Results for 'Siobhain Lash'

159 found
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  1.  53
    Expensive Tastes and Living in High-Risk or Hazardous Areas: Claims to Compensation.Siobhain Lash - forthcoming - Ethics, Policy and Environment.
    In this paper, I defend a position contrary to a popular view of distributive justice. Residents of flood-prone or otherwise hazardous areas, like the Gulf South of the United States, receive substantial amounts of aid, paid through taxes on people living elsewhere in the US, after natural disasters that frequent the region. In popular discourse, some argue that we have reason not to (re)build in high-risk or hazardous areas, like the Gulf South. Instead, these residents, and others in similarly situated (...)
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  2.  14
    Introduction: Ulrich Beck: Risk as Indeterminate Modernity.Scott Lash - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (7-8):117-129.
    This serves as an introduction to this section on Beck and as a standalone essay. In it we see that the writers in this section understand Beck's risk as modernity itself. And in this context risk's reflexive modernity is understood as ‘indeterminate modernity’. The essay thematizes a radically subjectivist reading of Beck's risk. It sees reflexivity as opposed to the objectivism and positivism of Kant's critique of pure reason, and instead in terms of the subjectivity of Kant's third aesthetic critique. (...)
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  3.  26
    Remembering Ulrich Beck.Scott Lash - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (7-8):336-339.
    This is a commemoration of Ulrich Beck, written originally just after his passing. It understands Beck in terms of Kant’s critiques. Here if, say, Latour incorporates the first critique of instrumentalism and Habermas the second critique of morality, then Ulrich points us to the third critique – hope.
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  4. Doctrinal Development and Christian Unity.Nicholas Lash - 1967
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  5. Crisis and Tradition in Veritatis Splendor.Nicholas Lash - 1994 - Studies in Christian Ethics 7 (2):22-28.
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  6.  81
    Power after Hegemony.Scott Lash - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (3):55-78.
    The treatment in what follows of the politics of hegemony is not per se one of Gramsci, or Laclau or of Stuart Hall's earlier work. At stake is something that encompasses a more general regime of power that will be developed throughout the length of this: what might be called 'extensive politics'. What I will try to show is that such extensive power or such an extensive politics is being progressively displaced by a politics of intensity. I will trace the (...)
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  7.  15
    Not in his image: gnostic vision, sacred ecology, and the future of belief.John Lamb Lash - 2021 - White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing.
    Lash is capable of explaining the mind-bending concepts of Gnosticism and pagan mystery cults with bracing clarity and startling insight.... [His] arguments are often lively and entertaining.”—Los Angeles Times Fully revised and with a new preface by the author, this timely update is perfect for readers of The Immortality Key. Since its initial release to wide acclaim in 2006, Not in His Image has transformed the lives of readers around the world by presenting the living presence of the Wisdom (...)
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  8. Recovering Contingency.Nicholas Lash - 1998 - In John Cornwell (ed.), Consciousness and Human Identity. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 197--211.
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  9.  16
    Reflections on where we have come from.Nicholas Lash - 2010 - Modern Theology 26 (1):45-52.
  10. The dissolution of the social?Scott Lash & John Urry - 1986 - In Mark L. Wardell & Stephen P. Turner (eds.), Sociological theory in transition. Boston: Allen & Unwin. pp. 95--109.
     
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  11.  21
    The legal fiction of infallibility.Nicholas Lash - 1975 - Heythrop Journal 16 (1):57–58.
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  12.  26
    Ontology or Theology? François Jullien and Chinese Vitalism.Scott Lash - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (4-5):41-56.
    François Jullien intervenes into the ontology debates to understand Chinese thought as an anti-ontology, but instead in terms of ‘life’, that is as a sort of vitalism. Chinese anti-ontology features the juxtaposition of the wu (there-is-not) with the you (there-is). This, I argue, maps onto theology’s counterposition of otherworldly and this-worldly. Here Daoism features an ascetic and unstratified wu in contraposition to Confucianism’s you of moderation and stratification. We contrast ontology’s causation with ‘efficacy’ in Jullien’s Chinese thought. We read Zhuangzi’s (...)
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  13.  30
    Considering the trinity.Nicholas Lash - 1986 - Modern Theology 2 (3):183-196.
  14.  13
    Hoping against hope or Abraham's dilemma.Nicholas Lash - 1994 - Modern Theology 10 (3):233-246.
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  15.  34
    Life (Vitalism).Scott Lash - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):323-329.
    This entry is about the concept of vitalism. The currency of vitalism has reemerged in the context of the changes in the sciences, with the rise of ideas of uncertainty and complexity, and the rise of the global information society. This is because the notion of life has always favoured an idea of becoming over one of being, of movement over stasis, of action over structure, of flow and flux. The global information order seems to be characterized by ‘flow’. There (...)
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  16.  52
    (2 other versions)An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.John Henry Newman & Nicholas Lash - 1870 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press. Edited by Charles Frederick Harrold.
    This classic of Christian apologetics seeks to persuade the skeptic that there are good reasons to believe in God even though it si impossible to understand the Deity fully. First written over a century ago, the _Grammar of Assent _speaks as powerfully to us today as it did to its first readers. Because of the informal, non-technical character of Newman's work, it still retains its immediacy as an invaluable guide to the nature of religious belief. An introduction by Nicholas (...) reviews the background of the _Grammar, _highlights its principal themes, and evaluates its philosophical originality. (shrink)
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  17.  38
    Discourse or Figure? Postmodernism as a `Regime of Signification'.Scott Lash - 1988 - Theory, Culture and Society 5 (2-3):311-336.
  18.  37
    Postmodern Ethics.Scott Lash - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (2):91-104.
  19.  28
    Introduction to the Ethics and Difference Debate.Scott Lash - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (2):75-77.
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  20.  34
    Performativity or Discourse? An Interview with John Searle.Scott Lash - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (3):135-147.
    Scott Lash interviews John Searle, one of the foremost contemporary philosophers. Over the course of the conversation, Searle discusses his research into performativity, language and intentionality, the question of information and his account of social ontology. The conversation initially deals with the early influence of John Austin and Ludwig Wittgenstein as well as Searle's relationship to phenomenology and the rest of the philosophical tradition. This offers a conceptual reconstruction of Searle’s work from multiple perspectives. Crucial concepts are highlighted such (...)
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  21.  53
    Postmodernity and desire.Scott Lash - 1985 - Theory and Society 14 (1):1-33.
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  22.  33
    Deforming the Figure: Topology and the Social Imaginary.Scott Lash - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (4-5):261-287.
    Topology is integral to a shift in socio-cultural theory from a linguistic to a mathematical paradigm. This has enabled in Badiou and Žižek a critique of the symbolic register, understood in terms of pure conceptual abstraction. Drawing on topology, this article understands it instead in terms of the figure. The break with the symbolic and language necessitates a break with form, but topologically still preserves a logic of the figure. This becomes a process of figuration, indeed a process of `deformation'. (...)
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  23.  21
    Not exactly politics or power?Nicholas Lash - 1992 - Modern Theology 8 (4):353-364.
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  24.  32
    Lebenssoziologie.Scott Lash - 2005 - Theory, Culture and Society 22 (3):1-23.
    This article presents a case for the revaluation of vitalism in sociological theory. It argues for the relevance of such a Lebenssoziologie in the global information age. The body of the article addresses what a vitalist sociology might be through a consideration of Georg Simmel. The analysis works from the juxtapositon of vitalist monadology with postivist atomism. It shows how Simmel drew on the Kantian cognition to develop an idea of the social. Here Kant’s Newtonian atomism was transformed into Simmel’s (...)
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  25.  47
    Technological Forms of Life.Scott Lash - 2001 - Theory, Culture and Society 18 (1):105-120.
    This article attempts to gain purchase on the information society via the notion of `technological forms of life'. It first addresses the idea of `forms of life'. Forms of life are a mode of conceiving of culture that arose at the turn of the 20th century in conjunction with phenomenology. Previously, in early modernity, culture was conceived very much on a representational model. The rest of the essay explores the possibility that a new paradigm of culture, i.e. technological forms of (...)
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  26.  30
    Was Newman a theologin?Nicholas Lash - 1976 - Heythrop Journal 17 (3):322–325.
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  27.  83
    Reflexive Modernization: The Aesthetic Dimension.Scott Lash - 1993 - Theory, Culture and Society 10 (1):1-23.
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  28.  74
    Genealogy and the Body: Foucault/Deleuze/Nietzsche.Scott Lash - 1984 - Theory, Culture and Society 2 (2):1-17.
  29.  11
    Experience: new foundations for the human sciences.Scott Lash - 2018 - Medford, MA: Polity.
    This book is a radical plea for the centrality of experience in the social and human sciences. Scott Lash argues that a large part of the output of the social sciences today is still shaped by assumptions stemming from positivism, in contrast to the tradition of interpretative social enquiry pioneered by Max Weber. These assumptions are particularly central to economics, with its emphasis on homo economicus, the utility-maximizing, instrumental actor, but they have infiltrated the other social sciences too. (...) argues for a social sciences based not in positivism’s utilitarian a priori but instead in the a posteriori of grounded and embedded subjective experience. This features a politics of Hannah Arendt’s public sphere, which begins with the particular experience of Aristotle’s polis and moves - via Rome, Augustine and Kant - to a modernity that acknowledges the fragility of political worlds. Yet modernity is also a matter of technological experience and technological forms of life. Lash - starting from Aristotle’s technics and working through Turing’s and Shannon’s computer mediation – develops a novel account of technological experience, of how objects themselves experience. And here he finds a surprising convergence with Chinese cosmology’s ethos of dao, qi and li: the experience of the embedded multiplicity of the ‘ten thousand things’. This original book by a leading social and cultural theorist will be of interest to scholars and students across the social sciences, from sociology and cultural studies to anthropology and politics. (shrink)
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  30.  86
    Eternal life: Life 'after' death?Nicholas Lash - 1978 - Heythrop Journal 19 (3):271–284.
  31.  7
    A matter of hope: a theologian's reflections on the thought of Karl Marx.Nicholas Lash - 1981 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press.
  32.  18
    Experience.Scott Lash - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):335-341.
    For Kant, experience is epistemological, whereas ontological experience (Gadamer) is in the first instance poetic and Romantic (Schiller, Goethe). In contradistinction to Kantian Erfahrung, it is most often called Erlebniß. We note further that Erfahrung is cognitive experience while Erlebnis is also aesthetic experience. Dilthey and Husserl understand experience pertaining to knowledge through Erlebnis. In epistemological or classificatory knowledge the parts add up to the whole. Ontological knowledge instead is holistic in which the whole is present in each of the (...)
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  33. Book Review: Grammar and Grace: Reformulations of Aquinas and Wittgenstein. [REVIEW]Nicholas Lash - 2006 - Studies in Christian Ethics 19 (2):262-265.
  34.  22
    Book Review: Science and the Reformation: Religion and the Rise of Modern Science. [REVIEW]Nicholas Lash - 1973 - History of Science 11 (2):145-148.
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  35.  13
    Fear of the Dark.Nicholas Lash - 2000 - Modern Theology 16 (2):203-214.
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  36.  29
    Graham Jones and Ashley Woodward Acinemas: Lyotard's Philosophy of Film.Dominic Lash - 2019 - Film-Philosophy 23 (3):391-394.
    Review of Graham Jones and Ashley Woodward, eds., "Acinemas: Lyotard's Philosophy of Film" (Edinburgh University Press).
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  37.  21
    Introduction: Millenniums and catastrophic times.Scott Lash, Andrew Quick & Richard Roberts - 1998 - Cultural Values 2 (2-3):159-173.
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  38.  27
    (Re)producing Marriage.Dominic Lash - 2021 - Film and Philosophy 25:1-22.
    This article considers aspects of Stanley Cavell’s film-philosophy in the light of Paul Thomas Anderson’s 2017 film Phantom Thread, and vice versa. Methodologically, it concentrates on the interpretation of Cavell’s writing and of Anderson’s film. In arguing that Phantom Thread has affinities with Cavell’s famous cinematic genre of remarriage comedy, the article addresses Cavell’s understanding of the production of what Wittgenstein calls “criteria.” Affirming Steven J. Affeldt’s insistence that the production of criteria is occasioned by crisis, the article explores the (...)
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  39. Response to Fr. Myroslaw Tataryn: Papal Primacy, Local Primacy and Episcopal Collegiality,‖ in.Ephrem Lash - 1993 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 34 (1-2):142-151.
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  40. Observation, Revelation and the Posterity of Noah.Nicholas Lash - 1988 - In Robert J. Russell, William R. Stoeger & George V. Coyne (eds.), Physics, philosophy, and theology: a common quest for understanding. Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press [distributor].
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  41. The Beginning and the End of 'Religion'.Nicholas Lash - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    The common view that 'religion' is something quite separate from politics, art, science, law and economics is one that is peculiar to modern Western culture. In this book Professor Lash argues that we should begin to question seriously that viewpoint: the modern world is ending and we are now in a position to discover new forms of ancient wisdom, which have been obscured from view. These essays explore this idea in a number of directions, examining the dialogue between theology (...)
     
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  42.  66
    Communicative Rationality and Desire.Roy Boyne & Scott Lash - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (61):152-158.
    Over the past three years or so, Telos and New German Critique have opened a debate in which Habermas's theory of communicative rationality has been counterposed to the ‘aesthetic-sensual forms of subjectivity’ advocated by certain French theorists, who have come to be known as the ‘post-structuralists’. Among the latter, the most significant figures are Michel Foucault, Jean-Francois Lyotard, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari. This confrontation between theories of desire and theories of communicative rationality is perhaps only just beginning, but already (...)
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  43.  37
    Rupture, Suture, Nietzsche: Impossible Intersubjectivity in Alien.Dominic Lash - 2021 - Film-Philosophy 25 (3):229-250.
    The concept of suture has long been an important and controversial concept in investigations of the relationships between narrative, diegesis, character, and spectator. The dominant understanding of suture has paid more attention to its Lacanian derivation – and to the account given by Daniel Dayan – than to the work of Jean-Pierre Oudart which first introduced suture into Film Studies. This article, however, follows the recent work of George Butte, who argues that the way Oudart understands suture is very illuminating (...)
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  44. Thinking, attending, praying.Nicholas Lash - 2009 - In John Cornwell & Michael McGhee (eds.), Philosophers and God: at the frontiers of faith and reason. New York: Continuum.
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  45.  12
    The Church in the State We’re In.Nicholas Lash - 1997 - Modern Theology 13 (1):121-137.
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  46.  40
    Capitalism and Metaphysics.Scott Lash - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (5):1-26.
    Contemporary capitalism is becoming increasingly metaphysical. The article contrasts a ‘physical’ capitalism – of the national and manufacturing age – with a ‘metaphysical capitalism’ of the global information society. It describes physical capitalism in terms of (1) extensity, (2) equivalence, (3) equilibrium and (4) the phenomenal, which stands in contrast to metaphysical capitalism’s (1) intensity, (2) inequivalence (or difference), (3) disequilibrium and (4) the noumenal. Most centrally: if use-value or the gift in pre-capitalist society is grounded in concrete inequivalence, and (...)
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  47.  28
    Recognition and Difference.Scott Lash & Mike Featherstone - 2001 - Theory, Culture and Society 18 (2-3):1-19.
  48.  32
    Reflexivity as Non-Linearity.Scott Lash - 2003 - Theory, Culture and Society 20 (2):49-57.
    This article attempts to re-think the notion of reflexivity in terms of non-linearity. It tries to understand the second modernity as a non-linear modernity. This second modernity is understood as much in terms of communications as social norms. It is a modernity that is thoroughly monist. It features non-linear socio-technical systems.
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  49.  32
    An Interview with Philip Mirowski.Scott Lash & Bogdan Dragos - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (6):123-140.
    In this interview, Philip Mirowski, a foremost economic historian and philosopher of economic thought, discusses his research into the history of economics along with its complex relationship to the natural sciences and the recent rise of neoliberalism. The conversation starts by focusing on his early work on the birth of neoclassical economics as an imitation of modern physics via energetic metaphors. We also discuss the subsequent impact of the computer metaphor and its influence on post-Second World War economic theory. Some (...)
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  50. Die Religionswissenschaft und das Christentum: Eine historische Untersuchung ueber das Verhaeltnis von Religionswissenschaft und Theologie (Sigurd Hjelde).N. Lash - 1996 - Heythrop Journal 37:483-483.
     
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