Results for 'Means of production'

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  1.  22
    'Means of Communication as Means of Production' revisited.William Hebblewhite - 2012 - TripleC - Cognition, Communication, Co-Operation 10 (2):203-213.
    This paper seeks to examine the claim made by Raymond Williams that the means of communication are a means of production. While agreeing with the central claim by Williams, the paper argues that the model which Williams’ represents this claim with is insufficiently realized. By looking at the work of Marx and Althusser in relation to this claim, we suggest a new conceptual tool to actualize Williams’ claims.
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  2. Variations in the technological means of production as a global factor.J. Jirasek - 1985 - Filosoficky Casopis 33 (6):810-816.
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  3.  84
    What Are “The Means of Production”?William A. Edmundson - 2020 - Journal of Political Philosophy 28 (4):421-437.
    Journal of Political Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  4. The material conditions of non-domination: Property, independence, and the means of production.Alexander Bryan - 2023 - European Journal of Political Theory 22 (3):425-444.
    While it is a point of agreement in contemporary republican political theory that property ownership is closely connected to freedom as non-domination, surprisingly little work has been done to elucidate the nature of this connection or the constraints on property regimes that might be required as a result. In this paper, I provide a systematic model of the boundaries within which republican property systems must sit and explore some of the wider implications that thinking of property in these terms may (...)
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  5.  39
    Alternative criteria for the design of means of production.Seymour Melman - 1981 - Theory and Society 10 (3):325-336.
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  6. The nature and results of socialist ownership of means of products.H. Luft - 1975 - Filosoficky Casopis 23 (1):61-71.
     
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  7. Who owns the taste of coffee – examining implications of biobased means of production in food.Zoë Robaey & Cristian Timmermann - 2021 - In Hanna Schübel & Ivo Wallimann-Helmer (eds.), Justice and food security in a changing climate. Wageningen Academic Publishers. pp. 85-90.
    Synthetic foods advocates offer the promise of efficient, reliable, and sustainable food production. Engineered organisms become factories to produce food. Proponents claim that through this technique important barriers can be eliminated which would facilitate the production of traditional foods outside their climatic range. This technique would allow reducing food miles, secure future supply, and maintain quality and taste expectations. In this paper, we examine coffee production via biobased means. A startup called Atomo Coffee aims to produce (...)
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  8.  53
    The meaning of hominid species – culture as process and product?Kate Robson Brown - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (1):157-157.
    One implication of Laland, Odling-Smee & Feldman's niche construction model concerns the significance of the role of behavioural or cultural traits in comparative analysis. In this commentary it is suggested that cladistic methods already recognise this importance, and that behavioural characters may play a key role in hominid speciation and the definition of species.
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  9.  24
    gay (ze) doesn't reciprocate'the look', rather a lesbian reading is imposed upon her, more in hope than anticipation. But the voyeur can still momentarily imagine the space as her own, producing a small fissure in hegemonic hetero-sexual space. Lesbian spaces are also mobilized through linguistic structures of meaning. [REVIEW]Lesbian Productions Of Space - 1996 - In Nancy Duncan (ed.), BodySpace: destabilizing geographies of gender and sexuality. New York: Routledge.
  10. On the meaning of the economic base+ relations of production, forces of production and modes of production.Cf Yang - 1981 - Chinese Studies in Philosophy 12 (3):55-72.
     
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  11. The natural right to the means of production.Hillel Steiner - 1977 - Philosophical Quarterly 27 (106):41-49.
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  12. Mystery and meaning of law of Karma, a study on motivation factor in productivity.H. Natarajan - 1988 - Journal of Dharma 13 (2):141-146.
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  13. Production of rules by means of rules.Riccardo Guastini - 1986 - Rechtstheorie 17 (3):295-309.
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  14.  35
    Capital’s Artificial Intellect Becoming Uber’s Means of Autonomous Immaterial Production.Ramon Salim Diab - 2019 - Historical Materialism 27 (1):125-154.
    The global path of capitalist development is continuously transformed as a result of the production and integration of advanced information and communication technologies within various forms of production. The first half of this paper conceptualises ICTs as capital’s appropriation and objectification of the productive forces of the general intellect in ‘the general artificial intellect’, a category that refers to the total processing power of networked ICTs in global society. The second half of the paper analyses Uber’s development of (...)
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  15. Forces of Production and Relations of Production in Socialist Society.Sean Sayers - 1980 - Radical Philosophy 24 (24):19-26.
    It seems evident that class differences and class struggle continue to exist in socialist societies; that is to say, in societies like the Soviet Union and China, which have undergone socialist revolutions and in which private property in the means of production has been largely abolished. I shall not attempt to prove this proposition here; rather it will form my starting point. For my purpose in this paper is to show how the phenomenon of class in socialist society (...)
     
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  16. Transculturalism and the Meaning of Life.James Tartaglia - 2016 - Humanities 5 (2).
    I begin by introducing the standoff between the transculturalist aim of moving beyond cultural inheritances, and the worry that this project is itself a product of cultural inheritances. I argue that this is rooted in concerns about the meaning of life, and in particular, the prospect of nihilism. I then distinguish two diametrically opposed humanistic responses to nihilism, post-Nietzschean rejections of objective truth, and the moral objectivism favoured by some analytic philosophers, claiming that both attempt, in different ways, to break (...)
     
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  17. The meaning of sterility in the patriarchal cycle.Suzana Chwarts - 2009 - Principia: Revista do Departamento de Letras Clássicas e Orientais do Instituto de Letras 2 (19):99-117.
    This paper focuses on the concept of sterility as idealized in the Biblical text and exemplified in the stories of Sarah and Abraham, Rebecca, Leah, Rachel and Jacob. My analysis of these stories leads to the hypothesis that sterility is one of the foundational themes of Israel’s ancient past, by condensing some of the main obstacles inherent to the emergency of a people who believe to be guided by God. This new perspective on sterility was achieved by focusing on the (...)
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  18.  46
    Co-Production on the Web: Social Software as a Means of Collaborative Value Creation in Web-based Infrastructures.Tassilo Pellegrini - 2007 - International Review of Information Ethics 7 (9):1-6.
    The concept of co-production was originally introduced by political science to explain citizen participation in the provision of public goods. The concept was quickly adopted in business research targeting the question how users could be voluntarily integrated into industrial production settings to improve the development of goods and services on an honorary basis. With the emergence of the Social Software and web-based colla-borative infrastructures the concept of co-production gains importance as a theoretical framework for the collaborative (...) of web content and services. This article argues that co-production is a powerful concept, which helps to explain the emergence of user generated content and the partial transformation of orthodox business models in the content industries. Applying the concept of co-production to developmental policies could help to theorize and derive new models of including underprivileged user groups and communi-ties in collaborative value creation on the web for the mutual benefit of service providers and users. (shrink)
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  19.  75
    Kant's productive ontology: Knowledge, nature and the meaning of being.Beth Lord - 2003 - Dissertation, University of Warwick
    In this thesis I provide an interpretation of Kant's theories of knowledge, nature, and being in order to argue that Kant's ontology is a productive ontology: it is a theory of being that includes a notion of production. I aim to show that Kant's epistemology and philosophy of nature are based on a theory of being as productivity. The thesis contributes to knowledge in that it considers in detail Kant's ontology and theory of being, topics which have generally been (...)
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  20.  9
    The Transformative Power of Education as a Means of Enabling Former Offenders to Live Meaningful and Productive Lives.Colin O’Connor - 2021 - International Journal for Transformative Research 8 (1):33-44.
    Kaur (2012) raises the question, how can education be more inclusive and representative when catering to diverse groups and students? Does our entitlement to human kindness cease once incarcerated, and are we to be forever banished to the outskirts of society? The majority of offender education research assesses success or failure through mechanistic, objective and calculated criteria. Statistically, offenders repeatedly underachieve in primary and secondary education; offenders who partake in some form of adult and post-release learning continue this pattern, and (...)
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  21.  45
    Mimesis and clinical pictures: thinking with Plato and Broekman through the production and meaning of images of disease.Marjolein Oele - 2018 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 21 (4):507-515.
    This paper contends, following Plato and Broekman, that seeing images as images is crucial to theorizing medicine and that considering clinical pictures as images of images is a much-needed epistemic complement to the domineering view that sees clinical pictures as mirrors of disease. This does not only offer epistemic, but also ethical benefits to individual patients, especially in those cases where patients suffer from chronic, debilitating, and terminal illnesses and where medicine provides no, or limited, answers in terms of treatment, (...)
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  22.  14
    The Meaning of ‘Right’.W. D. Ross - 1930 - In William David Ross (ed.), The Right and the Good. Some Problems in Ethics. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    This first chapter of Ross's book is devoted to an inquiry into the meaning of right. The interest throughout is ethical, with value only being discussed as far as it seems relevant. The first aspect addressed is the ambiguity inherent in any definition of the meaning of right. G. E. Moore's three definitions of a horse are discussed: these may be designated the arbitrary verbal definition, the verbal definition proper, and the definition that involves the sense of being reduced to (...)
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  23.  22
    The Meaning of History.Calvin Schrag - 1963 - Review of Metaphysics 16 (4):703 - 717.
    Professor Weiss's book, in which he attempts to lay bare the structures of historical reality and shed new light on methods used by historians in understanding the past, is a closely reasoned, provocative, and seminal work, exhibiting a philosophical vision reminiscent of the speculative and metaphysical profundity of a Hegel or a Spinoza. The reader of History: Written and Lived soon becomes aware that the author understands philosophy to be a serious enterprise and that he is in possession of the (...)
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  24.  46
    “Digging for Meaning”: The Effect of a Designer’s Expertise and Intention on Depth of Product Metaphors.Nazlı Cila, Paul Hekkert & Valentijn Visch - 2014 - Metaphor and Symbol 29 (4):257-277.
    In the product-design domain, metaphors are used as a means of communication between designers and users. A designer generates a metaphor by deciding on a quality of a target to highlight and selecting a corresponding source that conveys this quality; the user interprets the designer’s intentions via the end product. The depth of the generated metaphor can be assessed by the extent to which the highlighted quality is salient for the target: Metaphors focusing on a salient quality of the (...)
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  25.  32
    Social organization and the meaning of health.Sander Kelman - 1980 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 5 (2):133-144.
    SummaryThe meaning of the term “health” is properly the subject of social, rather than natural, investigation. The structure of modern industrial capitalist society appears to materially and unavoidably produce a meaning of “health” intrinsically involving substantially preventable disease. Because in such a society private investment responds to cyclical and geographic fluctuations in rates of return and competitive labor markets, much of the disease structure (heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, and cancer, among others) encompasses diseases which captive citizens cannot afford to (...)
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  26.  78
    Production of presence: what meaning cannot convey.Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht - 2004 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Production of Presence is a comprehensive version of the thinking of Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, one of the most consistently original literary scholars writing today. It offers a personalized account of some of the central theoretical movements in literary studies and in the humanities over the past thirty years, together with an equally personal view of a possible future. Based on this assessment of the past and the future of literary studies and the humanities, the book develops the provocative thesis (...)
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  27.  33
    The Meanings of the Logical Constants in Deontic Logic.Sean Coyle - 1999 - Ratio Juris 12 (1):39-58.
    If deontic logic is to cast light on any of the normative sciences, such as legal reasoning, then certain problems regarding its logical constants must be faced. Recent studies in the area of deontic logic have tended to assume that it is our responses to the “paradoxes” of deontic implication which are fundamental to resolving problems with the use of deontic logic to investigate various branches of normative reasoning. In this paper I wish to show that the paradoxes are of (...)
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  28.  9
    Meanings of social reality representation in the subculture of a creolized text (as exemplified by the Russian musical genre of chanson).Ekaterina Prilukova & Denis Rakovsky - 2023 - Sotsium I Vlast 1:109-116.
    Introduction. The rapid dynamics of the present world results in its complication and construction. Reality turns out to be woven from many quote fragments, representing a collage that a person creates and comprehends through the prism of various texts. Constantly transformable forms come to the fore and, as a result, there exists a plurality of meanings. Models of the world are continuously generated, replacing the actual reality with a multi- tude of spectacular simulacra. The search for ways to comprehend reality (...)
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  29.  8
    Deleuze and Guattari's becoming and feminist meaning : the production of new body and feminist politics. 김은주 - 2014 - Korean Feminist Philosophy 21 (null):95-120.
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  30. Seeking the Everyday Meaning of Autonomy in Neurologic Disorders.George J. Agich - 2004 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 11 (4):295-298.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Seeking the Everyday Meaning of Autonomy in Neurologic DisordersGeorge J. Agich (bio)The Socratic aphorism that the unexamined life is not worth living and dictums like "Know thyself" remind us of the centrality of self-understanding in the history of philosophical reflections on autonomy. These traditional concerns with autonomy may seem far removed from the neurologic impairments to which Joel Anderson and Warren Lux draw our attention. Nonetheless, Anderson and Lux (...)
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  31.  15
    Matrix methods of product range analysis and their comparative characteristics.Anastasiya Valerevna Petrova - 2021 - Kant 40 (3):62-67.
    Implementing the key functions, any company is faced with issues related to the formation and analysis of the range of goods, products, services. Regardless of the field of activity, enterprises need to analyze each product line separately in order to make timely adjustments to the product range policy, which directly affects the economic efficiency of the enterprise as a whole. The purpose of the study is to reveal the content of matrix methods of assortment analysis. The article deals with the (...)
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  32.  42
    The social construction of production externalities in contemporary agriculture: Process versus product standards as the basis for defining “organic”. [REVIEW]B. James Deaton & John P. Hoehn - 2005 - Agriculture and Human Values 22 (1):31-38.
    The analysis distinguishes two types of standards for defining organic produce; process standards and product standards. Process standards define organic products by the method and means of production. Product standards define organic by the physical quality of the end product. The National Organic Program (NOP) uses process standards as the basis for defining organic. However, the situation is complicated by agricultural production practices, which sometimes result in the migration of NOP prohibited substances from conventional to organic fields. (...)
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  33.  20
    The Meanings of Money: A Sociological Perspective.Bruce G. Carruthers - 2010 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 11 (1):51-74.
    Money undergirds market exchange, but the social significance of money goes well beyond the obvious importance of its highly uneven distribution in modern market economies. In addition, modern money imposes an ostensibly precise and unidimensional valuation on social products, processes and relations that often conflicts with other modes of social valuation. In this regard, monetarization is a particular instance of quantification. Money’s status as an official economic metric is the result of a long, contingent, and uneven historical process. Given alternative (...)
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  34.  24
    Educational co-production in the age of digital reason: A review of the digital university: A dialogue and manifesto. [REVIEW]Alexander J. Means - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (6):660-662.
  35.  61
    (1 other version)But Who Created the Controllers? Control as Social Production of Meanings of Consumption.Shay Hershkovitz - 2013 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2013 (163):171-186.
    Excerpt“We have invented happiness,” said the last men, and they blinked. Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra1Introduction One of the key issues in the Marxist sociopolitical theory of the critique of capitalism regards the idea of “domination” or “control.” Webster's Dictionary defines domination as: (1) supremacy or preeminence over another; (2) exercise of mastery or ruling power; (3) exercise of preponderant, governing, or controlling influence.2 From a sociopolitical perspective, domination can be addressed using two different approaches. The first, a traditional approach, (...)
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  36. Recognition and Social Relations of Production.Andrew Chitty - 1998 - Historical Materialism 2 (1):57-98.
    This article presents a new interpretation of the concept of social relations of production in Marx. Against G.A. Cohen, it argues that social relations of production are relations of interaction between persons, not relations of de facto control between persons and means of production. It argues further that these relations are relations of 'de facto recognition', that is, relations constituted by actions in which individuals treat each other as if they recognised each other in certain ways, (...)
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  37. The meanings of understanding in the theories of Weber and Habermas.José Geraldo A. B. Poker - 2013 - Trans/Form/Ação 36 (s1):221-244.
    Partindo do pressuposto de que a teoria social elaborada por Habermas em muito se assemelha àquela construída por M. Weber, procedeu-se a um estudo comparativo com a intenção de identificar as formas pelas quais Weber e Habermas elaboraram o conceito de compreensão, ao mesmo tempo em que e o elegeram, cada um a seu modo, como instrumento metodológico adequado às dificuldades da produção de conhecimento científico nas Ciências Sociais. Tanto para Weber, como para Habermas, o conhecimento nas Ciências Sociais não (...)
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  38.  10
    Financial Factors Influencing the Development of Product Innovations in Polish Small and Medium Enterprises.Stanisław Ślusarczyk - 2021 - Studia Humana 10 (3):42-52.
    The development of product innovations in small and medium enterprises is determined mainly by their financial capabilities. These enterprises usually encounter financial problems when it comes to the introduction of product innovations. Therefore, managers should manage the company’s finances in the way that will enable them using all available means to solve these problems. This means that they ought to use external financial resources to a greater extent (not only in the form of loans). The article focuses on (...)
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  39.  68
    On the actual measurability of the density matrix of a decaying system by means of measurements on the decay products.S. Bergia, F. Cannata, A. Cornia & R. Livi - 1980 - Foundations of Physics 10 (9-10):723-730.
    The density matrix ρ describing a decaying system can be expressed in terms of correlations among observables belonging to the subsystems. Due to this structure and to the difficulties in measuring higher rank tensors of decay products for a single decay event, it is found that the mean value of ρ cannot be determined, in general, from measurements on the decay products. We also discuss the consequences of this conclusion as far as tests of quantum mechanics are concerned.
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  40.  5
    Evil and the Meaning of Life.Eric Reitan - 2008 - In Is God a Delusion?: A Reply to Religion's Cultured Despisers. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 187–207.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Evidential Argument from Evil Theodicies A Limited Perspective Horrors The Defeat of Horror Sources of Meaning.
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  41.  14
    Kant's productive ontology : knowledge, nature and the meaning of being.Beth Lord - 2003 - Pli 14.
    In this thesis I provide an interpretation of Kant's theories of knowledge, nature, and being in order to argue that Kant's ontology is a productive ontology: it is a theory of being that includes a notion of production. I aim to show that Kant's epistemology and philosophy of nature are based on a theory of being as productivity. The thesis contributes to knowledge in that it considers in detail Kant's ontology and theory of being, topics which have generally been (...)
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  42.  39
    Workplace spirituality to increase institutions’ commitment and meaning of life.Muntahibun Nafis Agus Z. F. F. Mujib - 2018 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 13 (1):89-112.
    The low commitment and meaning of life can be caused by many, but they potentially occur because people in an institution do not know what they get from their work other than just money; people become unhappy with their work, then get bored and uncomfortable at work, apathetic, and ultimately unproductive. An institution that implements workplace spirituality will make people feel connected and meaningful at work. The purpose of this study is to explain how the values of WS can increase (...)
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  43.  16
    (1 other version)On the Meaning of the Economic Base.Yang Changfu - 1981 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 12 (3):55-72.
    Whether the economic base refers ultimately to the relations of production or to the modes of production is a problem that involves understanding an important principle of historical materialism and political economics and thus is related to how we use fundamental social contradictions in solving real present problems; this must be clarified.
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  44.  11
    Pro-creative function of productive imagination in kant’s first critique. Discussion remark on the book of Saulius Geniusas “phenomenology of productive imagination: Embodiment, language, subjectivity” (ibidem-verlag, stuttgart, 2021. Isbn-13: 978-3-8382-1552-5). [REVIEW]Natalia Artemenko - 2023 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 12 (1):216-234.
    The aim of our “discussion remark” is not to present a critical review on the book written by S. Geniusas, a brilliant study notable by its extreme painstakingness, historical sensitivity and terminological accuracy, but rather to delve deeply into the origins of phenomenological understanding of productive imagination, i.e., to turn “back to Kant”, given in Saulius Geniusas’ book (the first chapter) for introductory reason. We proceed from S. Geniusas remark that productive imagination establishes a relation between different abilities, reconciles the (...)
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  45.  14
    The Meaning of “Epistemology” Science, Common Sense and Philosophy according to Émile Meyerson.Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos - 2017 - Kairos 19 (1):36-67.
    Émile Meyerson (1859–1933) is an epistemologist, in the French meaning of the term: he himself introduced the word in French as a synonymous for “philo- sophy of science” in his major book of 1908 Identity and Reality. First educated as a chemist, Meyerson discovered philosophy while reading Auguste Comte’s Cours de philosophie positive. However, he strongly rejected Comte’s positivism: metaphysics, he said, penetrates science and even common sense; men, whether they are scien- tists or not, are interested in finding a (...)
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  46.  20
    Embodiment and the Meaning of Life.Jeff Noonan - 2018 - Montréal: Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    The long tradition of pessimism in philosophy and poetry notoriously laments suffering caused by vulnerabilities of the human body. The most familiar and contemporary version is antinatalism, the view that it is wrong to bring sentient life into existence because birth inevitably produces suffering. Technotopianism, which stems from a similarly negative view of embodied limitations, claims that we should escape sickness and death through radical human-enhancement technologies. In Embodiment and the Meaning of Life Jeff Noonan presents pessimism and technotopianism as (...)
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  47.  37
    Meaning of presence.Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht & Ivan Ivashchenko - 2019 - Sententiae 38 (1):137-152.
    Conversation about expected translation into Ukrainian of Gumbrecht's book Production of Presence. What Meaning Cannot Convey (Stanford UP: Stanford, 2004).
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  48.  27
    Skepticism as a Means of “Indirect Exposition”: Boris Pasternak and Gustav Shpet.Tatiana G. Shchedrina & Boris I. Pruzhinin - 2021 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 58 (4):292-299.
    When we discuss skepticism, we generally mean a certain philosophical movement with a fundamental basis in doubt. At the same time, the history of philosophy gives us another highly productive, met...
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  49.  23
    Intentional Training With Speech Production Supports Children’s Learning the Meanings of Foreign Words: A Comparison of Four Learning Tasks.Katja Junttila & Sari Ylinen - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  50. The unproductivity of production theological thoughts on justification.R. Ahlers - 1982 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 5 (4):333-350.
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