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  1. Narrative accidents and literary miracles.Evan Horowitz - 2011 - Philosophy and Literature 35 (1):65-78.
    On September 12, 2008 a Los Angeles commuter train collided with a freight train, killing 25 people and injuring another 135. In chapter 56 of Charles Dickens's Dombey and Son, a passing train collides with a character, running him over and casting "his mutilated fragments in the air."The first of these we might well call an accident. No malicious human agent was at work in that fatal Los Angeles encounter; whenever you have large numbers of vehicles traveling on shared tracks (...)
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  • What are narratives good for?John Beatty - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 58:33-40.
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  • Abstraction and Finitude: Education, Chance and Democracy. [REVIEW]Richard Smith - 2006 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 25 (1):19-35.
    Education in the west has become a very knowing business in which students are encouraged to cultivate self-awareness and meta-cognitive skills in pursuit of a kind of perfection. The result is the evasion of contingency and of the consciousness of human finitude. The neo-liberalism that makes education a market good exacerbates this. These tendencies can be interpreted as a dimension of scepticism. This is to be dissolved partly by acknowledging that we are obscure to ourselves. Such an acknowledgement is fostered (...)
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