Results for 'disproportion'

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  1. Disproportional mental causation.Justin T. Tiehen - 2011 - Synthese 182 (3):375-391.
    In this paper I do three things. First, I argue that Stephen Yablo’s influential account of mental causation is susceptible to counterexamples involving what I call disproportional mental causation. Second, I argue that similar counterexamples can be generated for any alternative account of mental causation that is like Yablo’s in that it takes mental states and their physical realizers to causally compete. Third, I show that there are alternative nonreductive approaches to mental causation which reject the idea of causal competition, (...)
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  2.  17
    Comparando os incomparáveis: resenha do livro Infini et disproportion chez Pascal, de João Cortese.Luís César Guimarães Oliva - 2023 - Cadernos Espinosanos 49:265-267.
    Trata-da resenha do livro Infini et disproportion chez Pascal, de João Cortese.
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  3.  19
    A Study on ‘Disproportion’ and ‘Fragility’ of Paul Ricoeur’s Philosophical Anthropology: Focusing on Fallible Man. 김세원 - 2022 - Korean Feminist Philosophy 37:61-103.
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  4.  10
    Virtues and Values, Without Disproportion or Dysfunction.Simon Burgess - 2022 - Australasian Philosophical Review 6 (2):172-179.
    ABSTRACT Pettigrove advances a persuasive case against the proportionality principle. In my view, the moral respect that his modus operandi account of virtue affords to each person’s ‘characteristic way of being’ is also to be applauded. While various philosophers have come to believe in the proportionality principle, it is something that presupposes a monistic account of value. Moreover, it is readily arguable that the kind of abstraction that this involves provides nothing more than an illusion of understanding, and that any (...)
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  5.  3
    João F. N. B. Cortese, Infini et disproportion chez Pascal.Thomas Bellon - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 13 (1):199-203.
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  6.  40
    A Semiotic Morphology, Anime Body Disproportion, and Storytelling.Yukihide Endo - 2012 - Semiotics:119-123.
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  7.  22
    Translating Cultural Safety to the UK.Amali U. Lokugamage, Elizabeth Rix, Tania Fleming, Tanvi Khetan, Alice Meredith & Carolyn Ruth Hastie - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (4):244-251.
    Disproportional morbidity and mortality experienced by ethnic minorities in the UK have been highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement has exposed structural racism’s contribution to these health inequities. ‘Cultural Safety’, an antiracist, decolonising and educational innovation originating in New Zealand, has been adopted in Australia. Cultural Safety aims to dismantle barriers faced by colonised Indigenous peoples in mainstream healthcare by addressing systemic racism.This paper explores what it means to be ‘culturally safe’. The ways in which New (...)
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  8.  10
    La mémoire des "camps" en Europe : surdité et chassé-croisés.Catherine Coquio - 2008 - Hermes 52:, [ p.].
    La disproportion est grande et ne cesse d'augmenter ces dix dernières années, entre la mémoire de la Shoah et celle du Goulag. La première, ponctuée par les commémorations internationales des 50 et 60 ans de la Libération d'Auschwitz ne cesse de cristalliser l'attention tandis que le regard porté sur le Goulag se tient, lui, nettement aux marges de la vie culturelle, médiatique et scolaire, du moins en Europe occidentale. Cette mémoire bancale a créé un litige qui semble se normaliser, (...)
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  9.  15
    Retrouver la place centrale de l’homme : la cosmologie de Ruyer.André Conrad - 2022 - Rue Descartes 101 (1):40-54.
    « La disproportion de la violence anti-spéciste par rapport à ses objets pose la question des motifs de cette violence. Loin d’être l’expression d’une compassion instruite par une morale hédoniste, par une écologie et une éthologie, cette violence joue dans l’idéologie générale de l’indifférenciation, un rôle capital et manifeste le ressentiment propre à la post-modernité. On ne peut retrouver la place privilégiée de l’homme qu’en répondant à la crise cosmologique de la modernité par une cosmologie panpsychiste, celle, par exemple, (...)
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  10.  11
    Exploring smallholder farmers’ climate change adaptation intentions in Tiruchirappalli District, South India.Hermine Mitter, Kathrin Obermeier & Erwin Schmid - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-17.
    Smallholder farmers are disproportionally vulnerable to climate change, and knowledge on cognitive factors and processes is required to successfully support their adaptation to climate change. Hence, we apply a qualitative interview approach to investigate smallholder farmers’ adaptation intentions and behavior. The theoretical Model of Private Proactive Adaptation to Climate Change has guided data collection and analysis. We conducted twenty semi-structured interviews with smallholder farmers living and working in Tiruchirappalli District in South India. We applied a qualitative content analysis by combining (...)
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  11.  81
    (1 other version)Epistemic injustice in Climate Adaptation.Morten Byskov & Keith Hyams - 2022 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 25 (4):613-634.
    Indigenous peoples are disproportionally vulnerable to climate change. At the same time, they possess valuable knowledge for fair and sustainable climate adaptation planning and policymaking. Yet Indigenous peoples and knowledges are often excluded from or underrepresented within adaptation plans and policies. In this paper we ask whether the concept of epistemic injustice can be applied to the context of climate adaptation and the underrepresentation of Indigenous knowledges within adaptation policies and strategies. In recent years, the concept of epistemic injustice has (...)
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  12.  27
    Révolution copernicienne et métaphysique de la grandeur : Copernic, Descartes, Pascal.Édouard Mehl - 2018 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 125 (2):251-266.
    L’article situe Disproportion de l’Homme dans le prolongement de la discussion entre Descartes et Christine de Suède (1647), la jeune reine objectant à la cosmologie des Principia Philosophiae que son infinitisme blesse les « fondements de la religion », là où, répond Descartes, on ne devrait pas, si l’on avait une idée juste de la puissance divine, « enfermer le monde dans une boule ». Bien que la discussion ne porte à aucun moment sur Copernic, elle n’a de sens (...)
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  13.  70
    A Mathematical Model of Juglar Cycles and the Current Global Crisis.Leonid Grinin, Andrey Korotayev & Sergey Malkov - 2010 - In Leonid Grinin, Peter Herrmann, Andrey Korotayev & Arno Tausch (eds.), History & Mathematics: Processes and Models of Global Dynamics.
    The article presents a verbal and mathematical model of medium-term business cycles (with a characteristic period of 7–11 years) known as Juglar cycles. The model takes into account a number of approaches to the analysis of such cycles; in the meantime it also takes into account some of the authors' own generalizations and additions that are important for understanding the internal logic of the cycle, its variability and its peculiarities in the present-time conditions. The authors argue that the most important (...)
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  14. The case for banning cigarettes.Kalle Grill & Kristin Voigt - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (5):293-301.
    Lifelong smokers lose on average a decade of life vis-à-vis non-smokers. Globally, tobacco causes about 5–6 million deaths annually. One billion tobacco-related deaths are predicted for the 21st century, with about half occurring before the age of 70. In this paper, we consider a complete ban on the sale of cigarettes and find that such a ban, if effective, would be justified. As with many policy decisions, the argument for such a ban requires a weighing of the pros and cons (...)
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  15.  32
    (1 other version)The Extra-Phenomenal.Emmanuel Falque - 2018 - Diakrisis 1:9-28.
    Everything is phenomenon, everything is gift, or everything is given. This presupposition of phenomenology, which makes giveness the starting point for phenomenality, is not altogether self-evident. It is not sufficient to look merely at the reverse of the gift, but it is a matter of questioning the impossibility of even giving. Questioning the strategies of the contemporary reappropriations of Kant—radicalization, disproportion, and inversion —this text works under a fourth possibility, seldom examined and yet still envisaged by Kant: the “Extra-Phenomenal”, (...)
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  16. Two kinds of organic unity.Thomas Hurka - 1998 - The Journal of Ethics 2 (4):299-320.
    This paper distinguishes two interpretations of G. E. Moore''s principle of organic unities, which says that the intrinsic value of a whole need not equal the sum of the intrinsic values its parts would have outside it. A holistic interpretation, which was Moore''s own, says that parts retain their values when they enter a whole but that there can be an additional value in the whole as a whole that must be added to them. The conditionality interpretation, which has been (...)
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  17.  23
    What Virtue Adds to Value.Glen Pettigrove - 2022 - Australasian Philosophical Review 6 (2):113-128.
    ABSTRACT In virtually every corner of ethics—including discussions of value, practical reasoning, moral psychology, and justice—it is common for theorists to suggest that our actions, attitudes, or emotions should be proportional to the degree of value present in the objects or events to which they are responding. I argue that there is a fundamental problem with these approaches: they overlook the character of the agent and what it adds to the equation. I show that a commitment to proportionality is at (...)
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  18.  24
    Simple Utterances but Complex Understanding? Meta-studying the Fuzzy Mismatch between Animal Semantic Capacities in Varied Contexts.Sigmund Ongstad - 2022 - Biosemiotics 15 (1):85-108.
    This meta-study of animal semantics is anchored in two claims, seemingly creating a fuzzy mismatch, that animal utterances generally appear to be simple in structure and content variation and that animals’ communicative understanding seems disproportionally more advanced. A set of excerpted, new studies is chosen as basis to discuss whether the semantics of animal uttering and understanding can be fused into one. Studies are prioritised due to their relatively complex designs, giving priority to dynamics between syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and between (...)
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  19.  32
    “There is no time for rest”: Gendered CSR, sustainable development and the unpaid care work governance gap.Lauren McCarthy - 2018 - Business Ethics 27 (4):337-349.
    Unpaid care work, including child care, elder care, and housework, is unremunerated work essential to human survival and flourishing. Worldwide, women disproportionally carry out this work, impacting upon their ability to engage in other activities, such as education, employment, or leisure. Despite a growing number of businesses engaging in “gendered CSR,” in the form of women's empowerment projects, attention to unpaid care work remains little discussed in the literature, despite its importance to sustainable development. Applying Diane Elson's feminist economic framework (...)
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  20.  30
    Sinning against nature: the theory of background conditions.R. Blackford - 2006 - Journal of Medical Ethics 32 (11):629-634.
    Debates about the moral and political acceptability of particular sexual practices and new technologies often include appeals to a supposed imperative to follow nature. If nature is understood as the totality of all phenomena or as those things that are not artificial, there is little prospect of developing a successful argument to impugn interference with it or sinning against it. At the same time, there are serious difficulties with approaches that seek to identify "proper" human functioning. An alternative approach is (...)
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  21.  43
    Questioning the Role of Anti-Blackness in Quijano’s Theory of Coloniality of Power.Rosa O’Connor Acevedo - 2023 - Radical Philosophy Review 26 (2):205-233.
    The author argues that Quijano’s conceptualization of race within the theory of coloniality of power is limited and theoretically insufficient given its lack of elaboration regarding the role of anti-Blackness in Spanish colonization. This article contrasts the idea of coloniality of power with Cedric Robinson’s elaboration of racial capitalism to demonstrates how Robinson has a more complex and historically rich analysis of race that centers the expansion of racial capitalism with the invention of the Negro subject. The article closes with (...)
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  22.  94
    Sharing in or Benefiting from Scientific Advancement?Cristian Timmermann - 2014 - Science and Engineering Ethics 20 (1):111-133.
    The intellectual property regimes we have currently in place are heavily under attack. One of the points of criticism is the interaction between two elements of article 27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the widely discussed issue of being able to benefit from scientific progress and the less argued for position of having a right to take part in scientific enterprises. To shine light on the question if we should balance the two elements or prioritize one of them, (...)
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  23.  55
    Should pregnant women be charged for non-invasive prenatal screening? Implications for reproductive autonomy and equal access.Eline M. Bunnik, Adriana Kater-Kuipers, Robert-Jan H. Galjaard & Inez D. de Beaufort - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (3):194-198.
    The introduction of non-invasive prenatal testing in healthcare systems around the world offers an opportunity to reconsider funding policies for prenatal screening. In some countries with universal access healthcare systems, pregnant women and their partners are asked to pay for NIPT. In this paper, we discuss two important rationales for charging women for NIPT: to prevent increased uptake of NIPT and to promote informed choice. First, given the aim of prenatal screening, high or low uptake rates are not intrinsically desirable (...)
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  24.  60
    Terminal sedation: source of a restless ethical debate.J. J. M. van Delden - 2007 - Journal of Medical Ethics 33 (4):187.
    Slow euthanasia or a good palliative intervention?There are many ways in which doctors influence the circumstances and/or the timing of a patient’s death. Some of these are accepted as normal medical practice—for instance, when a disproportional treatment is forgone, others are considered tolerable only under strict conditions or even intolerable, such as non-voluntary active euthanasia. A relatively new phenomenon in the ethical discussion on end-of-life decisions is terminal sedation. Terminal sedation is used in patients with terminal illnesses where normal medical (...)
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  25.  81
    Penser la confiance avec Paul Ricoeur.Laure Assayag - 2016 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 7 (2):164-186.
    This article proposes to retrace the path of trust that Paul Ricœur has drawn across his works. If the concept of trust is never themed as such, nevertheless it unfolds in subtle ways in fields as diverse as ethics, morality, politics, and religion. We will argue that trust is a solid but fragile foundation for Ricœur’s recognition theory. Rooted in man’s structural disproportion, trust is a perpetual tension between the finitude of existence and the infinitude of mutual recognition, between (...)
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  26.  96
    Deep culture in action: resignification, synecdoche, and metanarrative in the moral panic of the Salem Witch Trials.Isaac Ariail Reed - 2015 - Theory and Society 44 (1):65-94.
    Sociological research on moral panics, long understood as “struggles for cultural power,” has focused on the social groups and media conditions that enable moral panics to emerge, and on the consequences of moral panics for the social control systems of societies. In this article I turn instead to modeling the specific cultural process of how the conditions for a moral panic are turned into an actual moral panic, moving the understanding of moral panic away from its Durkheimian origins and towards (...)
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  27.  65
    Revolution Against Non-violent Oppression.Zsolt Kapelner - 2019 - Res Publica 25 (4):445-461.
    Oppressive governments that use violence against citizens, e.g. murder and torture, are usually thought of as liable to armed revolutionary attack by the oppressed population. But oppression may be non-violent. A government may greatly restrict political rights and personal autonomy by using surveillance, propaganda, manipulation, strategic detention and similar techniques without ever resorting to overt violence. Can such regimes be liable to revolutionary attack? A widespread view is that the answer is ‘no’. On this view, unless a government is or (...)
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  28.  29
    A Wise Person Proportions Their Beliefs With Humor.Chris Kramer - 2021 - The Philosophy of Humor Yearbook 2 (1):141-143.
    “Just as philosophy begins with doubt, so also a life that may be called human begins with irony” (Kierkegaard The Concept of Irony with Continual Reference to Socrates, pg.6, thesis XV) What has proportion to do with humor or irony? And what do either of these have to do with being human? Jokes, laughter, and funniness connote excess, exaggeration, incongruity, dissonance, etc., the opposite of proportion--balance, symmetry, Aristotle’s golden mean. Yet, The Philosopher maintains, the wit has found the ideal moderate (...)
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  29.  58
    How can we decide a fair allocation of healthcare resources during a pandemic?Cristina Roadevin & Harry Hill - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (12):e84-e84.
    Whenever the government makes medical resource allocation choices, there will be opportunity costs associated with those choices: some patients will have treatment and live longer, while a different group of patients will die prematurely. Because of this, we have to make sure that the benefits we get from investing in treatment A are large enough to justify the benefits forgone from not investing in the next best alternative, treatment B. There has been an increase in spending and reallocation of resources (...)
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  30.  18
    Tratamento e cuidado dos pacientes em estado vegetativo persistente: um debate de vida e de morte.Paul Okoth Auma - 2016 - Revista de Teologia 10 (17):267-276.
    This article presents the ethical situation that evolves the discussion of limitation of treatment offered to patients in a persistent vegetative state. Health professionals find themselves in difficult situations when dealing with these recurrent problems in their daily professional activities. This is presented, then, as an ethical issue of difficult solution, the decision of suspension of life support tasks. The debate is sustained, however, on how to distinguish the concepts of terminality of life, orthothanasia, euthanasia, dysthanasia, palliative care and, in (...)
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  31. Maimónides y Tomás: El triunfo de la negación.Mario Di Giacomo - 2009 - Apuntes Filosóficos 18 (35):109-128.
    En este artículo se exploran las relaciones entre finito-infinito y los límites del lenguaje posible, del lenguaje finito, para hablar de su callado fundamento. En este sentido, el mismo vaciamiento del lenguaje, expresión de una imposibilidad a la cual empero no se hurta, la de hablar de Dios, conduce a ponderar la importancia que tiene la teología negativa en el sentido de permitir al mundo humano barruntar las dimensiones del misterio que lo funda. Se tocan, de esta manera, las concepciones (...)
     
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  32.  31
    International Rescue and Mediated Consequences.Ned Dobos - 2012 - Ethics and International Affairs 26 (3):335-353.
    One of the most commonplace worries about humanitarian intervention relates to the perverse incentives that it might create, or the adverse reactions that it might provoke. For instance, it is sometimes said that by weakening the norm of sovereignty humanitarian intervention can encourage unscrupulous states to wage aggressive wars of self-interest using human rights as a pretense. It is feared, in other words, that humanitarian intervention—even when it has the purest motives—might ultimately do more harm than good by inciting unwanted (...)
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  33.  6
    Opining the articuli fidei: Thomas Aquinas on the Heretic’s Assent to the Articles of Faith.M. V. Dougherty - 2016 - The Thomist 80 (1):1-21.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Opining the articuli fidei:Thomas Aquinas on the Heretic’s Assent to the Articles of FaithM. V. DoughertyTHOMAS AQUINAS’S ACCOUNT of the infused virtue (habitus) of faith presupposes that some intrinsically intelligible truths are beyond the range of the natural cognitive abilities of human beings. The possession of the virtue of faith allows the believer to transcend certain natural epistemic limitations so that he can assent to truths that are necessary (...)
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  34.  10
    Note critique. Sommes-nous en transition vers le mode de production managérial?Fabien Foureault - 2022 - Actuel Marx 1:147-156.
    Cette note entend faire une critique constructive de la thèse du « mode de production managérial », due à Gérard Duménil et Dominique Lévy. Tout en reconnaissant les mérites de leurs travaux, la note essaye de montrer qu’il existe une disproportion entre leur proposition théorique, de grande ampleur, et sa base empirique, trop faible pour la soutenir. Trois contre-arguments sont développés en ce sens. D’abord, les auteurs ne se fondent pratiquement que sur le constat de la montée de la (...)
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  35.  8
    Prelude: When Truth Encounters Us.Jean Greisch - 2022 - Critical Hermeneutics 5 (2).
    The proposed text first appeared under the title Prélude. Quand la vérité nous donne rendez-vous as an introduction to Jean Greisch’s volume, Rendez-vous avec la vérité. However, the vortex of metaphors that ‘tell’ the ‘truth’ remains hardly reducible to a single ‘theory’ of ‘Truth’. Over the centuries, what-is-’true’ has been said in many different ways, starting with the unsolvable opposition between the truth-fidelity of the Jewish tradition and the truth-disclosure/manifestation of classical Greek thought; passing through the truth-regulating, namely the truth-institution (...)
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  36.  8
    Rendez-vous con la verità.Jean Greisch - 2022 - Critical Hermeneutics 5 (2).
    The proposed text first appeared under the title Prélude. Quand la vérité nous donne rendez-vous as an introduction to Jean Greisch's volume, Rendez-vous avec la vérité. However, the vortex of metaphors that 'tell' the 'truth' remains hardly reducible to a single 'theory' of 'Truth'. Over the centuries, what-is-‘true' has been said in many different ways, starting with the unsolvable opposition between the truth-fidelity of the Jewish tradition and the truth-disclosure/manifestation of classical Greek thought; passing through the truth-regulating, namely the truth-institution (...)
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  37.  2
    Toward an Ontology of Peace II.Brian Gregor - 2024 - Approaching Religion 14 (3):41-53.
    Following Part I, this essay (Part II) continues my attempt to develop an ontology of peace by drawing resources from Ricœur’s thought. I begin with Augustine, Dionysius, and Aquinas to show that peace is not contrary to our humanity but is a natural desire that runs with the grain of our being. This account is complicated by the category of the irascible, however, which Ricœur interprets as an appetite for difficulty, suggesting the human desire for peace is not directly continuous (...)
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  38.  7
    Amazing truths: how science and the Bible agree.Michael Guillen - 2015 - Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan.
    Best of both worlds: objective truth exists -- Beyond circular reasoning: time is linear -- I am who I am: an entity can have contradictory natures -- Seeing in the dark: significant parts of reality are hidden from us -- Not of this world: light is unearthly -- An egg-straordinary event: the universe was created Ex Nihilo -- The certainty of uncertainty: truth is bigger than proof -- La vida loca: cause and effect can be disproportional -- The cosmic grapevine: (...)
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  39.  6
    Hermeneutic of Aquinas’s Texts: Notes on the Index Thomisticus.Paolo Guietti - 1993 - The Thomist 57 (4):667-686.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:HERMENEUTIC OF AQUINAS'S TEXTS: NOTES ON THE INDEX THOMISTICUS PAOLO GurnTTI Universita Cattolica Augustinianum Milan, Italy I. Introduction: First Impressions of the Index Thomisticus UPON ENTERING an excellent library of philosophy, one cannot help but notice the 56 volumes of the Inde:c Thomisticus.1 Anyone with a scholarly interest in Saint 1 Index Thomisticus: Sancti Thomae Aquinatis Operum omnium Indices et concordantiae... (Stuttgart: Frommann-Holzboog, 1974-1980). Reference to this work in (...)
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  40.  33
    Carl Schmitt and Modern Law.Andreas Kalyvas - 1999 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1999 (116):153-164.
    Apart from a few exceptions,1 studies of Carl Schmitt in English have not dealt with the legal and constitutional aspects of his work. William Scheuerman's book begins to fill this gap. His work is an important corrective to previous interpretations which, by disproportionally emphasizing the cultural and theological aspects of Schmitt's work, have neglected its central legal character, thus reducing one of the most influential jurists of the 20th century either to a right-wing cultural critic or to a dissatisfied crypto-theologian.2 (...)
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  41.  12
    Ambivalences of smallness: population statistics and narratives of scale among American Jewry.Michal Kravel-Tovi - 2023 - Theory and Society 52 (2):293-331.
    Small things loom large as a distinct category in social and cultural analysis. However, the social construction and effects of this idiom of scale commonly remain vague and underexplored. Bringing the literature on quantification in conversation with the literature on scale-making, this article offers a theoretically-informed analysis of how smallness consolidates as a publicly salient social attribute, and how it feeds collective narratives. The empirical focus is on American Jewry – an ethnoreligious minority group whose leaders and experts have invested (...)
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  42. Ricceur's conception of human failing.M. Kuric - 2005 - Filozofia 60 (6):430-439.
    The experience of human fragility and factual human failing found its response also in the writings of Paul Ricœur. The result of his reflecting on this issue is the corres-ponding philosophical concept answering the question of the possible failing from the perspective of the intrinsic structure of humans. The problem of human failing is discussed on the background of the fundamental question of philosophical anthropology: „What is human being?“ The analysis of the possible failing shows, that a human being is (...)
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  43.  9
    Production and Economic Dynamics.Michael A. Landesmann & Roberto Scazzieri (eds.) - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    This volume is inspired by developments in two strands of economic theorising. Firstly, research on structural economic dynamics based on three sources: Hicks' work on traverse analysis, Pasinetti on disproportional growth and Goodwin on dynamic decomposition and economic fluctuations. The second strand goes back to Georgescu-Roegen's interest in an organisational theory of production based upon the interrelationship between tasks, fund factors and material transformations. The approach taken involves a comprehensive view of sub-units of the whole economic system representing dynamics of (...)
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  44.  26
    Lexico-grammatical alignment in metaphor construal.Jenny Lederer - 2019 - Cognitive Linguistics 30 (1):165-203.
    This study concerns the distribution of metaphorical lexis in discrete syntactic constructions. Source and target seed language from established conceptual metaphors in economic discourse is used to catalogue the specific patterns of how metaphorical pairs align in five syntactic constructions: A-NP, N-N, NP-of-NP, V-NP, and X is Y. Utilizing the Corpus of Contemporary American English, the examination includes 12 frequent metaphorical target triggers combined with 84 source triggers to produce 2,016 ordered collocations, i.e. investment freeze and turbulent market. Through detailed (...)
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  45.  12
    De opinierichtingen in de Belgische dagbladpers.Theo Luykx - 1975 - Res Publica 17 (2):223-244.
    From the outset the Belgian press has been a political press. The catholic and liberal newspapers, however, have never been tightly linked to the corresponding political parties, whereas the socialist and communistnewspapers depend officially from their respective political party so that they can be considered as real party-papers.Of the 39 Belgian newspapers 20 can be defined as catholic, 7 as liberal, 7 as socialist and 1 as communist ; 4 newspapers call themselves «neutral», but on several political occasions they heve (...)
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  46.  28
    (1 other version)Neorealism, genre and nostalgia: Italian urban modernity in Renato Castellani’s Sotto il sole di Roma.Lorenzo Marmo - 2017 - Latest Issue of Empedocles European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 8 (1):37-53.
    The article centres on Italian Neorealist cinema and its crucial role in negotiating the positioning of Italy in the transnational post-war scenario. Recent scholarship on the topic has come to challenge many deeply rooted assumptions about Neorealism, claiming that the disproportioned attention paid to this particular filmic trend has proven in the long term to be an hindrance to a full comprehension of the Italian visual culture of the period. I seek to contribute to such a renewed understanding of the (...)
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  47.  23
    The Models of Relationship of Law and Politics in Jurisprudence and Their Applicability.Ramunė Miežanskienė & Vytautas Šlapkauskas - 2013 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 20 (2):429-450.
    This article is aimed at representing the approaches of legal theory to the interaction between law and politics and to depict the main national features of the relationship between law and politics. The analysis is based on the adoption of methodology of fundamental work of Mauro Zamboni “Law and Politics”. The adoption of methodology was used only partially, while seeking to identify and clarify the features of static, dynamic and epistemological aspects of the relationship of law and politics in Lithuania. (...)
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  48.  19
    Excess and Responsibility: Derrida's Ethico-Political Thinking.Morag Patrick - 1997 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 28 (2):160-177.
    SummaryAs a great deal of contemporary discussion reveals, there is an ongoing interest in determining the ethical and political relevance of Jacques Derrida's work. From standpoints deconstructive and otherwise, critics have tended to converge upon some version of a single question: What is the ethico-political significance of deconstruction? In this paper I shall aim to specify the difficulties of thus evaluating Derrida's work. The difficulties to which I refer stem largely from the inadequacy of established forms of critique to evaluate (...)
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  49.  6
    Aktualność myśli i doświadczeń Anieli Godeckiej w świetle współczesnych dylematów ekonomii społecznej.Anna Rutkowska - 2012 - Annales. Ethics in Economic Life 15:89-98.
    Aniela Godecka was a co-founder of non-habit Congregation of Little Sisters of Mary Immaculate an active initiator of actions connected with social economy amongst the contemporary factory population. For Aniela Godecka in the sphere of the social economy above all a penetrating analysis and a correct identification of needs of social, professional and economic women were a base of her effective news. Growing disproportions and divisions of the society and the reaction to exclude larger groups from the mainstream of the (...)
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  50. Rorty and a Pragmatic View of public versus private Problem.Radim Sip - 2011 - Filozofia 66 (10):981-991.
    The paper focuses on the disproportion the author sees in Rorty’s work. While the author appreciates highly Rorty’s antirepresentationalism, he criticizes Rorty’s social and political philosophy, which, an his opinion, is rooted in early modern philosophy. The latter, he argues, emphasizes the dichotomy between subject and object – an approach characteristic for that period. In support of his claiming a big difference between full-fledge pragmatism and purely pragmatic eclecticism, the author compares Rorty’s and Dewey’s works to show that those (...)
     
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