A discussion forum (and e-mail list) for the philosophers on the Humanities Commons platform.
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Narasimhananda Swami deposited Review Human Kindness and the Smell of Warm Croissants Ruwen Ogien Prabuddha Bharata September 2019 in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoRuwen Ogien pleasantly reminds us the pleasures of doing philosophy through this extremely lucid and accessible primer on ethics. Presenting nineteen moral puzzles and seven chapters on moral intuitions, Ogien shows the readers that philosophy is not the distant and dry discipline far from life that it is made out to be. Philosophy has to do with…[Read more]
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Lajos Brons deposited Aphantasia, SDAM, and Episodic Memory in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoEpisodic memory (EM) involves re-experiencing past experiences by means of mental imagery. Aphantasics (who lack mental imagery) and people with severely deficient autobiographical memory (SDAM) lack the ability to re-experience, which would imply that they don’t have EM. However, aphantasics and people with SDAM have personal and affective…[Read more]
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Lajos Brons deposited Philosophy of mental time — A theme introduction in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months ago(First paragraphs.) — The notion of “mental time” refers to the experience and awareness of time, including that of past, present, and future, and that of the passing of time. This experience and awareness of time raises a number of puzzling questions. How do we experience time? What exactly do we experience when we experience time? Do we actua…[Read more]
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David Backer deposited Radical Discussions: Agonistic Democratic Education in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoClaudia Ruitenberg’s recent work on democratic education has spurred an important debate.1 On the one hand, philosophers of educa-tion such as Amy Guttman and Dennis Thompson, and more recently Tomas Englund, draw from John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas to claim that democratic education should be rooted in deliberative competence, consensus pr…[Read more]
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Jonathan Basile deposited How the Other Half-Lives: Life as Identity and Difference in Bennett and Schrödinger in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoThis essay deconstructs Jane Bennett’s and Erwin Schrödinger’s theories of life to demonstrate the untenability of defining life on the basis of either identity (relation to self) or difference (relation to other). Because the living thing is undecidably self and other, its traditional bond to the self-relation of teleology is untenable. Yet reli…[Read more]
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William Buck deposited Precision And Recall : An Ontological Perspective in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoThere is a traditional narrative within information studies regarding precision and recall measures. Precision and recall have been the most commonly used retrieval metrics and are the basis for more complicated and accurate information retrieval evaluations. Relevance, which is the criterion by which both recall and precision are judged, is…[Read more]
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Rodney Swan deposited Contrée: Picasso’s visual fragmented tailpieces emphasise the poetry of Robert Desnos. in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoCompleted in early 1944, Robert Desnos’s militant series of 25 poems in Contrée evokes memories of a lost peace and calls for the defeat of the German occupiers. Suggesting the desecration of the human body by the occupiers, Picasso cut his cubist–surrealist frontispiece etching of Dora Marr to produce severed heads and dismembered body part…[Read more]
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William Buck deposited Organizational Integration, Strategic Planning, And Staff Assessment In Publicly Funded Libraries in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoLibrary and information center services are at risk during times of extensive budget reductions. Publicly funded institutions labeled as inessential or as auxiliary departments may lose the revenue necessary to maintain full staffing. Financial circumstances of recent years highlight the importance of strategic planning in library and information…[Read more]
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William Buck deposited Privacy And Censorship : Another Look in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoA traditional expectation for publicly funded libraries is that they should be institutions where patron records are kept confidential and a standard of privacy is maintained. After the events of 911, methods increasing search and surveillance powers and reducing legal protections were drafted into law as the “Patriot Act”. Searching patron rec…[Read more]
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William Buck deposited Providing Help In Hard Times : A Blueprint For Successful Strategic Planning in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoIn response to a lack of funding during the 2007–2009 recession, many library systems reduced or eliminated professional and library support positions. Traditional outcome measurements were not sufficient to convince tax-depleted legislatures to allocate more funds to libraries. In response to the crisis authors recommended cost-saving measures a…[Read more]
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David Backer deposited Pedagogics of Liberation: A Latin American Philosophy of Education in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoEnrique Dussel is considered one of the founding philosophers of liberation in the Latin American tradition, an influential arm of what is now called decoloniality. While he is astoundingly prolific, relatively few of his works can be found in English translation — and none of these focus specifically on education. Founding members of the Latin A…[Read more]
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Lajos Brons deposited Patterns, noise, and beliefs in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIn “Real Patterns” Daniel Dennett developed an argument about the reality of beliefs on the basis of an analogy with patterns and noise. Here I develop Dennett’s analogy into an argument for descriptivism, the view that belief reports do no specify belief contents but merely describe what someone believes, and show that this view is also supported…[Read more]
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Narasimhananda Swami deposited Review Philosophy in Colonial India ed. by Sharad Deshpande in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIndia has been the seat of deep philosophical engagements since the Vedic period. However, Indian philosophical wisdom, albeit different from Western philosophical in many respects, was not widely known to the rest of the world before colonial thinkers started their dialogue with Indian philosophy through their translations and academic exegeses.…[Read more]
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Christopher P. Long deposited Dialogue on Aristotle’s De Anima in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoThis is a recording of a reading of Aristotle’s De Anima by Richard Lee and Christopher P. Long that was originally presented at the Collegium Phaenomenologicum in Citta di Castello, Umbria, Italy, on July 10, 2018. The theme of the 2018 Collegium was Aristotle: Physis, Psyche, Anthropos, and Kristi Sweet read Chris Long’s part at the conference…[Read more]
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Rodney Swan deposited Henri Matisse’s Jazz: The Mystery of The Codomas in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIn addition to the enigmatic The Codomas, Henri Matisse distinguished three other images with a name, Icarus, Monsieur Loyal and Pierrot’s Funeral for his landmark livre d’artiste Jazz. While the characters Loyal, Pierrot and Icarus were readily identifiable and the images could be interpreted within the context of the difficulties of the Ger…[Read more]
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Rodney Swan deposited Symbolism and Allusion in Matisse’s Jazz in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoHenri Matisse’s images in Jazz, created during the disruption of the German Occupation of France, were embedded with symbols of cultural resistance, while his text, which he composed after the defeat of the Germans, reflected the transition to a post-Liberation France. The wartime symbols and allusions camouflaged within these images are readily r…[Read more]
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Jonathan Basile deposited Borges y Yo, Eiron and Alazon: Irony in “The Library of Babel” and “Pierre Menard” in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months agoBorges made a habit of differing from himself. “El otro” and “Borges y yo” are only the most overt examples from a corpus that constantly played with his biography, his beliefs, and his proper name. In his “non-fiction,” this Auseinselbstsetzung takes the form of self-contradiction, asserting opposed theses in his own name, celebrating…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited The Faded Silvery Imprints of the Bare Feet of Angels: Notes Toward an Historical Poethics in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months agoBy way of the autobiographical writings of Bruno Schulz and the “resurrection” paintings of Stanley Spencer, this talk sketches out some of the ways in which literature and the fine arts situate themselves within the division, or series of breaks, that Michel de Certeau argued Western historiography inscribes between past and present, between the…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited You Are Here: A Manifesto in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months agoThis essay ruminates the ethics of a co-implicated, bounded dependence between objects (human and otherwise) that are always in some sense withdrawing from each other but also always together in a some-place labeled “here”: the world (where no Absolute or Outside vantage point is possible or habitable). This essay also considers the possibility,…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited Like Two Autistic Moonbeams Piercing the Windows of My Asylum: Chaucer’s Griselda and Lars von Trier’s Bess McNeill in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months agoThrough a comparative analysis of Chaucer’s “The Clerk’s Tale” and Lars von Trier’s film “Breaking the Waves,” this essay wonders what happens when two texts and one reader happen to each other and open up a singular adventure that is also a moment of ‘futurition’ that opens up new horizons of meaning, both human and inhuman. How can we reckon the…[Read more]
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