(1 other version)Steps toward improving ethical evaluation in health technology assessment: a proposed framework.Nazila Assasi,Jean-EricTarride,Daria O’Reilly &Lisa Schwartz -forthcoming -Most Recent Articles: Bmc Medical Ethics.detailsWhile evaluation of ethical aspects in health technology assessment has gained much attention during the past years, the integration of ethics in HTA practice still presents many challenges. In response...
Du revenu de base maintenant au revenu de base souhaitable.Jean-Éric Hyafil -2016 -Multitudes 63 (2):72-81.detailsS’il est difficile de lever à court terme les freins – avant tout géopolitiques – qui empêchent de mettre en œuvre un revenu de base d’un montant « élevé », il faudrait néanmoins commencer par mettre un œuvre un revenu de base, même d’un montant équivalent à l’actuel RSA. Cela doit et peut se faire dès maintenant. Cet article explique comment, étape par étape.
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L' Avenir de la philosophie Violence et langage: CahiersEric Weil I. Huit études surEric Weil.Eric Weil &Jean Quillien -1987 - Presses Universitaires du Septentrion.detailsCe premier numéro des CahiersEric Weil contient deux textes d'Eric Weil: une réédition de "Violence et langage" de 1967 et un inédit de 1974: "L'avenir de la philosophie". Il contient également des études sur la philosophie de Weil.Ont...
(1 other version)Défaire l'image.Éric Alliez &Jean-Claude Bonne -2007 -Multitudes 1 (1):189-194.detailsContemporary art was born out of the radicalization of a crisis begun by modern art , concerning the twofold sensible identity of art, which involves both its image-form and its aesthetic-form. This crisis led Matisse and Duchamp to « undo the image » inasmuch as it is defined by Form, in a kind of phenomenology of the visible and the invisible . Matisse responds to this with a vitalist energeticism which brings about an expansive constructivism of color-forces which replaces aesthetics (...) with an aesthesis. Duchamp enacts a constructivism of the signifier, in which nominalism and bachelor machinism abolish all effects of being of the sign-image and thus all aesthetic sign-making of the world. (shrink)
Lévia...Tot.Éric Alliez &Jean-Claude Bonne -2008 -Multitudes 33 (2):155.detailsLeviathan-Toth, Ernesto Neto’s anti/counter-installation which could be seen hanging from the vaults of the Panthéon in autumn 2006 does not seek to exploit this national memorial as a space in which to stand as an exhibition. It responds to all of its surrounding factors – physical, aesthetic, political, and metaphysical, to attack the representative art whose constitutive-constitutional role in the republic, according to Hobbes, can be seen in Leviathan’s frontispiece. Setting up a sort of Critique et Clinique of Representation in (...) all senses of the term beginning with the short-circuit between politics and aesthetics, Neto’s operation sets its sights on the expansive dis-organisation of the multitude living under the « democratic » regime of contractual representation of which the Panthéon is the temple. It provides a body for the rhizomatic-bioenergetic perversion of the Image of the State-Machine, of the Form-State, by projecting a new infra and supra-organic type of reality which draws its « energy » from the forces of the multitudo dissoluta whose radical and vital recomposition it advocates. This work or non-work, derived from a Brazilian political-aesthetic constructivism which is undergoing redefinition, can now only take place in the context of a practice of displacement which incorporates and is constituted of the spectator-participant. (shrink)
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Matisse-en-Amérique.Éric Alliez &Jean-Claude Bonne -2005 -Multitudes 1 (1):33-45.detailsAt the Barnes Foundation in 1931, Matisse undertook the painting of a large decorative panel entitled La Danse. Its stakes are considerable: the disqualification of the painting-form and the drawing-genre, in favor of an environmental art infused with a decorative vitalism that redefines the architectural function itself at the deepest level, beyond any question of site-specificity.
Living ethics: a stance and its implications in health ethics.Eric Racine,Sophie Ji,Valérie Badro,Aline Bogossian,Claude Julie Bourque,Marie-Ève Bouthillier,Vanessa Chenel,Clara Dallaire,Hubert Doucet,Caroline Favron-Godbout,Marie-Chantal Fortin,Isabelle Ganache,Anne-Sophie Guernon,Marjorie Montreuil,Catherine Olivier,Ariane Quintal,Abdou Simon Senghor,Michèle Stanton-Jean,Joé T. Martineau,Andréanne Talbot &Nathalie Tremblay -2024 -Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 27 (2):137-154.detailsMoral or ethical questions are vital because they affect our daily lives: what is the best choice we can make, the best action to take in a given situation, and ultimately, the best way to live our lives? Health ethics has contributed to moving ethics toward a more experience-based and user-oriented theoretical and methodological stance but remains in our practice an incomplete lever for human development and flourishing. This context led us to envision and develop the stance of a “living (...) ethics”, described in this inaugural collective and programmatic paper as an effort to consolidate creative collaboration between a wide array of stakeholders. We engaged in a participatory discussion and collective writing process known as instrumentalist concept analysis. This process included initial local consultations, an exploratory literature review, the constitution of a working group of 21 co-authors, and 8 workshops supporting a collaborative thinking and writing process. First, a living ethics designates a stance attentive to human experience and the role played by morality in human existence. Second, a living ethics represents an ongoing effort to interrogate and scrutinize our moral experiences to facilitate adaptation of people and contexts. It promotes the active and inclusive engagement of both individuals and communities in envisioning and enacting scenarios which correspond to their flourishing as authentic ethical agents. Living ethics encourages meaningful participation of stakeholders because moral questions touch deeply upon who we are and who we want to be. We explain various aspects of a living ethics stance, including its theoretical, methodological, and practical implications as well as some barriers to its enactment based on the reflections resulting from the collaborative thinking and writing process. (shrink)
La rondelle en linéaire A d'Aghia Triada Wc 3024 (HM 1110).Jean-Pierre Olivier,Éric Hallager &Louis Godart -1989 -Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 113 (2):431-437.detailsLa rondelle d'argile HT Wc 3024, trouvée fortuitement en surface en 1987, semble bien démontrer la validité d'une hypothèse proposée deux ans avant sa découverte : le nombre d'empreintes de sceau sur le pourtour d'une rondelle indique le nombre d'objets impliqués dans la transaction dont cette rondelle porte témoignage (dans le cas présent, aux six empreintes de sceau correspond le chiffre six qui suit l'idéogramme de la brebis).
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The Enigma of Gift and Sacrifice.Edith Wyschogrod,Jean-Joseph Goux &Eric Boynton (eds.) -2002 - Fordham University Press.detailsWhat does it mean to give a "gift"? In this timely collection, distinguished anthropologists--Maurice Godelier, George Marcus, Stephen Tyler--and philosophers--Mark C. Taylor, John D. Caputo,Jean-Joseph Goux and Adriaan Peperzak, explore an enigma that has disturbed contemporary philosophers from Marcel Mauss to Jacques Derrida.The essays included in the volume: Some Things You Give, Some Things You Sell, But Some Things You Must Keep for Yourselves: What Mauss Did Not Say about Sacred Objects by Maurice Godelie.The Gift and Globalization: A (...) Prolegomenon to the Anthropological Study of Contemporary Finance Capital and Its Mentalities by George MarcusCapitalizing (on) Gifting by Mark C. Taylor"Even Steven" or "No Strings Attached" by Stephen TylerMothering, Co-muni-cation and the Gifts of Language by Genevieve VaughanThe Time of Giving, the Time of Forgiving by John D. CaputoSeneca against Derrida: Gift and Alterity byJean-Joseph Goux Giving by Adriaan Peperzak. (shrink)
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(2 other versions)Présentation.Jean-Claude Gens &Éric Pommier -2014 -Alter: revue de phénoménologie 22:13-14.detailsOn pourrait s’étonner de la lecture que Hans Jonas propose de l’histoire des interprétations de l’être. Celle-ci serait animée par une ontologie de mort qui empêche la vie d’être portée au concept. Mais comment cet oubli de la vie pourrait-il concerner le courant de la Lebensphilosophie? Par ailleurs, la phénoménologie elle-même ne prend-elle pas au sérieux cette notion lorsque Husserl considère la pulsion ou interroge le monde de la vie et lorsque le jeune Heidegger consacre un séminaire du...
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Preventive Human Genome Editing and Enhancement: Candidate Criteria for Governance.Eric Juengst,Michael A. Flatt,John M. Conley,Arlene Davis,Gail Henderson,Douglas MacKay,Rami Major,Rebecca L. Walker &R.Jean Cadigan -2024 -Hastings Center Report 54 (5):14-23.detailsWhile somatic cell editing to treat disease is widely accepted, the use of human genome editing for “enhancement” remains contested. Scientists and policy-makers routinely cite the prospect of enhancement as a salient ethical challenge for human genome editing research. If preventive genome editing projects are perceived as pursuing human enhancement, they could face heightened barriers to scientific, public, and regulatory approval. This article outlines what we call “preventive strengthening research” (or “PSR”) to explore, through this example, how working to strengthen (...) individuals’ resistance to disease beyond what biomedicine considers to be the human functional range may be interpreted as pursuing human enhancement. Those involved in developing guidance for PSR will need to navigate the interface between preventive goals and enhancement implications. This article identifies and critiques three of these ideas in the interest of anticipating the wider emergence of PSR and the need for a normative approach for its pursuit. All three “candidate criteria” merit attention, but each also faces challenges that will need to be addressed as further research policy is developed. (shrink)
Penser les interactions entre le politique et l'économie.Éric Dacheux &Jean-Louis Laville -2003 -Hermes 36:9-17.detailsResearchers in political sciences, communication or sociology who are interested in the public sphere are not as concerned with a civil and solidarity-based economy perspective. Conversely, economists and sociologists working on the civil and solidarity-based economy often do not use the concept of the public sphere in their conceptual equipment. This type of compartmentalization is partly due to an opposition between work, defined as an alienating activity, and political activity defined as an action typical of the free man that many (...) authors claim to borrow from Hannah Arendt and introduces a radical dichotomy between the economic and public spheres. However, as a historical investigation clearly indicates, the analytical distinction between the political order and the economic order cannot be transformed into an empirical dissociation. The civil and solidarity-based economy thus invites the researcher to think about economic activity and political activity together in order to look further into the concept of public sphere. (shrink)
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COVID-19, economic threat and identity status: Stability and change in prejudice against Chinese people within the Canadian population.Victoria Maria Ferrante,Éric Lacourse,Anna Dorfman,Mathieu Pelletier-Dumas,Jean-Marc Lina,Dietlind Stolle &Roxane de la Sablonnière -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13:901352.detailsObjectivesPrevious studies found a general increase in prejudice against Chinese people during the first months of the pandemic. The present study aims to consider inter-individual heterogeneity in stability and change regarding prejudice involving Chinese people during the pandemic. The first objective is to identify and describe different trajectories of prejudice over a seven-month period during the pandemic. The second and third objectives are to test the association between trajectory group membership and antecedent variables such as: socio-demographic factors (i.e., age, gender, (...) political affiliation) and two psychological mechanisms, namely economic threat and global citizenship identification.MethodsA representative Canadian sample (N = 3,617) according to age, gender and province of residence, was recruited for a 10-wave survey starting from April 2020 to December 2020. First, a group-based modeling approach was used to identify trajectories of prejudice. Second, a multinomial logistic regression model was used to test associations between membership in trajectories and antecedents.ResultsFour trajectories were identified. The first three trajectories have a low (71.4% of the sample), high (18.5%) or very high (5.3%) level of prejudiceagainstChinese people which is relatively stable over time. The fourth trajectory (4.9%) reports low levels of prejudicein favorof Chinese people which become more positive throughout 2020. Regarding socio-demographic factors: gender is not associated with trajectory group membership, younger people are more likely to follow the trajectory in favor of Chinese people and conservatives are more likely to follow the highest trajectories against Chinese people. Regarding some psychological mechanisms: personal but not collective economic threat is associated with the trajectory in favor of Chinese people. Finally, the highest levels of prejudice are found when the strategy of identification is more local rather than global.ConclusionThe present study shows that Canadians differ in terms of both their level and change in prejudice against Chinese people throughout the pandemic with some socio-demographic groups being more likely than others to be associated with prejudice. The results also suggest that a promising way to tackle the major social issue of prejudice is to highlight a vision of the world where individuals are all “global citizens” facing the same challenge. (shrink)
Connecting ethics and epistemology of AI.Federica Russo,Eric Schliesser &Jean Wagemans -forthcoming -AI and Society:1-19.detailsThe need for fair and just AI is often related to the possibility of understanding AI itself, in other words, of turning an opaque box into a glass box, as inspectable as possible. Transparency and explainability, however, pertain to the technical domain and to philosophy of science, thus leaving the ethics and epistemology of AI largely disconnected. To remedy this, we propose an integrated approach premised on the idea that a glass-box epistemology should explicitly consider how to incorporate values and (...) other normative considerations, such as intersectoral vulnerabilities, at critical stages of the whole process from design and implementation to use and assessment. To connect ethics and epistemology of AI, we perform a double shift of focus. First, we move from trusting the output of an AI system to trusting the process that leads to the outcome. Second, we move from expert assessment to more inclusive assessment strategies, aiming to facilitate expert and non-expert assessment. Together, these two moves yield a framework usable for experts and non-experts when they inquire into relevant epistemological and ethical aspects of AI systems. We dub our framework ‘epistemology-cum-ethics’ to signal the equal importance of both aspects. We develop it from the vantage point of the designers: how to create the conditions to internalize values into the whole process of design, implementation, use, and assessment of an AI system, in which values (epistemic and non-epistemic) are explicitly considered at each stage and inspectable by every salient actor involved at any moment. (shrink)
The correspondence between James Hutton (1726–1797) and James Watt (1736–1819) with two letters from Hutton to George Clerk-Maxwell (1715–1784): Part I. [REVIEW]Jean Jones,Hugh S. Torrens &Eric Robinson -1994 -Annals of Science 51 (6):637-653.details(1994). The correspondence between James Hutton (1726–1797) and James Watt (1736–1819) with two letters from Hutton to George Clerk-Maxwell (1715–1784): Part I. Annals of Science: Vol. 51, No. 6, pp. 637-653.
Stabilizing Effect of Cannibalism in a Two Stages Population Model.Jonathan Rault,Eric Benoît &Jean-Luc Gouzé -2013 -Acta Biotheoretica 61 (1):119-139.detailsIn this paper we build a prey–predator model with discrete weight structure for the predator. This model will conserve the number of individuals and the biomass and both growth and reproduction of the predator will depend on the food ingested. Moreover the model allows cannibalism which means that the predator can eat the prey but also other predators. We will focus on a simple version with two weight classes or stage and present some general mathematical results. In the last part, (...) we will assume that the dynamics of the prey is fast compared to the predator’s one to go further in the results and eventually conclude that under some conditions, cannibalism can stabilize the system: more precisely, an unstable equilibrium without cannibalism will become almost globally stable with some cannibalism. Some numerical simulations are done to illustrate this result. (shrink)
Le contexte géomorphologique et historique de l'aqueduc de Nicopolis.Panagiotis Doukellis,Eric Fouache &Jean-Jacques Dufaure -1995 -Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 119 (1):209-233.detailsLa fondation de Nicopolis est la réponse donnée par Rome aux problèmes de l'organisation politique, administrative et sociale de l'Épire méridionale et de l'Acarnanie. Aussi les constructions telles que l'aqueduc constituent-elles, par leur inscription dans le paysage urbain et rural, un symbole majeur de la romanisation. Or le tracé de cet aqueduc, long de près de soixante-dix kilomètres, est encore imparfaitement connu. Nous en avons donc repris l'étude en nous attachant à reconstituer les contraintes auxquelles sa construction avait été soumise, (...) ainsi que l'évolution géomorphologique récente des bassins-versants traversés. Au-delà de l'aspect technique et naturaliste, nous nous sommes également attachés à replacer l'aqueduc dans le contexte territorial et géopolitique de l'époque. (shrink)
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A clinician's perspective on memory reconsolidation as the primary basis for psychotherapeutic change in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).Nathan A. Kimbrel,Eric C. Meyer &Jean C. Beckham -2015 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38.detailsLane et al.'s proposal that psychotherapeutic change comes about through memory reconsolidation is compelling; however, the model would be strengthened by the inclusion of predictions regarding additional factors that might influence treatment response, predictions for improving outcomes for non-responsive patients, and a discussion of how the proposed model might explain individual differences in vulnerability for mental health problems.
The correspondence between James Hutton (1726–1797) and James Watt (1736–1819) with two letters from Hutton to george Clerk-Maxwell (1715–1784): Part II. [REVIEW]Jean Jones,Hugh S. Torrens &Eric Robinson -1995 -Annals of Science 52 (4):357-382.detailsThere are eleven previously unpublished letters between James Hutton and James Watt in the Doldowlod collection, which Birmingham City Archives acquires from Lord Gibson-Watt in 1994. They were written between 1774 and 1795. Very little of Hutton's other correspondence survives, so these letters add significantly to our knowledge. The earliest letters together with two letters from Hutton to George Clerk-Maxwell , describe geological tours that Hutton made through Wales, the Midlands, and the south-west of England in 1774. The correspondence after (...) 1774 reveals Watt's expertise in geology, and also discusses meteorology, varnish making, Symington's steam engines, the first experiments with steam navigation, pneumatic medicine, and other topics. (shrink)
Human heritable genome editing and its governance: views of scientists and governance professionals.R.Jean Cadigan,Margaret Waltz,John M. Conley,Rami M. Major,Elizabeth K. Branch,Eric T. Juengst &Michael A. Flatt -2024 -New Genetics and Society 43 (1).detailsHeritable human genome editing has garnered significant attention in scholarly and lay media, yet questions remain about whether, when, and how heritable genome editing ought to proceed. Drawing on interviews with scientists who use genome editing in their research and professionals engaged in human genome editing governance efforts, we examine their views on the permissibility of heritable genome editing and the governance strategies they see as necessary and realistic. For both issues, we found divergent views from respondents. We place the (...) views of these scientists and governance professionals within the context of the larger bioethical discussion of heritable genome editing governance, along a continuum of hard to soft approaches. These respondents’ views highlight the challenges of various hard forms of governance and the potential virtues of soft governance approaches. (shrink)
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The Promise and Reality of Public Engagement in the Governance of Human Genome Editing Research.John M. Conley,R.Jean Cadigan,Arlene M. Davis,Eric T. Juengst,Kriste Kuczynski,Rami Major,Hayley Stancil,Julio Villa-Palomino,Margaret Waltz &Gail E. Henderson -2023 -American Journal of Bioethics 23 (7):9-16.detailsThis paper analyses the activities of five organizations shaping the debate over the global governance of genome editing in order to assess current approaches to public engagement (PE). We compare the recommendations of each group with its own practices. All recommend broad engagement with the general public, but their practices vary from expert-driven models dominated by scientists, experts, and civil society groups to citizen deliberation-driven models that feature bidirectional consultation with local citizens, as well as hybrid models that combine elements (...) of both approaches. Only one group practices PE that seeks community perspectives to advance equity. In most cases, PE does little more than record already well-known views held by the most vocal groups, and thus is unlikely to produce more just or equitable processes or policy outcomes. Our exploration of the strengths, weaknesses, and possibilities of current forms of PE suggests a need to rethink both “public” and “engagement.”. (shrink)
Jean Bodin’s First Reading of Machiavelli.Eric MacPhail -2025 -Jus Cogens 7 (1):131-144.detailsJean Bodin’s first major prose work, the Methodus ad facilem historiarum cognitionem of 1566 inaugurates a long critical tradition of challenging the coherence and the consistency of Machiavelli’s theory of the state, without indulging in conventional ad hominem attacks. Bodin’s analysis, brief and cogent, can still help us to understand Machiavelli today and to grasp some of the major tendencies of Machiavelli criticism that have developed since the Renaissance. Bodin takes Machiavelli seriously as a major threat to his own (...) theory of sovereignty. Moreover, he focuses our attention on the rhetorical dimension of Machiavelli’s work and draws some suggestive parallels between Machiavelli and the sophistic tradition, especially in his second major work, Les six livres de la République, where he likens Machiavelli to the sophist Favorinus of Arles, who wrote a paradoxical encomium of the quartan fever. Bodin’s reading reveals the striking affinities as well as the basic antagonism between these two major figures in the history of political thought. (shrink)
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Products of compact spaces and the axiom of choice II.Omar De la Cruz,Eric Hall,Paul Howard,Kyriakos Keremedis &Jean E. Rubin -2003 -Mathematical Logic Quarterly 49 (1):57-71.detailsThis is a continuation of [2]. We study the Tychonoff Compactness Theorem for various definitions of compactness and for various types of spaces . We also study well ordered Tychonoff products and the effect that the multiple choice axiom has on such products.
Reuniting philosophy and science to advance cancer research.Thomas Pradeu,Bertrand Daignan-Fornier,Andrew Ewald,Pierre-Luc Germain,Samir Okasha,Anya Plutynski,Sébastien Benzekry,Marta Bertolaso,Mina Bissell,Joel S. Brown,Benjamin Chin-Yee,Ian Chin-Yee,Hans Clevers,Laurent Cognet,Marie Darrason,Emmanuel Farge,Jean Feunteun,Jérôme Galon,Elodie Giroux,Sara Green,Fridolin Gross,Fanny Jaulin,Rob Knight,Ezio Laconi,Nicolas Larmonier,Carlo Maley,Alberto Mantovani,Violaine Moreau,Pierre Nassoy,Elena Rondeau,David Santamaria,Catherine M. Sawai,Andrei Seluanov,Gregory D. Sepich-Poore,Vanja Sisirak,Eric Solary,Sarah Yvonnet &Lucie Laplane -2023 -Biological Reviews 98 (5):1668-1686.detailsCancers rely on multiple, heterogeneous processes at different scales, pertaining to many biomedical fields. Therefore, understanding cancer is necessarily an interdisciplinary task that requires placing specialised experimental and clinical research into a broader conceptual, theoretical, and methodological framework. Without such a framework, oncology will collect piecemeal results, with scant dialogue between the different scientific communities studying cancer. We argue that one important way forward in service of a more successful dialogue is through greater integration of applied sciences (experimental and clinical) (...) with conceptual and theoretical approaches, informed by philosophical methods. By way of illustration, we explore six central themes: (i) the role of mutations in cancer; (ii) the clonal evolution of cancer cells; (iii) the relationship between cancer and multicellularity; (iv) the tumour microenvironment; (v) the immune system; and (vi) stem cells. In each case, we examine open questions in the scientific literature through a philosophical methodology and show the benefit of such a synergy for the scientific and medical understanding of cancer. (shrink)
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