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  1. Pragmatism and Social Ethics: An Intercultural and Phenomenological Approach.Lenart Skof - 2008 - Contemporary Pragmatism 5 (1):121-146.
    This article deals with some intercultural and phenomenological uses of pragmatist thought. In the first part, early methods of comparative philosophy are linked to James's radical empiricism. The second part analyses Dewey's social philosophy, interpreted from the intercultural perspective and linked to James's philosophy. The third part argues for an enlargement of the uses of Deweyan social thought in the broader intercultural contexts. Finally, the phenomenology of breath is introduced and proposed as the basis for a new pragmatist social ethics (...)
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  • Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Breath, Body and World.Andrew Russell & Rebecca Oxley - 2020 - Body and Society 26 (2):3-29.
    Breath, the ephemeral materialization of air at the interface of body and world, engages with and alters the quality of both. As a process of inhalation and exhalation that signals its physiological universality, breath is an invisible prerequisite for life, an automated and functional necessity. Yet it is more than simply a reflexive action and can at times be controlled or manipulated. It can also affect or be affected by experiences, environments and relationships. In this essay, like the contributors to (...)
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  • The horizonal character of phenomena and the shining-forth of things.Tadashi Ogawa - 2000 - Research in Phenomenology 30 (1):146-157.
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  • Quasi-things: the paradigm of atmospheres.Tonino Griffero - 2017 - Albany, New York: SUNY Press.
    Quasi things come and go and we cannot wonder where they've been (starting from the wind) -- Quasi-things assault and resist us: feelings as atmospheres -- Quasi things are felt (though not localized): the isles of the felt-body -- Quasi-things are proofs of existence: pain as the genesis of the subject -- Quasi-things affect us (also indirectly): vicarious shame -- Quasi-things communicate with us: from the gaze to the portrait (and back) -- Quasi-things are the more effective the vaguer they (...)
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