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  1. Entertainment as Key to Public Intellectual Agency: Response to Welsh.Steve Fuller - 2013 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 46 (1):105-113.
    Scott Welsh is likely to elicit a sigh of relief from the many academics who struggle with what, if any, public intellectual persona they should adopt. Welsh (2012) argues against a broad swathe of mostly left-leaning rhetorical scholars that the academic’s democratic duty is adequately discharged by providing suitably ambivalent rhetorical resources for others to use in their political struggles. For Welsh, following Slavoj Žižek (2008), the scholar’s first obligation is to “enjoy your symptom”—that is, to demonstrate in one’s discursive (...)
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  • Spinoza: hacia una formación sin modelos.Germán Ulises Bula & Iván Ramón Rodríguez - 2017 - Cuadernos de Filosofía Latinoamericana 38 (116):211-236.
    En este texto se busca elaborar una idea de formación en el pensamiento de Baruch de Spinoza, como alternativa a las ideas educativas que, de manera esencialista, mediante el proceso educativo pretenden hacer corresponder al educando a ciertos modelos preestablecidos. Para ello se construye una idea de auto-realización en Spinoza en la que resultan deseables diferentes caminos de auto-realización para diferentes individuos. Se propone que esta auto-realización consiste en ser capaz de obrar y ser afectado de muchas maneras, y se (...)
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  • Rhetoric, philosophy, and the public intellectual.Nathan Crick - 2006 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 39 (2):127-139.
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  • Coming to Terms with the Antagonism between Rhetorical Reflection and Political Agency.Scott Welsh - 2012 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 45 (1):1-23.
    Now over a decade since the publication of John Michael’s Anxious Intellects (2000), many rhetoric scholars are no less anxious about the relevance of scholarship to public affairs. Recent exchanges concerning rhetorical criticism, public intellectualism, and academic engagement continue to provide evidence of a prominent felt need to prove public relevance, explain away the lack of readily apparent public engagement, or adopt a more activist posture. That academic work should have political consequences is broadly assumed within a dominant strain of (...)
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  • Speaking Out: Toward an Institutional Agenda for Refashioning STS Scholars as Public Intellectuals.Sharon McKenzie Stevens - 2008 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 33 (6):730-753.
    Bijker calls for scholars in science and technology studies to become public intellectuals by actively working toward “democratizing... technological culture.” Many STS scholars have developed practices that support democratic and public activity; yet, these typically require individual commitment with inadequate institutional support. The public work of STS scholars can be better supported through a program that includes using specialist research in nonreproductive educational contexts, redefining and revaluing academic service, developing more accessible ways of writing, and publishing and valuing STS-based texts (...)
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