Results for 'Edvard Munch'

228 found
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  1.  3
    Edvard Munch and the Medicalization of Modern Life: Towards a Curatorial Medical Humanities.Allison Morehead - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Humanities:1-5.
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  2. Edvard Munch and the Vitalized Bodies of National Science.Patricia Berman - 2023 - In Fae Brauer (ed.), Vitalist modernism: art, science, energy and creative evolution. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
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  3. Edvard Munch and the Vitalized Bodies of National Science.Patricia Berman - 2023 - In Fae Brauer (ed.), Vitalist modernism: art, science, energy and creative evolution. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
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  4.  53
    Edvard Munch's dramatic images 1892-1909.Carla Lathe - 1983 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 46 (1):191-206.
  5.  8
    Edvard Munchs Skrik som kulturell ikon.Hans Lund - 2001 - Agora Journal for metafysisk spekulasjon 19 (2-3):20-41.
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  6.  19
    Frauenbilder. Friedrich Nietzsche und Edvard Munch.Anneliese Plaga - 2012 - Nietzscheforschung 19 (1).
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  7. "Edvard Munch": Gösta Svenaeus. [REVIEW]K. Mitchells - 1969 - British Journal of Aesthetics 9 (1):93.
     
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  8.  8
    Forfatteren, skribenten og poeten Edvard Munch.Ingeborg Winderen Owesen - 2001 - Agora Journal for metafysisk spekulasjon 19 (2-3):289-294.
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  9.  56
    Staging Subjectivity: Love and Loneliness in the Scene of Painting with Charlotte Salomon and Edvard Munch.Griselda Pollock - 2017 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 7 (7):114-144.
    This paper proposes a conversation between Charlotte Salomon and Edvard Munch that is premised on a reading of Charlotte Salomon’s monumental project of 784 paintings forming a single work Leben? oder Theater? as itself a reading of potentialities for painting, as a staging of subjectivity in the work of Edvard Munch, notably in his assembling paintings to form the Frieze of Life. Drawing on both Mieke Bal’s critical concept of “preposterous history” and my own project of (...)
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  10. The violent dreamer: Some remarks on the work of edvard Munch.F. X. Salda - 1969 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (2):149-153.
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  11.  29
    “I Made This Munch”: Mieke Bal Talks to Dorota Filipczak about the Exhibition Emma & Edvard: Love in the Time of Loneliness, opened in Munchmuseet, Oslo.Dorota Filipczak - 2017 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 7:11-24.
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  12. Imagining Hedda Gabler: Munch and Ibsen on Art and Modern Life.Kristin Gjesdal - 2017 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 7 (7):71-86.
    Among Edvard Munch’s many portraits of Henrik Ibsen, the famous Norwegian dramatist and Munch’s senior by a generation, one stands out. Large in scope and with a characteristic pallet of roughly hewed gray blue, green and yellow, the sketch is given the title Geniuses. Munch’s sketch shows Ibsen, who had died a few years earlier, in the company of Socrates and Nietzsche. The picture was a working sketch for a painting commissioned by the University. While (...), in the end, chose a different motif for his commission, it is nonetheless significant that he found it appropriate to portrait the Norwegian dramatist in the company of key European philosophers, indeed the whole span of the European philosophical tradition from its early beginnings to its most controversial spokesman in the late 1800s. In my article, I seek to take seriously Munch’s bold and original positioning of Ibsen in the company of philosophers. Focusing on Hedda Gabler—a play about love lost and lives unlived—I explore the aesthetic-philosophical ramifications of Ibsen’s peculiar position between realism and modernism. This position, I suggest, is also reflected in Munch’s sketches for the set design for Hermann Bahr’s 1906 production of the play. (shrink)
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  13.  35
    Responding to Modern Sensibilities: Emma and Edvard Entangled.Patricia G. Berman - 2017 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 7 (7):145-159.
    This article is an edited version of the response paper offered at the conclusion of the symposium, Modern Sensibilities. It ties together themes from the symposium papers, as well as ideas prompted by Mieke Bal’s exhibition, Emma & Edvard: Love in the Time of Loneliness, and her accompanying book, Emma and Edvard Looking Sideways: Loneliness and the Cinematic. It focuses on the anachronistic entanglements among Flaubert’s “Emma,” Munch’s motifs, Mieke Bal and Michelle Williams Gamaker’s Madame B, the (...)
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  14.  18
    Fear and trembling: a new translation.Søren Kierkegaard - 2006 - New York, NY: Liveright Publishing Corporation. Edited by Bruce H. Kirmmse.
    This newly translated Fear and Trembling, a founding document of modern philosophy and existentialism, could not be more apt for these perilous times. First published in 1843 under the pseudonym "Johannes de silentio" (John of Silence), Søren Kierkegaard's richly resonant Fear and Trembling has for generations stood as a pivotal text in the history of moral philosophy, inspiring such artistic and philosophical luminaries as Edvard Munch, W. H. Auden, Walter Benjamin, and existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre. Retelling the biblical story (...)
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  15.  5
    The Annual of Psychoanalysis, V. 17.Jerome A. Winer (ed.) - 1989 - Routledge.
    Volume 17, the first volume of _The Annual _published by The Analytic Press, includes John Gedo's examination of the "epistemology of transference" and Edwin Wallace's outline of a "phenomenological and minimally theoretical psychoanalysis." Studies in applied psychoanalysis focus on the art of Edvard Munch ; George Eliot's _Romolo _; and psychoanalysis and music.
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  16.  12
    Vitalist modernism: art, science, energy and creative evolution.Fae Brauer (ed.) - 2023 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    This book reveals how, when, where and why vitalism and its relationship to new scientific theories, philosophies and concepts of energy became seminal from the fin de siècle until the Second World War for such Modernists as Sophie Tauber-Arp, Hugo Ball, Juliette Bisson, Eva Carrière, Salvador Dalì, Robert Delaunay, Marcel Duchamp, Edvard Munch, Picasso, Yves Tanguy, Gino Severini and John Cage. For them Vitalism entailed the conception of life as a constant process of metamorphosis impelled by the free (...)
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  17.  65
    Sensing the Present: “Conceptual Art of the Senses”.Rachel E. Burke & Mieke Bal - 2017 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 7 (7):27-54.
    After Rachel E. Burke briefly introduces the essays presented with a focus on our contemporary relationship to modern subjectivity, Mieke Bal will make the case for the sense of presentness on an affective and sensuous level in Munch’s paintings and Flaubert’s writing by selecting a few topics and cases from the book Emma and Edvard Looking Sideways: Loneliness and the Cinematic, published by the Munch Museum in conjunction with the exhibition Emma & Edvard. It is this (...)
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  18. Perpetrator Disgust: The Moral Limits of Gut Feelings.Ditte Marie Munch-Jurisic - 2022 - New York City, New York, USA: Oxford University Press.
    "What is the significance of our gut feelings? Can they disclose our deep selves or point to a shared human nature? The phenomenon of perpetrator disgust provides a uniquely insightful perspective by which to consider such questions. Across time and cultures, some individuals exhibit signs of distress while committing atrocities. They experience nausea, convulse, and vomit. Do such bodily responses reflect a moral judgment, a deep-seated injunction against atrocity? What conclusions can we draw about the relationship of our gut feelings (...)
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  19.  83
    Ethical Relativity.Edvard Alexander Westermarck - 1932 - Westport, Conn.,: Routledge.
    First published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  20.  72
    How Privacy Rights Engender Direct Doxastic Duties.Lauritz Aastrup Munch - 2022 - Journal of Value Inquiry 56 (4):547-562.
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  21. Privacy rights and ‘naked’ statistical evidence.Lauritz Aastrup Munch - 2021 - Philosophical Studies 178 (11):3777-3795.
    Do privacy rights restrict what is permissible to infer about others based on statistical evidence? This paper replies affirmatively by defending the following symmetry: there is not necessarily a morally relevant difference between directly appropriating people’s private information—say, by using an X-ray device on their private safes—and using predictive technologies to infer the same content, at least in cases where the evidence has a roughly similar probative value. This conclusion is of theoretical interest because a comprehensive justification of the thought (...)
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  22.  20
    High Intensity Long Interval Sets Provides Similar Enjoyment as Continuous Moderate Intensity Exercise. The Tromsø Exercise Enjoyment Study.Edvard H. Sagelv, Tord Hammer, Tommy Hamsund, Kamilla Rognmo, Svein Arne Pettersen & Sigurd Pedersen - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  23. Can large language models help solve the cost problem for the right to explanation?Lauritz Munch & Jens Christian Bjerring - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    By now a consensus has emerged that people, when subjected to high-stakes decisions through automated decision systems, have a moral right to have these decisions explained to them. However, furnishing such explanations can be costly. So the right to an explanation creates what we call the cost problem: providing subjects of automated decisions with appropriate explanations of the grounds of these decisions can be costly for the companies and organisations that use these automated decision systems. In this paper, we explore (...)
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  24. Hearing God - the character and functionality of situatedness for elucidating the variance in Evangelical doctrine and as the primary criterion for contextual cross-cultural proclamation.Edvard Kristian Foshaugen - manuscript
    God speaks. Hearing God. Two phrases of two words each are perhaps the most critical, misunderstood and even abused words in the existence of the Church and in particular for evangelicals. ‘I think God said’ and ‘I think God is saying’ are the most sagacious, precise, truthful and appropriate manner of responding to the conviction that God speaks and for shared engaging enriched discourse on what God says to ensure He is heard. The Bible must never be seen and interpreted (...)
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  25. The value of responsibility gaps in algorithmic decision-making.Lauritz Munch, Jakob Mainz & Jens Christian Bjerring - 2023 - Ethics and Information Technology 25 (1):1-11.
    Many seem to think that AI-induced responsibility gaps are morally bad and therefore ought to be avoided. We argue, by contrast, that there is at least a pro tanto reason to welcome responsibility gaps. The central reason is that it can be bad for people to be responsible for wrongdoing. This, we argue, gives us one reason to prefer automated decision-making over human decision-making, especially in contexts where the risks of wrongdoing are high. While we are not the first to (...)
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  26.  40
    A Philosophical Defense of Myth: Josef Pieper’s Reading of Platonic Eschatology.Edvard Lorkovic - 2021 - Heythrop Journal 62 (2):257-269.
  27. Ist das Problem der Intentionalität auflösbar?Dieter Münch - 1992 - Ethik Und Sozialwissenschaften 3 (4):481.
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  28.  46
    Den moraliska intuitionen.Edvard Westermarck - 1935 - Theoria 1 (1-2):1-31.
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  29. Algorithmic decision-making: the right to explanation and the significance of stakes.Lauritz Munch, Jens Christian Bjerring & Jakob Mainz - 2024 - Big Data and Society.
    The stakes associated with an algorithmic decision are often said to play a role in determining whether the decision engenders a right to an explanation. More specifically, “high stakes” decisions are often said to engender such a right to explanation whereas “low stakes” or “non-high” stakes decisions do not. While the overall gist of these ideas is clear enough, the details are lacking. In this paper, we aim to provide these details through a detailed investigation of what we will call (...)
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  30.  83
    Digital Self-Defence: Why you Ought to Preserve Your Privacy for the Sake of Wrongdoers.Lauritz Aastrup Munch - 2022 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 25 (2):233-248.
    Most studies on the ethics of privacy focus on what others ought to do to accommodate our interest in privacy. I focus on a related but distinct question that has attracted less attention in the literature: When, if ever, does morality require us to safeguard our own privacy? While we often have prudential reasons for safeguarding our privacy, we are also, at least sometimes, morally required to do so. I argue that we, sometimes, ought to safeguard our privacy for the (...)
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  31.  78
    “No One Cares What or How Much You Know, Until They Know How Much You Care” - the Message, Method and Goal in Evangelism.Edvard Kristian Foshaugen - manuscript
    The belief that Christianity has a relevancy and a truth to convey is one thing, a reason to be heard is another. Christians are to be grounded in the Word, ready to give a reason for their hope (1 Peter 3:15). But, as has been experienced by the Church over the centuries ‘no one cares how much you know, until they know how much you care.’.
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  32.  66
    THE THERAPEUTIC FUNCTION OF PRAYER IN CURA ANIMARUM.Edvard Kristian Foshaugen - manuscript
    Prayer is not just about the composition of a message from the sender to God the receiver. I say this because I believe that prayer is not primarily conversation but fellowship and communion. There is a relation of trust in which the recipient of trust is true and faithful. Prayer loses its theological character and becomes a psychological phenomenon that is an introspection into oneself if there is no trusting faith and God who is faithful. Prayer is far more than (...)
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  33.  88
    The Right to Privacy, Control Over Self‐Presentation, and Subsequent Harm.Lauritz Aastrup Munch - 2020 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 37 (1):141-154.
    Andrei Marmor has recently offered a narrow interpretation of the right to privacy as a right to having a reasonable amount of control over one's self‐presentation. He claims that the interest people have in preventing others from abusing their personal information to do harm is not directly protected by the right to privacy. This article rejects that claim and defends a view according to which concerns about abuse play a central role in fleshing out the appropriate scope of a general (...)
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  34. To Believe, or Not to Believe – That is Not the (Only) Question: The Hybrid View of Privacy.Lauritz Munch & Jakob Mainz - 2023 - The Journal of Ethics 27 (3):245-261.
    In this paper, we defend what we call the ‘Hybrid View’ of privacy. According to this view, an individual has privacy if, and only if, no one else forms an epistemically warranted belief about the individual’s personal matters, nor perceives them. We contrast the Hybrid View with what seems to be the most common view of what it means to access someone’s personal matters, namely the Belief-Based View. We offer a range of examples that demonstrate why the Hybrid View is (...)
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  35.  56
    The Right to Feel Comfortable: Implicit Bias and the Moral Potential of Discomfort.Ditte Marie Munch-Jurisic - 2020 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 23 (1):237-250.
    An increasingly popular view in scholarly literature and public debate on implicit biases holds that there is progressive moral potential in the discomfort that liberals and egalitarians feel when they realize they harbor implicit biases. The strong voices among such discomfort advocates believe we have a moral and political duty to confront people with their biases even though we risk making them uncomfortable. Only a few voices have called attention to the aversive effects of discomfort. Such discomfort skeptics warn that, (...)
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  36. Why the NSA didn’t diminish your privacy but might have violated your right to privacy.Lauritz Munch - forthcoming - Analysis.
    According to a popular view, privacy is a function of people not knowing or rationally believing some fact about you. But intuitively it seems possible for a perpetrator to violate your right to privacy without learning any facts about you. For example, it seems plausible to say that the US National Security Agency’s PRISM program violated, or could have violated, the privacy rights of the people whose information was collected, despite the fact that the NSA, for the most part, merely (...)
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  37. Treating people as individuals and as members of groups.Lauritz Aastrup Munch & Nicolai Knudsen - 2024 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 110 (1):253-272.
    Many believe that we ought to treat people as individuals and that this form of treatment is in some sense incompatible with treating people as members of groups. Yet, the relation between these two kinds of treatments is elusive. In this paper, we develop a novel account of the normative requirement to treat people as individuals. According to this account, treating people as individuals requires treating people as agents in the appropriate capacity. We call this the Agency Attunement Account. This (...)
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  38. Intention und Zeichen. Untersuchungen zu Franz Brentano und zu Edmund Husserls Frühwerk.Dieter Münch - 1995 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 57 (3):604-605.
     
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  39. Kritische Stimmen zu Titeln von Werner Gramsch.Edvard Gramsch - 1967 - Berlin,: Edited by Jasper Gramsch & Rasmus Gramsch.
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  40. Jeffrey Dudiak, The Intrigue of Ethics: a Reading of the Idea of Discourse in the Thought of Emmanuel Levinas Reviewed by.Edvard Lorkovic - 2002 - Philosophy in Review 22 (1):26-28.
     
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  41. (1 other version)Das Problem der Geschichtsphilosophie.Fritz Münch - 1912 - Société Française de Philosophie, Bulletin 17:349.
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  42. Kofink, Lessings Anschauungen über die Unsterblichkeit und Seelenwanderung.Fritz Münch - 1912 - Kant Studien 17:301.
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  43.  15
    The Early Husserl.Dieter Münch - 1989 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 20 (2):173-178.
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  44.  22
    Neues zum frühen Brentano.Dieter Münch - 2004 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 67 (1):209-225.
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  45. Against comfort: political implications of evading discomfort.Ditte Marie Munch-Jurisic - 2020 - Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs 10 (2):277-297.
    We typically think of emotional states as highly individualised and subjective. But visceral gut feelings like discomfort can be better understood as collective and public, when they reflect implicit biases that an individual has internalised. Most of us evade discomfort in favour of comfort, often unconsciously. This inclination, innocent in most cases, also has social and political consequences. Research has established that it is easier to interact with people who resemble us and that such in-group favouritism contributes to subtle forms (...)
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  46.  34
    Resilience beyond reductionism: ethical and social dimensions of an emerging concept in the neurosciences.Nikolai Münch, Hamideh Mahdiani, Klaus Lieb & Norbert W. Paul - 2020 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (1):55-63.
    Since a number of years, popular and scientific interest in resilience is rapidly increasing. More recently, also neuroscientific research in resilience and the associated neurobiological findings is gaining more attention. Some of these neuroscientific findings might open up new measures to foster personal resilience, ranging from magnetic stimulation to pharmaceutical interventions and awareness-based techniques. Therefore, bioethics should also take a closer look at resilience and resilience research, which are today philosophically under-theorized. In this paper, we analyze different conceptualizations of resilience (...)
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  47. Theorie des Handelns.Richard Münch, Talcott Parsons, Emile Durkheim & Max Weber - 1986 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 40 (1):150-155.
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  48.  26
    Losing the Monstrous and the Multiform: The Lessons of Myth in Plato’s Phaedrus.Edvard Lorkovic - 2014 - Philosophy and Literature 38 (2):462-478.
    At Phaedrus 229c, Socrates uncharacteristically defends myth, claiming not only to believe in myth but to be out of place in Athens because of this belief. In particular, he rejects attempts to explain myths that reduce them to natural phenomena. But in what sense can Socrates, the great critic of mythic poetry, believe in myth? For Socrates, myth is true, and thus believable, even when it is not correct; myths provide the terms by which humans can understand their experiences and (...)
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  49.  28
    Conjuring legitimacy: Shakespeare’s Macbeth as contemporary English politics.Edvard Djordjevic - 2020 - Filozofija I Društvo 31 (3):393-405.
    The text provides a political reading of Shakespeare?s Macbeth, claiming that the play is responding to the curious connection between witchcraft and state power in the preceding century, as well as contemporary political events. Namely, practices variously labeled as witchcraft, magic, conjuring were an integral aspect of English politics and struggles over royal succession in the sixteenth century; even more so were the witch hunts and attempts by British monarchs to control witchcraft. These issues reached a head with the accession (...)
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  50. Lask, Die Lehre vom Urteil.Fritz Münch - 1912 - Kant Studien 17:297.
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