Results for 'Post-materialist values'

975 found
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  1.  34
    Post-materialism’s Social Class Divide: Experiences and Life Satisfaction.Douglas E. Booth - 2020 - Journal of Human Values 27 (2):141-160.
    Over last half of the twentieth century, a silent revolution in post-material values made significant advances around the world. The formation of post-material values also resulted in expanded participation in post-material experiences such as joining voluntary groups, pursuing creativity and independence in the world of work, and engaging in political actions—experiences that go beyond a strict focus on accumulating economic wealth and material possessions. Because social class position matters for being a post-materialist, a (...)
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  2. Materialism and value.J. Post - 1995 - In Paul K. Moser & J. D. Trout (eds.), Contemporary Materialism: A Reader. New York: Routledge. pp. 374.
  3.  54
    Regime Type, Post-Materialism, and International Public Opinion about US Foreign Policy: The Afghan and Iraqi Wars.Benjamin E. Goldsmith - 2006 - Japanese Journal of Political Science 7 (1):23-39.
    Previous research (e.g., Horiuchi, Goldsmith, and Inoguchi, 2005) has shown some intriguing patterns of effects of several variables on international public opinion about US foreign policy. But results for the theoretically appealing effects of regime type and post-materialist values have been weak or inconsistent. This paper takes a closer look at the relationship between these two variables and international public opinion about US foreign policy. In particular, international reaction to the wars in Afghanistan (2001) and Iraq (2003) (...)
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  4.  83
    The faces of existence: an essay in nonreductive metaphysics.John F. Post - 1987 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    John F. Post argues that physicalistic materialism is compatible with a number of views often deemed incompatible with it, such as the objectivity of values, the irreducibility of subjective experience, the power of the metaphor, the normativity of meaning, and even theism.
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  5.  13
    Changes and Conflicts of What We Value: Empirical Value-Surveys and Axiological Reflection.Moritz von Kalckreuth - forthcoming - Journal of Value Inquiry.
    The aim of this paper is to discuss the notion of value presupposed by empirical value-surveys such as the World Values Survey (WVS) or the European Values Study (EVS), using some basic distinctions of philosophical value-theory. I intend to show that the framework of these surveys is grounded on definitions or implicit claims that are systematically problematic, having also a certain impact on the empirical realisation and some of the survey’s outcomes. First, it is shown that the assumption (...)
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  6.  21
    Human Values Compatible with Sustainable Development.Pavel Nováček - 2013 - Journal of Human Values 19 (1):5-13.
    The values that people hold are the most important factor in deciding whether they endorse sustainable development. At the same time value orientations are likely to change over long time periods. International long-term research conducted by Ronald Inglehart in the second half of the twentieth century tried to capture the shift from material to post-material values. With respect to a sustainable lifestyle the research revealed a problem: there is a relationship between post-materialistic attitudes and the level (...)
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  7. The Post-Cinematic Gesture: Redhack.Ekin Erkan - 2020 - Zapruder World 6.
    Over the last thirty years, once staunchly film history scholars such as Thomas Elsaesser, Jane Gaines, Siegfried Zielinski, André Gaudreault and Benoît Turquety (to name just a few) have abandoned history for historiography and film studies for media archaeology. Considering the heightened attention given to kulturtechnik (Siegert), the database as a dominant symbolic metaphor,1 and the decentered networked tenants of the postmodern global present, cinema is taking on the characteristics of new media, existing in increasingly intertextual space. Thus, the term (...)
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  8. New Materialism and Neutralized Subjectivity. A Cultural Renewal?Pedro Sargento - 2013 - Cultura 10 (2):113-125.
    Abstract. In the increasingly notorious philosophy of new materialism, a serious attempt to redefine subjectivity in terms of its non-dualistic nature can be ascertained. The criticism on dualisms draws directly on a wider critique focusing the anthropocentric and correlationist models that shaped modernity and modern thought. In this paper, I consider new materialism’s non-dualism as a starting point from which a subsequent decline of subjectivity can be purported. This decline does not involve immediately, or at all, devaluation but, instead, it (...)
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  9.  50
    Thinking political sociology: beyond the limits of post-Marxism.Kate Nash - 2002 - History of the Human Sciences 15 (4):97-114.
    This article is concerned with post-Marxism and materialism in the work of Judith Butler, Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe. As `post-Marxists' these writers use `material' in a variety of ways, all of which indicate limits and constraints. The article focuses on one version of `materialism' in this work, a version that is more implied than elaborated, in which `material' is equivalent to institutionalized performativity or sedimented discourse: to `objective' social structures and institutions. Post-Marxists often use `the social' (...)
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  10.  18
    Postmoderno doba i postmaterijalističke vrednosti.Neven Cvetićanin - 2009 - Philotheos 9:352-357.
    The Essay is describing one of the most important structural changes that are brought by post modern age comparing the classical modernism. That structural change is recognised in eruption of so called post materialistic values that are obvious in the fact that in post modern age major requirement becomes the requirement for recognising and identity, what results creating new post modern identities as specific combination of traditional forms of identities and some new forms discovered in (...)
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  11. Managers’ Moral Decision-Making Patterns Over Time: A Multidimensional Approach.Johanna Kujala, Anna-Maija Lämsä & Katriina Penttilä - 2011 - Journal of Business Ethics 100 (2):191-207.
    Taking multidimensional ethics scale approach, this article describes an empirical survey of top managers’ moral decision-making patterns and their change from 1994 to 2004 during morally problematic situations in the Finnish context. The survey questionnaire consisted of four moral dilemmas and a multidimensional scale with six ethical dimensions: justice, deontology, relativism, utilitarianism, egoism and female ethics. The managers evaluated their decision-making in the problems using the multidimensional ethics scale. Altogether 880 questionnaires were analysed statistically. It is concluded that relying on (...)
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  12.  46
    Paths to Democracy of the Post-Soviet Republics: Attempt at Conceptualization.Krzysztof Brzechczyn - 2007 - In Ewa Czerwińska-Schupp (ed.), Values and Norms in the Age of Globalization. Peter Lang. pp. 1--30.
    The paper conceptualizes five basic developmental paths the post-Soviet republics followed. The conceptual framework of this paper is expanded theory of real socialism in non-Marxian historical materialism, namely proposed the model of secession from socialist empire. The first developmental path was followed by societies in which an independent civil revolution took place. This path of development bifurcates into two furhter sub-variants. Namely civil revolutions in the Baltic republics (Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia) resulted in the independence and stable democracies. Civil revolution (...)
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  13.  23
    Human uniqueness on the brink of a new axial age: From separation to reintegration of humans and nature.Cornel W. du Toit - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (4):9.
    Karl Jaspers’ Axial Age concept is used to depict the way humans interact with their environment. The first Axial Age (800-200 BC) can be typified among others as the age in which humans started to objectify nature. Nature was dispossessed of spirits, gods and vital forces that humans previously feared and used as explanation for the origin of things. Secularised and objectified nature became a source of wealth for humans to use and abuse as they like. This has peaked in (...)
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  14.  39
    Money versus Value?Elena Louisa Lange - 2019 - Historical Materialism 28 (1):51-84.
    Even after the demise of the influential Uno School in the 1980s, Japanese economists have been continuously engaged in the categorial reconstruction of Marx’s Critique of Political Economy, especially the theory of value and money. Writing in the 1980s–2000s, authors of the ‘post-Uno School’, such as Ebitsuka Akira, Mukai Kimitoshi, Kataoka Kōji etc., broadened the value-theoretical views of Uno School orthodoxy to include, among others, the Neue Marx-Lektüre (predominantly H.-G. Backhaus and M. Heinrich) and the French economists C. Benetti (...)
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  15.  35
    Participación y ciudadanía en tiempos de globalización.Manuel Braga da Cruz - 2003 - Anuario Filosófico 36 (75-76):29-38.
    Social and political participation is a value and an essential dimension of modern democracies. But the decrease of this participation in the most developed contemporary societies affects their civic culture and the foundations of democratic legitimacy. Citizenship, wich is the basis of modern concept of nation, evolved from the early concept of civil liberty, at the beginning of the 19th century, and from the notion of political equality, at the end of the same century, to the later idea of social (...)
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  16.  6
    Transformational Politics: Theory, Study, and Practice.Stephen Woolpert, Christa Daryl Slaton & Edward W. Schwerin - 1998 - State University of New York Press.
    Winner of the 1999 Best Book in Ecological and Transformational Politics presented by the American Political Science Association's Section on Ecological and Transformational Politics The discipline of political science has reached a crossroads. The frequency with which terms such as "post-liberal," "post-modern," "post-patriarchical," "post-materialist," and "post-structural" are used in contemporary political discourse testifies to the pervasive conviction that an era has ended. Similarly, phrases such as "new world order," "new paradigm," "new age," and "third (...)
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  17. The two-valued iterative systems of mathematical logic.Emil Leon Post - 1941 - London,: H. Milford, Oxford university press.
    INTRODUCTION In ita original form the present paper was presented to the American Mathematical Society, April 2k,, as a companion piece to the writer's ...
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  18.  48
    Structure and Agency in Historical Materialism: A Response to Knafo and Teschke.Charles Post - 2021 - Historical Materialism 29 (3):107-124.
    This essay argues that Knafo and Teschke fundamentally misread Brenner’s original contribution to the transition debate. They equate his rejection of trans-historical or trans-modal laws of motion with the notion that social-property relations do not have strong rules of reproduction that structure the actions of agents and give rise to ‘developmental patterns’ specific to each form of social labour. Knafo and Teschke’s critique of Brenner’s analysis of capitalist expansion and crisis is also theoretically and empirically questionable.
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  19.  23
    Objective Value, Realism, and the End of Metaphysics.John F. Post - 1990 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 4 (2):146 - 160.
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  20.  24
    The Formative Period of American Capitalism: A Materialist Interpretation, Daniel Gaido, London: Routledge, 2006.Charles Post - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (2):191-195.
    Daniel Gaido’s The Formative Period of American Capitalism provides a thorough accounting of classical Marxist writing on the history of US capitalism. He combines insights from the classical Marxist and US Trotskyist traditions with an engagement with a selection of recent historical research to produce a provocative interpretation of the origins and rise of capitalism in the US. However, his failure to critically interrogate the classical Marxist and US Trotskyist traditions on the US or engage with the growing historical research (...)
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  21.  14
    Intellectual and manual labour: a critique of epistemology.Alfred Sohn-Rethel - 1978 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.
    Alfred Sohn-Rethel's Intellectual and Manual Labour is one of the major texts of post-war Marxist theory. A tremendous influence on the major writers of the Frankfurt School, with ongoing relevance to current debates about value, abstraction, and domination, Sohn-Rethel's ideas are here presented at their fullest scope and with their greatest theoretical clarity. Out of print for many years, this new Historical Materialism edition contains a new introduction by Chris O'Kane, an afterword by Chris Arthur, and a complete compilation (...)
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  22.  6
    Conversations with Socrates and Plato: how a post-materialist social order can solve the challenges of modern life and insure our survival.Neal Grossman - 2019 - Winchester, UK: Iff Books.
    How a Post-Materialist Social Order Can Solve the Challenges of Modern Life and Insure Our Survival.
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  23.  61
    Competitiveness, Rational Audits, Materialistic Values.Ponti Venter - 2006 - The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 4:135-145.
    How to understand the "entrepreneurial university"? Three hundred years of popularised economic/philosophical thought, in which conflict/competition has been presented as progressive; lacking a normative context, this becomes warlike. Society presented as a "macro-market", linking people with money and media and frowning on political justice, leads to economism (economic totalitarianism). This instrumentalises universities and motivates bookkeeping rationality and goal rationality; the maximisation thesis guides managerial aims. Scholarship becomes industrialised and leadership managerialised. Empty concepts of "quality" and "competitiveness" become audit measures of (...)
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  24. Pain: Ethics, Culture, and Informed Consent to Relief.Linda Farber Post, Jeffrey Blustein, Elysa Gordon & Nancy Neveloff Dubler - 1996 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 24 (4):348-359.
    As medical technology becomes more sophisticate the ability to manipulate nature and manage disease forces the dilemma of when can becomes ought. Indeed, most bioethical discourse is framed in terms of balancing the values and interests and the benefits and burdens that inform principled decisions about how, when, and whether interventions should occur. Yet, despite advances in science and technology, one caregiver mandate remains as constant and compelling as it was for the earliest shaman—the relief of pain. Even when (...)
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  25.  40
    Institutional globalization as a system of integration the phenomenon of the postmodern development.Viktor Zinchenko - 2015 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 8:74-85.
    Purpose. Institutionalism is gaining strength as a dominant point of view on the world. Its philosophical basis is the postulate of the uncertainty of the development, which comes to replace the neoclassical certainty characteristic of industrial society. The postulate of uncertainty is closely connected with the idea of subjectivization and individualization of post-industrial society. All these were very important components of the new paradigm, although they do not exhaust the problem. In the heart of postmodernism is a mass identity (...)
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  26.  77
    The "Iron Law" of Business Responsibility Revisited: Lessons from South AfricaEconomic Imperatives and Ethical Values in Global Business: The South African Experience and International Codes Today.James E. Post, S. Prakash Sethi & Oliver F. Williams - 2002 - Business Ethics Quarterly 12 (2):265.
  27.  34
    Constitutional restraints on the regulations of scientific speech and scientific research.Robert Post - 2009 - Science and Engineering Ethics 15 (3):431-438.
    The question of what constitutional constraints should apply to government efforts to regulate scientific speech is frequently contrasted to the question of what constitutional constraints should apply to government efforts to regulate scientific research. This comment argues that neither question is well formulated for constitutional analysis, which should instead turn on the relationship to constitutional values of specific acts of scientific speech and research.
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  28.  57
    The Use and Misuse of Uneven and Combined Development: A Critique of Anievas and Nişancıoğlu.Charles Post - 2018 - Historical Materialism 26 (3):79-98.
    Aneivas and Nişancıoğlu’s provocative book,How the West Came to Rule, attempts to provide an alternative account of the origins of capitalism to both ‘Political Marxism’ and ‘World-Systems Theory’. By making uneven and combined development a universal dynamic of human history and by utilising a flawed concept of ‘Eurocentrism’, however, they introduce a high degree of causal pluralism into their analysis. Despite important insights into the specific dynamics of different pre-capitalist forms of social labour, their account of the origins of capitalism (...)
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  29.  12
    Was ist Materialismus?: zur Einl. in Philosophie.Werner Post - 1975 - München: Kösel. Edited by Alfred Schmidt.
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  30.  50
    The American Crucible: Slavery, Emancipation and Human Rights, Robin Blackburn, London: Verso, 2011.Charles Post - 2012 - Historical Materialism 20 (4):199-212.
    Plantation slavery in the New World, in particular its relationship to the emergence of capitalism in Europe and North America, has long been a subject of debate and discussion among historians and social scientists. While there are literally thousands of monographs studying various aspects of chattel slavery in the US South, the Caribbean and Brazil, only a handful of works attempt to provide a synthetic account of its rise and decline from the sixteenth through nineteenth centuries. Few scholars, on the (...)
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  31.  22
    Justice, community dialogue, and health care.Stephen G. Post - 1992 - Journal of Social Philosophy 23 (3):23-34.
    The Greater Cleveland community Dialogue on values and Health Care most recently took up the questions of health care rationing and of access to long-term care. The Dialogue, funded by the Cleveland Foundation, involves a Core Group of thirty community leaders representing major interest groups, joined together in an attempt to build consensus or acceptable compromise. The purpose of the dialogue is to identify moral values that can provide signposts for public policy regarding health care distribution.
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  32.  31
    (1 other version)A Formalisation of Post'sm-Valued Propositional Calculus with Variable Functors.Alan Rose - 1965 - Zeitschrift fur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik 11 (3):221-226.
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  33.  70
    Analogy, evaluation, and moral disagreement.Stephen G. Post & Robert G. Leisey - 1995 - Journal of Value Inquiry 29 (1):45-55.
    This article examines the role of two distinct forms of analogy in moral discourse. The use of analogy in moral discourse. The use of analogy in abortion debates in used as an example of the dominance of analogy in applied ethics.
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  34.  42
    Expanding The Rubric of “Patient-Centered Care” to “Patient and Professional Centered Care” to Enhance Provider Well-Being.Stephen G. Post & Michael Roess - 2017 - HEC Forum 29 (4):293-302.
    Burnout among physicians, nurses, and students is a serious problem in U.S. healthcare that reflects inattentive management practices, outmoded images of the “good” provider as selflessly ignoring the care of the self, and an overarching rubric of Patient Centered Care that leaves professional self-care out of the equation. We ask herein if expanding PCC to Patient and Professional Centered Care would be a useful idea to make provider self-care an explicit part of mission statements, a major part of management strategies (...)
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  35.  62
    Exploring Ethical Dilemmas in Perioperative Nursing Practice Through Critical Incidents.Iréne von Post - 1996 - Nursing Ethics 3 (3):236-249.
    This article describes the nature of ethical dilemmas in perioperative nursing practice. Using the Critical Incident Technique, common ethical dilemmas experienced by periop erative nurses are explored. The aim of the study was to elicit the ethical dilemmas that arise in perioperative nurses' practice. The study has a descriptive design and the data are critical incidents described by 48 anaesthetic nurses and 76 operating theatre nurses. An analysis of the critical incidents gave four domains of ethical dilemmas: those arising as (...)
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  36. Exploring Working-Class Consciousness: A Critique of the Theory of the 'Labour-Aristocracy'.Charles Post - 2010 - Historical Materialism 18 (4):3-38.
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  37.  20
    Percieved Stress in Emerging Adulthood: The Role of Sense of Control and the Mediation Effects of Religiosity and Materialistic Values.Muhammad Rehan Masoom - 2022 - Human Affairs 32 (1):48-62.
    The research addresses the effect of sense of control on perceived stress by controlling for the intervening effects of Religiosity and Materialism. A total of 609 emerging adults living in Dhaka city participated in the survey; surveyors used a 48-item structural closed-ended questionnaire to collect the responses. The elicited responses were quantified, and structural equation models were formulated to identify any associations among the variables of interest. The findings suggest that sense of control is a strong determinant of perceived stress; (...)
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  38.  16
    Coercion, Contract, and Free Labor in the Nineteenth Century by Robert J. Steinfeld.Charles Post - 2006 - Historical Materialism 14 (3):275-281.
  39.  48
    Collaborative collective bargaining: Toward an ethically defensible approach to labor negotiations. [REVIEW]Frederick R. Post - 1990 - Journal of Business Ethics 9 (6):495-508.
    In this paper I explain the present adversarial collective bargaining process (ACB) and then critique it on legal and ethical grounds. A new methodology, that I describe as the collaborative collective bargaining process (CCB), will then be explained and similarly critiqued. I argue that replacing the present ACB model with the CCB model will result in better long-term results for all parties concerned. This is because the ACB model is comparable, in many respects, to the adversarial process used in court (...)
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  40. Racism and Capitalism: A Contingent or Necessary Relationship?Charles Post - 2023 - Historical Materialism 31 (2):78-103.
    Anti-racist debate today remains polarised between ‘class reductionist’ (any attempt to address racial disparities reinforces capitalist class relations) and ‘liberal identity’ (disparities in racial representation can be resolved without questioning class inequality) politics. Both positions share a common perspective – racial oppression and class exploitation are the products of distinctive social dynamics whose relationship is historically contingent. This essay is an initial step toward characterising a structurally necessary relationship between capitalism and racial oppression. The essay draws upon Anwar Shaikh and (...)
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  41.  16
    Commerce, Culture and Capitalism.Charles Post - 2015 - Historical Materialism 23 (1):191-200.
    The problem of commerce in pre-capitalist societies has been an issue debated among historians, both Marxian and non-Marxian, for over a century. Martha Howell’s book provides new historical data on the economic impact and cultural meaning of commerce in feudal Europe, without, however, addressing key theoretical and interpretive issues.
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  42.  10
    Living in a Technological Culture: Human Tools and Human Values by Mary Tiles; Hans Oberdiek. [REVIEW]Robert Post - 1997 - Isis 88:580-581.
  43. “A Sane Island in an Ocean of Madness”: A Case of Alternative Organisational Ethics Through Post-Growth Values.Ben Robra, Alex Pazaitis & Arnaud Levy - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-21.
    Unprecedented runaway climate change and ecological degradation is argued to be caused by the dominant capitalist mode of production’s reliance on endless economic growth and capital accumulation. Businesses and organisations are expected to act in an ecologically and socially ethical way to help avert the crisis. Yet, there has arguably been little progress in this direction. The conventional ethical frameworks are generally subsumed under capitalism’s reliance on growth that effectively delegate business ethics to a peripheral and, often, contradictory pursuit, insufficient (...)
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  44. The Fear of Forgetfulness: A Grassroots Approach to an Ethics of Alzheimer’s Disease.Stephen G. Post - 1998 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 9 (1):71-80.
  45.  54
    Capitalism, Laws of Motion and Social Relations of Production.Charles Post - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (4):71-91.
    Theory as History brings together twelve essays by Jarius Banaji addressing the nature of modes of production, the forms of historical capitalism and the varieties of pre-capitalist modes of production. Problematic formulations concerning the relationship of social-property relations and the laws of motion of different modes of production and his notion of merchant and slave-holding capitalism undermines Banaji’s project of constructing a non-unilinear, non-Eurocentric Marxism.
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  46. General Intellect.Paolo Virno - 2007 - Historical Materialism 15 (3):3-8.
    As part of the Historical Materialism research stream on immaterial labour, cognitive capitalism and the general intellect, begun in issue 15.1, this articles explores the importance of the expression 'general intellect', proposed by Marx in the Grundrisse, for an analysis of linguistic and intellectual work in contemporary capitalism. It links the notion of general intellect to the crisis of the law of value, the political significance of mass intellectuality, and the definition of democracy in a world where knowledge is a (...)
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  47.  66
    Social-Property Relations, Class-Conflict and the Origins of the US Civil War: Towards a New Social Interpretation.Charles Post - 2011 - Historical Materialism 19 (4):58-97.
  48.  25
    European Cosmopolitan Solidarity: Questions of Citizenship, Difference and Post-Materialism.Nick Stevenson - 2006 - European Journal of Social Theory 9 (4):485-500.
    The idea of a cosmopolitan Europe continues to be central to contemporary debates within post-national citizenship. However, much of the writing in this area remains disconnected from the need to reinvent European social democracy that questions the centrality of work and racist nationalism. This article argues that a revived European Left would need to move beyond specifically liberal concerns with procedure to articulate a view of European futures that both deconstructed neo-liberalism and embraced more convivial collective futures. This would (...)
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  49.  79
    Baby K: Medical Futility and the Free Exercise of Religion.Stephen G. Post - 1995 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (1):20-26.
    Pediatricians provided expert testimony that, in the case of Baby K, provision of ventilator support goes beyond accepted standards of care for anencephalic infants and so is medically futile. This argument, however reasonable, does not persuade those who believe in the absolute value of even a fraction of human life. In Baby K, court records indicate that Ms. H, Baby K's mother, persistently adheres to the sanctity-of-life principle on religious grounds.While I think that quality-of-life considerations have a role in medical (...)
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  50.  19
    Materialist ethics and life-value.Jeff Noonan - 2012 - Montreal: McGill Queens university press.
    Current patterns of global economic activity are not only unsustainable, but unethical - this claim is central to Materialist Ethics and Life-Value. Grounding the definition of ethical value in the natural and social requirements of life-support and life-development shared by all human beings, Jeff Noonan provides a new way of understanding the universal conception of "the good life." Noonan argues that the true crisis affecting the world today is not sluggish rates of economic growth but the model of measuring (...)
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