Results for ' hungry'

256 found
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  1.  99
    The hungry soul: eating and the perfecting of our nature.Leon Kass - 1994 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    The Hungry Soul is a fascinating exploration of the natural and cultural act of eating. Kass brilliantly reveals how the various aspects of this phenomenon, and the customs, rituals, and taboos surrounding it, relate to universal and profound truths about the human animal and its deepest yearnings. "Kass is a distinguished and graceful writer. . . . It is astonishing to discover how different is our world from that of the animals, even in that which most evidently betrays that (...)
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  2. Hungry Because of Change: Food, Vulnerability, and Climate.Alison Reiheld - 2017 - In Mary C. Rawlinson & Caleb Ward (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Food Ethics. New York, USA: Routledge. pp. 201-210.
    In this book chapter in the Routledge Handbook of Food Ethics, I examine the moral responsibility that agents have for hunger resulting from climate change. I introduce the problem of global changes in food production and distribution due to climate change, explore how philosophical conceptions of vulnerability can help us to make sense of what happens to people who are or will be hungry because of climate change, and establish some obligations regarding vulnerability to hunger.
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  3.  16
    Hungry for Knowledge”: Towards a Meso‐History of the Environmental Sciences.Nils Güttler - 2019 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 42 (2-3):235-258.
    Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, EarlyView.
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  4. Being Hungry Affects Oral Size Perception.Parker Crutchfield - 2018 - I-Perception 9 (3).
    Oral size perception is not veridical, and there is disagreement on whether this non-veridicality tends to underestimate or overestimate size. Further, being hungry has been shown to affect oral size perception. In the present study, we investigated the effect of hunger on oral size perception. Overall, being hungry had a small but significant effect on oral size perception and seemed to support that oral size perception tends to underestimate the size of objects. Both hungry and sated participants (...)
     
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  5.  12
    The Hungry God: Hindu Tales of Filicide and Devotion.Paula Richman & David Shulman - 1994 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 114 (4):655.
  6.  59
    On representation hungry cognition.Farid Zahnoun - 2019 - Synthese 198 (Suppl 1):267-284.
    Despite the gaining popularity of non-representationalist approaches to cognition, it is still a widespread assumption in contemporary cognitive science that the explanatory reach of representation-eschewing approaches is substantially limited. Nowadays, many working in the field accept that we do not need to invoke internal representations for the explanation of online forms of cognition. However, when it comes to explaining higher, offline forms of cognition, it is widely believed that we must fall back on internal-representation-invoking theories. In this paper, I want (...)
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  7.  1
    The hungry eye: eating, drinking, and European culture from Rome to the Renaissance.Leonard Barkan - 2021 - Princeton: Princeton Univeristy Press.
    In discussions of arts and culture, food and drink are often relegated to the realms of mere decoration or mere necessity. However, like the term taste, which begins as one of the five senses but comes to be understood as the most sweeping term for human sensibility, eating and drinking can also be fundamental aesthetic experiences. In this book, author Leonard Barkan covers millennia of Western aesthetic and cultural activity, tracing the history of eating and drinking across literature, art, philosophy, (...)
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  8.  30
    The Mind of the Hungry Agent: Hunger, Affect and Appetite.Michele Davide Ombrato & Edgar Phillips - 2020 - Topoi 40 (3):517-526.
    The aim of this paper is to provide an account of how hunger motivates us to seek food and eat. It seems that the way that it feels to be hungry must play some role in it fulfilling this function. We propose that hunger is best viewed as a complex state involving both affective and somatic constituents, as well as, crucially, changes in the way in which the hungry agent’s attention is deployed. We argue that in order to (...)
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  9.  21
    Hungry Brazil.Glenn W. Erickson - 1990 - Agriculture and Human Values 7 (3-4):36-46.
    The essay, based on four years of living and teaching philosophy in Brazil, is a series of aphorisms about food and hunger as concerns that have left their mark on the Brazilian mind. Alimentary jokes and homilies are retold, gustatory episodes are recalled, larders and cuisines remarked, markets and mealtimes remembered—with constant reference to the idiom of Brazilian Portuguese. The style of thinking is “postphilosophical” in the sense developed in Part II of the author's Negative Dialectics and the End of (...)
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  10.  10
    Hungry Ironies in the French Antilles.Nicole Simek - 2011 - Symploke 19 (1-2):107-117.
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  11.  4
    The Hungry Sheep.David Kelly - 2021 - Hassell Street Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be (...)
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  12.  19
    Hungry, drunk, and not real mad: The effects of alcohol injections on aggressive responding.James L. Tramill, Paul E. Turner, David A. Sisemore & Stephen F. Davis - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (5):339-341.
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  13.  28
    Hungry for Utopia: An Antiwork Reading of Bram Stoker's Dracula.Katie Stone - 2021 - Utopian Studies 32 (2):296-310.
    Within Marxist criticism the hunger of the vampire has thus far been read as a metaphorization of the violence of capitalist exploitation. This article offers an alternative Marxist reading of vampirism, which incorporates the vampire's simultaneous demands to be fed and refusals of work into an antiwork utopian politics. This article suggests that the hunger of the vampire is usefully connected to the utopian desire for a world without work that lies at the heart of Marxist utopianism. In this way (...)
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  14. Truth, beauty, and hungry monsters.Chris Hables Gray - 2024 - In Chara Kokkiou & Angeliki Malakasioti (eds.), Beauty and monstrosity in art and culture. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
     
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  15.  1
    Hungry Like the Wolf: On the Image of Mot.Robert D. Miller - 2020 - Ugarit-Forschungen 51:115–132.
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  16. Hungry Ghost or Divine Soul? : Post-Mortem Initiation in Medieval Shaiva Tantric Death Rites.Nina Mirnig - 2016 - In Peter Berger & Justin E. A. Kroesen (eds.), Ultimate ambiguities: investigating death and liminality. New York: Berghahn Books.
     
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  17.  2
    Scoop hungry or market driven.Chris Roush - 2002 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 17 (4):330.
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  18.  8
    Hungry for Honor: Children in Violent Youth Gangs.Evelyn L. Parker - 2001 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 55 (2):148-160.
    However distorted and dysfunctional, gangs satisfy the hunger for honor among adolescents. Churches that take ministry with youth seriously will seek to enable them to express their need for honor, group belonging, and hope in life-affirming ways.
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  19.  16
    The hungry eye.Raymond Frank Piper - 1956 - Los Angeles,: DeVorss.
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  20.  9
    The Hungry Eye: An Introduction to Cosmic Art.Raymond Frank Piper - 1956 - Philosophy East and West 6 (1):85-86.
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  21.  4
    The Hungry Eye.Julius Portnoy - 1958 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 16 (3):409-409.
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  22. When Pachamama is left hungry : healing and misfortune in the Atacama Desert.Anita Carrasco - 2019 - In Thomas Kerlin Park & James B. Greenberg (eds.), Terrestrial transformations: a political ecology approach to society and nature. Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  23.  27
    Feeding the Hungry Other: Levinas, Breastfeeding, and the Politics of Hunger.Robyn Lee - 2016 - Hypatia 31 (2):259-274.
    Breastfeeding has become a subject of moral concern as its benefits have become well known. Encouraging mothers to breastfeed has been the goal of extensive public health promotion efforts. Emmanuel Levinas makes absolute responsibility to the Other central to his ethics, with giving food to the Other the paradigmatic ethical act. However, Levinas also provides an important critique of the autonomous individual who is taken for granted by breastfeeding promotion efforts. I argue that the ethical obligation to feed the (...) child must be recognized as coextensive with meeting the needs of women, especially given the current absence of important social and economic supports for breastfeeding. Under a Levinasian framework, each of us is ethically responsible for feeding children; this responsibility is not limited to mothers. This ethical responsibility needs to be expressed through improving social and economic supports necessary for those individuals who wish to breastfeed, instead of attempting to convince women to breastfeed. This ethical responsibility must also be understood in a broader context of a politics of hunger, which provides access to quality food for all, and goes beyond mere nutrition to include the importance of culture, touch, and intimacy in the enjoyment of food—what Levinas calls “good soup.”. (shrink)
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  24.  71
    A case for a duty to feed the hungry: GM plants and the third world.Lucy Carter - 2007 - Science and Engineering Ethics 13 (1):69-82.
    This article is concerned with a discussion of the plausibility of the claim that GM technology has the potential to provide the hungry with sufficient food for subsistence. Following a brief outline of the potential applications of GM in this context, a history of the green revolution and its impact will be discussed in relation to the current developing world agriculture situation. Following a contemporary analysis of malnutrition, the claim that GM technology has the potential to provide the (...) with sufficient nourishment will be discussed within the domain of moral philosophy to determine whether there exists a moral obligation to pursue this end if and only if the technology proves to be relatively safe and effective. By using Peter Singer’s duty of moral rescue, I argue that we have a moral duty to assist the third world through the distribution of such GM plants. I conclude the paper by demonstrating that my argument can be supported by applying a version of the Precautionary Principle on the grounds that doing nothing might be worse for the current situation. (shrink)
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  25.  32
    The Hungry Soul. [REVIEW]Laurence Berns - 1994 - Review of Metaphysics 48 (2):413-414.
    This book, a sequel to the author's Toward a More Natural Science exhibits masterfully what a richer and more natural biology and anthropology can do, "one that does justice to our lived experience of ourselves as psychophysical entities--enlivened, purposive, and open to and in converse with the larger world". Without forcing the issue the book unfolds the natural connections between a more comprehensive conception of natural science and ethics: how a great variety of customs, cultures, laws, and norms of civilized (...)
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  26.  17
    'Sire, The People Are Hungry!' 'Let Them Have Symbols!' Literary and Linguistic Studies in the 20th and 21st Centuries.Eva Kushner - 1999 - Diogenes 47 (185):49-55.
    This title is playful, of course. It is designed merely to attract curiosity and attention … It dates back to a childhood game of which I have forgotten both rules and stakes. An imaginary sovereign was roused from his indifference and responded with an approximate repetition of Marie-Antoinette's suggestion that if the people were hungry, food should be thrown to them. I took such caricatures of kings as anti-models, replacing bread with symbols. Now we are all too disturbed, individually (...)
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  27.  35
    Apotheosis of the hungry God: Nihilism and the contours of scholarship.Jonathan M. Smith - 2010 - Ethics, Place and Environment 13 (1):31 – 41.
    The modern university is a demoralizing institution, largely devoted to the propagation of nihilism and liberation of desire. The apotheosis of this hungry god of the untrammeled will has taken more than 200 years, but the slow ascent has given humanistic scholarship its basic shape. The ascent of 'reason' over tradition and religion, at the end of the eighteenth century, caused conservative thought to emerge, reluctantly, and frame rational defenses of natural (i.e. spontaneously evolved) social institutions and belief systems. (...)
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  28.  5
    “No One Should Go Hungry”: The Challenges of Hunger Relief Efforts in Contemporary Spain.Maria Antònia Carbonero, María Gómez Garrido & Anahi Viladrich - 2018 - Researcher. European Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 1 (2).
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  29.  51
    Going Around Hungry: Topography and Poetics in Martial 2.14.Richard E. Prior - 1996 - American Journal of Philology 117 (1):121-141.
  30.  59
    To Feed the Hungry.Charles G. Wilber - 1963 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 38 (4):487-498.
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  31. The roots of 'norm-hungriness'.Andy Clark - 2002 - In Hugh Clapin (ed.), Philosophy of Mental Representation. Oxford University Press.
  32. Addicted to Food, Hungry for Drugs.Bennett Foddy - 2010 - Neuroethics 4 (2):79-89.
    There is a growing consensus among neuroscientists that people can become addicted to food, and that at least some cases of obesity have addiction as their cause. By contrast, the rest of the world continues to see obesity as either a disease of the metabolism, or as a reckless case of self-harm. Among obesity researchers, there has been a lively debate on the issue of whether obesity ought to be considered a disease. Few researchers, however, have suggested that obesity is (...)
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  33.  36
    Starving Ireland, Hungry Australia: The Irish Female Orphan Emigration Scheme, 1848-1850.Emily Lieffers - 2010 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 2 (1).
    From 1848-50, the British government sent 4,175 famine-stricken orphan girls from Ireland to Australia to give them a better life and fulfill population needs in the colony. The controversy surrounding the orphan emigration scheme suggests that prejudices against the Irish and their poverty were easily exported to a colonial setting. The girls’ physical appearance and ignorance, largely a result of poverty and terrible conditions in workhouses, were taken as racial deficiencies, while their religion was viewed as a threat. This orphan (...)
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  34.  17
    The Hungry Soul. [REVIEW]S. F. Torraco - 1997 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 71 (1):120-124.
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  35.  1
    The Hungry Soul. [REVIEW]S. F. Torraco - 1997 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 71 (1):120-124.
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  36.  73
    To be hungry already means that you want to be free.Jean-Paul Sartre - 2001 - Sartre Studies International 7 (2):8-11.
    Nowadays nothing is more discredited than freedom. In the past, people sometimes sold their freedom for money. Today people sell it even if in its place they can only look forward to war or death. How did things come to this pass? Because the freedoms provided by bourgeois democracies are mystifications. The rights or the socalled rights we all have in principle have real meaning only for a miniscule part of the population.
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  37.  26
    Fear and Ethics in the Sundarbans. Anthropology in Amitav Ghosh’s "The Hungry Tide".Alessandro Vescovi - forthcoming - Governare la Paura. Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies.
    Amitav Ghosh's The Hungry Tide has been often interpreted from the point of view of postcolonial studies and environmental studies, overlooking the anthropological implications of the narrative. This paper investigates the worship and the myth of the sylvan deity Bonbibi, and of her counterpart, the demon Dakshin Rai. The goddess, endowed with an apotropaic function, protects the people who “do the forest” from the dangers of the wilderness, epitomized by tigers. According to anthropologist Annu Jalais, who accompanied Ghosh in (...)
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  38. I Was Hungry: Cultivating Common Ground to End an American Crisis.[author unknown] - 2019
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  39.  5
    Who should feed hungry families during crisis? Moral claims about hunger on Twitter during the COVID-19 pandemic.Merin Oleschuk - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 39 (4):1437-1449.
    How do crisis conditions affect longstanding societal narratives about hunger? This paper examines how hunger was framed in public discourse during an early period in the COVID-19 crisis to mobilize attention and make moral claims on others to alleviate it. It does so through a discourse analysis of 1023 U.S.-based English-language posts dedicated to hunger on Twitter during four months of the COVID-19 pandemic. This analysis finds that Twitter users chiefly adopted hunger as a political tool to make moral claims (...)
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  40.  8
    Feeding the Hungry, Caring for the Poor in an Affluent Society.Elizabeth Rapley - 2003 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 6 (2):134-145.
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  41. Cute, quaint, hungry and romantic: the aesthetics of consumerism.Daniel Harris - 2001 - [S.l.]: Da Capo Press.
    Why has the ring of the telephone become a beep? What ever happened to the bumpers and fenders of cars? Why do food commercials never mention hunger?In this encyclopedia of low-brow aesthetics, Daniel Harris concentrates on the nuances of non-art, the uses of the useless, the politics of product design and advertising. We learn how advertisers exaggerate our sensual responses to eating, how close-up nature photography exaggerates the accessibility of the natural world, and how the mutated physiology of dolls invites (...)
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  42. If your enemy is hungry: love and subversive politics in Romans 12-13.Sylvia C. Keesmaat - 2007 - In Robert L. Brawley (ed.), Character ethics and the New Testament: moral dimensions of Scripture. Westminster John Knox Press.
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  43.  8
    ‘Obstructive and power hungry’?: the Australian human research ethics process.Doreen Rosenthal, Marilys Guillemin & Lynn Gillam - 2006 - Monash Bioethics Review 25 (2):S30-S38.
    ObjectivesTo investigate the views of Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) members and of researchers concerning the human research ethics review process in Australia.To examine whether there are differences between views of researchers and HREC members.Design and settingRegistrants at the NHMRC Ethics in Human Research Conference held in Canberra in May 2005 were surveyed by anonymous questionnaire comprising 14 questionnaire items and background demographic questions.ResultsOf the 407 registrants, 252 completed the questionnaire (62% response rate). Respondents comprised 219 (87%) HREC members or (...)
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  44.  37
    On fieding the hungry.Robert Coburn - 1976 - Journal of Social Philosophy 7 (3):11-16.
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  45. COMMENTARY-The Hungry of the Earth.Raj Patel - 2008 - Radical Philosophy 151:2.
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  46.  12
    Studies in motivation and learning: II. Thirsty rats trained in a maze with food but no water; then run hungry.Henry Gleitman - 1950 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 40 (2):169.
  47.  8
    182 Bibliography Becker, Jasper (1996) Hungry Ghosts: China's Secret Famine.Postcolonial Discourses An Anthology - 2012 - In Michael Freeden & Andrew Vincent (eds.), Comparative Political Thought: Theorizing Practices. Routledge. pp. 181.
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  48.  7
    Themed Book Review: Hungry Listening: Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies by Dylan Robinson. [REVIEW]Annie Goh - 2021 - Feminist Review 127 (1):150-152.
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  49.  28
    Decision Theory and Artificial Intelligence II: The Hungry Monkey.Jerome A. Feldman & Robert F. Sproull - 1977 - Cognitive Science 1 (2):158-192.
    First paper introducing probabilisitic decision theory methods to AI problem solving.
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  50.  25
    RECkoning with the Stakes in Overcoming Representation-Hungry Problem Domains.Rasmus Gahrn-Andersen - 2021 - Acta Analytica 36 (4):517-532.
    The paper reviews the current state of play around anti-representationalist attempts at countering Clark and Toribio’s representation-hunger thesis. It introduces a distinction between different approaches to Chemero’s Radical embodied cognition thesis in the form of, on the one hand, those pushing a hard line and, on the other, those who are more relaxed about their anti-representationalist commitments. In terms of overcoming Clark and Toribio’s thesis, hardliners seek to avoid any mentioning of mental content in the activity they purport to explain. (...)
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