Results for ' Flesh'

966 found
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  1.  47
    Human Flesh Search Engine and Online Privacy.Yang Zhang & Hong Gao - 2016 - Science and Engineering Ethics 22 (2):601-604.
    Human flesh search engine can be a double-edged sword, bringing convenience on the one hand and leading to infringement of personal privacy on the other hand. This paper discusses the ethical problems brought about by the human flesh search engine, as well as possible solutions.
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  2.  8
    Sentient Flesh: Thinking in Disorder, Poiesis in Black.R. A. Judy - 2020 - Duke University Press.
    In _Sentient Flesh _R. A. Judy takes up freedman Tom Windham’s 1937 remark “we should have our liberty 'cause... us is human flesh" as a point of departure for an extended meditation on questions of the human, epistemology, and the historical ways in which the black being is understood. Drawing on numerous fields, from literary theory and musicology, to political theory and phenomenology, as well as Greek and Arabic philosophy, Judy engages literary texts and performative practices such as (...)
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  3. Flesh of Stories of Pain and Suffering.István Fazakas - 2024 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 15 (2):111-129.
    The paper explores the difference between semiology and hermeneutics of pain and suffering by focusing on narrativity and the body. First, it recapitulates some historical distinctions between explaining and understanding in the context of psychopathology. It shows how the hermeneutic method culminates in the idea of the cohesion of life, constituted through biography and narrative. The second section deals with the relationship between narrativity and selfhood in stories of suffering. The third part addresses the problem of the lived body and (...)
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  4.  12
    Black Flesh Matters: Essays on Runagate Interpretation.Vincent L. Wimbush - 2022 - Fortress Academic.
    This book models an ex-centric orientation to the study of modern formation as the study of the hyper-signification of difference as racialization/racism. As Black flesh came to be identified as persistent baseline for difference, it opens windows onto mimetic translations of all modern subjectivities.
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  5.  28
    Rigid Flesh – Towards the Critique of Technologically Mediated Chiasm.Domonkos Sik - 2024 - Critical Horizons 25 (2):94-110.
    Technology has been at the centre of existentialist (e.g. Heidegger) and sociological (e.g. Marcuse) critique for a long time. The latest versions of criticism rely on the results of “science and technology studies”: they argue that essentialist conceptualisations of technology should be replaced while aiming at “democratizing technology” (e.g. Feenberg). However, even these approaches are characterised by a shortcoming when it comes to providing a normative basis: as contemporary technology intermeshes with the elementary levels of existence (such as perception or (...)
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  6.  12
    En-Fleshed Practicing in Organisations Flesh as Elemental Carnality and Formative Medium for Organising Sustainability Development.Wendlin Keupers - 2023 - Phenomenology and Practice 18 (1).
    Based on Merleau-Pontys’s philosophy of flesh, this paper outlines possibilities for organisational practices towards sustainability development. In order to elucidate these en-fleshed practices, the paper begins by presenting Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of the body and perception as well as his ontology of ‘flesh’. In particular, flesh is interpreted as elemental ‘carnality’ and formative medium. As such, it is processed through sensual and reflexive doubling as a reversibility and chiasm of the sentient and the sensible. This understanding opens for (...)
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  7.  25
    Flesh and the Machine.Stefan Kristensen - 2016 - Chiasmi International 18:169-182.
    This essay is a second attempt to reconcile the perspectives of Merleau-Ponty and Guattari, following on the examination of the unconscious in a previous issue of Chiasmi. Here the focus concerns an ontology that overcomes the dualistic heritage of Western metaphysics. More precisely, I compare the concept of flesh as Merleau-Ponty employs it in his later texts with that of the machine as Guattari uses this from the end of the 1960s until his last writings in the early 1990s. (...)
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  8.  57
    Bringing Flesh to Theory: Ethnography, Black Queer Theory, and Studying Black Sexualities.Nikki Lane - 2016 - Feminist Studies 42 (3):632.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:632 Feminist Studies 42, no. 3. © 2016 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Nikki Lane Bringing Flesh to Theory: Ethnography, Black Queer Theory, and Studying Black Sexualities As Dorothy Hodgson tells us, the most common features of an ethnographic project involve “talking to, participating with, and observing the people who produce... texts, exploring the contexts of their ideas and actions, and often studying how their situations, ideas, and actions (...)
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  9. The flesh of perception: Merleau-ponty and Husserl.A. D. Smith - 2007 - In Thomas Baldwin (ed.), Reading Merleau-Ponty: On Phenomenology of Perception. New York: Routledge.
  10.  21
    Fleshing out Gender: Crafting Gender Identity on Women's Bodies.Valérie Fournier - 2002 - Body and Society 8 (2):55-77.
    The aim of this article is to flesh out gender by drawing connections between the experience of pain and the experience of womanhood. The article builds upon two themes in feminist work (the constitution of woman through her effacement, and the inscription of gender on the body) and proposes to analyse `effacement' in terms of an embodied sense of being `gutted out', or made `immaterial'. I use this imagery of `gutting out' to suggest that effacement is experienced through the (...)
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  11.  24
    The Flesh of Words: The Politics of Writing.Jacques Rancière - 2004 - Stanford University Press.
    This new collection of challenging literary studies plays with a foundational definition of Western culture: the word become flesh.
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  12. Flesh and Nature: Understanding Merleau-Ponty’s Relational Ontology.Bryan E. Bannon - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (3):327-357.
    In this paper I attempt to develop several ways Merleau-Ponty's ontology might contribute to an environmental ethic through a redefinition of his concept of flesh in terms of a general theory of affectivity. Currently accepted interpretations of the concept such as those in Abram, Toadvine, Barbaras, and Dastur rely upon conceiving flesh as a perceptual experience. I contest this interpretation and argue that a more productive conception of flesh emerges when understood in terms of Heidegger's philosophy. The (...)
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  13.  12
    Flesh of Architecture : J. Pallasmaa’s Phenomenology of Architectural Experience. 박신화 - 2018 - Phenomenology and Contemporary Philosoph 79:195-223.
    메를로-퐁티의 지각 철학에는 이렇다 할 건축에 대한 얘기가 없지만 그럼에도 불구하고 오늘날 일군의 건축가와 건축 이론가들에게 새로운 건축 이론을 형성하는 데 있어 큰 영감의 원천이 되고 있다. 그중에는 핀란드의 건축가 이자 건축 이론가인 유하니 팔라스마가 있다. 팔라스마는 메를로-퐁티의 지각철학을 자신이 전개한 건축 이론의 기초로 삼았지만, 그렇다고 해서 그의 건축적 경험 이론과 메를로-퐁티의 지각 이론이 전적으로 합치되는 것은 아니다. 반대로 이론의 핵심 부분에서 양자 사이에는 미묘한 대립이 발견된다. 따라서 이 글에서 우리는 먼저 팔라스마의 건축 현상학을 몇 가지 쟁점을 통해 고찰하였다. 그리고 (...)
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  14.  75
    Estrangement, Nature and 'the Flesh'.Simon Hailwood - 2014 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 17 (1):71-85.
    In this paper I address the question of what it is to be alienated from nature. The focus is alienation in the sense of estrangement, a ‘being cut off from’ a wider world. That we are so estranged is a claim associated with ecological critique of contemporary society. But what is it to be estranged from nature given that everything we are, do and produce, always remains within a wider nature? I explore the possibility that this might be understood with (...)
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  15.  69
    Fleshing Out Vulnerability.Nicolas Tavaglione, Angela K. Martin, Nathalie Mezger, Sophie Durieux-Paillard, Anne François, Yves Jackson & Samia A. Hurst - 2013 - Bioethics 29 (2):98-107.
    In the literature on medical ethics, it is generally admitted that vulnerable persons or groups deserve special attention, care or protection. One can define vulnerable persons as those having a greater likelihood of being wronged – that is, of being denied adequate satisfaction of certain legitimate claims. The conjunction of these two points entails what we call the Special Protection Thesis. It asserts that persons with a greater likelihood of being denied adequate satisfaction of their legitimate claims deserve special attention, (...)
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  16.  99
    Topologies of the Flesh: A Multidimensional Exploration of the Lifeworld.Steven M. Rosen - 2006 - Ohio University Press, Series in Continental Thought.
    The concept of "the flesh" (la chair) derives from the writings of Maurice Merleau-Ponty. This was the word he used to name the concrete realm of sentient bodies and life processes that has been eclipsed by the abstractions of science, technology, and modern culture. Topology, to conventional understanding, is the branch of mathematics that concerns itself with the properties of geometric figures that stay the same when the figures are stretched or deformed. Topologies of the Flesh blends continental (...)
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  17.  17
    The Flesh of Words: The Politics of Writing.Charlotte Mandell (ed.) - 2004 - Stanford University Press.
    This new collection of challenging literary studies plays with a foundational definition of Western culture: the word become flesh. But the _word become flesh_ is not, or no longer, a theological already-given. It is a millennial goal or telos toward which each text strives. Both witty and immensely erudite, Jacques Rancière leads the critical reader through a maze of arrivals toward the moment, perhaps always suspended, when the word finds its flesh. That is what he, a valiant and (...)
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  18.  23
    Flesh Possessed.Jennifer McWeeny - 2016 - Chiasmi International 18:215-231.
    What does it mean to say that “I am always on the same side of my body” if the body is understood as flesh? This question of sidedness, and specifically of perspectival unilaterality, in Merleau-Ponty’s ontology leads to a careful sorting of the various relational metaphors that he deploys across his oeuvre, including reversibility, intertwining, possession, encroachment, incorporation, promiscuity, and many others. Curiously, each of these notions implicates a different image of sidedness, from sides that are impermeable in themselves (...)
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  19.  55
    The Flesh of Images, Images of Flesh: Merleau-Ponty Forwarded.Galen A. Johnson - 2017 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 48 (4):360-367.
    The Flesh of Images: Merleau-Ponty Between Painting and Cinema, by Mauro Carbone, is his third book in a body of work interpreting Merleau-Ponty’s ontology of Flesh: The Thinking of the Sensible: M...
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  20.  21
    Between Flesh and Text.Richard Kearney - 2016 - Eco-Ethica 5:219-231.
    This essay explores how Paul Ricoeur analyses the body as both flesh and text. Beginning with a phenomenology of embodiment and life in his early philosophy of the will, after his hermeneutic turn in the 1960s he concentrated more on the mediation of flesh through textual interpretation and language. This led Ricoeur beyond Husserl and Levinas and closer to the work of Merleau-Ponty. His later writing opens horizons for rethinking the ‘flesh of the world’ in new ontological (...)
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  21.  19
    Distorted flesh – Towards a non-speculative concept of social pathology.Domonkos Sik - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    The article aims at elaborating a non-speculative concept of social pathology. In the first section, various conceptualizations (e.g. Habermas, Honneth) are critically revaluated. It is argued that (a) applying the originally medical concept of ‘pathology’ on social entities has untenable connotations (due to the lacking social equivalent of death); (b) grounding social pathology on the level of ‘social suffering’ is not in accordance with the actors’ horizon shaped by biomedical- and psy-discourses. To avoid these dead-ends, social pathologies are reinterpreted as (...)
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  22.  10
    Cinema's baroque flesh: film, phenomenology and the art of entanglement.Saige Walton - 2016 - Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
    Introduction. Flesh and its reversibility ; Defining the baroque ; 'Good looking' ; A cinema of baroque flesh -- 1. Flesh, cinema and the baroque : the aesthetics of reversibility. Baroque vision and painting the flesh ; Baroque flesh ; Analogous embodiments : the film's body ; Baroque vision and cinema ; Summation : face to face-feeling baroque deixis -- 2. Knots of sensation : co-extensive space and a cinema of the passions. Synaesthesia, phenomenology, and (...)
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  23.  9
    Flesh, Death, and Tofu.T. R. Kover - 2010 - In Fritz Allhoff & Nathan Kowalsky (eds.), Hunting Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 171–183.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Hunting as the Pursuit of Wild “Life” Carnal Bonds and the Way of All Flesh Saintly Chewing and the Corruption of the Flesh The Vital Paradox: The Acceptance of Death as Affirmation of Life Notes.
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  24.  20
    In Flesh and Bones.Emmanuel Falque & Christopher C. Rios - 2021 - Journal for Continental Philosophy of Religion 3 (1):3-26.
    Everyone can agree that the mystery of the Incarnation is difficult to believe and to understand, and yet it is precisely what Christians do not cease to profess. The most innocent questions concerning the “carnal consistency” of the Resurrected One today are omitted for want of a suitable and contemporary anthropology for us to ask them. But that a body made of “flesh and bones” can indeed now claim to appear and reappear in what we ordinarily call a horizon (...)
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  25. The flesh of the forest: Wild being in Merleau-Ponty and Werner Herzog.Dylan Trigg - 2012 - Emotion, Space and Society 5 (3):141–147.
    The history of the sublime within aesthetics has tended to focus on the natural world. Within this history, the sublime has been a category reserved for awe-inspiring and overwhelming experiences, in which the finite subject is dwarfed by a more expansive force. Despite subjectivity being foremost in this topic, what has been overlooked, is the role the body plays in being the centre of aesthetic experience. In this paper, I will turn the tide on this omission and thematize the role (...)
     
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  26.  33
    Fleshing Out the Political: Merleau-Ponty, Lefort and the Problem of Alterity.Paul Mazzocchi - 2013 - Critical Horizons 14 (1):22-43.
    This paper attempts to draw out the political import of Merleau-Ponty’s ontology of the flesh, by engaging the critique levelled against it by his student and literary executor Claude Lefort. In suggesting a tension in Merleau-Ponty’s work that obscures alterity, Lefort seems to miss the rich political import of Merleau-Ponty’s ontology of the flesh. Founded in his development of the concepts of écart and reversibility, Merleau-Ponty’s ontological position breaks with many of the standard tenets of political thinking, and (...)
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  27.  28
    Flesh as communication:-Body art and art theory.Falk Heinrich - 2012 - Contemporary Aesthetics 10.
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  28. Fashioning flesh : Inclusion, exclusivity, and the potential of genomics.Fiona O'Neill - 2006 - In Paul Atkinson (ed.), New Genetics, New Indentities. Routledge.
     
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  29.  15
    Cartesian Philosophy and the Flesh: Reflections on Incarnation in Analytical Psychology.Frances Gray - 2012 - Routledge.
    How do you know anything is true? What relation is there between my psyche and your psyche, does one exist? Can we doubt everything or are some things indubitable? What does Jung have to say about body and psyche, body and mind? Cartesian Philosophy and the Flesh is an analysis and critique of interpretations of Cartesian philosophy in analytical psychology. It focuses on readings of Descartes that have important implications for understanding Jung, and analytical and existential psychology generally. Frances (...)
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  30.  17
    The Flesh is Not Sad: Returns of the Body in the Modern Utopian Tradition.S. D. Chrostowska - 2018 - Diacritics 46 (3):4-30.
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  31.  19
    Flesh of Steel: Literature and the Machine in American Culture. Thomas Reed West.W. Jones - 1967 - Isis 58 (4):565-566.
  32. Flesh as otherness.Gary Brent Madison - 1990 - In Galen A. Johnson & Michael Bradley Smith (eds.), Ontology and alterity in Merleau-Ponty. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
     
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  33.  32
    We Flesh: Musser, Spillers, and Beyond the Phenomenological Body.Andrea Warmack - 2022 - Puncta 5 (4):106-124.
    Not all homo sapiens are human subjects. This paper explores the lived experience of homo sapiens but not human that I call “lived flesh.” A lived experience/distinction that shouldn’t be possible on Merleau-Ponty’s account of human subjectivity in Phenomenology of Perception and “The Intertwining – The Chiasm.” The use of flesh is deliberate and emerges from my engagement with Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception and “The Intertwining – The Chiasm” through Toni Morrison’s Beloved, Hortense Spillers’ “Interstices: A Small Drama (...)
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  34.  18
    Flesh Becomes Word: A Lexicography of the Scapegoat or, the History of an Idea.David Dawson - 2013 - Michigan State University Press.
    A groundbreaking search for the origins of this expression, Flesh Becomes Word traces the scapegoat to its origins in Mesopotamian ritual across centuries of typological interpretation and religious reflection, to its first informal uses in ...
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  35.  8
    The Ego and the Flesh: An Introduction to Egoanalysis.Robert Vallier (ed.) - 2010 - Stanford University Press.
    Is our ego but an illusion, a mere appearance produced by a reality that is foreign to us? Is it the main source of violence and injustice? Jacob Rogozinski calls into question these prejudices that dominate current philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the human sciences. Arguing that we must distinguish the true ego from the alienated and narcissistic construct, he calls for an end to egicide, or the destruction of the ego. _Ego and the Flesh_ offers a critique of the two masters (...)
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  36.  38
    Flesh and Matter: Merleau-Ponty’s Late Ontology as a Materialist Philosophy.Richard Theisen Simanke - 2016 - Humana Mente (31):117-133.
    The ontology developed by Merleau-Ponty in the final stage of his work is centered on the concept of flesh, giving this notion its most general scope by complementing the idea of “flesh of the body” with that of a “flesh of the world.” This paper seeks to evaluate the possibility of reading this philosophy of the flesh as a materialist ontology. For this purpose, the possibility is considered of interpreting the concept of flesh as a (...)
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  37.  16
    Flesh and body: on the phenomenology of Husserl.Didier Franck - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    A phenomenological approach to questions of the body, ego, temporality and intersubjective relations with the 'other' by a leading French thinker and Husserl scholar.
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  38.  53
    Force of Flesh: From the Phenomenology of the Living Body to the Ethics of Meat Consumption in Derrida’s Deconstruction of Law and Justice.Yoav Kenny - 2016 - Research in Phenomenology 46 (3):426-439.
    _ Source: _Volume 46, Issue 3, pp 426 - 439 The concept of _flesh_ had a very short and fragmented career in the writings of Jacques Derrida, appearing as such in central arguments only in his reading of Antonin Artaud from 1965 and in an interview with Jean-Luc Nancy from 1988. By exposing and exploring several implicit discussions of flesh in Derrida’s juridico-political texts from the 1990s, this paper outlines the conceptualization of flesh implicit in Derrida’s work and, (...)
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  39.  52
    Flesh of My Flesh: The Ethics of Cloning Humans a Reader.Gregory E. Pence, George Annas, Stephen Jay Gould, George Johnson, Axel Kahn, Leon Kass, Philip Kitcher, R. C. Lewontin, Gilbert Meilaender, Timothy F. Murphy, National Bioethics Advisory Commission, Chief Justice John Roberts & James D. Watson - 1998 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Flesh of My Flesh is a collection of articles by today's most respected scientists, philosophers, bioethicists, theologians, and law professors about whether we should allow human cloning. It includes historical pieces to provide background for the current debate. Religious, philosophical, and legal points of view are all represented.
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  40.  48
    “The Flesh of The Perceptible”: The New Materialism of Leviathan.Max Bowens - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (3):428-447.
    This article seeks to entangle two current philosophic praxes: New Materialism, and Sensory Ethnography. Jane Bennett has become one of New Materialism's most prominent proponents since the release of her now-seminal text, Vibrant Matter in 2010. Due to the varied ground upon which New Materialism stands, Bennett's work will be looked at idiosyncratically, then pushed into the realm of the cinematic via an analysis of the documentary, Leviathan. Directed by Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel, this film was among the first (...)
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  41.  13
    Flesh, Chiasm…Providence?Ian Leask - 2006 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 37 (1):5-20.
  42.  49
    Flesh Without Blood: The Public Health Benefits of Lab‐Grown Meat.Jonny Anomaly, Heather Browning, Diana Fleischman & Walter Veit - 2024 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 21 (1):167-175.
    Synthetic meat made from animal cells will transform how we eat. It will reduce suffering by eliminating the need to raise and slaughter animals. But it will also have big public health benefits if it becomes widely consumed. In this paper, we discuss how “clean meat” can reduce the risks associated with intensive animal farming, including antibiotic resistance, environmental pollution, and zoonotic viral diseases like influenza and coronavirus. Since the most common objection to clean meat is that some people find (...)
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  43.  46
    Eat my flesh and drink my blood.Nicholas Nathan - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (5):862-871.
    Disgust or horror is our natural attitude to eating human flesh and drinking human blood. How can this attitude not transfer itself to the Christian Eucharist, in which the bread is said to be Christ's body and the wine his blood? And if the aversion must transfer itself, then how can God have been, as Christians have to think, the founder of the rite? I discuss these questions with reference to several different theories of the Eucharist, one Calvinist, the (...)
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  44. Flesh and otherness.Claude Lefort - 1990 - In Galen A. Johnson & Michael Bradley Smith (eds.), Ontology and alterity in Merleau-Ponty. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press. pp. 3--13.
     
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  45.  40
    Stretched Flesh-Space.Zachary Braiterman - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (1):92-103.
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  46.  47
    Electric flesh - the electromagnetic medium.Alan Dunning & Paul Woodrow - 2005 - Technoetic Arts 3 (3):155-168.
    This paper discusses the work of the Einstein's Brain Project and its representations of a dynamic world through the production of technologically sustained realities and recursive cognitive systems examining bio-electrical fields. These augmented realities combine the languages of art, science and technology, and the new structures of hypermorphism - the ever morphing, ever changing object, and the parallaxic remix - the ever moving contextual eye -to reveal the invisible elements of biological existence and the dynamics of living systems.
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  47.  29
    The Flesh of Fasts and Feasts: A Study of the Monastic Diet in Theory and Practice (c. 1025–1525).Carl Tobias Frayne - 2020 - Journal of Animal Ethics 10 (2):115-134.
    This article examines the monastic diet during the high and late medieval periods. The evolution of this central aspect of daily life gives us greater insight into contemplative monks’ increasing worldliness. Monks not only fell short of their forefathers’ ideals, but also of their own codes of behavior. Their diet gradually became more akin to that of noblemen than to that of their ancient brothers and sisters. Frugality and temperance all too often gave way to indulgence and debauchery. Days on (...)
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  48.  22
    Flesh and Blood and Flesh and Blood.Elvira K. Katić - 2013 - Semiotics:257-271.
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  49. Flesh machines : self-making and the postmodern body.Elizabeth Stephens - 2008 - In Nicole Anderson & Katrina Schlunke (eds.), Cultural Theory in Everyday Practice. Oxford University Press.
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  50.  7
    Culture/flesh: Explorations of Postcivilized Modernity.Michael A. Weinstein - 1995 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Michael Weinstein redefines the debates over modernism/postmodernism that dominate contemporary cultural studies, offering a daring and original alternative. He argues that the current era is neither a continuation of modernity nor a postmodern rupture, but a period of 'post-civilized modernity.'.
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