Results for 'Asbjørn Hauge-Helgestad'

113 found
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  1.  39
    Come as you are? Public Reason and Climate Change.Morten Ebbe Juul Nielsen & Asbjørn Hauge-Helgestad - 2021 - Res Publica 28 (1):17-32.
    The likely adverse effects of climate change call for political action. In this paper, we argue that the public reason framework—with its insistence on justifiability to all reasonable citizens, in spite of their profound disagreements—despite initial misgivings recommends itself as a framework for debate and decisions pertaining to climate change. We address two possible stumbling blocks: the exclusion of non-anthropocentric points of view, and the controversy over intergenerational justice. We argue that public reason can deal with these problems. Moreover, we (...)
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  2.  13
    Eingreifendes Denken: Wolfgang Fritz Haug zum 65. Geburtstag.Wolfgang Fritz Haug, Christoph Kniest, Susanne Lettow & Teresa Orozco (eds.) - 2001 - Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot..
  3. Philosophical Methodology: The Armchair or the Laboratory?Matthew C. Haug (ed.) - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    What methodology should philosophers follow? Should they rely on methods that can be conducted from the armchair? Or should they leave the armchair and turn to the methods of the natural sciences, such as experiments in the laboratory? Or is this opposition itself a false one? Arguments about philosophical methodology are raging in the wake of a number of often conflicting currents, such as the growth of experimental philosophy, the resurgence of interest in metaphysical questions, and the use of formal (...)
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  4.  39
    Beyond female masochism: memory-work and politics.Frigga Haug - 1980 - New York: Verso.
    ONE Victims or Culprits? Reflections on Women's Behaviour My title, 'Victims or Culprits?', with its interrogatory inflection, may appear somewhat inane. ...
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  5.  9
    Den ukendte Løgstrup: de seks fromhedsbølger.Hans Hauge - 2020 - København: Eksistensen.
    Was Løgstrup fascinated by National Socialism in Germany? Did Løgstrup become a personalist in France? Did Løgstrup become a logical positivist in Vienna? Did Løgstrup become organic in Germany in the 1930s? Questions like these are ones that Hans Hauge wants to answer in his new book about the theologian and thinker K.E. Løgstrup. In the book, Hauge describes many of the both known and unknown people Løgstrup met during his study stays around Europe, mostly in Germany in (...)
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  6. Two Kinds of Completeness and the Uses (and Abuses) of Exclusion Principles.Matthew C. Haug - 2009 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 47 (4):379-401.
    I argue that the completeness of physics is composed of two distinct claims. The first is the commonly made claim that, roughly, every physical event is completely causally determined by physical events. The second has rarely, if ever, been explicitly stated in the literature and is the claim that microphysics provides a complete inventory of the fundamental categories that constitute both the causal features and intrinsic nature of all the events that causally affect the physical universe. After showing that these (...)
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  7. Continence, temperance, and motivational conflict: Why traditional neo-Aristotelian accounts are psychologically unrealistic.Matthew C. Haug - 2022 - Philosophical Psychology 35 (2):205-225.
    Traditional neo-Aristotelian accounts hold that temperance and continence are distinct character traits that are distinguished by the extent to which their bearers experience motivational conflict. In this paper, I formulate two pairs of necessary conditions—which, collectively, I call the conformity thesis—that articulate this distinction. Then, drawing on work in contemporary social and personality psychology, I argue that the conformity thesis is false. Being highly self-controlled is the best, psychologically realistic candidate for continence. However, our best evidence suggests that highly self-controlled/continent (...)
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  8. Silencing, Psychological Conflict, and the Distinction Between Virtue and Self-Control.Matthew C. Haug - 2022 - The Journal of Ethics 26 (1):93-114.
    According to many virtue ethicists, one of Aristotle’s important achievements was drawing a clear, qualitative distinction between the character traits of temperance and self-control. In an influential series of papers, John McDowell has argued that a clear distinction between temperance and self-control can be maintained only if one claims that, for the virtuous individual, considerations in favor of actions that are contrary to virtue are “silenced.” Some virtue ethicists reject McDowell’s silencing view as offering an implausible or inappropriate picture of (...)
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  9. Of mice and metaphysics: Natural selection and realized population‐level properties.Matthew C. Haug - 2007 - Philosophy of Science 74 (4):431-451.
    In this paper, I answer a fundamental question facing any view according to which natural selection is a population‐level causal process—namely, how is the causal process of natural selection related to, yet not preempted by, causal processes that occur at the level of individual organisms? Without an answer to this grounding question, the population‐level causal view appears unstable—collapsing into either an individual‐level causal interpretation or the claim that selection is a purely formal, statistical phenomenon. I argue that a causal account (...)
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  10.  46
    Gender Relations.Frigga Haug - 2005 - Historical Materialism 13 (2):279-302.
  11.  7
    Film and the ethical imagination.Asbjorn Gronstad - 2016 - London, United Kingdom: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This book provides a comprehensive, critical overview of the turn to ethics in literature, film, and visual culture. It discusses the concept of a biovisual ethics, offering a new theory of the relation between film and ethics based on the premise that images are capable of generating their own ethical content. This ethics operates hermeneutically and materializes in cinema's unique power to show us other modes of being. The author considers a wealth of contemporary art films and documentaries that embody (...)
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  12.  13
    Borges og science fiction.Hallvard Haug - 2010 - Agora Journal for metafysisk spekulasjon 28 (4):236-251.
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  13.  7
    Das "Kapital" lesen, aber wie?: Materialien zur Philosophie und Epistemologie der marxschen Kapitalismuskritik.Wolfgang Fritz Haug - 2013 - Hamburg: Argument.
  14.  19
    Julian Reid on Foucault- applying his work on war, resilence, imagination and poltical subjectivity.Kristian Haug - 2017 - Foucault Studies 22:254-262.
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  15.  6
    Recompense and Reward: The Scholarly Contributions of Michael David Bonner (1952‒2019).Robert Haug - 2019 - Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East 96 (2):271-280.
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  16. Must Naturalism Lead to a Deflationary Meta-Ontology?Matthew Haug - 2014 - Metaphysica 15 (2):347-367.
    Huw Price has argued that naturalistic philosophy inevitably leads to a deflationary approach to ontological questions. In this paper, I rebut these arguments. A more substantive, less language-focused approach to metaphysics remains open to naturalists. However, rebutting one of Price’s main arguments requires rejecting Quine’s criterion of ontological commitment. So, even though Price’s argument is unsound, it reveals that naturalists cannot rest content with broadly Quinean, “mainstream metaphysics,” which, I suggest, naturalists also have independent reasons to reject.
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  17. Natural Properties and the Special Sciences: Nonreductive Physicalism without Levels of Reality or Multiple Realizability.Matthew C. Haug - 2011 - The Monist 94 (2):244-266.
    In this paper, I investigate how different views about the vertical and horizontal structure of reality affect the debate between reductive and nonreductive physicalism. This debate is commonly assumed to hinge on whether there are high-level, special-science properties that are distinct from low-level physical properties and whether the alleged multiple realizability of high-level properties establishes this. I defend a metaphysical interpretation of nonreductive physicalismin the absence of both of these assumptions. Adopting an independently motivated, discipline-relative account of natural properties and (...)
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  18. Trait Self-Control, Inhibition, and Executive Functions: Rethinking some Traditional Assumptions.Matthew C. Haug - 2021 - Neuroethics 14 (2):303-314.
    This paper draws on work in the sciences of the mind to cast doubt on some assumptions that have often been made in the study of self-control. Contra a long, Aristotelian tradition, recent evidence suggests that highly self-controlled individuals do not have a trait very similar to continence: they experience relatively few desires that conflict with their evaluative judgments and are not especially good at directly and effortfully inhibiting such desires. Similarly, several recent studies have failed to support the view (...)
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  19.  28
    A Discussion on Heidegger’s “Über die Sixtina”.Steven Haug - 2020 - Philosophy Today 64 (3):781-791.
    In 1955, Raphael’s Sistine Madonna was returned to Germany following its removal from Dresden in anticipation of the city being bombed. That same year Heidegger wrote a short paper titled “Über die Sixtina,” likely to commemorate the painting’s return. The goal of this article is to bring the largely overlooked “Über die Sixtina” into discussions about Heidegger’s philosophy of art. While brief, Heidegger’s paper makes clear that the Sistine Madonna is an important work to consider when deliberating about his philosophy (...)
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  20.  26
    Du constructivisme au naturalisme ontologique. L’itinéraire intellectuel de Lukács à la lumière des questionnements écologiques contemporains.Timothée Haug - 2021 - Actuel Marx 69 (1):106-118.
    Cet article relit l’itinéraire conduisant Lukács d’un constructivisme fort à un naturalisme plus prononcé à la lumière des débats écologiques contemporains polarisés par l’opposition entre naturalisme et antinaturalisme. La critique de la naturalisation des phénomènes sociaux conduit dans Histoire et conscience de classe à disqualifier tout concept de nature ; ce constructivisme fort empêche la première philosophie de la praxis de problématiser les rapports écologiques entre nature et société. À l’inverse, Ontologie de l’être social interroge le conditionnement naturel de la (...)
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  21. Gewinn und Verlust in der Musikgeschichte.Andreas Haug - 2008 - In Andreas Haug & Andreas Dorschel (eds.), Vom Preis des Fortschritts: Gewinn und Verlust in der Musikgeschichte. New York: Universal Edition.
     
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  22.  5
    Lessons from the Women's Movement in Europe.Frigga Haug - 1989 - Feminist Review 31 (1):107-116.
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  23.  10
    The End of Socialism in Europe: A New Challenge for Socialist Feminism?Frigga Haug - 1991 - Feminist Review 39 (1):37-48.
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  24.  52
    Historical-Critical.Wolfgang Fritz Haug - 2006 - Historical Materialism 14 (2):259-270.
  25.  73
    Partial Dynamic Semantics for Anaphora: Compositionality without Syntactic Coindexation.Dag Trygve Truslew Haug - 2014 - Journal of Semantics 31 (4):fft008.
    This article points out problems in current dynamic treatments of anaphora and provides a new account that solves these by grafting Muskens' Compositional Discourse Representation Theory onto a partial theory of types. Partiality is exploited to keep track of which discourse referents have been introduced in the text (thus avoiding the overwrite problem) and to account for cases of anaphoric failure. Another key assumption is that the set of discourse referents is well-ordered, so that we can keep track of the (...)
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  26. Explaining the placebo effect: Aliefs, beliefs, and conditioning.Matthew Haug - 2011 - Philosophical Psychology 24 (5):679-698.
    There are a number of competing psychological accounts of the placebo effect, and much of the recent debate centers on the relative importance of classical conditioning and conscious beliefs. In this paper, I discuss apparent problems with these accounts and with?disjunctive? accounts that deny that placebo effects can be given a unified psychological explanation. The fact that some placebo effects seem to be mediated by cognitive states with content that is consciously inaccessible and inferentially isolated from a subject's beliefs motivates (...)
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  27. Realization, determination, and mechanisms.Matthew C. Haug - 2010 - Philosophical Studies 150 (3):313-330.
    Several philosophers (e.g., Ehring (Nous (Detroit, Mich.) 30:461–480, 1996 ); Funkhouser (Nous (Detroit, Mich.) 40:548–569, 2006 ); Walter (Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37:217–244, 2007 ) have argued that there are metaphysical differences between the determinable-determinate relation and the realization relation between mental and physical properties. Others have challenged this claim (e.g., Wilson (Philosophical Studies, 2009 ). In this paper, I argue that there are indeed such differences and propose a “mechanistic” account of realization that elucidates why these differences hold. This (...)
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  28. The Exclusion Problem Meets the Problem of Many Causes.Matthew C. Haug - 2010 - Erkenntnis 73 (1):55-65.
    In this paper I develop a novel response to the exclusion problem. I argue that the nature of the events in the causally complete physical domain raises the “problem of many causes”: there will typically be countless simultaneous low-level physical events in that domain that are causally sufficient for any given high-level physical event. This shows that even reductive physicalists must admit that the version of the exclusion principle used to pose the exclusion problem against non-reductive physicalism is too strong. (...)
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  29. Resolving two tensions in (Neo-)Aristotelian approaches to self-control.Matthew Haug - 2022 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 25 (4):685-700.
    A neo-Aristotelian approach to self-control has dominated both philosophy and the sciences of the mind. This approach endorses three key theses: that self-control is a form of self-regulation aimed at desires that conflict with one’s evaluative judgments, that high trait self-control is continence, which is distinguished from temperance by motivational conflict, and that self-control is broad, in that such resistance can be not only direct but also indirect. There is an obvious tension between and. I argue that the equally obvious (...)
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  30. Naturalistic Metaphysics at Sea.Matthew Haug - 2018 - Philosophical Inquiries 6 (1):95-122.
    In this paper I return to the mid-20th-century debate between Quine and Carnap on the status of metaphysics questions with an eye toward advancing contemporary debates about whether naturalists can coherently undertake substantive metaphysical inquiry. Following Huw Price, I take the debate between Quine and Carnap to hinge, in part, on whether human inquiry is functionally unified. However, unlike Price, I suggest that this question is not best understood as a question about the function(s) of descriptive discourse. This goes along (...)
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  31.  46
    Postmoderner Links-Nietzscheanismus. Deleuze & Foucault. Eine Dekonstruktion.Wolfgang Fritz Haug - 2007 - Historical Materialism 15 (3):205-215.
  32.  25
    A Tool for Reflecting on Questionable Numbers in Society.Kjellrun Hiis Hauge - 2022 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (5):511-528.
    The increased distribution of fake news on internet and social media raises concerns for democratic processes. Sometimes, argumentation in deceptive information is built on numbers, which gives reason to include mathematics when working with fake news in education. In this paper, I suggest a tool to facilitate students’ critical thinking related to numbers, or other mathematical representations, presented in the media. It may not be straight forward, or even possible, to judge the validity of presented numbers, or whether numbers are (...)
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  33. Artussage und Heilsgeschichte: Zum Programm des Fussbodenmosaiks von Otranto.Walter Haug - 1975 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 49 (3):577-606.
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  34.  10
    Der Schatten des Kopfes der Kammerzofe: Der zwielichtige Platonismus im ›Heptaméron‹ der Marguerite de Navarre.Walter Haug - 1992 - In Walter Haug & Burghart Wachinger (eds.), Literatur, Artes und Philosophie. de Gruyter. pp. 85-116.
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  35.  50
    Historical-Critical Dictionary of Marxism Immaterial Labour.Wolfgang Fritz Haug & Joseph Fracchia - 2009 - Historical Materialism 17 (4):177-185.
  36.  14
    Historical-Critical Dictionary of Marxism.Wolfgang Fritz Haug - 2010 - Historical Materialism 18 (2):209-216.
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  37.  16
    Sur la théorie des rapports de sexe.Frigga Haug & Éric David - 2001 - Actuel Marx 30 (2):43-60.
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  38.  11
    Vom Preis des Fortschritts: Gewinn und Verlust in der Musikgeschichte.Andreas Haug & Andreas Dorschel (eds.) - 2008 - New York: Universal Edition.
  39.  17
    Why the Politics of Literacy? – Guest Editors' Introduction.Chelsey Hauge & Jennifer Rowsell - 2019 - Studies in Social Justice 13 (1):1-9.
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  40.  53
    Dialectics.Wolfgang Fritz Haug - 2005 - Historical Materialism 13 (1):241-266.
  41. No microphysical causation? No problem: selective causal skepticism and the structure of completeness-based arguments for physicalism.Matthew C. Haug - 2019 - Synthese 196 (3):1187-1208.
    A number of philosophers have argued that causation is not an objective feature of the microphysical world but rather is a perspectival phenomenon that holds only between “coarse-grained” entities such as those that figure in the special sciences. This view seems to pose a problem for arguments for physicalism that rely on the alleged causal completeness of physics. In this paper, I address this problem by arguing that the completeness of physics has two components, only one of which is causal. (...)
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  42. Abstraction and Explanatory Relevance; or, Why Do the Special Sciences Exist?Matthew C. Haug - 2011 - Philosophy of Science 78 (5):1143-1155.
    Non-reductive physicalists have long held that the special sciences offer explanations of some phenomena that are objectively superior to physical explanations. This explanatory “autonomy” has largely been based on the multiple realizability argument. Recently, in the face of the local reduction and disjunctive property responses to multiple realizability, some defenders of non-reductive physicalism have suggested that autonomy can be grounded merely in human cognitive limitations. In this paper, I argue that this is mistaken. By distinguishing between two kinds of abstraction (...)
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  43.  71
    Abstraction, Multiple Realizability, and the Explanatory Value of Omitting Irrelevant Details.Matthew C. Haug - manuscript
    Anti-reductionists hold that special science explanations of some phenomena are objectively better than physical explanations of those phenomena. Prominent defenses of this claim appeal to the multiple realizability of special science properties. I argue that special science explanations can be shown to be better, in one respect, than physical explanations in a way that does not depend on multiple realizability. Namely, I discuss a way in which a special science explanation may be more abstract than a competing physical explanation, even (...)
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  44.  6
    Feminist Writing: Working with Women's Experience.Frigga Haug - 1992 - Feminist Review 42 (1):16-32.
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  45.  8
    Hytten og hæfterne: historien om Heidegger og hans "Schwarze Hefte".Hans Hauge - 2019 - København: U Press.
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  46.  26
    Kohei Saito, Natur gegen Kapital. Marx’ Ökologie in seiner unvollendeten Kritik des Kapitalismus.Timothée Haug - 2017 - Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 41:167-171.
    Parue en août 2016 en allemand, la thèse de Kohei Saito apporte enfin une justification philologique solide aux entreprises écosocialistes, qui oscillent depuis les années 1970 entre une interprétation hétérodoxe ou orthodoxe de l’œuvre de Marx. Faut-il purger cette dernière d’une tendance prométhéenne propre au xixe siècle industriel, ou au contraire en faire l’expression première – et donc la plus pure – de la sensibilité écologique naissante à cette époque? Comme Saito le montre avec brio...
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  47.  50
    Marxism-Feminism.Frigga Haug - 2016 - Historical Materialism 24 (4):257-270.
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  48. On the distinction between reductive and nonreductive physicalism.Matthew C. Haug - 2011 - Metaphilosophy 42 (4):451-469.
    Abtract: This article argues that the debate between reductive and nonreductive physicalists is best characterized as a disagreement about which properties are natural. Among other things, natural properties are those that characterize the world completely. All physicalists accept the “completeness of physics,” but this claim contains a subtle ambiguity, which results in two conceptions of natural properties. Reductive physicalists should assert, while nonreductive physicalists should deny, that a single set of low-level physical properties is natural in both of these senses. (...)
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  49.  26
    Queerfeministische Solidarität zwischen Kollektivität und Identität.Franziska Haug - 2018 - Zeitschrift Für Kultur- Und Kollektivwissenschaft 4 (1):235-262.
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  50.  49
    The capitalist metabolism: an unachieved subsumption of life under the value-form.Timothée Haug - 2018 - Journal for Cultural Research 22 (2):191-203.
    This article views capitalism not only as a mode of production, but also as a mediation of the reproduction of life, following the concept of ‘social metabolism’ that Marx employs to analyze the interaction between the individuals composing a society and their natural environment. Insofar as the ‘value-form’ is the distinctive social relation of capitalism, it appears necessary to ask whether the metabolic process of reproduction can be fully subsumed under this form. Marx takes for granted the idea that the (...)
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