Results for 'Michele Bernasconi'

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  1.  55
    Failures of the reduction principle in an Ellsberg-type problem.Michele Bernasconi & Graham Loomes - 1992 - Theory and Decision 32 (1):77-100.
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  2.  31
    Network formation in repeated interactions: experimental evidence on dynamic behaviour. [REVIEW]Michele Bernasconi & Matteo Galizzi - 2010 - Mind and Society 9 (2):193-228.
    Here, we present some experiments of non-cooperative games of network formation based on Bala and Goyal (Econometrica 68:1181–1229, 2000 ). We have looked at the one-way and the two-way flow models, each for high and low link costs. The models come up with both multiple equilibria and coordination problems. We conducted the experiments under various conditions which allowed for repeated interactions between subjects. We found that coordination on non-empty Strict Nash equilibria was not an easy task to achieve, even in (...)
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  3.  33
    Critical philosophy of race: essays.Robert Bernasconi - 2023 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    The fifteen essays collected here set out to demonstrate why the critical philosophy of race needs to take a historical turn. Genealogies of the concepts of both race and racism are deployed to clarify why some of the dominant strategies for combatting racism tend either miss the target altogether or give it only a glancing blow. For example, relying on biology to reject the concept of race as a way of disarming racism misses the fact that racism precedes the biology (...)
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  4. Making Nietzsche’s Thought Groan: The History of Racisms and Foucault’s Genealogy of Nietzschean Genealogy in “Society Must be Defended”.Robert Bernasconi - 2017 - Research in Phenomenology 47 (2):153-174.
    In 1976, in “Society Must be Defended,” Foucault did more than offer an alternative genealogy of his own genealogical perspective to the one he is sometimes taken to have provided in “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History.” He also, by implication, located Nietzsche within that genealogy, one result of which is that he gave what amounts to a new perspective on how Nietzsche might be placed within the history of racisms.
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  5. The policing of race mixing: The place of biopower within the history of racisms. [REVIEW]Robert Bernasconi - 2010 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 7 (2):205-216.
    In this paper I investigate a largely untold chapter in the history of race thinking in Northern Europe and North America: the transition from the form of racism that was used to justify a race-based system of slavery to the medicalising racism which called for segregation, apartheid, eugenics, and, eventually, sterilization and the holocaust. In constructing this history I will employ the notion of biopower introduced by Michel Foucault. Foucault’s account of biopower has received a great deal of attention recently, (...)
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  6.  7
    Robert Bernasconi and the challenges of a Critical Philosophy of Race: (Un)learning to read and teach the history of moral philosophy.Benjamin Décarie-Daigneault - 2025 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 51 (2):324-343.
    This essay is an attempt to determine what Robert Bernasconi’s body of work in Critical Philosophy of Race can teach us about the way in which we, philosophers and professors of philosophy, ought to treat our institutional heritage. What should we make, for instance, of moral claims made by philosophers of the modern era who – tacitly or explicitly – manifested certain levels of endorsement toward the Atlantic Slave Trade? How should we comprehend the conceptual tools that we have (...)
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  7.  25
    Derrida: a critical reader.David Wood (ed.) - 1992 - Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell.
    Jacques Derrida's prolific output has been the delight of philosophers and literary theorists for over twenty years. His influence on the way we read theoretical texts continues to be profound. No serious contemporary thinker can fail to come to terms with deconstruction and there have been a number of monographs devoted to his work. Very few, however, have combined a critical edge with a detailed knowledge of his writing. The contributors to this volume were each asked - in the most (...)
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  8.  47
    Heidegger in Question: The Art of Existing.Robert Bernasconi - 1993 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanity Books.
    Robert Bernasconi explores in the context of Heidegger's thought a number of questions of far-reaching concern: what is the role of literary examples within philosophy? Is art dead? What is the relation of art to nature? Is there a place for the idea of a "people" in art and literary theory, and in philosophy? Is the history of philosophy to be written as a narrative? What is the status of ethics within philosophy? What place does philosophy give to praxis? (...)
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  9. Kant's Third Thoughts on Race.Robert Bernasconi - 2011 - In Stuart Elden & Eduardo Mendieta (eds.), Reading Kant's Geography. State University of New York Press. pp. 291--318.
  10. Hegel at the Court of the Ashanti.Robert Bernasconi - 1998 - In Stuart Barnett (ed.), Hegel After Derrida. New York: Routledge. pp. 41--63.
    Hegel called world history a court of judgement, a world court, and in his Lectures on the Philosophy of World History he took Africans before that court and found them to be barbaric, cannibalistic, preoccupied with fetishes, without history, and without any consciousness of freedom. -/- In this paper, after rehearsing some of the more familiar objections to Hegel's verdict against Africa, I turn the tables and put Hegel on trial. More specifically, given that much of Hegel's account is directed (...)
     
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  11.  78
    Re-Reading Levinas.Robert Bernasconi & Simon Critchley (eds.) - 1991 - Indiana University Press.
    These essays provoke new responses to the work of the eminent French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas through an analysis of how the problematics of reading, deconstruction, feminism, and psychotherapy complicate and deepen Levinas's account of ...
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  12.  67
    The Cambridge Companion to Lévinas.Robert Bernasconi & Simon Critchley (eds.) - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Emmanuel Levinas is now widely recognised alongside Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty and Sartre as one of the most important Continental philosophers of the twentieth century. His abiding concern was the primacy of the ethical relation to the other person and his central thesis was that ethics is first philosophy. His work has also had a profound impact on a number of fields outside philosophy such as theology, Jewish studies, literature and cultural theory, psychotherapy, sociology, political theory, international relations theory and critical legal (...)
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  13.  34
    Race.Robert Bernasconi (ed.) - 2001 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    This volume provides an introduction to the concept of race within philosophy. It gives an overview of the most important contributions by continental philosophers to the understanding or race as well as presenting a general review of recent philosophical discussions.
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  14. The Provocation of Levinas: Rethinking the Other.Robert Bernasconi & David Wood (eds.) - 1988 - New York: Routledge.
    There is a growing recognition of Levinas's importance. It can in part be attributed to an increasing concern that twentieth-century continental philosophy seems to have no place for ethics. In making ethics fundamental to philosophy, rather than a problem to which we might one day return, Levinas transforms continental thought. The book brings together some of the most interesting and far-reaching responses to the work of Levinas, in three different areas: contemporary feminism, psychotherapy, and Levinas's relation to other philosophers. It (...)
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  15.  70
    The Third Party. Levinas on the Intersection of the Ethical and the Political.Robert Bernasconi - 1999 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 30 (1):76-87.
  16. Heidegger's Destruction of Phronesis.Robert Bernasconi - 1990 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 28 (S1):127-147.
  17. Will the real Kant please stand up-The challenge of Enlightenment racism to the study of the history of philosophy.Robert Bernasconi - 2003 - Radical Philosophy 117:13-22.
  18.  26
    Slavery's absence from histories of moral and political philosophy.Robert Bernasconi - 2024 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 62 (S1):54-67.
    At a time when many institutions of higher learning are reflecting on their past complicity with chattel slavery, either in terms of the sources of their funding or their use of slave labor, philosophy as an academic discipline has been largely silent about its own complicity. Questions surrounding the legitimacy and practice of slavery were a regular part of moral philosophy courses at universities from the sixteenth century until its abolition. However, the discussions of slavery found in the dominant textbooks (...)
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  19.  98
    Frantz Fanon’s Engagement with Phenomenology: Unlocking the Temporal Architecture of Black Skin, White Masks.Robert Bernasconi - 2020 - Research in Phenomenology 50 (3):386-406.
    Attention to the role of phenomenology in Frantz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks is fundamental to an appreciation of the book’s progressive structure. And it is through an appreciation of this structure that it becomes apparent that the book’s engagement with phenomenology amounts to an enrichment, not a critique, of existential phenomenology, although the latter might appear to be the case at first sight, given Fanon’s rejection of certain aspects of Jean-Paul Sartre’s “Black Orpheus.” This is demonstrated through an examination (...)
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  20. Crossed Lines in the Racialization Process: Race as a Border Concept.Robert Bernasconi - 2012 - Research in Phenomenology 42 (2):206-228.
    Abstract The phenomenological approach to racialization needs to be supplemented by a hermeneutics that examines the history of the various categories in terms of which people see and have seen race. An investigation of this kind suggests that instead of the rigid essentialism that is normally associated with the history of racism, race predominantly operates as a border concept, that is to say, a dynamic fluid concept whose core lies not at the center but at its edges. I illustrate this (...)
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  21. African Philosophy’s Challenge to Continental Philosophy.Robert Bernasconi - 1997 - In Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze (ed.), Postcolonial African Philosophy: A Critical Reader. Cambridge, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 183--196.
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  22.  34
    Where Is Xenophobia in the Fight against Racism?Robert Bernasconi - 2014 - Critical Philosophy of Race 2 (1):5-19.
    What is at stake in identifying some actions or speech acts as racist as opposed to regarding them as “merely” xenophobic? If we understand racism as a system, how does this impact the way we address the distinction between the terms racism and xenophobia? My attempt to address these questions is guided by two observations drawn from the genealogy of the term racism. First, in the English language, the word was initially a synonym for Nazi anti-Semitism. The strategies to combat (...)
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  23. What is the question to which 'substitution'is the answer.Robert Bernasconi - 2002 - In Robert Bernasconi & Simon Critchley (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Lévinas. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 234--251.
     
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  24. The double face of the political and the social: Hannah Arendt and America's racial divisions.Robert Bernasconi - 1996 - Research in Phenomenology 26 (1):3-24.
  25. The contradictions of racism : Locke, slavery, and the two treatises.Robert Bernasconi & Anika Maaza Mann - 2005 - In Andrew Valls (ed.), Race and Racism in Modern Philosophy. Cornell University Press.
  26. Levinas and the Struggle for Existence.Robert Bernasconi - 2005 - In Eric Sean Nelson, Antje Kapust & Kent Still (eds.), Addressing Levinas. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press. pp. 170--184.
     
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  27.  5
    Ottobah Cugoano’s Place in the History of Political Philosophy: Slavery and the Philosophical Canon.Robert Bernasconi - 2023 - In Critical philosophy of race: essays. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 123-141.
    Ottobah Cugoano’s Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery is perhaps the most powerful attack on slavery of the late eighteenth century. It is also remarkably relevant still today for its account of responsibility, its attack on gradualism, and its understanding that any judgment about the means appropriate to ending slavery should be proportionate to the evil of slavery itself, which was considerable. Cugoano’s significance is established by contrasting his arguments with those of other philosophers from Francis Hutcheson to (...)
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  28.  91
    Must We Avoid Speaking of Religion? The Truths of Religions.Robert Bernasconi - 2009 - Research in Phenomenology 39 (2):204-223.
    Heidegger already recognized in the 1920s the difficulties facing a phenomenology of religion, but the problems are greatly multiplied once one recognizes that many of the so-called religions were constituted as such only in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and that the "invention" of these religions was according to an idea of religion shaped by Christianity. By investigating the incompatible attempts of Kant and Hegel to negotiate that idea, I identify the genealogy of the double bind whereby today (...)
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  29.  57
    Race and Racism in Continental Philosophy.Robert Bernasconi (ed.) - 2003 - Indiana University Press.
    This volume provides an indispensable critical introduction to new perspectives on thinking about race and racism.
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  30. Race and earth in Heidegger's thinking during the late 1930s.Robert Bernasconi - 2010 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 48 (1):49-66.
    In 1934 Heidegger offered an account of what a Volk is in terms of the existential analytic of Dasein set out in Being and Time , but soon after he abandoned this framework as he began the task of overcoming metaphysics. Integral to this new task was a confrontation with the racial policies not just of the Nazis but also of the Allies because he believed that the Western philosophical tradition was deeply implicated in these policies. Against this background, this (...)
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  31.  39
    With What Must the History of Philosophy Begin?Robert Bernasconi - 2003 - Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 16:35-49.
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  32.  30
    The question of language in Heidegger's history of being.Robert Bernasconi - 1985 - London: Macmillan.
    This study is not an attempt to render an account of Heidegger's history of Being; that history is not a story and cannot be retold as one. This book is concerned with the insight that introduces us to the history of Being and the transformation in our re.
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  33.  93
    The ethics of suspicion.Robert Bernasconi - 1990 - Research in Phenomenology 20 (1):3-18.
  34.  85
    Almost always more than philosophy proper.Robert Bernasconi - 2000 - Research in Phenomenology 30 (1):1-11.
  35. Deconstruction and the Possibility of Ethics.Robert Bernasconi - 1987 - In John Sallis (ed.), Deconstruction and philosophy: the texts of Jacques Derrida. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 122--39.
     
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  36. Different styles of eschatology: Derrida's take on Levinas' political messianism.Robert Bernasconi - 1998 - Research in Phenomenology 28 (1):3-19.
  37.  38
    Heidegger and the invention of the western philosophical tradition.Robert Bernasconi - 1995 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 26 (3):240-254.
  38. On deconstructing nostalgia for community within the west: The debate between Nancy and Blanchot.Robert Bernasconi - 1993 - Research in Phenomenology 23 (1):3-21.
  39.  79
    On Heidegger’s Other Sins of Omission.Robert Bernasconi - 1995 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 69 (2):333-350.
  40.  24
    The third party.Robert Bernasconi - 2003 - In Claire Elise Katz & Lara Trout (eds.), Emmanuel Levinas. New York: Routledge. pp. 1--1.
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  41.  72
    A most dangerous error: The Boasian myth of a knock-down argument against racism.Robert Bernasconi - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (2):92-103.
    A genealogy of the English word racism shows that its dominant sense was shaped by Franz Boas, Ruth Benedict, and Ashley Montagu around 1940 in order to establish a broad consensus against a narrow form of antisemitism found among some anthropologists in Nazi Germany. Their strategy, which was to challenge the biological concept of race on which racism, on their account, was said to be parasitic was subsequently adopted by UNESCO in 1950 and is still advocated by many today. But (...)
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  42.  19
    Levinas.Robert Bernasconi - 1988 - In Hugh J. Silverman (ed.), Philosophy and Non-philosophy Since Merleau-Ponty. New York: Routledge. pp. 1--232.
  43.  20
    How to read Sartre.Robert Bernasconi - 2007 - New York: W.W. Norton & Co..
    'I too was superfluous' -- 'Outside, in the world, among others' -- 'Hell is other people' -- 'He is playing at being a waiter in a café' -- 'In war there are no innocent victims' -- 'I am obliged to want others to have freedom' -- 'The authentic Jew makes himself a Jew' -- 'The eyes of the least favoured' -- 'A future more or less blocked off' -- 'Man is violent'.
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  44.  11
    Heredity and Hybridity in the Natural History of Kant, Girtanner, and Schelling during the 1790s.Robert Bernasconi - 2014 - In Susanne Lettow (ed.), Reproduction, Race, and Gender in Philosophy and the Early Life Sciences. State University of New York Press. pp. 237-258.
  45.  28
    Infinity.Pablo Bernasconi - 2021 - Oklahoma City & Greensboro: Penny Candy Books.
    What is infinity? It's reading the last line of a book and imagining the rest. No, wait, it's the instruction manual for the machine that operates the sun and the stars. In unexpected observations, captivating images, and even some equations, celebrated Argentinian author-illustrator Pablo Bernasconi, finalist for the 2018 Hans Christian Andersen Award, offers up verses about what infinity could mean to all of us. Winner of the Grand Prize from the Asociación de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil de la (...)
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  46. Bridging the abyss: Heidegger and Gadamer.Robert Bernasconi - 1986 - Research in Phenomenology 16 (1):1-24.
  47. No exit: Levinas' aporetic account of transcendence.Robert Bernasconi - 2005 - Research in Phenomenology 35 (1):101-117.
    In this paper I present Levinas' account of excendence in On Escape and Existence and Existents and show its continuity with his subsequent discussions of transcendence in Time and the Other, Totality and Infinity, and Otherwise than Being. I argue that Levinas' critique of the traditional idea of identity plays a decisive role in establishing the continuity between these various accounts as it provides the key to unlocking his account of transcendence as a formal structure. However, the meaning of trascendence (...)
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  48.  83
    The Fate of the Distinction Between Praxis and Poiesis.Robert Bernasconi - 1986 - Heidegger Studies 2:111-139.
  49. Levinas's Ethical Critique of Levinasian Ethics.Robert Bernasconi - 2012 - In Scott Davidson & Diane Perpich (eds.), Totality and infinity at 50. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Duquesne University Press.
     
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  50.  25
    Toward a Phenomenology of Human Rights.Robert Bernasconi - 2011 - Eco-Ethica 1:83-96.
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