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6The jury sound-shape project: Harbinger of things to come?International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 6 (3): 305-314. 1993.
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3Between hermeneutics and semiotics: In homage to Algirdas J. GreimasInternational Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 3 (2): 115-132. 1990.
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The jury summation as speech-form (review)International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 3 (2): 215-219. 1990.
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62Book Reviews (review)Ethics, Place and Environment 1 (1): 109-123. 1998.(1998). Book Reviews. Ethics, Place & Environment: Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 109-123.
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6Understanding the Importance and Perceived Structure of Moral CharacterIn Christian B. Miller, R. Michael Furr, Angela Knobel & William Fleeson (eds.), Character: New Directions from Philosophy, Psychology, and Theology, Oup Usa. pp. 100-126. 2015.Chapter 4 considers the importance of moral character in the impressions and evaluations we form of other people in our daily lives, reporting on recent research showing that moral character is extremely important in person perception and evaluation, much more so than the related notion of social warmth. Moral character is also seen as fundamental to identity. The chapter raises three central questions about the perception of moral character that remain to be answered: (i) Is morality properly c…Read more
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2About 17 (+/−2) Potential Principles about Links between the Innate Mind and CultureIn Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence & Stephen Stich (eds.), Innate Mind: Volume 2: Culture and Cognition, Oup Usa. pp. 39-60. 2007.Innate and cultural programming act to a large degree by creating predispositions, rather than fixed outcomes. Predispositions vary in different domains of life. There are both innate and cultural influences on environments, which in turn, influence both biological and cultural evolution. Preadaptation is a common feature of both biological and cultural evolution. The same type of co-opting occurs in development, in the form of accessing older systems for newer functions. These and many other po…Read more
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72Études de philosophie indienne: Le système vedântaRevue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 6 (n/a). 1878.
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28La mémoire, l’histoire, l’oubliSeuil. 2004." L'ouvrage comporte trois parties nettement délimitées par leur thème et leur méthode. La première, consacrée à la mémoire et aux phénomènes mnémoniques, est placée sous l'égide de la phénoménologie au sens husserlien du terme. La deuxième, dédiée à l'histoire, relève d'une épistémologie des sciences historiques. La troisième, culminant dans une méditation sur l'oubli, s'encadre dans une herméneutique de la condition historique des humains que nous sommes. Mais ces trois parties ne font pas tro…Read more
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212 Meaning and geographyIn James D. Proctor & David Marshall Smith (eds.), Geography and ethics: journeys in a moral terrain, Routledge. pp. 19. 1999.
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Pseudo-Dionysius: a commentary on the texts and an Introduction to their influenceOxford University Press. 1993.Dionysius the Areopagite is the pseudonymous author of an influential body of early (about 500 AD) Christian theological texts. Paul Rorem here explores the profound influence of these texts on medieval theolgy in the East and the West.
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2Contemporary Legal Constitution of Woman: Categories, Classification, DichotomyOxford Literary Review 8 (1): 198-207. 1986.
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25This paper investigates the posthuman ramifications of machine learning (ML) in cancer cell detection, analyzing how artificial intelligence fundamentally alters the production of medical knowledge, reshapes human-machine interactions in healthcare, and contests anthropocentric notions of embodiment, agency, and mortality. This analysis examines recent advancements in multicancer early detection (MCED) technologies and deep learning methodologies, exploring how AI-mediated diagnosis challenges c…Read more
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26The value of genealogies for political philosophyInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (7): 2084-2103. 2024.ABSTRACT Genealogies are an increasingly important part of contemporary political philosophy. However, even recent genealogies differ a great deal in terms of their ends and methods. Strikingly, this has received virtually no discussion in the literature. This article begins to fill that gap. It does so by comparing and contrasting the genealogies of Bernard Williams, Quentin Skinner, and Raymond Geuss, exploring their different goals, methods, and value for political philosophy. This helps us b…Read more
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30Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and HermeneuticsRoutledge. 1983.First Published in 1984. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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4He Effects of Transgressors’ Affective Reactions on Children's Moral JudgmentsJournal of Moral Education 11 (2): 89-93. 1982.The present study investigated the degree to which transgressors’ affective reactions influence children's moral judgments. Eighteen children at each of three different grade levels (first‐, second‐, and third‐grade) were required to make judgments of the goodness or badness of four different transgressors.The transgressors acted out of good or bad intent, produced low or high levels of damage and displayed the affective reactions of happiness, sadness or neutrality because of the outcomes they …Read more
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2Zu einer Hermeneutik des Rechts: Argumentation und InterpretationDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 42 (3): 375-384. 2014.
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13LiteraturIn Claudia Brinker-von der Heyde, Nina Kalwa, Nina-Maria Klug & Paul Reszke (eds.), Eigentlichkeit: Zum Verhältnis von Sprache, Sprechern und Welt, De Gruyter. pp. 10-14. 2015.
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8Das eigentliche Ziel der Diskursanalyse?In Claudia Brinker-von der Heyde, Nina Kalwa, Nina-Maria Klug & Paul Reszke (eds.), Eigentlichkeit: Zum Verhältnis von Sprache, Sprechern und Welt, De Gruyter. pp. 175-194. 2015.
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10EinleitungIn Claudia Brinker-von der Heyde, Nina Kalwa, Nina-Maria Klug & Paul Reszke (eds.), Eigentlichkeit: Zum Verhältnis von Sprache, Sprechern und Welt, De Gruyter. pp. 1-9. 2015.
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213What Makes Us Think?: A Neuroscientist and a Philosopher Argue about Ethics, Human Nature, and the BrainPrinceton University Press. 2002.Will understanding our brains help us to know our minds? Or is there an unbridgeable distance between the work of neuroscience and the workings of human consciousness? In a remarkable exchange between neuroscientist Jean-Pierre Changeux and philosopher Paul Ricoeur, this book explores the vexed territory between these divergent approaches--and comes to a deeper, more complex perspective on human nature.Ranging across diverse traditions, from phrenology to PET scans and from Spinoza to Charles Ta…Read more
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22Paul Robeson Jr SpeaksRutgers University Press. 1993.Robeson argues that the controversy about multiculturalism is in fact a struggle over the values of national culture. More than a question of race and gender, the debate is about whether melting-pot culture should be replaced by a mosaic culture of the diverse values of America's population.
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12Freedom and Nature: The Voluntary and the InvoluntaryNorthwestern University Press. 1966.This volume, the first part of Paul Ricoeur's Philosophy of the Will, is an eidetics, carried out within carefully imposed phenomenological brackets. It seeks to deal with the essential structure of man's being in the world, and so it suspends the distorting dimensions of existence, the bondage of passion, and the vision of innocence, to which Ricoeur returns in his later writings. The result is a conception of man as an incarnate Cogito, which can make the polar unity of subject and object inte…Read more
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Husserl: An Analysis of His PhenomenologyNorthwestern University Press. 2007.Paul Ricoeur was one of the foremost interpreters and translators of Edmund Husserl's philosophy. These nine essays present Ricoeur's interpretation of the most important of Husserl's writings, with emphasis on his philosophy of consciousness rather than his work in logic. In Ricoeur's philosophy, phenomenology and existentialism came of age and these essays provide an introduction to the Husserlian elements which most heavily influenced his own philosophical position.
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3The Conflict of Interpretations: Essays in HermeneuticsNorthwestern University Press. 2007.This collection brings together twenty-two essays by Paul Ricoeur under the topics of structuralism, psychoanalysis, hermeneutics, and religion. In dramatic conciseness, the essays illuminate the work of one of the leading philosophers of the day. Those interested in Ricoeur's development of the philosophy of language will find rich and suggestive reading. But the diversity of essays also speaks beyond the confines of philosophy to linguists, theologians, psychologists, and psychoanalysts.
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60Memory, History, ForgettingUniversity Of Chicago Press. 2006.Why do major historical events such as the Holocaust occupy the forefront of the collective consciousness, while profound moments such as the Armenian genocide, the McCarthy era, and France's role in North Africa stand distantly behind? Is it possible that history "overly remembers" some events at the expense of others? A landmark work in philosophy, Paul Ricoeur's _Memory, History, Forgetting_ examines this reciprocal relationship between remembering and forgetting, showing how it affects both …Read more
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80Oneself as AnotherUniversity Of Chicago Press. 1992.Paul Ricoeur has been hailed as one of the most important thinkers of the century. _Oneself as Another,_ the clearest account of his "philosophical ethics," substantiates this position and lays the groundwork for a metaphysics of morals. Focusing on the concept of personal identity, Ricoeur develops a hermeneutics of the self that charts its epistemological path and ontological status.