Results for ' forme, activité, image idéale, corps inorganique, monnaie'

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  1.  15
    L’idéel.Evald Ilyenkov - 2022 - Astérion 27 (27).
    Tendencies of dematerialisation observable in capitalism from the 1960s, from political economy (the rise of immaterial labour) to artistic practices (the emergence of conceptual art) have prompted attempts at rethinking materialism. These attempts centre around the search for a materialism capable of accounting for the symbiotic relations between material objects and their idealisations. Recent trends in the so-called material turn, such as Karen Barad’s Agential Realism, could be read as responding to this challenge. Yet the peculiar absence of Marx from (...)
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  2.  31
    Féminité et esthétique sportive dans l’Italie fasciste.Gigliola Gori - 2006 - Clio 23:93-118.
    En Italie, bien que le secteur masculin se soit continuellement développé (en atteignant son point d’orgue avec le fascisme), l’éducation physique féminine a rencontré des difficultés à être mise en œuvre dans un pays profondément pénétré de traditionalisme, de religiosité et de misogynie. Jusqu’à l’évènement de la révolution fasciste, a plupart des Italiens croyaient à l’infériorité physique et mentale des femmes et les pionnières du sport féminin étaient ridiculisées ou perçues avec suspicion. Le régime mussolinien a promu l’émancipation sociale des (...)
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  3.  22
    Nudité, corps et « figure ». L'exemple chorégraphique.Roland Huesca - 2011 - Nouvelle Revue d'Esthétique 8 (2):136-143.
    Résumé Années 1990. Nus sur scène, une poignée de danseurs explore en de surprenantes contorsions les possibilités du corps. Virtuoses de l’étrange, ils présentent un type de récit inattendu où la nudité, loin d’incarner un quelconque idéal, semble le révoquer pour proposer un ordre sensible sans précédent. L’idée? Échapper au figuratif, à la narration, aux formes directement lisibles, car prévisibles, pour mieux promouvoir les formes iconoclastes maintenues en puissance dans le visible. Au delà des cadres de l’usuel et des (...)
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  4.  29
    Relation Dynamique entre Image et Forme dans la Pensée de Platon.Makoto Sekimura - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 12:71-77.
    On sait que Platon fait grand cas des êtres intelligibles en instaurant la théorie des Idées. Mais il n’est pas approprié de le considérer comme penseur qui néglige le rôle de l’apparence sensible. Ce philosophe demeure très sensible à la modalité par laquelle les phénomènes apparaissent dans le champ de notreperception. En distinguant deux types d’apparence : image et simulacre, il donne à l’image le rôle d’intermédiaire actif entre le sensible et l’intelligible. L’examen des modalités des actions humaines (...)
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  5. Enige aspecten Van het tasten.F. J. J. Buytendijk - 1961 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 23 (3):403-427.
    1. L'aspect le plus important du toucher est sa relation au temps et à l'étendue, relation constituée par le mouvement même du toucher. En référence aux conceptions de E. Straus, on expose la distinction entre le toucher et l'être-touché à la lumière d'expériences faites par nous avec des animaux. 2. Le toucher est un être-dans-les-limites-propres et en même temps un franchissement de ces limites, être par lequel l'objet touché est éprouvé à la fois comme „Gegenstand” et comme „Mitseiend”. „Pour le (...)
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  6. ‘Esprit de Corps’ and the French Revolutionary Crisis: a Prehistory of the Concept of Solidarity.Luis de Miranda - 2015 - Historisch-Kulturwissenschaftliche Fakultät Portal.
    The word solidarity is a borrowing from the French solidarité, which until the nineteenth century had the restricted legal meaning of a contractual obligation. I argue that in the pre-revolutionary decades, a newly born French lexeme was much closer to what solidarity would mean for modern societies, at least if we accept the agonistic context of most phenomena of solidarity: ‘esprit de corps’, taken from the military language and changed into a combat concept by the Philosophes. A ‘corps (...)
     
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  7.  19
    Naissance d’un stéréotype. Le berger dans quelques textes de la fin du Moyen Age. Thomas - 2021 - Studium 26 (26):13-37.
    : The shepherd embodies a strange and disturbing society. Isolated, marginal, it forms a world apart and evolves in a wild space where mountains, valleys, meadows or forests make up the framework of its activity. In this non-domesticated nature the human presence is suspect. This confusing being is very often represented with an animalized, almost monstrous or deformed body which becomes a metaphor for social order. This grotesque body translates the prejudices of urbanites and elites. It fuels sexual fantasies and (...)
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  8.  50
    Classification objects, ideal observers & generative models.Cheryl Olman & Daniel Kersten - 2004 - Cognitive Science 28 (2):227-239.
    A successful vision system must solve the problem of deriving geometrical information about three-dimensional objects from two-dimensional photometric input. The human visual system solves this problem with remarkable efficiency, and one challenge in vision research is to understand howneural representations of objects are formed and what visual information is used to form these representations. Ideal observer analysis has demonstrated the advantages of studying vision from the perspective of explicit generative models and a specified visual task, which divides the causes of (...)
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  9.  23
    Corps, matière et contact.Valérie Cordonier - 2008 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 86 (3):353-378.
    Résumé — Cet article étudie la manière dont Alexandre analyse le monde sensible, en ses structures constitutives et quant aux principes tenus pour être à l’origine ses opérations fondamentales que sont l’altération et le mélange. En premier lieu, il s’agit de voir quels sont les critères pour qu’un étant soit un « corps ». Ensuite, je montre les facteurs mobilisés par Alexandre pour expliquer les caractéristiques de ces corps, leur activité et leur passivité réciproques. Prenant pour point de (...)
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  10.  51
    Activite Perceptive Et Activite Hallucinatoire.Henri Ey - 1976 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 7 (1):70-77.
    Erwin Straus nourished his spirit on "Act psychology", "Gestalt psychology" and "Husserlian phenomenology" in Berlin and Göttingen, and has renewed his engagement with these problems in Lexington without renouncing his commitment to a tradition to which he has remained always faithful. It is in the realm of the psychology of perception that Erwin Straus - as did the analyses of Bergson, Gestalt psychology, and the phenomenology of Husserl - made his point of departure for his critique of sensationistic empiricism and (...)
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  11.  55
    Le corps sportif : un capital rentable pour tous?Catherine Louveau - 2007 - Actuel Marx 41 (1):55-70.
    Sport makes it possible to (re)invest certain forms of capital which have been forged in and through professional work. Certain men thus manage to transfer their labour potential and their « pain threshold» to boxing or to rugby, while others invest their cultural capital in sports which involve forms of scientific knowledge. Bodies are not however gender-neutral. Men and women are thus set apart in the work of sport, both in its practice and in its normative representation. « Femininity » (...)
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  12.  74
    Desire “to Have” and Desire “to Be”: the Influence of Representations of the Idealized Masculine Body on the Subject and the Object in Male Same-Sex Attraction.Robert Pralat - 2010 - Dialogue and Universalism 20 (5-6):101-117.
    In this essay, I attempt to consider a difficult issue: the triangular relationship between the subject, the object and the visual representations of masculinity in the context of male homosexual desire. I outline contemporary circumstances of society’s interaction with popular culture in which gay men form two images of an idealized masculine body: a concept of their own body and a concept of the body they feel sexually attracted to. My concern is to theorize these two kinds of desire and (...)
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  13.  34
    Computably Enumerable Reals and Uniformly Presentable Ideals.S. A. Terwijn & R. Downey - 2002 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 48 (S1):29-40.
    We study the relationship between a computably enumerable real and its presentations. A set A presents a computably enumerable real α if A is a computably enumerable prefix-free set of strings such that equation image. Note that equation image is precisely the measure of the set of reals that have a string in A as an initial segment. So we will simply abbreviate equation image by μ. It is known that whenever A so presents α then A (...)
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  14.  47
    Altered Images: Understanding the Influence of Unrealistic Images and Beauty Aspirations.Fiona MacCallum & Heather Widdows - 2018 - Health Care Analysis 26 (3):235-245.
    In this paper we consider the impact of digitally altered images on individuals’ body satisfaction and beauty aspirations. Drawing on current psychological literature we consider interventions designed to increase knowledge about the ubiquity and unreality of digital images and, in the form of labelling, provide information to the consumer. Such interventions are intended to address the negative consequences of unrealistic beauty ideals. However, contrary to expectations, such initiatives may not be effective, especially in the long-term, and may even be counter-productive. (...)
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  15.  56
    Image, measure, figure: a critical discourse analysis of nursing practices that develop children.Rochelle Einboden, Trudy Rudge & Colleen Varcoe - 2013 - Nursing Philosophy 14 (3):212-222.
    Motivated by discourses that link early child development and health, nurses engage in seemingly benign surveillance of children. These practices are based on knowledge claims and technologies of developmental science, which remain anchored in assumptions of the child body as an incomplete form with a universal developmental trajectory and inherent potentiality. This paper engages in a critical discursive analysis, drawing on Donna Haraway's conceptualizations of technoscience and figuration. Using a contemporary developmental screening tool from nursing practice, this analysis traces the (...)
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  16.  11
    The musical image: a theory of content.Laurence D. Berman - 1993 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    A musical phrase, or, for that matter, a musical unit of any size or shape, becomes an image whenever we imagine it to be invested with a content whose origins lie outside music. Such a content, according to the theory developed here, constitutes the image's conventional significance; it accounts for whatever strikes us about the image as having a common and familiar ring. That being so, the origins in question must be coincident with the fundamental ideas--the archetypes--that (...)
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  17.  8
    Augustin et le corps de la voix.Anne-Isabelle Bouton-Touboulic - 2010 - Cahiers Philosophiques 122 (2):43-56.
    Cet article vise à montrer comment Augustin conçoit la voix selon son aspect corporel. Phénomène acoustique d’origine physiologique, elle est une réalité muable et transitoire, qui relève du sensible ; en vertu d’une représentation de type dualiste, Augustin l’oppose à diverses réalités spirituelles et intelligibles, telle la forme, qui donne sens à la voix confuse. Outre l’influence des philosophies antiques du langage, cette conception de la voix reflète l’évolution de la valeur du « verbe », de plus en plus intériorisé (...)
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  18.  56
    Exegetical Idealization: Hermann Cohen’s Religion of Reason Out of the Sources of Maimonides.James A. Diamond - 2010 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 18 (1):49-73.
    While Maimonides reread his sources to reconcile biblical and rabbinic texts with the demands of reason, Hermann Cohen, in his construction of a “religion of reason,” rereads Maimonides' rereadings of those very same texts. Maimonides' Judaism often bridges the sources toward Cohen's religion of reason by providing a philological anchor that nudges a term or verse now viewed through a more modern historical and evolutionary lens toward its ultimate reason-infused meaning. This paper will explore a hitherto neglected feature of their (...)
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  19.  57
    Ideja “unutrašnje forme” i njezina transformacija.Tanehisa Otabe - 2009 - Prolegomena 8 (1):5-21.
    The idea of “inner form” originates from Plotin, the founder of the so-called Neo-Platonism, and had a decisive influence on aesthetic theory from Renaissance to the 18th century. Lessing‘s assumption of “Raphael without hands” in Emilia Galotti embodies the ideal of Neoplatonist artist, who creates with his purely mental conception, untainted by the material world. Admittedly, the image of a painter who doesn‘t paint reflects the specific problematic nature of Neoplatonist conception of art. The 19th and 20th centuries saw (...)
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  20. Norbert Elias et « l’idéal du nous ».Claire Pagès - 2024 - Astérion 31 (31).
    This article traces how the sociologist Norbert Elias understands what leads an individual to say ‘we', to form a mental unit with a group, but also to refuse to form a unit or to feel part of it, or even to deny being an integral part of a ‘we’ to which close interdependent relationships nonetheless like him. His social and group theory of identity, which rejects the division between the individual and society, led Elias to develop the idea that two (...)
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  21. Parsing pictures: on analyzing the content of images in science.Letitia Meynell - 2013 - The Knowledge Engineering Review 28 (3): 327-345.
    In this paper I tackle the question of what basic form an analytical method for articulating and ultimately assessing visual representations should take. I start from the assumption that scientific images, being less prone to interpretive complication than artworks, are ideal objects from which to engage this question. I then assess a recent application of Nelson Goodman's aesthetics to the project of parsing scientific images, Laura Perini's ‘The truth in pictures’. I argue that, although her project is an important one, (...)
     
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  22.  29
    Transforming Images: How Photography Complicates the Picture.Aphrodite Désirée Navab - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (2):114-121.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.2 (2003) 114-121 [Access article in PDF] TRANSFORMING IMAGES: HOW PHOTOGRAPHY COMPLICATES THE PICTURE, by Barbara E. Savedoff. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2000, 233 pp., $35.00 hardcover. The very title of Barbara Savedoff's book invites us on a journey into photography's multiple roles. Photographic images transform their subjects at the same time that they themselves are the results of transformations. They also (...)
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  23.  43
    Images of History: Kant, Benjamin, Freedom, and the Human Subject.Richard Eldridge - 2016 - New York, US: Oxford University Press USA.
    Developing work in the theories of action and explanation, Eldridge argues that moral and political philosophers require accounts of what is historically possible, while historians require rough philosophical understandings of ideals that merit reasonable endorsement. Both Immanuel Kant and Walter Benjamin recognize this fact. Each sees a special place for religious consciousness and critical practice in the articulation and revision of ideals that are to have cultural effect, but they differ sharply in the forms of religious-philosophical understanding, cultural criticism, and (...)
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  24.  24
    La sémiotique des formes de vie, un nouveau tournant?Colas-Blaise Marion - 2018 - Semiotica 2018 (221):301-313.
    Résumé Ce compte rendu de Formes de vie de Jacques Fontanille cherche à montrer que l’ouvrage s’inscrit dans une certaine continuité, notamment par rapport à Pratiques sémiotiques, mais qu’il constitue aussi un nouveau tournant, qui fait évoluer la sémiotique et la positionne dans le champ des sciences humaines et sociales. D’abord, nous discutons le fait que, selon Jacques Fontanille, les formes de vie font « vaciller » la frontière entre la nature et la culture. Nous soulignons le fait que Jacques (...)
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  25.  92
    The image of a second sun: Plato on poetry, rhetoric, and the technē of mimēsis (review).Catalin Partenie - 2011 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (3):371-372.
    There are two main discussions of poetry in Plato's Republic: the first one is in Books II and III, the other in Book X. Their conclusions are not entirely coherent. In Books II and III, only some poetry is considered imitative, and certain forms of it are allowed in the ideal city. In Book X all poetry is considered imitative, and all of it is banned from the city. Jeff Mitscherling's book deals with Plato's criticism of poetry and art. It (...)
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  26.  46
    Conscience et image.Sylvain Roux - 2011 - Chôra 9:81-102.
    Cet article étudie le rapport particulier établi par Plotin entre deux notions, l’antilêpsis et la phantasia, pour penser la prise de conscience par l’âme de certains «objets» et de certaines activités. Car celle-ci pose un problème que Plotin a formulé clairement, à la fin du traité 10 (V, 1), sans lui trouver encore de solution absolument satisfaisante. Si l’antilêpsis a besoin de la phantasia pour s’exercer, peut-il en être de même pour les activités supérieures de l’âme dont elle voudrait prendre (...)
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  27. The Eyes Don’t Have It: Fracturing the Scientific and Manifest Images.P. Kyle Stanford - 2012 - Humana Mente 5 (21):19-44.
    Wilfrid Sellars famously argued that we find ourselves simultaneously presented with the scientific and manifest images and that the primary aim of philosophy is to reconcile the competing conceptions of ourselves and our place in the world they offer. I first argue that Sellars’ own attempts at such a reconciliation must be judged a failure. I then go on to point out that Sellars has invited us to join him in idealizing and constructing the manifest and scientific images by conflating (...)
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  28. Continuum-Many Boolean Algebras of the Form [image] Borel.Michael Oliver - 2004 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 69 (3):799 - 816.
    We examine the question of how many Boolean algebras, distinct up to isomorphism, that are quotients of the powerset of the naturals by Borel ideals, can be proved to exist in ZFC alone. The maximum possible value is easily seen to be the cardinality of the continuum $2^{\aleph_{0}}$ ; earlier work by Ilijas Farah had shown that this was the value in models of Martin's Maximum or some similar forcing axiom, but it was open whether there could be fewer in (...)
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  29.  15
    Ideals.E. Il'enkov, V. Murian & S. Ikonnikova - 1965 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 4 (1):35-51.
    - a model, a norm, an ideal image, determining the mode and nature of behavior of an individual or a class in society. Creativity in accordance with an ideal, the shaping of natural materials in accordance with an ideal, constitute a specifically human form of life-activity distinguishing it from the activity of animals. As a universal aspect of goal-directed activity, the ideal appears in all spheres of the life of society: social, political, moral, esthetic, etc. The category of the (...)
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  30.  40
    New Images of Plato. [REVIEW]L. J. Elders - 2005 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (4):909-910.
    Reale points out that the good and the demiurgic intelligence are radically distinct, a conclusion denied by J. Seifert in the last paper of the book. Fourteen characteristics of the idea of the good are listed by T. A. Szlezák. It is obvious, he argues, that the theory of principles of Plato’s unwritten doctrines is not identical with what Republic 6 and 7 say about the good, but there is no real opposition. In the next paper, however, H. W. Ausland, (...)
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  31.  46
    Can ‘Ready-to-Hand’ Normativity be Reconciled with the Scientific Image?Dionysis Christias - 2016 - Philosophia 44 (2):447-467.
    In this paper, first, I will focus on the divergent interpretations of two leading Sellars’ scholars, Willem deVries and James O’Shea, as regards Sellars’ view on the being of the normative. It will be suggested that this conflict between deVries’ and O’Shea’s viewpoints can be resolved by the provision of an account of what I shall call ‘ready-tohand’ normativity, which incorporates the insights of both deVries’ and O’Shea’s interpretive perspectives, while at the same time going beyond them. It shall be (...)
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  32.  9
    Visual images of beauty of the word in the Persian poetry of XVI - the beginning of XVIII century: the Indian style and painting by word.Marina L. Reisner - 2020 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 24 (1):12-22.
    The article is devoted to the problem of changing stylistic paradigm in the Persian poetry of XVI-XVII centuries and reflection of this process in self-consciousness of outstanding authors of the period. Parallel with preserving stable norms of traditional poetics literary practice demonstrates flexibility and forms new range of popular poetic strategies. New aesthetic criteria if ideal poetic language, expressed with epithet ‘colourful’, appears alongside with criteria of previous period, expressed with epithet ‘sweet’ and step by step gets leadership. Lyric poetry (...)
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  33. Sincerity, Idealization and Writing with the Body: Karoline von Günderrode and Her Reception.Anna Ezekiel - 2016 - In Simon Bunke & Katerina Mihaylova (eds.), Aufrichtigkeitseffekte. Signale, soziale Interaktionen und Medien im Zeitalter der Aufklärung. Rombach. pp. 275–290.
    In 1804, when asked by the aspiring writer Clemens Brentano why she had chosen to publish her work, Karoline von Günderrode wrote that she longed “mein Leben in einer bleibenden Form auszusprechen, in einer Gestalt, die würdig sei, zu den Vortreflichsten hinzutreten, sie zu grüssen und Gemeinschaft mit ihnen zu haben.” In light of this kind of statement, it is perhaps not surprising if, despite some exceptions, much of the still relatively scant literature on Günderrode reads her works largely in (...)
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  34.  45
    Figures de la victime de la traite des êtres humains : de la victime idéale à la victime coupable.Milena Jakšić - 2008 - Cahiers Internationaux de Sociologie 124 (1):127.
    Lors des mobilisations associatives et des débats parlementaires en France, la victime de la traite apparaît sous une forme idéale : jeune femme, étrangère, naïve, innocente et vulnérable, elle nécessite protection au nom de la défense des droits de l’homme. Cette victime idéale devient suspecte dès que son statut légal ou son activité sont appréhendés. L’idéalité de la victime est dissoute dans les priorités nationales qui conduisent à se protéger des « indésirables ». La tension entre les priorités du national (...)
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  35. Sources of Shame, Images of Home.Ryan Preston-Roedder - 2023 - In Melissa Schwartzberg & Eric Beerbohm (eds.), Reconciliation and Repair: NOMOS LXV. NYU Press.
    In “Reconciliation as Non-Alienation: The Politics of Being at Home in the World,” Catherine Lu develops a novel account of reconciliation. Put briefly, she claims that reconciliation aims to address agents’ alienation from the unjust social institutions and practices that structure their lives; it aims, in other words, to enable these agents to be at home in their social worlds. In these comments, I present two kinds of challenges that Lu’s account faces. Both challenges have their source in forms of (...)
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  36.  49
    Brain Scales and the Dynamics of Images according to Gilbert Simondon.Yves Citton - 2015 - Iris 36:139-157.
    Cet article interroge les échelles multiples à travers lesquelles nos imaginaires scientifiques actuels cadrent et cartographient les activités de notre cerveau. Le réduit-on à l’encéphale? au système nerveux qui le nourrit de stimuli, depuis les doigts jusqu’aux talons? aux réseaux de communication qui alimentent nos sensations d’images et de sons venant des quatre coins de la planète? La façon dont Gilbert Simondon modélise la dynamique transindividuelle des images dans son cours sur l’imagination et l’invention offre des ressources encore insuffisamment exploitées (...)
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  37.  71
    Imagination and incarnation.Nicolas de Warren - 2009 - Methodos 9:1-16.
    Il n’est pas inhabituel de considérer l’imagination comme une conscience d’objets non réels, ayant la forme d’images internes ou de représentations privées de toute incarnation spatiale. Dans cet article j’interroge la phénoménologie de l’imagination de Husserl à partir de deux questions : l’imagination est-elle un type de conscience d’image? L’imagination, est-elle privée de toute incarnation spatiale? Après avoir reconstruit la distinction nette opérée par Husserl entre imagination et conscience d’image (l’imaginaire n’est pas une image mentale interne), j’explore (...)
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  38.  17
    The Media Creates Us in Its Image.Richard Stivers - 2012 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 32 (3):203-212.
    Propaganda in all its forms is the culture of a mass society. The media transmits propaganda to form public opinion and recreate the human being. Reversing the Western ideal of a rational and free individual, the media creates a childish conformist ensconced in the peer group, who acts unconsciously.
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  39.  76
    Aspects of the Western Utopian Tradition.Krishan Kumar - 2003 - History of the Human Sciences 16 (1):63-77.
    The western utopia has both classical and Judaeo-Christian roots. From the Greeks came the form of the ideal city, based on reason, from Jews and Christians the idea of deliverance through a messiah and the culmination of history in the millennium. The Greek conception placed utopia in an ideal space, the Christian conception in an ideal time. The modern utopia, dating from Thomas More's Utopia (1516), drew upon both these traditions but added something distinctive of its own. Following More, the (...)
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  40.  56
    Standards of Truth: The Arrested Image and the Moving Eye.E. H. Gombrich - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 7 (2):237-273.
    I have stressed here and elsewhere that perspective cannot and need not claim to represent the world "as we see it." The perceptual constancies which make us underrate the degree of objective diminutions with distance, it turns out, constitute only one of the factors refuting this claim. The selectivity of vision can now be seen to be another. There are many ways of "seeing the world," but obviously the claim would have to relate to the "snapshot vision" of the stationary (...)
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  41.  14
    The Healthy Body Paradox: Organizational and Interactional Influences on Preadolescent Girls’ Body Image in Los Angeles.Bianca D. M. Wilson, Kerrie Kauer & Lauren Rauscher - 2013 - Gender and Society 27 (2):208-230.
    In this article, we present paradoxical findings from a formative evaluation research project that explores how preadolescent girls understand and feel about their bodies after participating in “Girls on the Run of Los Angeles County”, a girl-serving positive youth development program. Findings from pre/post test data show that girls’ body image improved after participation in GOTR LA, yet many girls also reported the dominant thin ideal and the importance of not being fat as key characteristics of strong and healthy (...)
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  42.  22
    Moral geometry, natural alignments and utopian urban form.Jean-Paul Baldacchino - 2018 - Thesis Eleven 148 (1):52-76.
    The city has featured as a central image in utopian thought. In planning the foundation of the new and ideal city there is a close interconnection between ideas about urban form and the vision of the moral good. The spatial structure of the ideal city in these visions is a framing device that embodies and articulates not only political philosophy but is itself an articulation of moral and cosmological systems. This paper analyses three different utopian moments in three different (...)
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  43.  71
    Schema as both the key to and the puzzle of life.Jui-Pi Chien - 2004 - Sign Systems Studies 32 (1-2):187-207.
    Jakob von Uexküll’s problematic is manifested in his paradoxical portraiture of form within the plan of nature: the one a sensual schema and the other a transsensual ideal form. At first sight, Uexküll’s belief in the Platonic and the Reformational notions of the immobile becoming of form seems to be a resignation from the heated debates among his contemporary materialists, vitalists, dynamists, and evolutionists. However, in terms of the Kantian subjective teleology, Uexküll’s appropriation of the ancient philosophy reinstates the invisible, (...)
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  44.  6
    (2 other versions)2. Platonic Eurhythmy – 4th century BC – part 1.Pascal Michon - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    Previous chapter The Platonic shift in the definition of the term rhuthmós had naturally aesthetic, ethical and political consequences. If rhythm was now to be used as a decisive way to link the concept of Time with that of Form, the ugly and hopeless Becoming with the beautiful and good Being, it naturally became necessary to elaborate the concept of “good rhythm” as a proper image in time of the timeless values and Forms. The entire ideal City should in (...)
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  45.  61
    Painting in tongues: Faith-based languages of formalist art.Kevin Z. Moore - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (4):40-52.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Painting in Tongues:Faith-Based Languages of Formalist ArtKevin Z. Moore (bio)A philosophical problem is created by the incoherence between the earlier state and the later one.—Ian Hacking, Historical OntologyWhatever is happening to evidence-based treatment? When the facts contravene conventional wisdom, go with the anecdotes?—New York Times, "Science Times," February 14, 2006Cephalopods have a visual language that may be considered artful; humans have written and vocalized languages that are sometimes artful; (...)
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  46.  30
    Nous, on s'haime.Geneviève Djenati & Christine Vignaud - 2012 - Dialogue: Families & Couples 198 (4):31-44.
    Résumé L’anorexie mentale est un symptôme qui apparaît à l’adolescence. La « crise » ne se résume pas à un trouble de l’alimentation. De nombreux auteurs s’accordent pour dire qu’il s’agit d’une distorsion de l’image du corps propre en lien avec le stade du miroir. Reconnaissance et identification sont altérées. En croisant certains éléments de la thérapie individuelle de Pauline avec ceux de la thérapie de sa famille, l’article propose d’aborder la problématique anorexique à la fois dans sa (...)
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    De l’image du corps au corps dans l’image.Sylvie Quesemand Zucca - 2022 - Cités 93 (1):135-139.
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  48.  29
    Kafka. Trois images du corps, le visage intérieur et puis plus rien.André Hirt - 2023 - Philosophique 26 (26):69-80.
    Jeûner comme écrire. Jeûner, écrire. Jeûner non pour maigrir ou pour quelque raison de santé, même si l’on peut relever, çà et là dans les pages du Journal ou des correspondances de Kafka, des préoccupations concernant la vie au grand air, les régimes, même et surtout le naturisme. Cependant, rien de tout cela ne saurait encore désigner l’essentiel, car ces motivations se retirent assez vite devant des exigences tout autres, celles d’un appel et même d’une convocation subjective bien plus imp...
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    Lockean Natural History and the Revivification of Post-Truth Objects.Piper W. Corp - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (2):117-141.
    ABSTRACT Post-truth, understood as a turn from collective sense and judgment to nonpublic forms of epistemic justification, is a distinctly rhetorical problem. This article offers, in response, a theorization of knowledge making as the means by which affective and material impingements upon bodies become publicly legible and rhetorically available. For this, the author turns, perhaps unexpectedly, to John Locke. Locke’s works offer the foundations of an empirical theory of rhetoric that embraces the sensible realm not as a conduit to reality (...)
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    Inégalité sur la ligne de départ : femmes, origines sociales et conquête du sport.Catherine Louveau - 2006 - Clio 23:119-143.
    Depuis le XIXe siècle et jusqu’à nos jours, l’expansion des activités physiques et sportives s’est accompagnée de différences et d’inégalités sociales. A fortiori parmi l’ensemble des femmes, rarement pensé comme étant un ensemble lui-même divisé et hiérarchisé. S’agissant de l’accès aux loisirs sportifs puis au sport, les rapports au temps et à toutes les formes de travail, les rapports au corps sont particulièrement différenciateurs pour elles. Jusqu’à la moitié du XXe siècle environ, le sport ne concerne, au regard des (...)
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