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Results for 'Anna Bjurman'

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  1.  198
    Fictional coreference as a problem for the pretense theory.AnnaBjurman Pautz -2008 -Philosophical Studies 141 (2):147 - 156.
    There seems to be a perfectly ordinary sense in which different speakers can use an empty name to talk about the same thing. Call this fictional coreference. It is a constraint on an adequate theory of empty names that it provide a satisfactory account of fictional coreference. The main claim of this paper is that the pretense theory of empty names does not respect this constraint.
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  2.  31
    Narrate It Until You Become It.Anna Bortolan -2021 -Journal of the American Philosophical Association 7 (4):474-493.
    Research in phenomenology and philosophy of psychiatry has suggested that psychopathological disturbances of experience often involve an alteration of one's ‘sense of possibility’, dependent upon the presence of specific ‘existential feelings’ (Ratcliffe 2012). In this paper I provide an extended account of how the engagement with certain narratives can lead to a transformation of one's sense of possibility by eliciting affective experiences that are not consonant with the person's existential feelings. More precisely, I claim that, even when the experience of (...) some types of emotion is generally precluded by a restricted sense of possibility, such emotions may be aroused by particular self-narratives, and I explore how this dynamic can give rise to enduring and wide-ranging affective changes. (shrink)
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  3. Vulnerability, advanced global capitalism and co-symptomatic injustice : locating the vulnerable subject.Anna Grear -2013 - In Martha Fineman & Anna Grear,Vulnerability: reflections on a new ethical foundation for law and politics. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
     
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  4. Feminism and power.Anna Yeatman -1997 - In Mary Lyndon Shanley & Uma Narayan,Reconstructing political theory: feminist perspectives. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 144--157.
  5.  48
    Law's Entities: Complexity, Plasticity and Justice.Anna Grear -2013 -Jurisprudence 4 (1):76-101.
    This article locates a theoretical reflection on the form of legal subjectivity against twenty-first century complexities and pressures, including the structural complexities visible in biotechnological developments, new hybridities and numerous contemporary theoretical and practical manifestations of heterogeneity, multiplicity and complexity emerging in a range of disciplines, including cybernetics, techno-theory, post-humanism and ecology. The author defends the theoretical and critical utility of understanding the legal subject as an explicit (and explicitly limited ) constructus . Criticising the constructed naturalism (and the historical (...) and contemporary exclusions) of the 'human being' of law, the author suggests that the language and concept of the 'legal entity' (rather than that of the 'legal person') draws attention to the patterned 'gap' between law and life (and to related injustices enacted by the form of the materialisation of legal subjectivity) while simultaneously providing the degree of theoretical plasticity now required by the mutable complexities of the twenty-first century and beyond. (shrink)
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  6.  21
    Comparing Online Webcam- and Laboratory-Based Eye-Tracking for the Assessment of Infants’ Audio-Visual Synchrony Perception.Anna Bánki,Martina de Eccher,Lilith Falschlehner,Stefanie Hoehl &Gabriela Markova -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Online data collection with infants raises special opportunities and challenges for developmental research. One of the most prevalent methods in infancy research is eye-tracking, which has been widely applied in laboratory settings to assess cognitive development. Technological advances now allow conducting eye-tracking online with various populations, including infants. However, the accuracy and reliability of online infant eye-tracking remain to be comprehensively evaluated. No research to date has directly compared webcam-based and in-lab eye-tracking data from infants, similarly to data from adults. (...) The present study provides a direct comparison of in-lab and webcam-based eye-tracking data from infants who completed an identical looking time paradigm in two different settings. We assessed 4-6-month-old infants in an eye-tracking task that measured the detection of audio-visual asynchrony. Webcam-based and in-lab eye-tracking data were compared on eye-tracking and video data quality, infants’ viewing behavior, and experimental effects. Results revealed no differences between the in-lab and online setting in the frequency of technical issues and participant attrition rates. Video data quality was comparable between settings in terms of completeness and brightness, despite lower frame rate and resolution online. Eye-tracking data quality was higher in the laboratory than online, except in case of relative sample loss. Gaze data quantity recorded by eye-tracking was significantly lower than by video in both settings. In valid trials, eye-tracking and video data captured infants’ viewing behavior uniformly, irrespective of setting. Despite the common challenges of infant eye-tracking across experimental settings, our results point toward the necessity to further improve the precision of online eye-tracking with infants. Taken together, online eye-tracking is a promising tool to assess infants’ gaze behavior but requires careful data quality control. The demographic composition of both samples differed from the generic population on caregiver education: our samples comprised caregivers with higher-than-average education levels, challenging the notion that online studies will per se reach more diverse populations. (shrink)
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  7.  19
    Forgotten Botany: The Politics of Knowledge within the Royal Botanical Garden of New Spain.Anna Toledano -2021 -Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 44 (2):228-244.
    Spanish naturalists established the Viceregal Botanical Garden of New Spain in Mexico City in 1788 to advance agriculture, manufacturing, and medicine. This colonial institution also served the ideological role of cultivating agents of empire. Rather than establish the garden in the already robust tradition of American botany, the Spanish appropriated this space, employing Creole students and servant workers to Europeanize local botanical knowledge through taxonomic colonialism. The different agendas at work in the botanical garden, which straddled the colonial and revolutionary (...) periods in Mexico, destabilized not only this institution, but also the empire itself from the ground up. That the contributions of the agents of the garden have been forgotten is evidence of the fragility and failure of a European institution in the American colonial state. (shrink)
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  8.  27
    Acknowledgements.Anna Tomaszewska -2014 - InThe Contents of Perceptual Experience: A Kantian Perspective. De Gruyter Open. pp. 18-18.
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  9.  36
    4th Russian Philosophy Congress.Anna Kostikova &Elena Kosalova -2006 -Philosophy Now 54:9-11.
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  10.  4
    Platone e la questione della virtù.Anna Motta (ed.) -2023 - Napoli: Paolo Loffredo.
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  11.  10
    The gamma‐tubulin ring complex: Deciphering the molecular organization and assembly mechanism of a major vertebrate microtubule nucleator.Anna Böhler,Bram J. A. Vermeulen,Martin Würtz,Erik Zupa,Stefan Pfeffer &Elmar Schiebel -2021 -Bioessays 43 (8):2100114.
    Microtubules are protein cylinders with functions in cell motility, signal sensing, cell organization, intracellular transport, and chromosome segregation. One of the key properties of microtubules is their dynamic architecture, allowing them to grow and shrink in length by adding or removing copies of their basic subunit, the heterodimer αβ‐tubulin. In higher eukaryotes, de novo assembly of microtubules from αβ‐tubulin is initiated by a 2 MDa multi‐subunit complex, the gamma‐tubulin ring complex (γ‐TuRC). For many years, the structure of the γ‐TuRC and (...) the function of its subunits remained enigmatic, although structural data from the much simpler yeast counterpart, the γ‐tubulin small complex (γ‐TuSC), were available. Two recent breakthroughs in the field, high‐resolution structural analysis and recombinant reconstitution of the complex, have revolutionized our knowledge about the architecture and function of the γ‐TuRC and will form the basis for addressing outstanding questions about biogenesis and regulation of this essential microtubule organizer. (shrink)
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  12.  31
    Self-Deception: Intentional Plan or Mental Event?Anna Elisabetta Galeotti -2012 -Humana Mente 5 (20).
    The focus of this paper is the discussion between supporters of the intentional account of SD and supporters of the causal account. Between these two options the author argues that SD is the unintentional outcome of intentional steps taken by the agent. More precisely, she argues that SD is a complex mixture of things that we do and that happen to us; the outcome is however unintended by the subject, though it fulfils some of his practical, though short-term, goals. In (...) her account, SD is produced after a fashion similar to those beneficial social phenomena which serve some collective purpose, are the product of human action, but not of human design, such as money, language and many social conventions; and similarly SD can be accounted by invisible hand explanation. The paper will critically analyze both the intentional and the causal accounts, and then present the invisible hand explanation which avoids the most puzzling aspect of the intentional view, while keeping the distinctiveness of SD in the realm of motivated irrationality. A brief discussion of the issue of responsibility for SD will conclude the paper. (shrink)
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  13.  32
    Erkenntnis und Liebe. Zur Nähe und Ferne zwischen Heinrich Barths und Søren Kierkegaards Verständnis von Gemeinschaft.Anna Berres -2018 -Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 23 (1):291-309.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook Jahrgang: 23 Heft: 1 Seiten: 291-309.
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  14.  7
    Sciences, objectivity and realism between Ludwik Fleck and contemporary debates.Anna C. Zielinska -unknown
    In this paper, I explore the philosophical and scientific positions of Ludwik Fleck, author of the first theory of democratic science and, at the end of the day, a scientific realist. This interpretation of his work is somewhat at odds with the more standard approach, wherein Fleck is presented as a pioneer of relativism or of social constructivism in the philosophy of sciences. In the following, I discuss Fleck's philosophical context o er an analysis of a few of his better-known (...) interpretations and offer a final perspective by showing his commitment to the reality of scientific practice, notwithstanding his scepticism towards scientific theories. And while this paper is an attempt to o er an alternative reading of Fleck's positions, it also aims at reaffirming a stance already defended by, among others, Ian Hacking. Scientific realism needs to be understood not in opposition to a historical perspective on dynamically developing sciences, but along with this perspective. (shrink)
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  15.  21
    EMMA (Applying ethics multiprofessionally and methodically): a specific structured tool for ethics case consultations in long-term care.Anna Wachter &Arnd T. May -2024 -Ethik in der Medizin 36 (3):355-368.
    Einrichtungen der Altenpflege weisen spezifische ethische Spannungsfelder und ethische Fragestellungen auf. Das Strukturinstrument EMMA (Ethik Multiprofessionell Methodisch Anwenden) zur Moderation einer Ethik-Fallberatung wurde für den Einsatz in Einrichtungen der Altenpflege konzipiert. Inhaltlich werden die Besonderheiten dieses Settings unter Bezugnahme auf den Schlüsselbegriff Privatheit in den Mittelpunkt gestellt. EMMA eignet sich aufgrund seiner Kontextsensitivität darüber hinaus zum Einsatz in der Ethik-Fallberatung in unterschiedlichen außerklinischen Settings.
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  16. Straight and twisted self-deception.Anna Galeotti -2016 -Phenomenology and Mind 11:90-99.
    The paper analyzes the two types of self-deception, usually labeled straight and twisted self-deception. In straight cases the self-deceptive belief coincides with the subject’s desire. In twisted cases, by contrast, the self-deceptive belief opposes the subject’s desire as in the example of Othello’s conviction of Desdemona’s infidelity. Are both these contrasting types of deceptive beliefs cases of SD? The argument of this paper shall answer this question in the positive, yet in different way from the unitary explanation of straight and (...) twisted SD proposed by Alfred Mele. The causal account of SD claims to provide a unitary and simple explanation for both straight and twisted SD, and considers such a unitary explanation as a specific virtue of the causal view. Within the same causal model, the difference between straight and twisted self-deception is explained by a difference in the motivational state that in twisted cases is dominated by emotions. The paper will critically examine this claim, and advance an alternative explanation based on a different view of self-deception where emotions play a role alongside wishes both in straight and in twisted case. (shrink)
     
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  17.  22
    Architectural Memory and trimalchio'sPorticvs.Anna Anguissola -2023 -Classical Quarterly 73 (2):786-794.
    This paper seeks to respond to two questions posed by previous commentators concerning the arrangement of Trimalchio's porticus as described in Petronius’ Satyrica (Sat. 29): first, whether the freedman's house lacked an atrium; second, whether the cursores (runners) who are described as unconventionally exercising in the portico were pictorial representations or real-life athletes who would symbolize the social incompetence of the dominus. This paper argues that nothing in the text supports the interpretation of Trimalchio's house as having an unconventional architectural (...) layout. Instead, as the narrative requires that Encolpius move quickly towards the triclinium, in his description the loca communia appear conflated, while he only sparsely notices a few relevant elements of the decor. The presentation of Trimalchio's porticus appears to have a functional rather than a simply descriptive purpose: it symbolizes both Roman contemporary practices (the loca communia as a distinctive unit within the domus) and the influence of Greek cultural habits (the characteristic association of colonnaded courtyards and athletics). The excerpt that describes the guests’ arrival at Trimalchio's house, therefore, serves an important narrative function, providing essential information about the character's origins, self-image and social life. (shrink)
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  18.  44
    Drogues : ordre et désordres. Revue Mouvements n° 86.Anna C. Zielinska &Noé Le Blanc (eds.) -2017 - Paris: Découverte.
  19.  21
    L’échec instructif de la bioéthique. Pour une réflexion sur les procédures décisionnelles dans le champ biomédical.Anna C. Zielinska -2016 -Noesis 28.
    The article aims at challenging the very idea of bioethics. Starting with a thought experiment which puts into perspective relations between law and ethics, a reflexion on founding moments of bioethics as a distinctive discipline will be proposed in order to contest some of its assumptions. Less traditional ways of seeing the field will be subsequently analyzed, yet the conclusion of this exploration will remain critical: we should rather think of an alternative way of seeing moral expertise in the biomedical (...) sphere, founded on plural knowledge of diverse agents who leave their moral presuppositions aside as much as this is possible. (shrink)
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  20.  63
    Thick Concepts and Context Dependence.Anna Bergqvist -2013 -Southwest Philosophy Review 29 (1):221-232.
    In this paper I develop my account of moral particularism, focussing on the nature of thick moral concepts. My aim is to show how the particularist can consistently uphold an non-reductive cognitivist ‘dual role’ view of thick moral concepts, even though she holds that the qualities ascribed by such concepts can vary in their moral relevance – so that to judge that something is generous or an act of integrity need not entail that the object of evaluative appraisal is good (...) to some extent. A novel particularist account of thick concepts is proposed, in response to recent work on variance holism. The particularist rejects the holist’s attempt to preserve the idea that thick concepts are evaluative concepts by postulating a special semantic content, a contextually variable evaluative valence, as theoretically unmotivated and conceptually confused. Instead it is argued that the thick concepts have determinable evaluative content in situ only. (shrink)
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  21. La traduction italienne de la sagesse dans son contexte vénitien.Anna Bettoni -2008 -Corpus: Revue de philosophie 55:251-268.
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  22.  38
    Evaluative Conditioning Induces Changes in Sound Valence.Anna C. Bolders,Guido P. H. Band &Pieter Jan Stallen -2012 -Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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  23.  24
    The effectiveness of computer-assisted cognitive rehabilitation in brain-damaged patients.Anna Bolewska &Emilia Łojek -2013 -Polish Psychological Bulletin 44 (1):31-39.
    This study examined the effects of computer-assisted cognitive rehabilitation in a group of 16 brain-damaged patients. Therapeutic effectiveness was assessed by improvement on computer tasks, the results of neuropsychological tests and quality of life ratings. Participants suffered from mild to moderate attention and memory problems or aphasia. The procedure involved baseline assessment, a 15-week course of therapy conducted twice a week and posttest. Neuropsychological tests assessing attention, memory and language problems and quality of life ratings were administered twice: in pre- (...) and posttests. Twelve healthy controls were also examined twice using the same battery of neuropsychological tests. The RehaCom program and the Polish computer therapy program for aphasics called Afa-System were used for rehabilitation. The computer-assisted rehabilitation tasks were selected individually for each patient. The results showed significant improvement on computer-assisted tasks in all braindamaged subjects. However, none or very little improvement was observed on neuropsychological tests and quality of life ratings. The results of the study confirm the importance of using different types of measures to estimate the effectiveness of computer-assisted neuropsychological rehabilitation as well as the necessity of applying various kinds of therapy to improve cognitive, emotional and social functioning in brain-damaged patients. (shrink)
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  24. Wokół teorii typów: Russell.Anna Maria Borzymowska -2002 -Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 44 (4):39-56.
     
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  25.  30
    Attachment Narratives in Depression A Neurocognitive Approach.Anna Buchheim,Roberto Viviani &Henrik Walter -2013 -Journal of Consciousness Studies 20 (7-8):7-8.
    Attachment is the way we relate to others. The way we attach to others is developed early in childhood, can be impaired by early traumatic life events, and is disturbed in many psychiatric disorders. Here we give a short overview about attachment patterns in psychiatric disorders with a focus on depression, and discuss two recent empirical studies of our own that have investigated attachment related brain activation using fMRI. In the first study with patients with borderline personality disorder we used (...) a paradigm in which patients produced narratives in response to attachment pictures and measured brain activity while participants were talking. Our results are consistent with the view that BPD pathology might be correlated with traumatic attachment fear related to autobiographic abuse and loss experiences. In the second study we investigated patients with major depression undergoing therapy in a longitudinal design. In this study we used a design with individualized stimuli that were extracted from narratives produced outside of the scanner. We found that patients, as compared to healthy controls, showed differences in a pre-post comparison. The significant correlation of changes in the subgenual cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex with symptom improvement provides evidence that these regions are involved in mediating therapy related effects. (shrink)
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  26.  29
    Machiavelli's Florentine histoires.Anna Maria Cabrini -2010 - In John M. Najemy,The Cambridge companion to Machiavelli. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  27. Some grammatical glosses of baldus in Paganini's prints.Anna Zago -2011 -Rinascimento 51:89-108.
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  28. Famiglie con un solo genitore e rischio di povertà.Anna Laura Zanatta -1996 -Polis 10 (1):63-79.
     
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  29. Rola świadomości w konstytuowaniu człowieka. Roman Ingardena Paul Ricoeur.Anna Ziółkowska -2011 -Ruch Filozoficzny 68 (3).
     
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  30.  7
    Charakter samotnośoi w antropologii Jana Pawła II.Anna Zamorzanka -1985 -Roczniki Filozoficzne 33 (2):157-171.
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  31. Жінки в рабинаті: Американський досвід.Anna Mariia Basauri Zuzina -2014 -Схід 3 (129):74-77.
    Стаття присвячена історії становлення жіночого рабинату в іудаїзмі США. Оскільки сміха (звання рабина) надається в теологічних навчальних закладах, то авторка акцентує свою увагу саме на них. Розглянуто позицію представників ортодоксального іудаїзму, які, базуючись на Галасі, забороняють жінкам ставати рабинами. Далі розглядається, яким чином навчальні заклади різних напрямів сучасного іудаїзму (реформістського, реконструктивістського та консервативного) приймали рішення про дозвіл жінкам вступати до рабинських факультетів та отримувати сміху. Авторка пов'язує ці зміни з феміністським рухом 1960-70 рр. Виділено загальні проблеми жінок під час навчання (...) та після його закінчення: жінки мають менше шансів стати рабинами в громадах, аніж чоловіки; жінкам важче знайти баланс між обов'язками рабина та їхніми жіночими функціями в сім'ї. Показано, що жінки привносять до рабинату нові цінності та стилі управління громадою ("спів-рабинат"). Вони також створюють релігійні обряди, присвячені суто жіночим життєвим циклам. (shrink)
     
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  32.  54
    Refugees, Narratives, or How To Do Bad Things with Words.Anna Gotlib -2017 -Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 27 (S2):65-86.
    “How odd I can have all this inside me and to you it’s just words.”The American election of 2016 was, in its vitriol, polarization, and outcome, unlike any in recent memory. This paper addresses and critiques the anti-refugee rhetoric and policies, as well as their uncritical uptake, which developed around the candidacy of Donald Trump. My intent is to examine and confront the fact that some of this election cycle’s cruelest, most violent, and most racist rhetoric was reserved for Syrian (...) refugees, and to consider some possible responses to such speech in the future. This anti-refugee rhetoric, I suggest, both contributed decisively to Donald Trump’s victory and created potentially lasting toxic... (shrink)
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  33.  48
    Stories from the margins: Immigrant patients, health care, and narrative medicine.Anna Gotlib -2009 -International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 2 (2):51-74.
    In this paper, I address the marginalization of Russian immigrant patients within the American medical system. I argue that their already vulnerable position as immigrants with serious illnesses or conditions is exacerbated by unfamiliar social, cultural, and psychological terrain. This complex situation calls for a revision of the clinician–patient model in favor of a more comprehensive approach that takes seriously their double marginalization and its effects. I claim that one such approach, narrative medicine, can begin to address their marginalized status (...) by attending to not only the symptoms of the body, but to the story of the illness experience. (shrink)
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  34. Predicting moral judgments of corporate responsibility with formal decision heuristics.Anna Coenen &Julian N. Marewski -2009 - In N. A. Taatgen & H. van Rijn,Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. pp. 1524--1528.
     
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  35.  1
    Book Bans and the Bowdlerization of Life.Anna Adams -2023 -Aletheia: The Alpha Chi Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship 8 (Fall).
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  36.  5
    Ėsteticheskiĭ ideal i priroda obraza.Anna Akopova -1994 - Erevan: Izd-vo "Gituti︠u︡n" NAN RA.
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  37.  27
    Monstrous body: between alienness and ownness.Anna Alichniewicz -2021 -Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 11 (2):403-414.
    Monstrosity has its recognized place in cultural narratives but in philosophical discourse it remains mostly untouched. In my paper I make an attempt at phenomenological inquiry into the experience of the Other’s monstrous body. I am beginning with some remarks concerning Georges Canguilhem and Michel Foucault, the philosophers who devoted some attention to the problem of monstrosity and the monstrous, but my analysis is mainly based on the works of Bernhard Waldenfels, Edmund Husserl and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Waldenfels emphasizes that the (...) corporeal self is somehow perceived as alien, always somewhat distanced and not totally graspable. He also argues that the closer the Other, the stronger activation of the boundary between the spheres of the ownness and the alienness is caused. A promising framework for the analysis of the ambivalent reaction brought about by the encounter with a monstrous human body can be provided by Husserl’s phenomenological inquiry into the process of pairing, developed in his Cartesian meditations. It seems that in this experience the pairing process is frustrating and deranged because the process of apperception is disturbed by a cluster of untypical or quite unique characteristics of the monstrous body. In result, its sense remains unclear, puzzling and challenging. Interesting light on the experience of the Other’s monstrous body could shed Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology, especially the ideas of flesh and chiasm outlined in his last work. The radical character of the monster, while does not render it something totally different from the own, elucidates, however, the contingency of the order under which the human corporeality is subsumed. (shrink)
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  38.  17
    A generalization of combinatorial operators.Anna Silverstein -1978 -Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 19 (4):639-645.
  39.  151
    Religious language as poetry: Heidegger's challenge.Anna Strhan -2011 -Heythrop Journal 52 (6):926-938.
    This paper examines how Heidegger's view that language is poetry might provide a helpful way of understanding the nature of religious language. Poetry, according to Heidegger, is language in its purest form, in that it both reveals Being, whilst also showing the difference between word and thing. In poetry, Heidegger suggests, we come closest to the essence of language itself and encounter its strangeness and impermeability, and its revelatory character. What would be the implications for viewing religious language in this (...) way? Through examining Heidegger's view that poetry is the purest form of language, I suggest that it would also be possible to view religious language as poetry in this way, in that it also shows the transcendence of what cannot be brought to presence in language, except as concealed. Such a view of religious language does not regard it as a problematic type of language, deserving special treatment, but rather suggests that in religious language the inarticulable relationship between word and world is revealed. (shrink)
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  40.  22
    The Core of Legal Rights as a Logical Necessity.Anna Baka -2018 -Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 54:5-19.
    Analytical jurisprudence and the legal mainstream perceive legal rights in an interactionist fashion, pursuant to a right-obligation duality. The Paper suggests that this is principally because legal positivism and the analytical Anglo-Saxon legal tradition ground their theories on logical positivism and the Wittgensteinian premise that meaning is produced and asserted in social use, i.e. both consensually and contextually. The paper suggests that there is a surplus of meaning which exists beyond social use and which cannot be conceptualized within the sociolinguistic (...) confines of Wittgenstein’s logic of language. This surplus of meaning corresponds to the essential core of legal rights, which, following Aristotle’s induction and philosophy of the essences, constitutes a necessary property and τὸ τί ἦν εἶναι of legal rights, namely a state of affairs or a state of being that cannot be altered without their necessary breach or, indeed, the negation of their very meaning. The Paper discusses the shortcomings of the Wittgensteinian approach and revisits the philosophical foundations of legal rights by employing Aristotle’s induction and theory of the essences, which the Paper connects to the phenomenological method and particularly Ricoeur’s hermeneutics and Husserl’s transcedental phenomenology. This is a process of abstraction and insight, which aspires to induce a rational revisiting of the general theory of legal rights and address the surplus of meaning that Wittgensteinian logic leaves semantically uncovered. (shrink)
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  41.  1
    KAOS, ki »ni žajfnica z nenavadnimi imeni«?Anna Baranek &Elżbieta Olechowska -2024 -Clotho 6 (2):123-156.
    Članek obravnava vizijo in načrtovano sporočilo serije KAOS (Charlie Covell, Netflix 2024) v kontekstu novejših avdiovizualnih produkcij, kjer nastopajo vplivne družine, ter s primerjanjem mitov, preoblikovanih za potrebe serije, z dejanskimi miti. Pokazati želi, da serija odraža aktualna vprašanja in izzive, podobne brezčasnim človeškim skrbem, ki jih najdemo v mitih. Posebej zanimiva je karakterizacija ženskih likov, ki se osredotoča zlasti na protagonistki Evridiko in Ariadno. Serija združuje prepoznavne elemente klasičnih mitov s sodobno feministično perspektivo in ponuja nov pristop k antičnim (...) pripovedim. Ne le, da se pri tem umešča v ustaljeno mrežo klasične recepcije, temveč tudi zavestno povečuje zastopanost ženskih mitoloških likov. Preučevanje upodobitev Evridike in Ariadne ta dva lika kontekstualizira znotraj sodobne recepcije obeh mitoloških osebnosti in poudarja elemente, značilne za KAOS, denimo svojske spremembe v mitološkem izročilu o obeh junakinjah. Avtorici ugotavljata, da se feministično razumevanje obeh likov ujema s širšimi trendi v klasični recepciji in odpira prostor za dojemanje obeh antičnih žensk, prostih okvirov mitičnega etosa in časa. (shrink)
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  42.  6
    Kulturowe konteksty idei filozoficznych.Anna Pałubicka (ed.) -1997 - Poznań: Wydawn. Nauk. Instytutu Filozofii Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu.
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  43. Orientacje epistemologiczne a rozwój nauki.Anna Pałubicka -1977 - Poznań: Państwowe Wydawn. Naukowe.
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  44. Praktyczny i teoretyczny aspekt pojmowania realności świata z perspektywy filozofii humanistyki.Anna Pałubicka -2004 -Principia.
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  45. The anguish of assimilation : The case of Italo svevo.Anna Maria Accerboni Pavanello -2008 - In Pierluigi Barrotta, Anna Laura Lepschy & Emma Bond,Freud and Italian culture. New York: Peter Lang.
     
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  46.  23
    Correlation between Habituation of Visual Evoked Potentials and Magnetophosphene thresholds in migraine.AmbrosiniAnna,Kisialiou Aliaksei,Iezzi Ennio,Perrotta Armando,Nardella Andrea,Berardelli Alfredo,Pierelli Francesco &Schoenen Jean -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  47.  52
    Multicultural claims and equal respect.Anna Elisabetta Galeotti -2010 -Philosophy and Social Criticism 36 (3-4):441-450.
    In this article the author intends to provide general normative guidelines which ought to inform policies concerning the most controversial multicultural claims for a liberal democracy. In order to do that, she proposes a general reconsideration of the struggle of cultures and identities which makes up the stuff of multiculturalism. She suggests that instead of focusing on the issue of compatibility, the adequate viewpoint from which considering multicultural claims should be justice and, within justice, the principle of equal respect (ER). (...) The reference to ER is widespread in the literature on multiculturalism, but it does not specify what should be the object of ER: persons and their dignity, or cultures/religions/identities and their members? The alternative is then examined and the author argues in favour of an interpretation of ER for persons which considers persons as they are, given their identities and differences. Finally, the author provides a typology of multicultural claims, ranked on a scale of different levels of disrespect, which consequently require different kinds of response. As a result, one is invited to reflect on the how beside the what, on the procedures and attitudes beside the benefits and measures, and not only for the pragmatic reasons of finding a relatively easy way out, but also for principled reasons of justice. (shrink)
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  48. Etyka czytania i strategie narracji na podstawie powieści Toni Morrison „Umiłowana”.Anna Głąb -2013 -Analiza I Egzystencja 21:91-115.
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  49.  21
    Kartezjańska koncepcja zjednoczenia umysłu i ciała.Anna Głąb -2010 -Roczniki Filozoficzne 58 (1):27-50.
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  50.  21
    Retroactive Attentional Shifts Predict Performance in a Working Memory Task: Evidence by Lateralized EEG Patterns.Anna Göddertz,Laura-Isabelle Klatt,Christine Mertes &Daniel Schneider -2018 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12:407906.
    Shifts of attention within working memory based on retroactive (retro-) cues were shown to facilitate performance in working memory tasks. Although posterior asymmetries in the EEG, such as the contralateral delay activity (CDA), have been used to study the active storage of lateralized working memory representations, results on the relation of such asymmetric effects to retro-cue benefits remain inconclusive. We recorded EEG in a retro-cue working memory task with lateralized items and a continuous performance response. Following either a selective or (...) neutral retro-cue, participants adjusted the orientation of a central memory probe to the cued item. Selective retro-cues elicited an early posterior contralateral negativity (PCN), anterior directing attention negativity (ADAN) and a later modulation of CDA indicating that active storage was concentrated on the cued information. By dividing all trials into three within-condition performance quantiles, we could further show that high working memory accuracy was associated with a sustained increase of the CDA effect following the retro-cue. These results suggest that focusing resources on the active storage of relevant representations is an important factor regarding retro-cue benefits in working memory tasks. (shrink)
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