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  1. Teaching as an Immortality Project: Positing Weakness in Response to Terror.Cathryn van Kessel & Kevin Burke - 2018 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 52 (2):216-229.
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  • Rita Felski & Stephen Muecke (2020).Latour and the Humanities.Juan M. Zaragoza - 2022 - Centaurus 64 (2):551-554.
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  • Gary Tomlinson. Culture and the Course of Human Evolution. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2018. 208 pp. [REVIEW]Miriam Piilonen - 2020 - Critical Inquiry 46 (2):464-465.
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  • Against Austerity.Christopher Breu - 2014 - Symploke 22 (1-2):23.
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  • Moving from “matters of fact” to “matters of concern” in order to grow economic food futures in the Anthropocene.Ann Hill - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (3):551-563.
    Agrifood scholars commonly adopt “a matter of fact way of speaking” to talk about the extent of neoliberal rollout in the food sector and the viability of “alternatives” to capitalist food initiatives. Over the past few decades this matter of fact stance has resulted in heated debate in agrifood scholarship on two distinct battlegrounds namely, the corporate food regime and the alternative food regime. In this paper I identify some of the limitations of speaking in a matter of fact way (...)
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  • Toward a Sustainable Epistemology.Naomi Scheman - 2012 - Social Epistemology 26 (3):471-489.
    I argue that naturalizing normativity—articulating norms that are appropriate given what we know about ourselves and the world—can be framed in terms of sustainability, calling for norms that underwrite practices of inquiry that make it more rather than less likely that others, especially those who are variously marginalized and subordinated, will be able to acquire knowledge in the future. The case for a sustainable epistemology, with a commitment to attending especially to those in positions of vulnerability, can be made, I (...)
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  • Heraclean Overhaul(s): Par-a-noia_, Badiou’s Un-thought, and Neurodiversity in _H of H.Mario Telò - 2023 - Classical Antiquity 42 (2):280-292.
    This paper considers Carson’s rewriting of Heracles’ tragic madness— through the art of collage, an assembling and disassambling of textual fragments, scraps of papers, drawings, chromatic smears, and sketches—as an imagistic site for theorizing the anti-normative materiality, physical and metaphysical, of par-a-noia. I make a case for a materiality of par-a-noia by proposing a comparison with Alain Badiou’s Marxist political formalism. The distinctive formal trait of H of H, verbal and pictorial juxtaposition, invites us to think of par-a-noia as an (...)
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  • Rethinking Critical Sociology, Transcending the Transcendental.Bruno Frère & Daniel Jaster - 2024 - Theory, Culture and Society 41 (3):37-54.
    This article calls for a rethinking of critical sociology. Representing classical critical sociology, the Bourdieusian paradigm illustrated domination, but its negative foundation removed actors’ power, privileging sociological knowledge as capable of identifying (social) transcendental categories of thought. Latour’s constructivism challenged this privilege, giving actors the political power of aggregating collectives around their common concerns at the cost of emphasizing domination and critique. We propose a critical approach that evades a transcendental perspective reliant on pure negation, producing a more positive critical (...)
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  • Natura Naturans.Vincent P. Pecora - 2022 - The European Legacy 27 (7-8):798-805.
    We seem to be living through an animist revival.1 The term “new animism” first appeared in 2005, in Graham Harvey’s Animism: Respect for the Living World. Harvey’s work draws heavily on Irving Hall...
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  • Presentación. Inteligencia artificial y nuevas éticas de la convivencia.Nuria Valverde Pérez - 2021 - Arbor 197 (800):a599.
    Las tecnologías de la inteligencia artificial (IA) hacen emerger con mayor fuerza una pregunta central para la filosofía contemporánea: ¿cómo se generan los desplazamientos éticos a través de la producción de nuevas formas de convivencia tecnológica? Saber en qué consisten estos desplazamientos y si contribuyen, o no, a determinados tipos de convivencia es más urgente que precipitarse a una producción de normativa que no se enfrenta a los cambios inherentes al nuevo entorno. Pero una de las consecuencias que apuntan en (...)
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  • Towards an ecological ethics of academic responsibility: debunking power structures through relationality in Greek environmentalism.Elvira Wepfer - 2021 - Journal for Cultural Research 25 (1):88-103.
    . Towards an ecological ethics of academic responsibility: debunking power structures through relationality in Greek environmentalism. Journal for Cultural Research: Vol. 25, What should academics do about conspiracy theories? Moving beyond debunking to better deal with conspiratorial movements, misinformation and post-truth., pp. 88-103.
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  • Radical Pragmatism in the Ethics of Belief.Samuel Montplaisir - 2020 - Philosophia 49 (1):403-419.
    In this paper, I defend the view that only practical reasons are normative reasons for belief. This requires viewing beliefs as the predictable results of our actions. I will show how this fits with our intuitions about mental autonomy. The remainder of the paper consists in a defense against a series of objections that may be expected against this position. The paper concludes with a metaphilosophical explanation about our conflicting intuitions regarding the normativity of rationality.
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  • Field Philosophy East and West: An Introduction to the Special Issue.Adam Briggle - 2020 - Social Epistemology 35 (4):337-344.
    Field philosophy is both a collaborative practice of engaged scholarship and a theory of knowledge that contrasts with the model of disciplinary knowledge production. I briefly describe the origins...
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  • Haunting history: Deconstruction and the spirit of revision 1.Ethan Kleinberg - 2007 - History and Theory 46 (4):113-143.
    This essay explores the ways that the specter of deconstruction has been haunting history over the past thirty years, in particular this specter's effects on the revision of intellectual and cultural history. The essay uses the terms "specter" and "haunting" to express the fact that while deconstruction is repeatedly targeted in attacks against the dangers of postmodernism, poststructuralism, or the linguistic turn, very few historians actively use deconstruction as a historical methodology; in this regard the target has always been a (...)
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  • Comments on 'Black Box Arguments'.Marcin Lewiński - 2008 - Argumentation 22 (3):447-451.
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  • The inhumanity of people living in Slovak Roma settlements: on the creation of the focal images.Tomáš Kobes - 2023 - Semiotica 2023 (254):157-180.
    This text deals with convergence and divergence in relation to the formation of images of inhumanity in Slovak Roma settlements. Slovak media, social networks, and television reports often contain negative images emphasizing the Roma’s backwardness, irrationality, superstition, and cruelty, and aiming to highlight their inhumanity. This approach has become prevalent even among official state authorities such as the police of the Slovak Republic, shaping the perception of the Roma as monsters. It represents a mobilization strategy that connects and disconnects various (...)
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  • Theory Again.Steven Mailloux - 2020 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 53 (1):62-74.
    “Why theory now?” and related questions have punctuated the history of critical theory. During the so-called Theory Boom of the 1960s and 1970s in the U.S. academy, such questions were asked throughout the humanities and interpretive social sciences, and the array of answers included causes and motives both internal and external to the institutional context of the disciplines asking the questions. External accounts cited the sociopolitical upheavals of the period in the broader culture, and internal explanations noted interdisciplinary events such (...)
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  • Metaphysics or Metaphors for the Anthropocene? Scientific Naturalism and the Agency of Things.Patrick Gamez - 2018 - Open Philosophy 1 (1):191-212.
    In this paper, I provide the outlines of an alternative metaphilosophical orientation for Continental philosophy, namely, a form of scientific naturalism that has proximate roots in the work of Bachelard and Althusser. I describe this orientation as an “alternative” insofar as it provides a framework for doing justice to some of the motivations behind the recent revival of metaphysics in Continental philosophy, in particular its ecological-ethical motivations. In the second section of the paper, I demonstrate how ecological-ethical issues motivate new (...)
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  • Rorty Against Rorty.Nicholas Gaskill - 2022 - Common Knowledge 28 (3):380-401.
    As the leading contribution to the Common Knowledge symposium “Whatever Happened to Richard Rorty?,” this essay asks why Rorty was so often taken to be saying things that he claimed he was not. The argument is that Rorty's rhetorical approach and jargon engendered this confusion and undermined his effectiveness as a philosopher and public intellectual. The focus here is on two points: first, on how, in his eagerness to shut down attempts to claim a privileged path to Reality, he gave (...)
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  • Integrating Agency with Climate Critique.Adam Trexler - 2013 - Symploke 21 (1-2):221.
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  • Consolidated Youth Jury: Alcohol Prevention for Young People from Matters of Fact to Matters of Concern. A Swedish Case Report.J. Forsemalm - 2014 - Public Health Ethics 7 (1):17-20.
    In the course of a project on European policy on media and alcohol, a series of structured deliberative discussion sessions with young people (aged 13–25 years) in Sweden were arranged, where young people could communicate and exchange ideas about risks and policy issues connected to alcohol consumption and drinking, as presented in fictional media. The objective was to understand how risks and knowledge about alcohol consumption is acquired by young people and ‘uploaded’ to peers. The discussion sessions applied adapted variants (...)
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  • Uncrossing God.Marc C. Santos - 2015 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 48 (3):313-336.
    ABSTRACTIn “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam,” Bruno Latour wonders whether academia, particularly the humanities, can rethink its dedication to critique and cultivate an ethos that cares. I question whether Latour's commitment to enlightenment without modernity, particularly his allergy to transcendence, inhibits his ability to transform critique into care. For Latour, transcendence makes impossible the due process of his proposed collective and the corresponding practice of real world politics precisely because it dangles a truth beyond compromise. While Latour regards (...)
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  • Review: Catching up with Technoscience Studies. [REVIEW]Robert Rosenberger - 2006 - Human Studies 29 (3):399 - 403.
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  • Rorty, Science Studies, and the Politics of Post-Truth.Chris Voparil - 2022 - Common Knowledge 28 (3):402-423.
    In a symposium built around a critical reassessment by Nicholas Gaskill of Richard Rorty's pragmatism, this contribution examines the provocative question of whether Rorty's rhetoric hinders Rortian aims. When reconsidering him in company with “the philosophical wing of science studies” (Bruno Latour, Isabelle Stengers, and Donna Haraway), Gaskill finds that Rorty's persistent assumption of nature/culture and word/world dichotomies is politically dangerous and prevents his comprehending both distributed agency and the complexity of human entanglements with the nonhuman. Gaskill's Rorty lacks a (...)
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  • Translating Dark into Bright: Diary of a Post-Critical Year.André Dao & Danish Sheikh - 2024 - Law and Critique 35 (2):377-403.
    This is an account of a reading project that began in February 2020. Australia was burning, a pandemic was simmering, the two of us were early in our PhD journeys at the Melbourne Law School. Already, we felt exhausted by critical theory which seemed to amplify the affects we felt all too intensely. Our reading project began as an attempt to find and inhabit texts that might move beyond critique, that might allow us to find wonder and vitality in legal (...)
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  • Strange loops, oedipal logic, and an apophatic ecology: Reimagining critique in environmental education.Antti Saari & John Mullen - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (3):228-237.
    Bruno Latour (2004) claims that modernist critique, the kind that removes the false veils of ideology, ‘has run out of steam’. Despite its theoretical variety, it often consists in pointing out how...
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  • Laws for the Anthropocene: Orientations, Encounters, Imaginaries.Kathleen Birrell & Daniel Matthews - 2020 - Law and Critique 31 (3):233-238.
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  • Mountains Made in Switzerland: Facts and Concerns in Nineteenth-Century Cartography.Daniel Speich - 2009 - Science in Context 22 (3):387-408.
    ArgumentCultural history has investigated the appropriation of mountain wilderness in considerable detail, without however systematically including the contributions of science and technology in the process. This paper suggests a way of filling this gap. It argues that cartography was instrumental in giving mountains their modern shape. In the course of the nineteenth century, mountains arguably gained a new factual existence at the intersection of new aesthetic, scientific, economic, and political concerns with landscape. Taking the case of Swiss cartography, the paper (...)
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  • Taking Exception: Philosophy of Technology as a Multidimensional Problem Space.Dominic Smith - 2021 - Foundations of Science 27 (1):155-170.
    This essay develops three key claims made in my 2018 book, Exceptional Technologies. Part one argues for ‘trivialising the transcendental’, to remove stigmas attached to the word ‘transcendental’ in philosophy in general and philosophy of technology in particular. Part two outlines the concept of ‘exceptional technologies’. These are artefacts and practices that show up as limit cases for our received pictures of what constitutes a ‘technology’ and that force us to reassess the conditions for the possibility of these pictures. I (...)
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  • L’Afrique en Théorie.Achille Mbembe & François Ronan-Dubois - 2018 - Multitudes 73 (4):143-152.
    L’Afrique a participé jusqu’a présent, souvent à titre de laboratoire, au développement de la science occidentale. Les défis rencontrés par la théorie critique aujourd’hui sont l’instrumentalisation de la théorie par les gouvernements, la prolifération de pratiques critiques diverses, notamment écologique, et surtout l’émergence d’un capitalisme de l’image et de l’affect. C’est en relation avec la Chine que l’Afrique peut apporter de nouvelles réponses et relever ces défis.
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  • Totalizing institutions, critique and resistance.Iain MacKenzie & Robert Porter - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (2):233-249.
    Drawing on Deleuze’s ‘Postscript on Control Societies’, our initial focus in this article will be on the role of institutions within societies of control, an analysis which brings Deleuze into the orbit of Ervin Goffman’s famous ethnographic work on total institutions. This cross-comparative analysis of Deleuze and Goffman will allow us to show how institutions of control function by sequencing ‘dividuals’ across institutional domains in a continual process of totalization. Inspired by James Williams’s recent work on the ‘process philosophy of (...)
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  • Form and Explanation.Jonathan Kramnick & Anahid Nersessian - 2017 - Critical Inquiry 43 (3):650-669.
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  • Civic Learning When the Facts Are Politicized: How Values Shape Facts, and What to Do about It.Gregory E. Kaebnick - 2021 - Hastings Center Report 51 (S1):S40-S45.
    This essay introduces a special report from The Hastings Center entitled Democracy in Crisis: Civic Learning and the Reconstruction of Common Purpose, which grew out of a project supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. This multiauthored report offers wide‐ranging assessments of increasing polarization and partisanship in American government and politics, and it proposes constructive responses to this in the provision of objective information, institutional reforms in government and the electoral system, and a reexamination of cultural and (...)
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  • The Limits of Epistemic Control, the Powers of Actualization, and the Moral Economies of a Fictional Collective.Judith Igelsböck - 2020 - Social Epistemology 34 (4):319-329.
    This essay narrates from a collective of social scientists giving up on the phantasy of ‘being in,’ or ‘having’ epistemic control, not – however – on the ‘dream of epistemic democracy’. This commun...
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  • Cosmopolitan research and public thinking: putting oneself to the test of reality.Naomi Hodgson - 2013 - Ethics and Education 8 (3):263-275.
    This paper returns to the theme of the academic turn to cosmopolitanism as a response to the challenges of globalisation, conflict, inequality and diversity discussed here previously. The discussion of cosmopolitanism here refers to the context of current policy relating to research and what it means to be a researcher in the European Union today or, as current policy frames it, ‘the Innovation Union’. The understanding of the researcher found in current policy relates closely to the particular understanding of citizenship (...)
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  • Governing taste: data, temporality and everyday kiwifruit dry matter performances.Matthew Henry, Christopher Rosin & Sarah Edwards - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (2):519-531.
    Data is essential to governing those emerging matters of concern that confront the agrifood every day. But data is no neutral intermediary. It disrupts, exposes, and creates new social, economic, political, and environmental possibilities, whilst simultaneously hiding, excluding, and foreclosing others. Scholars have become attuned to both the constitutive role of data in creating everyday worlds, and the need to develop critical accounts of the materialities, spatialities and multiplicities of data relationships. Whereas this emerging work develops insight to the capacity (...)
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  • What was life? Answers from three limit biologies.Stefan Helmreich - 2011 - Critical Inquiry 37 (4):671-696.
    What is life? A gathering consensus in anthropology, science studies, and philosophy of biology suggests that the theoretical object of biology, “life,” is today in transformation, if not dissolution. Proliferating reproductive technologies, along with genomic reshufflings of biomatter in such practices as cloning, have unwound the facts of life.
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  • The Artist Is President: Performance Art and Other Keywords in the Age of Donald Trump.Christopher Grobe - 2020 - Critical Inquiry 46 (4):764-805.
    Throughout the 2016 US presidential election, pundits repeatedly described Donald Trump as a performance artist and his campaign as performance art. Meanwhile, his alt-right supporters were mounting performance art shows, debating the meaning of Marina Abramović’s work, and developing their own theories of political performance. For experts in performance theory, such punditry and provocation is like the image in a funhouse mirror. It’s hard to make sense of such bizarre, distorted images—let alone to recognize ourselves in them. This article insists (...)
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  • Does the Climate Need Consensus?Gert Goeminne - 2013 - Symploke 21 (1-2):147.
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  • Climate Policy is Dead, Long Live Climate Politics!Gert Goeminne - 2010 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 13 (2):207-214.
    In this commentary, the author argues that the alleged failure of the Copenhagen climate summit in December 2009, and in particular the role played by the developing countries, should be embraced as a political accomplishment opening up a moment of political opportunity. Admittedly Copenhagen was a political failure, albeit of a populist consensual policy practice that invokes the semi-scientific threat of an apocalyptic doomsday scenario to make everybody toe the line of the neo-liberal market economy. Now that we are at (...)
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  • Care Ethics, Bruno Latour, and the Anthropocene.Michael Flower & Maurice Hamington - 2022 - Philosophies 7 (2):31.
    Bruno Latour is one of the founding figures in social network theory and a broadly influential systems thinker. Although his work has always been relational, little scholarship has engaged the relational morality, ontology, and epistemology of feminist care ethics with Latour’s actor–network theory. This article is intended as a translation and a prompt to spur further interactions. Latour’s recent publications, in particular, have focused on the new climate regime of the Anthropocene. Care theorists are just beginning to address posthuman approaches (...)
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  • ‘Business Unusual’: Building BoP 3.0.Danielle A. Chmielewski, Krzysztof Dembek & Jennifer R. Beckett - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 161 (1):211-229.
    With over three billion people currently living below the poverty line, finding better ways to lift people out of poverty is a concern of scholars from a range of disciplines. Within Management Studies, the focus is on developing market-based solutions to poverty alleviation through Bottom/Base-of-the-Pyramid initiatives. To date, these have enjoyed limited success, sometimes even exacerbating the problems they attempt to solve. As a result, there is a growing academic and practitioner push for a third iteration—BoP 3.0—that moves closer to (...)
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  • „Chemie der Begriffe“ und „historischer Sinn“. Überlegungen zur philosophischen Begriffsbildung.Christine Blättler - 2015 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 38 (2):153-169.
    Abstract“Chemistry of Concepts” and “Historical Sense”. On Philosophical Concept Formation. The question concerning concepts and their relations to objects and words has had a long and controversial history. Recently, it is challenged by an anew turn towards objects and an emphasized object‐oriented ontology. The article argues that one reason for this is the reduction of concepts towards pure rational constructions and offers arguments for alternative understandings. In this context, the article proposes a re‐reading of Nietzsche’s particular approach and shows that (...)
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  • The Politics of Clinic and Critique in Southern Brazil.Dominique P. Béhague - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (6):43-61.
    Drawing on a historical ethnography of how Brazil’s post-dictatorial psychiatric reforms have shaped young people’s lives, this paper builds on Eve Sedgwick’s analysis of the hermeneutics of suspicion to show that narrow applications of Foucault’s biopower concept nurture forms of resistance to bio-reductionism centred primarily on epistemic deconstruction. To unsettle this hermeneutic, I put young people’s theories of power into conversation with Georges Canguilhem’s concept of the milieu and with feminist scholars’ work on prefigurative politics. I introduce the concepts of (...)
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