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Christopher Long deposited Cultivating Communities of Learning with Digital Media in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 9 years agoDigital media technology, when deployed in ways that cultivate shared learning communities in which students and teachers are empowered to participate as partners in conjoint educational practices, can transform the way we teach and learn philosophy. This essay offers a model for how to put blogging and podcasting in the service of a cooperative…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited The Voice of Singularity and a Philosophy to Come in the group
Philosophy on Humanities Commons 9 years agoThis article traces what Schürmann calls the “double comprehension of being” in Kant in which the sense of being as pure givenness is said to be recognized but denied by Kant as his thinking undertakes its Copernican turn. Schürmann insists that this can be heard in the ambiguous ways the German terms “Position” and “Setzung” are used in Kant.…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited The Peripatetic Method: Walking with Woodbridge, Thinking with Aristotle on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Drawing on the poetry of Wallace Stevens and the remarkable series of lectures Frederick J. E. Woodbridge gave at Union College in 1930 entitled, simply, “The Philosophy of Aristotle,” but published under the title Aristotle’s Vision of Nature, this paper identifies the path of Aristotle’s thinking, its method, as a “peripatetic legomenol…[Read more]
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This essay articulates the differences and suggests the similarities between the practices of Socratic political speaking and those of Platonic political writing. The essay delineates Socratic speaking and Platonic writing as both erotically oriented toward ideals capable of transforming the lives of individuals and their relationships with one…[Read more]
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The main thesis of this essay is that the practice of Socratic political speaking and the practice of Platonic political writing are intimately interconnected but distinct.
The essay focuses on the famous passage from the Gorgias in which Socrates claims to be one of the few Athenians who attempt the political art truly and goes on to articulate…[Read more] -
Christopher Long deposited Crisis of Community: The Topology of Socratic Politics in the Protagoras on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
In Plato’s Protagoras Alcibiades plays the role of Hermes, the ‘ambassador god’, who helps lead Socrates’ conversation with Protagoras through a crisis of dialogue that threatens to destroy the community of education established by the dialogue itself.
By tracing the moments when Alcibiades intervenes in the conversation, we are led to an unde…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited Cultivating Communities of Learning with Digital Media on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
Digital media technology, when deployed in ways that cultivate shared learning communities in which students and teachers are empowered to participate as partners in conjoint educational practices, can transform the way we teach and learn philosophy. This essay offers a model for how to put blogging and podcasting in the service of a cooperative…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited The Voice of Singularity and a Philosophy to Come on Humanities Commons 9 years ago
This article traces what Schürmann calls the “double comprehension of being” in Kant in which the sense of being as pure givenness is said to be recognized but denied by Kant as his thinking undertakes its Copernican turn. Schürmann insists that this can be heard in the ambiguous ways the German terms “Position” and “Setzung” are used in Kant.…[Read more]
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This essay is an immanent critique of the story Reiner Schürmann tells concerning the origins of metaphysics as an epoch of hegemonic principles. In both Heidegger on Being and Acting and Broken Hegemonies, Schürmann identifies Aristotle as the father of a metaphysics that understands being in terms of human fabrication. The Duplicity of B…[Read more]
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Christopher Long replied to the topic Embedding Capacity for CORE ala Scribd in the discussion
Feedback and Feature Requests on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months agoI’d be interested too in knowing if others would use such a feature. It is probably worth considering a variety of ways we could facilitate access to material in CORE. Embedding on the websites of individual scholars is one possible way to drive more readers to the work stored in CORE.
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Christopher P. Long's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
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Christopher Long started the topic Embedding Capacity for CORE ala Scribd in the discussion
Feedback and Feature Requests on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months agoI would love to use CORE to embed pdfs into my own personal website. Right now I do that through Scribd, but I don’t want them monetizing my work. I’d rather fill out my CORE repository and embed the documents directly from CORE. The Scribd embedding tool is excellent, and ultimately that is what is keeping me there. I’d use CORE to embed my pa…[Read more]
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By attending closely to three ancient stories concerned with the origin and effect of patriarchal dominion, this essay seeks at once to discern the tragic dialectic according to which patriarchal authority operates and to open new possibilities for politics beyond the logic of domination and force. The stories of Zeus’s consumption of Métis in…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited Socrates and the Politics of Music: Preludes of the Republic on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
At least since the appearance of Aristotle’s Politics, Plato’s Republic has been read as arguing for a politics of unity in which difference is understood as a threat to the polis. By focusing on the musical imagery of the Republic, and specifically on its compositional organization around three “preludes,” this essay seeks an underst…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited Aristotle’s Phenomenology of Form: The Shape of Beings that Become on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
Scholars often assume that Aristotle uses the terms morphē and eidos interchangeably. Translators of Aristotle’s works rarely feel the need to carry the distinction between these two Greek terms over into English. This article challenges the orthodox view that morphē and eidos are synonymous. Careful analysis of texts from the Categories, Phy…[Read more]
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This essay challenges the received orthodoxy that in Aristotle, nous, the capacity for intuitive insight and logos, the capacity of combination that belongs to human discursive thinking, are mutually exclusive, independently operating capacities of the human mind. It argues rather that Aristotle articulates an understanding of nous that is able to…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited Saving 'ta legomena': Aristotle and the History of Philosophy on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
By taking seriously the extent to which Aristotle understands the things said (ta legemona) by his predecessors as genuine phenomena that express something of the truth about beings, this essay challenges the orthodox understanding of Aristotle’s approach to the history of philosophy as merely a thinly veiled attempt to legitimize the authority o…[Read more]
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Christopher P. Long's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
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Christopher Long deposited Totalizing identities: The ambiguous legacy of Aristotle and Hegel after Auschwitz on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
The Holocaust throws the study of the history of philosophy into crisis. Critiques of Western thinking leveled by such thinkers as Adorno, Levinas, and more recently by so-called “postmodern” theorists have suggested that Western philosophy is inherently totalizing, and that it must be read differently or altogether abandoned after Auschwitz. Thi…[Read more]
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Christopher Long deposited The Ethical Culmination of Aristotle's Metaphysics on Humanities Commons 9 years, 2 months ago
This article takes up the rather bold philosophical suggestion that Aristotle’s Metaphysics culminates not in the purity of God’s self-thinking found in book XII, but rather in the far more ambiguous set of contingent principles found in the Nicomachean Ethics. The suggestion defended is not that Aristotle intended this itinerary for the Met…[Read more]
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