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Books > Philosophy > Topics in philosophy
The concept of individualism has gone through a fundamental change,
according to distinguished political theorist Nadia Urbinati. In
the nineteenth century, individualism was a philosophical and
ethical perspective that permitted each person to respect and
cooperate with others as equals in rights and dignity for the
betterment of the community as a whole. Today, the individualist is
a more self-interested entity whose maxim might best be expressed
as "I don't give a damn." This contemporary form of individualism
is possessive and conformist, litigious and docile, all too prone
to manipulate norms and to submit to the tyrannical sway of private
interests. As such, Urbinati believes, it represents the most
radical risk that modern democracy currently faces. This
well-reasoned and thought-provoking polemic is an attempt to detect
the "tyranny of the moderns," with the ultimate aim of recovering
the role of the individual citizen as a free and equal agent of
democratic society. It explores the concept of communitarianism as
a form of individualism applied to the group itself, and advances
the idea that the rescue of true individualism from the current
ideology is a basic condition for the defense of democratic
citizenship.
Prolegomena to a Carnal Hermeneutics introduces the importance of
body politics from both Eastern and Western perspectives. Hwa Yol
Jung begins with Giambattista Vico's anti-Cartesianism as the birth
of the discipline. He then explores the homecoming of Greek mousike
(performing arts), which included oral poetry, dance, drama, and
music; Mikhail Bakhtin's dialogical body politics; the making of
body politics in Hannah Arendt, Emmanuel Levinas, and Luce
Irigaray; Marshall McLuhan's transversal and embodied philosophy of
communication; and transversal geophilosophy. This tour de force
will be an engaging read for anyone interested in the above
thinkers, as well as for students and scholars of comparative
philosophy, communication theory, environmental philosophy,
political philosophy, or continental philosophy
Ethics for Disaster addresses the moral aspects of hurricanes,
earthquakes, tornadoes, plane crashes, Avian Flu pandemics, and
other disasters. Naomi Zack explores how these catastrophes
illuminate the existing inequalities in society. By employing the
moral systems of utilitarianism, deontology, and virtue ethics to
analyze the consequences of recent natural disasters, Zack reveals
the special plight of the poor, disabled, and infirm when tragedy
strikes. Zack explores the political foundations of social contract
theory and dignitarianism and invites readers to rethink the
distinction between risk in normal times and risk in disaster.
Using both real life and fictional examples, Zack forcefully argues
for the preservation of normal moral principles in times of
national crisis and emergency, stressing the moral obligation of
both individuals and government in preparing for and responding to
disaster..
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Metaphysics
(Hardcover)
Donald Wallenfang
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This book is concerned with the evaluation of natural argumentative
discourse, and, in particular, with the language in which arguments
are expressed. It introduces a systematic procedure for the
analysis and assessment of arguments, which is designed to be a
practical tool, and may be considered a pseudo-algorithm for
argument evaluation. The first half of the book lays the
theoretical groundwork, with a thorough examination of both the
nature of language and the nature of argument. This leads to a
definition of argumentation as reasoning expressed within a
procedure, which itself yields the three frames of analysis used in
the evaluation procedure: Process, Reasoning, and Expression. The
second half begins with a detailed discussion of the concept of
fallacy, with particular attention on fallacies of language, their
origin and their effects. A new way of looking at fallacies emerges
from these chapters, and it is that conception, together with the
understanding of the nature of argumentation described in earlier
sections, which ultimately provides the support for the
Comprehensive Assessment Procedure for Natural Argumentation. The
first two levels of this innovative procedure are outlined, while
the third, that dealing with language, and involving the
development of an Informal Argument Semantics, is fully described.
The use of the system, and its power of analysis, are illustrated
through the evaluation of a variety of examples of argumentative
texts.
The Culture and Philosophy of Ridley Scott, edited by Adam Barkman,
Ashley Barkman, and Nancy Kang, brings together eighteen critical
essays that illuminate a nearly comprehensive selection of the
director's feature films from cutting-edge multidisciplinary and
comparative perspectives. Chapters examine such signature works as
Alien (1979), Blade Runner (1982), Thelma and Louise (1991),
Gladiator (2000), Hannibal (2001), Black Hawk Down (2001), and
American Gangster (2007). This volume divides the chapters into
three major thematic groups: responsibility, remembering, and
revision; real, alienated, and ideal lives; and gender, identity,
and selfhood. Each section features six discrete essays, each of
which forwards an original thesis about the film or films chosen
for analysis. Each chapter features close readings of scenes as
well as broader discussions that will interest academics,
non-specialists, as well as educated readers with an interest in
films as visual texts. While recognizing Scott's undeniable
contributions to contemporary popular cinema, the volume does not
shy away from honest and well-evidenced critique. Each chapter's
approach correlates with philosophical, literary, or cultural
studies perspectives. Using both combined and single-film
discussions, the contributors examine such topics as gender roles
and feminist theory; philosophical abstractions like ethics, honor,
and personal responsibility; historical memory and the challenges
of accurately rendering historical events on screen; literary
archetypes and generic conventions; race relations and the effect
of class difference on character construction; how religion shapes
personal and collective values; the role of a constantly changing
technological universe; and the schism between individual and
group-based power structures. The Culture and Philosophy of Ridley
Scott assembles the critical essays of scholars working in the
fields of philosophy, literary studies, and cultural studies. An
international group, they are based in the United States, Canada,
Argentina, Italy, Greece, Korea, the United Kingdom, and New
Zealand. The guiding assumption on the part of all the writers is
that the filmmaker is the leading determiner of a motion picture's
ethos, artistic vision, and potential for audience engagement.
While not discounting the production team (including screenwriters,
actors, and cinematographers, among others), auteur theory
recognizes the seminal role of the director as the nucleus of the
meaning-making process. With Scott an active and prolific presence
in the entertainment industry today, the timeliness of this volume
is optimal.
This volume brings together new papers advancing contemporary
debates in foundational, conceptual, and methodological issues in
cognitive neuroscience. The different perspectives presented in
each chapter have previously been discussed between the authors, as
the volume builds on the experience of Neural Mechanisms (NM)
Online - webinar series on the philosophy of neuroscience organized
by the editors of this volume. The contributed chapters pertain to
five core areas in current philosophy of neuroscience. It surveys
the novel forms of explanation (and prediction) developed in
cognitive neuroscience, and looks at new concepts, methods and
techniques used in the field. The book also highlights the
metaphysical challenges raised by recent neuroscience and
demonstrates the relation between neuroscience and mechanistic
philosophy. Finally, the book dives into the issue of neural
computations and representations. Assembling contributions from
leading philosophers of neuroscience, this work draws upon the
expertise of both established scholars and promising early career
researchers.
This book explores and elaborates three theories of public reason,
drawn from Rawlsian political liberalism, natural law theory, and
Confucianism. Drawing together academics from these separate
approaches, the volume explores how the three theories critique
each other, as well as how each one brings its theoretical arsenal
to bear on the urgent contemporary debate of medical assistance in
dying. The volume is structured in two parts: an exploration of the
three traditions, followed by an in-depth overview of the
conceptual and historical background. In Part I, the three
comprehensive opening chapters are supplemented by six dynamic
chapters in dialogue with each other, each author responding to the
other two traditions, and subsequently reflecting on the possible
deficiencies of their own theories. The chapters in Part II cover a
broad range of subjects, from an overview of the history of
bioethics to the nature of autonomy and its status as a moral and
political value. In its entirety, the volume provides a vibrant and
exemplary collaborative resource to scholars interested in the role
of public reason and its relevance in bioethical debate.
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Arguments about Animal Ethics
(Hardcover, New)
Greg Goodale, Jason Edward Black; Contributions by Wendy Atkins-Sayre, Renee S. Besel, Richard D. Besel, …
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Discovery Miles 28 580
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Bringing together the expertise of rhetoricians in English and
communication as well as media studies scholars, Arguments about
Animal Ethics delves into the rhetorical and discursive practices
of participants in controversies over the use of nonhuman animals
for meat, entertainment, fur, and vivisection. Both sides of the
debate are carefully analyzed, as the contributors examine how
stakeholders persuade or fail to persuade audiences about the
ethics of animal rights or the value of using animals. The essays
in this volume cover a wide range of topics, such as the campaigns
waged by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (including the
sexy vegetarian and nude campaigns), greyhound activists, the
Corolla Wild Horse Fund, food manufacturers, and the biomedical
research industry, as well as communication across the
human-nonhuman animal boundary and the failure of the animal rights
movement to protest research into genetically modifying living
beings. Arguments about Animal Ethics' insightful analysis of the
animal rights movement will appeal to communication scholars, as
well as those interested in social change.
Free Will and Continental Philosophy explores the concepts of
free-will and self-determination in the Continental philosophical
tradition. David Rose examines the ways in which Continental
philosophy offers a viable alternative to the hegemonic scientistic
approach taken by analytic philosophy. Rose claims that the problem
of free-will is only a problem if one makes an unnecessary
assumption consistent with scientific rationalism. In the sphere of
human action we assume that, since action is a physical event, it
must be reducible to the laws and concepts of science. Hence, the
problematic nature of free will raises its head, since the concept
of free will is intrinsically contradictory to such a reductionist
outlook. This book suggests that the Continental thinkers offer a
compelling alternative by concentrating on the phenomena of human
action and self-determination in order to offer the truth of
freedom in different terms. Thus Rose offers a revealing
investigation into the appropriate concepts and categories of human
freedom and action.>
This title brings Deleuze's writings on cinema into contact with
world cinema, drawing on examples ranging from Georges Melies to
Michael Mann. "Deleuze's Cinema books" continue to cause
controversy. Although they offer radical new ways of understanding
cinema, his conclusions often seem strikingly Eurocentric. "Deleuze
and World Cinemas" explores what happens when Deleuze's ideas are
brought into contact with the films he did not discuss, those from
Europe and the USA (from Georges Melies to Michael Mann) and a
range of world cinemas - including Bollywood blockbusters, Hong
Kong action movies, Argentine melodramas and South Korean science
fiction movies. These emergent encounters demonstrate the need for
the constant adaptation and reinterpretation of Deleuze's findings
if they are to have continued relevance, especially for cinema's
contemporary engagement with the aftermath of the Cold War and the
global dominance of neoliberal globalization.
Building a foundational understanding of the digital, Logic of the
Digital reveals a unique digital ontology. Beginning from formal
and technical characteristics, especially the binary code at the
core of all digital technologies, Aden Evens traces the pathways
along which the digital domain of abstract logic encounters the
material, human world. How does a code using only 0s and 1s give
rise to the vast range of applications and information that
constitutes a great and growing portion of our world? Evens'
analysis shows how any encounter between the actual and the digital
must cross an ontological divide, a gap between the productive
materiality of the human world and the reductive abstraction of the
binary code. Logic of the Digital examines the distortions of this
ontological crossing, considering the formal abstraction that
persists in exemplary digital technologies and techniques such as
the mouse, the Web, the graphical user interface, and the
development of software. One crucial motive for this research lies
in the paradoxical issue of creativity in relation to digital
technologies: the ontology of abstraction leaves little room for
the unpredictable or accidental that is essential to creativity,
but digital technologies are nevertheless patently creative. Evens
inquires into the mechanisms by which the ostensibly sterile binary
code can lend itself to such fecund cultural production. Through
clarification of the digital's ontological foundation, Evens points
to a significant threat to creativity lurking in the nature of the
digital and so generates a basis for an ethics of digital practice.
Examining the bits that give the digital its ontology, exploring
the potentials and limitations of programming, and using gaming as
an ideal test of digital possibility, Logic of the Digital guides
future practices and shapes academic research in the digital.
This book is authored by some of the renowned scholars in Africa
who take on the task to understand how Kenya is governed in this
century from a public policy perspective. The book's public policy
approach addresses three general and pertinent questions: (1) how
are policies made in a political context where change is called
for, but institutional legacies tend to stand in the way? (2) how
are power and authority shared among institutional actors in
government and society? and, (3) how effective is policymaking at a
time when policy problems are becoming increasingly complex and
involving multiple stakeholders in Africa? This book provides an
updated and relevant foundation for teaching policy, politics and
administration in Kenya. It is also a useful guide for politicians,
the civil society, and businesses with an interest in how Kenya is
governed. Furthermore, it addresses issues of comparability: how
does the Kenyan case fit into a wider African context of
policymaking? 'This volume is a major contribution to comparative
policy analysis by focusing on the policy processes in Kenya, a
country undergoing modernization of its economic and political
institutions. Written by experts with a keen eye for the
commonalities and differences the country shares with other
nations, it covers a range of topics like the role of experts and
politicians in policymaking, the nature of public accountability,
the impact of social media on policy actors, and the challenges of
teaching policy studies in the country. As a first comprehensive
study of an African nation, Governing Kenya will remain a key text
for years to come'. -Michael Howlett, Burnaby Mountain Chair of
Political Science, Simon Fraser University, Canada 'A superb
example of development scholarship which sets aside 'best practice'
nostrums and focuses on governance challenges specific to time and
place while holding on to a comparative perspective. Useful to
scholars and practitioners not only in Kenya but across developing
areas. I strongly recommend it!' -Brian Levy teaches at the School
of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, USA,
and the University of Cape Town, South Africa. 'This book is an
exploration of important deliberations - of interest for those of
us interested in deepening the understanding of public policy
theories and their application within a specific African setting'.
-Wilson Muna, Lecturer of Public Policy, Kenyatta University,
Nairobi, Kenya 'This collection of think pieces on public policy in
Kenya gives the reader theoretical and practical hooks critical to
the analysis of the implementation of the sovereign policy document
in Kenya, the 2010 Constitution'. -Willy Mutunga, Chief Justice
& President of the Supreme Court, Republic of Kenya, 2011-2016
'Governing Kenya provides a comprehensive analysis of public
policymaking in Kenya. The book integrates public policy theory
with extensive empirical examples to provide a valuable portrait of
the political and economic influences on policy choices in this
important African country. The editors have brought together a
group of significant scholars to produce an invaluable contribution
to the literature on public policy in Africa'. -B. Guy Peters,
Maurice Folk Professor of American Government, University of
Pittsburgh, USA
This book is dedicated to Dov Gabbay, one of the most outstanding
and most productive researchers in the area of logic, language and
reasoning. He has exerted a profound influence in the major fields
of logic, linguistics and computer science. Most of the chapters
included, therefore, build on his work and present results or
summarize areas where Dov has made major contributions. In
particular his work on Labelled Deductive Systems is addressed in
most of the contributions. The chapters on computational
linguistics address logical and deductive aspects of linguistic
problems. The papers by van Benthem Lambek and Moortgat investigate
categorial considerations and the use of labels within the "parsing
as deduction" approach. Analyses of particular linguistic problems
are given in the remaining papers by Kamp, Kempson, Moravcsik,
Konig and Reyle. They address the logic of generalized quantifiers,
the treatment of cross-over phenomena and temporal/aspectual
interpretation, as well as applicability of underspecified
deduction in linguistic formalisms. The more logic-oriented
chapters address philosophical and proof-theoretic problems and
give algorithmic solutions for most of them. The spectrum ranges
from K. Segerberg's contribution which brings together the two
traditions of epistemic and doxastic logics of belief, to M. Finger
and M. Reynold's chapter on two-dimensional executable logics with
applications to temporal databases. The book demonstrates that a
relatively small number of basic techniques and ideas, in
particular the idea of labelled deductive systems, can be
successfully applied in many different areas.
The Aporia of Rights is an exploration of the perplexities of human
rights, and their inevitable and important intersection with the
idea of citizenship. Written by political theorists and
philosophers, essays canvass the complexities involved in any
consideration of rights at this time. Yeatman and Birmingham show
through this collection of works a space fora vital engagement with
the politics of human rights.
Individual responsibility is an issue at the heart of public
debates surrounding justice today - this book explores the
philosophical implications of this hugely topical contemporary
debate. Personal responsibility is now very much on the political
agenda. But what is personal responsibility? Why do we care about
it? And what, if anything, should governments do to promote it?
This book explores the idea that individuals bear a special
responsibility for the success or failure of their own lives
looking at philosophical theories, political ideologies and public
opinion on the subject. Alexander Brown lends support to a recent
move in political philosophy to deal with real world problems and
shows how philosophy can contribute to public democratic debate on
pressing issues of personal responsibility. Articulate, provocative
and stimulating, this timely book will make a significant
contribution to one of the most important debates of our time.
"Think Now" is a new series of books which examines central
contemporary social and political issues from a philosophical
perspective. These books aim to be accessible, rather than overly
technical, bringing philosophical rigour to modern questions which
matter the most to us. Provocative yet engaging, the authors take a
stand on political and cultural themes of interest to any
intelligent reader.
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