colonizing, and totalizing—and a contextual postmodernism. He seems unaware both of the complex genealogy of postmodernism and of (...)
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  17.  25
    Democracy and Global Warming.Mick Smith - 2003 - Contemporary Political Theory 2 (3):393-395.
  18. Damian F. White, Bookchin: A Critical Appraisal.Mick Smith - 2009 - Radical Philosophy 156:53.
     
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  19.  32
    Epharmosis.Mick Smith - 2010 - Environmental Ethics 32 (4):385-404.
    Concerns for the more-than-human world are consistently marginalized by dominant forms of philosophical and political humanism, characterized here by their unquestioning acceptance of human sovereignty over the world. A genuinely ecological political philosophy needs post-humanist concepts to begin articulating alternative notions of “ecological communities” as ethical and political, and not just biological realities. Drawing upon Jean-Luc Nancy’s concept of community, epharmosis, a largely defunct term of art in early plant ecology, can be reappropriated to signify the creative ethical/political/ecological interrelations that (...)
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  20.  25
    Ethical difference(s): A response to maycroft on le corbusier and Lefebvre.Mick Smith - 2002 - Ethics, Place and Environment 5 (3):260 – 269.
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  21.  14
    Epharmosis.Mick Smith - 2010 - Environmental Ethics 32 (4):385-404.
    Concerns for the more-than-human world are consistently marginalized by dominant forms of philosophical and political humanism, characterized here by their unquestioning acceptance of human sovereignty over the world. A genuinely ecological political philosophy needs post-humanist concepts to begin articulating alternative notions of “ecological communities” as ethical and political, and not just biological realities. Drawing upon Jean-Luc Nancy’s concept of community, epharmosis, a largely defunct term of art in early plant ecology, can be reappropriated to signify the creative ethical/political/ecological interrelations that (...)
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  22.  61
    Environmental Risks and Ethical Responsibilities.Mick Smith - 2006 - Environmental Ethics 28 (3):227-246.
    The question of environmental responsibility is addressed through comparisons between Hannah Arendt’s and Ulrich Beck’s accounts of the emergent and globally threatening risks associated with acting into nature. Both theorists have been extraordinarily influential in their respective fields but their insights, pointing toward the politicization of nature through human intervention, are rarely brought into conjunction. Important differences stem from Beck’s treatment of risks as systemic and unavoidable side effects of late modernity. Arendt, however, retains a more restrictive anthropogenic view of (...)
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  23.  27
    Hermeneutics and the culture of birds: The environmental allegory of 'easter island'.Mick Smith - 2005 - Ethics, Place and Environment 8 (1):21 – 38.
    It has become commonplace to interpret 'Easter Island' in terms of an environmental allegory, a Malthusian morality tale of the consequences of over-exploitation of limited natural resources. There are, however, ethical dangers in treating places and peoples allegorically, as moralized means (lessons) to satisfy others' edificatory ends. Allegory reductively appropriates the past, presenting a specific interpretation as 'given' (fixed) and exemplary, wrongly suggesting that meanings and morals, like islands, are there to be 'discovered' ready-formed. Gadamer's hermeneutics suggests an alternative understanding (...)
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  24.  16
    Lost for Words? Gadamer and Benjamin on the Nature of Language and the 'Language' of Nature.Mick Smith - 2001 - Environmental Values 10 (1):59-75.
    Language is commonly regarded as an exclusively human attribute and the possession of the word has long served to demarcate culture from nature. This is often taken to imply that nature is incapable of meaningful expression, that any meaning it acquires is merely bestowed upon it by humanity. This anthropic logocentrism seriously undermines those forms of 'environmental advocacy' which claim to find and speak of the meaning and value of nature perse. However, shorn of their own anthropocentric presuppositions, the expressivist (...)
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  25.  22
    Ecology, Community and Food Sovereignty: What's in a Word?Jade Monaghan & Mick Smith - 2018 - Environmental Values 27 (6):665-686.
    'Food sovereignty' plays an increasingly important political role as a focus for grassroots agri-food organisations, such as La Via Campesina, in their attempts to contest the social injustices, health impacts and ecological damage resulting from the increasing global dominance of corporate/industrial agriculture. While not seeking to detract from the successes of such movements, there remain ethical, political and ecological concerns about just how the 'sovereignty' in food sovereignty is to be interpreted and what, if any, its relation to previous histories, (...)
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  26.  27
    Political Theory and the Ecological Challenge. [REVIEW]Mick Smith - 2008 - Environmental Ethics 30 (1):93-96.
  27.  6
    Rethinking the Communicative Turn. [REVIEW]Mick Smith - 2004 - International Studies in Philosophy 36 (1):215-216.
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  28.  11
    Rethinking the Communicative Turn. [REVIEW]Mick Smith - 2004 - International Studies in Philosophy 36 (1):215-216.
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  29.  9
    The Working Landscape. [REVIEW]Mick Smith - 2009 - Environmental Ethics 31 (1):97-100.
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  30.  2
    Book Review: Engaging Voices: Tales of Morality and Meaning in an Age of Global Warming. [REVIEW]Mick Smith - 2011 - Environmental Values 20 (4):569-571.
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  31. Philosophy and Geography Iii: Philosophies of Place.Philip Brey, Lee Caragata, James Dickinson, David Glidden, Sara Gottlieb, Bruce Hannon, Ian Howard, Jeff Malpas, Katya Mandoki, Jonathan Maskit, Bryan G. Norton, Roger Paden, David Roberts, Holmes Rolston Iii, Izhak Schnell, Jonathon M. Smith, David Wasserman & Mick Womersley (eds.) - 1998 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    A growing literature testifies to the persistence of place as an incorrigible aspect of human experience, identity, and morality. Place is a common ground for thought and action, a community of experienced particulars that avoids solipsism and universalism. It draws us into the philosophy of the ordinary, into familiarity as a form of knowledge, into the wisdom of proximity. Each of these essays offers a philosophy of place, and reminds us that such philosophies ultimately decide how we make, use, and (...)
     
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  32.  19
    New Perspectives on Anarchism.Samantha E. Bankston, Harold Barclay, Lewis Call, Alexandre J. M. E. Christoyannopoulos, Vernon Cisney, Jesse Cohn, Abraham DeLeon, Francis Dupuis-Déri, Benjamin Franks, Clive Gabay, Karen Goaman, Rodrigo Gomes Guimarães, Uri Gordon, James Horrox, Anthony Ince, Sandra Jeppesen, Stavros Karageorgakis, Elizabeth Kolovou, Thomas Martin, Todd May, Nicolae Morar, Irène Pereira, Stevphen Shukaitis, Mick Smith, Scott Turner, Salvo Vaccaro, Mitchell Verter, Dana Ward & Dana M. Williams - 2009 - Lexington Books.
    The study of anarchism as a philosophical, political, and social movement has burgeoned both in the academy and in the global activist community in recent years. Taking advantage of this boom in anarchist scholarship, Nathan J. Jun and Shane Wahl have compiled twenty-six cutting-edge essays on this timely topic in New Perspectives on Anarchism.
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  33. Mick Smith, Against Ecological Sovereignty: Ethics, Biopolitics, and Saving the Natural World.Jordan Kinder - 2012 - Radical Philosophy 175:61.
     
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  34.  16
    Against Ecological Sovereignty: Ethics, Biopolitics, and Saving the Natural World by Mick Smith.W. S. K. Cameron - 2014 - Environmental Ethics 36 (2):239-242.
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  35.  56
    The importance of environmental justice in stream rehabilitation.Mick Hillman - 2004 - Ethics, Place and Environment 7 (1-2):19 – 43.
    New forms of river management have emerged following widespread recognition of the environmental damage caused by attempts to harness and control rivers for navigation, consumptive water use and power generation. A dominant top-down engineering-based paradigm is being challenged by catchment-framed, ecosystem-based approaches which claim to place greater emphasis on participation and equity. However, there has been limited attention given to examining these claims, and principles of justice are frequently left unarticulated or embedded in what is still presented as an essentially (...)
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  36.  8
    Dream state: California in the movies.Mick LaSalle - 2021 - Berkeley, California: Heyday.
    Longtime San Francisco Chronicle film critic Mick LaSalle's freewheeling journey through several dozen big-screen visions of California.
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  37. Inquiry-based learning introductory course for social sciences has a significant impact on students subsequent performance at McMaster University, Canada.Mick Healey - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
  38.  2
    A course in cyborg semiotics.Mick Howard - 2024 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book uses a theory of cyborg semiotics to explore the similarities between language and cyborgs in their formation, interpretation, and relationships. This intersectional theory provides a unique perspective on power and the human condition.
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  39. Start-ups - AI : Why I Care.Mick Kiely - 2022 - In Martin Clancy (ed.), Artificial intelligence and music ecosystem. New York: Routledge.
     
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  40.  16
    Eliciting, interpreting and developing teachers' understandings of the nature of science.Mick Nott & Jerry Wellington - 1998 - Science & Education 7 (6):579-594.
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  41.  44
    Some practical uses of “a natural lifetime”.Mick A. Atkinson - 1980 - Human Studies 3 (1):33 - 46.
    Then Wendy began to see that one didn't stay at two for the rest of one's life. Indeed two is the beginning of the end. The end is being grown-up. Once you get to twenty one or so, you can never be ungrown-up again. But Mrs. Darling did not tell this to Wendy. Between two and twenty one, there was lots of time for her to find out.
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  42.  14
    Culture and Governance.Mick Dillon & Jeremy Valentine - 2002 - Cultural Values 6 (1):5-9.
    This paper is a discussion of the political agency of Cultural Studies within the contemporary conjuncture. It begins by examining critical polemics around culture and postmodernity and moves on to consider Bennett's Foucauldian approach to cultural criticism. Although critical of Bennett's approach, the paper retains the Foucauldian notion of governmentality as the explanation of governance as a form of rule. The relevance of governance to cultural studies is shown through the argument that the political agency of cultural studies rests on (...)
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  43.  10
    On the bullshitisation of mental health nursing: A reluctant work rant.Mick McKeown - 2024 - Nursing Inquiry 31 (1):e12595.
    This discussion paper offers a critical provocation to my mental health nursing colleagues. Drawing upon David Graeber's account of bullshit work, work that is increasingly meaningless for workers, I pose the question: Is mental health nursing a bullshit job? Ever‐increasing time spent on record keeping as opposed to direct care appears to represent a Graeberian bullshitisation of mental health nurses' work. In addition, core aspects of the role are not immune from bullshit. Professional rhetoric would have us believe that mental (...)
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  44. Some Reflections on the Personal Impact of Thomas Kuhn.Mick Nott - 2000 - Science & Education 9 (1):207-211.
  45.  5
    An Electromyographic Analysis of the Effects of Cognitive Fatigue on Online and Anticipatory Action Control.Mick Salomone, Boris Burle, Ludovic Fabre & Bruno Berberian - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Cognitive fatigue is a problem for the safety of critical systems as it can lead to accidents, especially during unexpected events. In order to determine the extent to which it disrupts adaptive capabilities, we evaluated its effect on online and anticipatory control. Despite numerous studies conducted to determine its effects, the exact mechanism affected by fatigue remains to be clarified. In this study, we used distribution and electromyographic analysis to assess whether cognitive fatigue increases the capture of the incorrect automatic (...)
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  46.  16
    ...Foret se souvenir d'existence.Mick Trean - 1972 - Substance 2 (5/6):71.
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  47. Kamusal alan olarak Internet.Mick Underwood - 2002 - Cogito 30:137.
  48.  16
    Stages of sadomasochism.Mick Wallis - 1994 - Paragraph 17 (1):60-69.
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  49.  13
    Moral-Material Ontologies of Nature Conservation: Exploring the Discord Between Ecological Restoration and Novel Ecosystems.Mick Lennon - 2017 - Environmental Values 26 (1):5-29.
    Recent years have witnessed growing concerns about how we should conduct conservation activities in a world of human-altered biophysical conditions. The 'novel ecosystems' perspective has emerged as a way to meet this challenge. Yet its focus on accepting 'new natures' as the 'new normal' has drawn much criticism from those wedded to conventional forms of conservation, such as 'ecological restoration'. This paper: 1) provides a much needed review of this dispute; 2) formulates and deploys an original analytical framework, which draws (...)
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  50. The Problem of Perception.A. D. Smith - 2002 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    The Problem of Perception offers two arguments against direct realism--one concerning illusion, and one concerning hallucination--that no current theory of ...
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