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Dedication

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Reason Papers 20:2-2 (1995)

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  1. Mass Online Education: Dialectic of Enlightenment 2.0.Carolyn Elerding - 2014 - Mediations 28 (1).
    Though Benjamin and Adorno’s various engagements with mass media suggest many possibilities for constructing approaches to descriptive and prescriptive critique, they have remained underexplored in media theory. Taken together, Adorno and Benjamin’s often incompatible views on the social significance of technological mediation offer a powerful framework for critical analysis of the political economies of contemporary socio-technological systems and practices, including mass online education, and for addressing persistent forms of technological determinism.
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  • Experiential embodiment and human immediacy: Adorno’s negative affinity.Mark Walker - unknown
    This thesis argues for the continuing possibility of Adorno set against the backdrop of a post-modern proliferation of affects. A major theoretical contention is the concept of the subject: a sticking point within philosophy. The thesis takes this up and offers a new pathway without falling into the cliché of a renewal of Adorno’s position. Drawing on Adorno’s theoretical thoughts on the subject the thesis contends that the subject is that which by turns dissolves all eventualities or more proportionally acts (...)
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  • The prajñāpāramitā in Relation to the Three Samādhis.Yoke Meei Choong - 2016 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 44 (4):727-756.
    The idea that insight is by nature incompatible with concentration has been a long-term focus of scholarly discussion regarding the interpretation of some sūtra passages that could suggest the occurrence of insight within concentration. In the Prajñāpāramitā literature, the set of three samādhis is identified with insight, the prajñāpāramitā. Some scholars identify the experience of emptiness in these samādhis with a state of concentration, very likely the absorption of extinction. I highlight elsewhere a passage in the Prajñāpāramitā in which preceding (...)
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  • Byron’s ‘Vision of Judgement’.J. D. Jump - 1968 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 51 (1):122-136.
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  • The Skilled, the Knowledgeable, and the Motivated: Investigating the Strategic Allocation of Time on Task in a Computer-Based Assessment.Johannes Naumann - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • Reflections and comparisons.Philip J. van der Eijk - 2006 - Metascience 15 (3):557-561.
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  • The "Moral Anatomy" of Robert Knox: The Interplay between Biological and Social Thought in Victorian Scientific Naturalism. [REVIEW]Evelleen Richards - 1989 - Journal of the History of Biology 22 (3):373 - 436.
    Historians are now generally agreed that the Darwinian recognition and institutionalization of the polygenist position was more than merely nominal.194 Wallace, Vogt, and Huxley had led the way, and we may add Galton (1869) to the list of those leading Darwinians who incorporated a good deal of polygenist thinking into their interpretions of human history and racial differences.195 Eventually “Mr. Darwin himself,” as Hunt had suggested he might, consolidated the Darwinian endorsement of many features of polygenism. Darwin's Descent of Man (...)
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  • What kinds of kind are the senses?Brian L. Keeley - unknown
    In Western common sense, one speaks of there being five human senses, a claim apparently challenged by the biological and psychological sciences. Part of this challenge comes in the form of claiming the existence of additional senses. Part of the challenge comes from positing multiple senses where common sense only speaks of one, such as with the fractionation of “touch” into pressure and temperature senses. One conceptual difficulty in thinking about the number and division of senses is that it's not (...)
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  • Historiographical Myth, Discipline, and Contextual Distortion.Conal Condren - 2014 - History of European Ideas 40 (1):1-7.
    Summary Although academic disciplines are given to mythologising their own histories, corrective historicisation is no straightforward matter. Anachronisms are most difficult to avoid where our own tacit understandings of the world are used to help structure contexts that are themselves often unstable and indeterminate. This is often the case in attempts to relate agents and propositions to a context of pre-existing problems. Propositions and concepts that are the result of satiric reduction, or unintended consequence, disrupt narrative sequences that lead directly (...)
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  • Inventing Economies. [REVIEW]Davis A. Smith-Brecheisen - 2014 - Mediations 28 (1).
    Davis A. Smith-Brecheisen reviews Diane Coyle's GDP: A Brief but Affectionate Historyand Zachary Karabell's The Leading Indicators: A Short History of the Numbers that Rule Our World.
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  • The Local Scripts from Nature to Culture.Nino Luraghi - 2010 - Classical Antiquity 29 (1):68-91.
    The emergence of local alphabets in archaic Greece, different from one another in the shapes of only few letters, is usually seen as accidental. Observing the use of local alphabets outside their area of origin especially, this article argues that they were consciously created so as to be recognizable from one another and closely associated with perceived ethnic boundaries within the Greek world. The use of the local alphabets should be observed in conjunction with the use of dialects, which appear (...)
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  • Form and function in the early enlightenment.Noga Arikha - 2006 - Perspectives on Science 14 (2):153-188.
    Many physicians, anatomists and natural philosophers engaged in attempts to map the seat of the soul during the so-called Scientific Revolution of the European seventeenth century. The history of these efforts needs to be told in light of the puzzlement bred by today's strides in the neurological sciences. The accounts discussed here, most centrally by Nicolaus Steno, Claude Perrault and Thomas Willis, betray the acknowledgement that a gap remained between observable form, on the one hand, and motor and sensory functions, (...)
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  • Hume the Sociable Iconoclast: The Case of the Four Dissertations.Jacob Sider Jost & John Immerwahr - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (5):603-618.
    Though each of its four constituent essays has received scholarly attention in itself, Hume?s Four Dissertations (1757) has received virtually no consideration from scholars as a unified whole. This article offers such an assessment, and argues that two crucially Humean themes link the four texts. First, they show the applicability of Hume?s theory of the passions to a wide range of questions: to the philosophy of religion, to psychology, and to aesthetics. Second, they show Hume grappling with the tension between (...)
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  • The public worth of Mary Somerville.Claire Brock - 2006 - British Journal for the History of Science 39 (2):255-272.
    This article assesses the reputation of Mary Somerville in the 1830s and suggests that critical confusion over her status in the changing world of early nineteenth-century science is not new. Drawing on Somerville’s own writings, contemporary newspaper and periodical reviews, political debates and unpublished manuscripts, Somerville's ‘uniqueness’ as a public figure is examined through the eyes of both the nascent scientific community of the time as well as the wider audience for her work. Somerville's status as a popularizer and an (...)
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  • Postcolonial anxiety and anti-conversion sentiment in the report of the Christian missionary activities enquiry committee.Chad M. Bauman - 2008 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 12 (2):181-213.
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  • bell hooks, Black Feminist Thought, and Black Buddhism: A Tribute.Carolyn M. Jones Medine - 2022 - Journal of World Philosophies 7 (1):187-196.
    pThis tribute to the late bell hooks examines her work as a Black feminist and Black Buddhist. After a brief introduction to her life, I examine her contributions to feminist thought, particularly her understanding of the need to dismantle “imperial white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.” As a Black feminist and woman, hooks comes to this work, first, with rage, but in her turn to Buddhist thought, she develops a love ethic, one that she wrote extensively about until her death in 2021 (...)
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  • Narcissus and the voyeur : some aspects of empirical description.Robert Michael Maclean - unknown
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