Results for 'Katharine Bath'

756 found
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  1.  38
    Promises and assertions.Katharine Bath - 1979 - Philosophia 8 (4):519-547.
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  2. A feminist voice in the enlightenment salon: Madame de Lambert on taste, sensibility, and the feminine mind*: Katharine J. hamerton.Katharine J. Hamerton - 2010 - Modern Intellectual History 7 (2):209-238.
    This essay demonstrates how the early Enlightenment salonnière madame de Lambert advanced a novel feminist intellectual synthesis favoring women's taste and cognition, which hybridized Cartesian and honnête thought. Disputing recent interpretations of Enlightenment salonnières that emphasize the constraints of honnêteté on their thought, and those that see Lambert's feminism as misguided in emphasizing gendered sensibility, I analyze Lambert's approach as best serving her needs as an aristocratic woman within elite salon society, and show through contextualized analysis how she deployed honnêteté (...)
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  3.  11
    My Father, Bertrand Russell.Katharine Tait - 1975 - New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
    Katharine Tait, daughter of Bertrand and Dora Russell, here vividly portrays the extraordinary and stimulating environment she grew up in. In refreshing contrast to the interpretation of Russell as philosopher and public figure, Tait's is a close personal account of her deep love and admiration for her father and its gradual tempering by the imperfections she came to see in him. Touchingly written and beautifully described, the book shows Russell to be a man of great warmth, charm and humour, (...)
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  4. Observation in the margins, 500-1500.Katharine Park - 2011 - In Lorraine Daston & Elizabeth Lunbeck (eds.), Histories of scientific observation. London: University of Chicago Press.
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  5.  11
    Studies in the philosophical terminology of Lucretius and Cicero.Katharine Campbell Reiley - 1909 - New York,: The Columbia university press.
    Experience the richness of classical literature and philosophy with this insightful analysis of the language used by two of its most famous practitioners: Lucretius and Cicero. Katharine C. Reiley provides a detailed examination of key terms and concepts, shedding new light on the complexity and sophistication of their foundational works. This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the "public (...)
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  6.  51
    Being a Good Nurse and Doing the Right Thing: a qualitative study.Katharine V. Smith & Nelda S. Godfrey - 2002 - Nursing Ethics 9 (3):301-312.
    Despite an abundance of theoretical literature on virtue ethics in nursing and health care, very little research has been carried out to support or refute the claims made. One such claim is that ethical nursing is what happens when a good nurse does the right thing. The purpose of this descriptive, qualitative study was therefore to examine nurses’ perceptions of what it means to be a good nurse and to do the right thing. Fifty-three nurses responded to two open-ended questions: (...)
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  7.  44
    Cross-cultural Comparison of Learning in Human Hunting.Katharine MacDonald - 2007 - Human Nature 18 (4):386-402.
    This paper is a cross-cultural examination of the development of hunting skills and the implications for the debate on the role of learning in the evolution of human life history patterns. While life history theory has proven to be a powerful tool for understanding the evolution of the human life course, other schools, such as cultural transmission and social learning theory, also provide theoretical insights. These disparate theories are reviewed, and alternative and exclusive predictions are identified. This study of cross-cultural (...)
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  8. Ontology and Oppression: Race, Gender, and Social Reality.Katharine Jenkins - 2023 - New York, US: OUP Usa.
    The way society is organised means that we all get made into members of various types of people, such as judges, wives, or women. These ‘human social kinds’ may be brought into being by oppressive social arrangements, and people may suffer oppression in virtue of being made into a member of a certain human social kind. This book argues that we should pay attention to the ways in which the very fact of being made into a member of a certain (...)
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  9. Ontic Injustice.Katharine Jenkins - 2020 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 6 (2):188-205.
    In this article, I identify a distinctive form of injustice—ontic injustice—in which an individual is wronged by the very fact of being socially constructed as a member of a certain social kind. To be a member of a certain social kind is, at least in part, to be subject to certain social constraints and enablements, and these constraints and enablements can be wrongful to the individual who is subjected to them, in the sense that they inflict a moral injury. The (...)
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  10.  31
    On gene expression patterns in mammalian hibernation.Katharine M. Brauch - 2008 - Bioessays 30 (9):920-920.
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  11.  28
    Proverbs 1–9: Issues of Social and Theological Context.Katharine J. Dell - 2009 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 63 (3):229-240.
    This essay studies the different literary genres of Proverbs 1–9, including how they might have emerged, what social contexts generated such texts in Israel and in Egypt, and what their function might have been. A theological context is seen to be integral to both of the main genres of instruction and poem, despite the clearly more educational emphasis of the instruction texts.
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  12. The Book of Proverbs in Social and Theological Context.Katharine J. Dell - 2006
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  13.  25
    (1 other version)Aquinas Medal Award to Gerald Verbeke.Katharine Rose Hanley - 1989 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 63:16-19.
  14.  2
    A prelude to metaphysics.Katharine Rose Hanley - 1967 - Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,: Prentice-Hall. Edited by Plato & J. Donald Monan.
    "Plato texts, a retrieve": p. [108]-174.
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  15.  40
    (1 other version)The Sting: Popular Fronts vs Persons.Katharine Rose Hanley - 1986 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 60:166-177.
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  16.  65
    Al-Farabi’s Images.Katharine Loevy - 2016 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 21 (1):67-84.
    Al-Farabi understands politically useful images to be good imitations of essences, and also effective means of persuasion for geographically and historically situated communities. Such images, moreover, are what constitute the virtuous religions of virtuous cities. At play in al-Farabi’s account of images is thus a relationship between image, religion, truth, and history, and one that brings with it certain implications for how we understand the nature of the human being. We are creatures of truth, of the grasping of essences, and (...)
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  17.  31
    The Fear of the Dog.Katharine Loevy - 2017 - Philosophy Today 61 (1):155-173.
    Levinas rarely speaks about non-human animals directly, but his texts and his interviews are saturated with animal rhetoric. Levinas’s most ubiquitous gesture is to cast non-human animals as beings whose striving to live is a form of violence. These images constitute violence as endemic to nature, and provide the essential contrast to what Levinas regards as the strictly human event of ethics. In order to sufficiently interrogate the fate of non-human animals in Levinas’s philosophy, we must address the manner in (...)
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  18.  16
    The Poetics of the Body in Islamic Mysticism.Katharine Loevy - 2017 - Philosophy East and West 68 (1):161-173.
    The category of the body is invested with an accumulation of meaning and significance, and it is far from obvious what "the body" does or ought to mean. The body is not, as one might presume, the locus of "nature" as opposed to "culture." It is not the site of what is given to us without the mediations of language or history, and it does not provide the substrate for an overlay of religious, linguistic, historical, or literary significance. To the (...)
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  19.  12
    Reluctant activists? The impact of legislative and structural attempts of surveillance on investigative journalism.Katharine Sarikakis & Anthony Mills - 2016 - Big Data and Society 3 (2).
    If we accept that surveillance by the State and ‘sousveillance’ by the media in Western democracies tend towards a relative equilibrium, or ‘equiveillance’ supported by the function of journalism as a watchdog and that the rule of law largely protects fundamental freedoms, this paper argues that the act of ‘mutual watching’ is undesired by the State and comes at a very high cost to journalists. The combination of technological capacity, legislative change and antidemocratic sentiments of the State, in the context (...)
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  20. Section 4. Intercorporeality, Perception, and Movement. Virtuosity, Obviously : Ravi Shankar, Historical Phenomenology, and the Valuation of Skill / David VanderHamm ; The Sound of Movement : Hearing Kathak Dance / Monica Dalidowicz ; Scrape, Brush, Flick : The Phenomenology of Sound.Katharine Young - 2023 - In Harris M. Berger, Friedlind Riedel & David VanderHamm (eds.), The Oxford handbook of the phenomenology of music cultures. New York: Oxford University Press.
  21.  34
    Can a robot be an expert? The social meaning of skill and its expression through the prospect of autonomous AgTech.Katharine Legun, Karly Ann Burch & Laurens Klerkx - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (2):501-517.
    Artificial intelligence and robotics have increasingly been adopted in agri-food systems—from milking robots to self-driving tractors. New projects extend these technologies in an effort to automate skilled work that has previously been considered dependent on human expertise due to its complexity. In this paper, we draw on qualitative research carried out with farm managers on apple orchards and winegrape vineyards in Aotearoa New Zealand. We investigate how agricultural managers’ perceptions of future agricultural automation relates to their approach to expertise, or (...)
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  22. Toward an Account of Gender Identity.Katharine Jenkins - 2018 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 5.
    Although the concept of gender identity plays a prominent role in campaigns for trans rights, it is not well understood, and common definitions suffer from a problematic circularity. This paper undertakes an ameliorative inquiry into the concept of gender identity, taking as a starting point the ways in which trans rights movements seek to use the concept. First, I set out six desiderata that a target concept of gender identity should meet. I then consider three analytic accounts of gender identity: (...)
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  23. Rape Myths and Domestic Abuse Myths as Hermeneutical Injustices.Katharine Jenkins - 2017 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 34 (2):191-205.
    This article argues that rape myths and domestic abuse myths constitute hermeneutical injustices. Drawing on empirical research, I show that the prevalence of these myths makes victims of rape and of domestic abuse less likely to apply those terms to their experiences. Using Sally Haslanger's distinction between manifest and operative concepts, I argue that in these cases, myths mean that victims hold a problematic operative concept, or working understanding, which prevents them from identifying their experience as one of rape or (...)
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  24.  15
    Snow White and the Wicked Problems of the West: A Look at the Lines between Empirical Description and Normative Prescription.Katharine N. Farrell - 2011 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 36 (3):334-361.
    This article discusses the relationship between the origins of the concept of post-normal science, its potential as a heuristic and the phenomenon of complex science entailed policy problems in late industrial societies. Drawing on arguments presented in the early works of Funtowicz and Ravetz, it is proposed that there is a fundamentally empirical character to the post-normal science call for democratizing expertise, which serves as an antidote to late industrial poisoning of the fairy tale ideal of a clean divide between (...)
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  25.  9
    Verantwortung und Un/Verfügbarkeit: Impulse und Zugänge eines (neo)materialistischen Feminismus.Corinna Bath (ed.) - 2017 - Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.
  26. Conferralism and Intersectionality: A Response to Ásta’s Categories We Live By.Katharine Jenkins - 2019 - Journal of Social Ontology 5 (2):261-272.
    The conferralist account of social properties that Ásta develops and defends in Categories We Live By is persuasive in many ways. Conferralism could however do better, by its own lights, at handling the phenomenon of intersectionality. This paper first suggests a friendly amendment to the schema for conferrals that Asta offers. This helps to explain the difficulty concerning intersectionality. Finally, the paper suggests a way of developing the conferralist account that would resolve this difficulty.
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  27.  35
    Consumer Participation in Cause-Related Marketing: An Examination of Effort Demands and Defensive Denial.Katharine M. Howie, Lifeng Yang, Scott J. Vitell, Victoria Bush & Doug Vorhies - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 147 (3):679-692.
    This article presents two studies that examine cause-related marketing promotions that require consumers’ active participation. Requiring a follow-up behavior has very valuable implications for maximizing marketing expenditures and customer relationship management. Theories related to ethical behavior, like motivated reasoning and defensive denial, are used to explain when and why consumers respond negatively to these effort demands. The first study finds that consumers rationalize not participating in CRM by devaluing the sponsored cause. The second study identifies a tactic marketers can utilize (...)
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  28. The organic soul.Katharine Park - 1988 - In C. B. Schmitt, Quentin Skinner, Eckhard Kessler & Jill Kraye (eds.), The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 464--84.
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  29.  96
    Pornography, social ontology, and feminist philosophy.Katharine Jenkins - 2020 - Apa Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy 20 (1):18-22.
    Mari Mikkola’s Pornography: A Philosophical Introduction is a rich, thorough, and important book. With great skill and precision, Mikkola maps the conceptual terrain of pornography; summarises and assesses key debates in the existing literature; and contributes her own insights – chiefly, in my view, an appealing artefactual definition of pornography, and a strong case for a methodological commitment to discussing pornography in a way that is grounded in empirical reality. The result is much more than the promised ‘introduction’: it is (...)
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  30.  32
    Ethical Decision-Making by Staff Nurses.Katharine Vogel Smith - 1996 - Nursing Ethics 3 (1):17-25.
    Ethical decision-making is inherent in nursing practice. Although a definite portion of the nursing literature is devoted to ethics and ethical decision-making, the profession is just beginning to ground its ethics research in the actual experience of nurses. Therefore, the purpose of this phenomenological study was to examine the experience of staff nurses as they engage in ethical decision-making. Interview data were collected from 19 staff nurses in a large, midwestern American metropolitan hospital. Interviews were subse quently transcribed and Giorgi's (...)
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  31. Motions in the Body, Sensations in the Mind: Malebranche's Mechanics of Sensory Perception and Taste.Katharine Julia Hamerton - 2019 - Arts Et Savoirs 11 (Entre savoir et fantasme).
    This article, which seeks to connect philosophy, polite culture, and the Enlightenment, shows how Malebranche’s Cartesian science presented a full-frontal attack on the worldly notion of a good taste aligned with reason. It did this by arguing that the aesthetic tastes that people experience were the result of mechanically-transmitted sensations that, like all physical sensations, were inaccurate, erroneous and relativistic. The mechanics of this process is explored in detail to show how Malebranche was challenging honnête thinking. The article suggests that (...)
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  32.  11
    The Long or the Post of It? Temporality, Suffering, and Uncertainty in Narratives Following COVID-19.Katharine Cheston, Marta-Laura Cenedese & Angela Woods - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Humanities:1-18.
    Long COVID affects millions of individuals worldwide but remains poorly understood and contested. This article turns to accounts of patients’ experiences to ask: What might narrative be doing both to long COVID and for those who live with the condition? What particular narrative strategies were present in 2020, as millions of people became ill, en masse, with a novel virus, which have prevailed three years after the first lockdowns? And what can this tell us about illness and narrative and about (...)
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  33.  38
    Recent catholic views on art and poetry.Katharine Gilbert - 1942 - Journal of Philosophy 39 (24):654-661.
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  34.  32
    Ruskin's relation to Aristotle.Katharine Gilbert - 1940 - Philosophical Review 49 (1):52-62.
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  35.  31
    The intent and tone of mr. I. A. Richards.Katharine Gilbert - 1943 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 3 (11/12):29-48.
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  36.  23
    Health Maintenance as Responsibility for Self.Katharine KolcabaRaymond Kolcaba - 1994 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 1 (2):19-24.
    Many kinds of health compromising norms, habits, and beliefs are highly resistant to change thereby preventing new knowledge about health maintenance from advancing widespread better health. Persons would be more responsive if they used a health ethic to harmonize personal behavior with health-maintaining practices. We argue that common sense morality includes a portion of a health ethic in the guise of responsibilities to maintain health as well as avoid self destruction. We discuss an example in which its application can retard (...)
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  37.  23
    The Weimar Republic and the younger proletariat. An economic and social analysis.Katharine Anne Lerman - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (3):421-422.
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  38.  81
    Confronting Natural Death in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit.Katharine Loevy - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (1):59-91.
    The following essay considers Life in Hegel's Phenomenology, and hence Life as it appears if viewed not through the perspective of the well-being of any singular living thing, but in terms of Life as an emergent pattern that incorporates and connects all living things within it. Such a view on living things enables us to evaluate vis-à-vis the emergent image of Life the relative significance of any singular living thing’s passing. Yet while the framework provided by Hegel’s account of Life (...)
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  39.  18
    Feminist Perspectives on Bible and Theology An Introduction to Selected Issues and Literature.Katharine Doos Sakenfeld - 1988 - Interpretation 42 (1):5-18.
    In feminist approaches to Scripture, the question of the source of authority for the Christian faith plays a central role, especially for those who name themselves both feminist and Christian.
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  40. A Little Book of Courtesies, by K. Tynan & C. Robinson.Katharine Tynan & Charles Robinson - 1906
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  41.  25
    Gendered vulnerability to climate change in Limpopo province, South Africa.Katharine Vincent, Tracy Cull & Emma Rm Archer - 2010 - In Irene Dankelman (ed.), Gender and Climate Change: An Introduction. Earthscan.
  42.  40
    High-fidelity simulation and legal/ethical concepts: A transformational learning experience.Katharine V. Smith, Jacki Witt, JoAnn Klaassen, Christine Zimmerman & An-Lin Cheng - 2012 - Nursing Ethics 19 (3):390-398.
    Students in an undergraduate legal and ethical issues course continually told the authors that they did not have time to study for the course because they were busy studying for their clinical courses. Faculty became concerned that students were failing to realize the value of legal and ethical concepts as applicable to clinical practice. This led the authors to implement a transformational learning experience in which students applied legal and ethical course content in a high-fidelity human simulation (HFHS) scenario. A (...)
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  43.  42
    Ethical Practice in the Care of an Elder: a Daughter’s Blog.Caroline Bath - 2017 - Ethics and Social Welfare 11 (4):307-319.
    This paper examines extracts from a daughter’s blog about her father’s time in a care home in the north of England from June 2015 until his death in January 2016. Through these extracts, the author of the paper, who is also the daughter of the title, provokes key ethical issues concerning the identity, agency and voice of an elder in the context of residential care. The wider, rapidly deteriorating, political and economic climate for the care of older people is briefly (...)
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  44. Disability, Impairment, and Marginalised Functioning.Katharine Jenkins & Aness Kim Webster - 2021 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 99 (4):730-747.
    One challenge in providing an adequate definition of physical disability is unifying the heterogeneous bodily conditions that count as disabilities. We examine recent proposals by Elizabeth Barnes (2016), and Dana Howard and Sean Aas (2018), and show how this debate has reached an impasse. Barnes’ account struggles to deliver principled unification of the category of disability, whilst Howard and Aas’ account risks inappropriately sidelining the body. We argue that this impasse can be broken using a novel concept: marginalised functioning. Marginalised (...)
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  45. (1 other version)Differentiating hate speech: a systemic discrimination approach.Katharine Gelber - 2019 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (4):1-22.
    In this paper I develop a systemic discrimination approach to defining a narrowly construed category of ‘hate speech’, as speech that harms to a sufficient degree to warrant government regulation. This is important due to the lack of definitional clarity, and the extraordinarily wide usage, of the term. This article extends current literature on how hate speech can harm by identifying under what circumstances speakers have the capacity to harm, and under what circumstances targets are vulnerable to harm. It also (...)
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  46.  40
    Untrol: Post-Truth and the New Normal of Post-Normal Science.Katharine N. Farrell - 2020 - Social Epistemology 34 (4):330-345.
    The idea that there exists a natural relationship between intellectual freedom, legitimate political authority and enjoyment of a dignified life was central to the European Enlightenment and to the...
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  47. How To Be A Pluralist About Gender Categories.Katharine Jenkins - 2022 - In Raja Halwani, Jacob M. Held, Natasha McKeever & Alan G. Soble (eds.), The Philosophy of Sex: Contemporary Readings, 8th edition. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 233-259.
    To investigate the metaphysics of gender categories—categories like “woman,” “genderqueer,” and “man”—is to ask questions about what gender categories are and how they exist. This chapter offers a pluralist account of the metaphysics of gender categories, according to which there are several different varieties of gender categories. I begin by giving a brief overview of some feminist accounts of the metaphysics of gender categories and illustrating how certain moral and political considerations have been in play in these discussions as constraints (...)
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  48.  28
    Fashion on the Brain: The Visible and Invisible Bonds of the Imagination in Malebranche.Katharine J. Hamerton - 2022 - French Historical Studies 45 (3):415–449.
    This article explores Nicolas Malebranche's approach to fashion: an inescapable postlapsarian consequence of God's sociable design of the human mind and body as manifested in the imagination. A problematic side effect of the general laws established by God governing the soul-body relationship, fashion wreaked havoc on individuals' thinking and potential for redemption yet pointed to a larger providential plan for social benefit. These ideas led Malebranche to a distinctive nonpolitical approach to fashion—both “Enlightenment project” and theodicy—in which he sought to (...)
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  49. Malebranche, Taste, and Sensibility: The Origins of Sensitive Taste and a Reconsideration of Cartesianism’s Feminist Potential.Katharine J. Hamerton - 2008 - Journal of the History of Ideas 69 (4):533-558.
    This essay argues that Malebranche originated the model of sensitive taste in French thought, several decades before Du Bos. It examines the highly gendered, negative physiological model of taste and of the female mind which Malebranche developed within the Cartesian framework and as a witness to Parisian salon society in which women’s taste had great cultural influence, and strongly questions the common assumption that Cartesian substance dualism necessarily contained feminist potential. The essay argues for Malebranche’s great influence in this regard, (...)
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  50.  52
    From aesthetics to politics: Rancière, Kant and Deleuze.Katharine Wolfe - 2006 - Contemporary Aesthetics 4.
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