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  1. Given (No) Time: A Derridean Reading of Denis Villeneuve's Arrival.Gina Zavota - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (2):185-203.
    The central character of Denis Villeneuve's 2016 film Arrival, Dr. Louise Banks, is a linguist tasked with deciphering a logographic alien language in time to avert a seemingly impending global war. I argue that the alien heptapods' logographs exemplify the understanding of language advanced by Jacques Derrida in seminal texts such as Of Grammatology, while also engaging some of the themes concerning time and gift-giving that he develops in later, more explicitly political works. Derrida argues that written signifiers, rather than (...)
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  • What is the humanistic and ethical value of the “logic of gift” in business relationships? A conceptual approach.Domènec Melé - 2024 - Business and Society Review 129 (S1):741-758.
    One conventional view of businesses is to reduce them to mere performers of economic transactions in an exercise of exchange based on the “logic of self‐interest,” and under the criterion do ut des, meaning “I give in order that you may give.” Drawing from personalist philosophy, this article argues that financial and organizational interactions are encounters, relations between persons, not mere economic transactions. Furthermore, people involved in business have the capacity to establish relations of gratuity with others under the criterion (...)
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