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#interanimated
dearorpheus · 2 years
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the second ep of cabinet of curiosities was made for me actually because i looooove rats i love pestilential rats i love sylvatic plagues i love the flesh eating pandyssian bull rats of dishonored i love the seething masses in a plague tale i love drinking and subsuming them in vampyr i love chittering amorphous swarms of rats and i think we need more of them in media. lovecraft’s rats in the walls, poe’s pit and the pendulum, camus’ plague. room 101 in 1984. 1922 nosferatu which has the pale and withered—plague-victim-esque—titular vamp arriving by ship with an army of rats which disembark and begin besieging the village... rats as portents of death, vessels for disease, vehicles for divine judgement, deeply imbued with our cultural fears. and rat kings are like those elk whose antlers intertwine irrevocably and who become fattened with knowledge of each other having been forced to contemplate one another until death (djuna barnes’ words not mine). they interanimate, they become conjoined, a something rather than many things, and they are fattened with horrible knowledge in doing so. which to me is also grotesquely godly (as all godly things ought to be grotesque). nebulous boundaries and monstrous understanding are at the heart of godhood. to me
i love them as metaphor i love them as single organism and aggregate whole i love them chaotically good or bad and also. they’re god's smiting palm. to me 
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ashenmind · 8 months
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it’s gotta be at least a little entertaining for satori to watch the various interanimal dramas play out amongst her pets.
I can’t really see her involving herself, as funny as a well placed “just fuck already!” might be.
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flustersluts · 4 years
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i will not share the kennel with a dogperson >:o
listen you all need to learn to behave >:((
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dubmiho · 2 years
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🧸 for the ask meme
Oh she for SURE has stuffed animals. She sleeps with them but also considers them decorative. She only brought two with her to NYC (a heart- and handwringing process when it came to choosing) and got used to not sleeping with a million stuffed animals on her bed, so now she mostly keeps them off her bed but arranges them in her room according to color, height, their interanimal friendships, the season, and arcane considerations unknown to humankind. They take turns being on the bed one or two at a time. 
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fierysword · 3 years
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In her interrelational understanding of life, separation is erased between the seer and the seen. Hildegard says of the Spirit, “You are the mighty way in which every / thing that is in the heavens, / on the earth, / and under the earth, / is penetrated with connectedness, / penetrated with relatedness.” Her contemplative visions uphold a truly Trinitarian universe, with all things spiraling toward one another, interanimating one another very much like a mandala.
This makes sense given Job 34:15, Col 1:17, & Psalm 104:30.
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beguines · 3 years
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There is a crossing of death and life that takes place here. And spirits are moving. The paraclete, the Spirit promised before the crucifixion is arriving, but the time is not specified. Jesus, who identifies himself as the other paraclete, appears, available to the senses and yet not. He breathes the Holy Ghost into them. And the scene recalls another in which the prophet Ezekiel is called to summon the breath-spirit (ruah) in the valley of dry bones. When he calls out, life returns to the bones, and flesh reconstitutes. Breath, synonymous with spirit, animates the bones, as sinews and flesh cover the bones with skin. This interanimation at the juncture of death and life is both spiritual and material.
The danger in erasing these wounds is that the erasure occludes a testimony to what is most difficult about traumatic histories, whether personal or collective: that the wounds remain. And yet to reorient the logic of wounds toward the after-living requires care and attention. . . Resurrection wounds provide a curious constellation for conceiving of life that is marked by wounds but recreated through them.
Shelly Rambo, Resurrecting Wounds: Living in the Afterlife of Trauma
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astranemus · 3 years
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Raven represents multiple knowledges, both practical and conceptual, and we argue that his intersubjective manipulations of earth systems and species reveal the integrity, balance, exigencies, and contingencies of life on earth. Indeed, we propose that Raven, through his knowledge and encounters, often exhibits what Scott (1998: 6) has termed mētis: "the indispensable role of practical knowledge, informal processes, and improvisation in the face of unpredictability" (Scott 1998: 6). Raven is a master of this mode, even if his novel experiments and improvisations do not always produce their intended ends. Raven's other crucial modality is as a mutable transcender of conventional boundaries. He marries other species, becomes their offspring, and otherwise pushes beyond the conventional limits of intersubjectivity and interanimation, such that nothing is beyond his manipulations. In this respect Raven in the "Ravencene" anticipates humanity in the Anthopocene, both as an agent (or "driver") of change through his appetites and aspirations to control things for his own purposes, and as a resilient respondent to change (through coping, mitigation, adaptation, etc.) when earth systems and their constituent elements prove too powerful, dynamic, and complex to be harnessed for the benefit of one being or species.
Thomas F. Thornton and Patricia M. Thornton, The Mutable, the Mythical, and the Managerial: Raven Narratives and the Anthropocene
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doux-amer · 4 years
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To capture her images of female nudes in natural landscapes, Anne Brigman sometimes set up camp for weeks or months at a time, eight thousand feet up in the Sierra Nevada. “Where I go is wild—hard to reach . . . because there [are] things in life to be expressed in these places,” she wrote to a Vanity Fair reporter, in 1916. Brigman would load her heavy camera equipment into stagecoaches that picked their way through the Sacramento Valley and up the American River Canyon, then finish her journey using pack mules to ascend to Donner Pass or into Desolation Valley. Her sister Elizabeth and a selection of friends often accompanied her, and together they would camp, hike, cavort, and pose for Brigman’s pictures.
The work Brigman created on those sojourns made her a groundbreaking early-twentieth-century photographer. She was an artist who helped shape American modernist, feminist, and landscape photographic traditions—and was one of the first women to photograph herself in the nude... Where male frontier photographers of the time tended to convey an omniscient, assessing view of the American landscape, Brigman was interested in the sensual, the gestural, the interanimation of human beings and the natural world.
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interanimes1 · 6 years
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Como? Onde ? O quê ? kkkkkk  ▶ Mais diversão e anime? Visite também nossas redes! ⬇⬇ YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/gTIF_JhoI6I FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/interanimes/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/interanimes/ TWITTER : https://twitter.com/InterAnimes1
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your-raifu-is-shit · 7 years
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No, weren't any convenient for that. I wanted to see if we could get the fairly new Hispanic guy involved for an interracial three way, but supervisor said no, that's racist apparently. I thought it would be inclusive.
You already had human-on-gun, isn’t that inter-- shit, uh, what the fuck even is that?
Interspecies? Interanimate? Interorganic?
Being on the internet and not having a word for a type of sexual congress is like the exact opposite of the old “eskimos have a hundred different words for snow” thing. I’m surrounded by this every day and I have no idea what it’s called.
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Language is given value by its context.  The interanimation of words take on whole new meanings by those in place around it.
"Any concrete utterance is a link in the chain of speech communication of a particular sphere. The very boundaries of the utterance are determined by a change of speech subjects. Utterances are not indifferent to one another, and are not self-sufficient; they are aware of and mutually reflect one another...”
We give meaning to our blog posts by the images we choose to share and the captions we assign to them.
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Thank you again Vince💙🐬!Reposted from @maestro320 - "What It Means To Be Free" - 🔵Maestro's Notes: This beautiful video was filmed on board the Research Vessel Falkor operated by The Schmidt Ocean Institute @schmidtocean courtesy of Falkor Crew and Scientific Officer, Lena @miss_lena_ and shared to all of us by My Long Time Friend Mia Simone and Floppy Bear @mia_and_the_bear • One of the most fascinating behaviors of dolphins is when they ride the bow pressure waves of boats. Dolphins probably have been bow-riding ever since swift vessels plied the seas, propelled by oar, sail, or very recently in the history of seafaring, motor. The Greeks wrote of bow-riding in the eastern Mediterranean and Aegean Seas by what were most likely bottlenose (Tursiops truneatus), common (Delphinus del-phis), and striped dolphins (Stenella coendeoalba). Bow-riding consists of dolphins, porpoises, and other smaller toothed whales (and occasionally sea lions and fur seals) positioning themselves in such a manner as to be lifted up and pushed forward by the circulating water generated to form a bow pressure wave of an advancing vessel (Lang, 1966; Hertel, 1969). Dolphins are exquisitely good at bow-riding, able to fine-tune their body posture and position so as to be propelled along entirely by the pressure wave, often with no tail (or fluke) beats needed. Bow-riders at the periphery of the pressure wave do need to beat their flukes, and so do bow-riders of a slowly moving vessel or one with a very sharp cutting instead of pushing bow. There is often quite a bit of jostling for position at the bow, as dominant animals of a group edge others to a less favorable position, or as one is displaced from the bow by another one approaching. It is great fun for a person to lean over the bow of a vessel and watch these interanimal antics, as well as the fine-tuning of positioning, effected by slight body turns and almost imperceptible movements of the flippers. Bow-riding dolphins also tend to emit what sounds to the human listener like a cacophony of underwater whistles and “screams,” sounds implicated in high levels of social activity (Brownlee and Norris, 1994). https://www.instagram.com/p/ByRe8q0ALzD/?igshid=mz0d5h36byl4
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tannertoctoo-blog · 7 years
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July 19, 2017
Environmental Ethics, Vol. 38, #4, 2016 Erkenntnis, Vol. 82, #4, 2017 FPQ: Feminist Philosophy Quarterly, Vol. 3, #2, 2017 Journal of Nietzsche Studies, Vol. 48, #2, 2017 Journal of Philosophical Logic, Vol. 46, #4, 2017 Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 113, #12, 2016 Journal of Practical Ethics, Vol. 5, #1, 2017 Journal of the History of Philosophy, Vol. 55, #3, 2017 Mind, Vol. 126, #502, 2017 Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Vol. 6, 2016 Philosophy Compass, Vol. 12, #7, 2017 Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 95, #1, 2017
Environmental Ethics, Vol. 38, #4, 2016 News and Notes Features Tom Dedeurwaerdere, Benjamin Six. Toward a Broadened Ethical Pluralism in Environmental Ethics: From Bryan Norton’s Discursive Ethics to William James’ Experiential Pluralism. Lantz Fleming Miller. Individual Responsibility for Environmental Degradation: The Moral and Practical Route to Change. Discussion Papers Lawrence E. Cahoone. Is Stellar Nucleosynthesis a Good Thing? Vincent Blok. Thinking the Earth: Critical Reflections on Quentin Meillassoux’s and Heidegger’s Concept of the Earth. Brendan Mahoney. Engaging the Sublime without Distance: Environmental Ethics and Aesthetic Experience. Neall Pogue. The Religious Right’s Compassionate Steward and Conservationist: The Lost Philosophies of Pat Robertson. Book Reviews Steven Fesmire reviews Bryan G. Norton's Sustainable Values, Sustainable Change: A Guide to Environmental Decision Making. Bernard Daley Zaleha reviews Lucas F. Johnston's Religion and Sustainability: Social Movements and the Politics of the Environment. Jeremy Bendik-Keymer reviews Steven Vogel's Thinking like a Mall: Environmental Philosophy after the End of Nature. Referees 2016 and Index. Back to top
Erkenntnis, Vol. 82, #4, 2017 Original Research Daniel Enrique Kalpokas. Experience and Justification: Revisiting McDowell’s Empiricism. Colin R. Caret. The Collapse of Logical Pluralism has been Greatly Exaggerated. Christian Lowe. Boltzmannian Immortality. Jesse R. Steinberg, Alan M. Steinberg. A Multiply Qualified Conditional Analysis of Disposition Ascription: Mapping the Conceptual Topography of Ceteris Paribus. James DiFrisco. Time Scales and Levels of Organization. Jan Almäng. An Argument for Shape Internalism. Gregg D. Caruso, Stephen G. Morris. Compatibilism and Retributivist Desert Moral Responsibility: On What is of Central Philosophical and Practical Importance. Joshua Spencer. Counting on Strong Composition as Identity to Settle the Special Composition Question. Sander Verhaegh. Blurring Boundaries: Carnap, Quine, and the Internal–External Distinction. David Alexander. Unjustified Defeaters. Gil Sagi. Contextualism, Relativism and the Liar. Lorraine Juliano Keller. Against Naturalized Cognitive Propositions. Back to top  
FPQ: Feminist Philosophy Quarterly, Vol. 3, #2, 2017 Symposium on Catharine A. MacKinnon's Toward a Feminist Theory of the State Articles Lori Watson. Introduction: Symposium on Toward a Feminist Theory of the State, Twenty-Five Years Later Catharine MacKinnon. Feminism, and Continental Philosophy: Comments on Toward a Feminist Theory of the State—Twenty-Five Years Later. Natalie Nenadic. 'We Must Find Words or Burn': Speaking Out against Disciplinary Silencing. Susan J. Brison. On the Politics of Coalition. Elena Ruíz and Kristie Dotson. Judging Women: Twenty-Five Years Further Toward a Feminist Theory of the State. Clare Chambers. Response to Five Philosophers: Toward a Feminist Theory of the State Some Decades Later. Catharine A. MacKinnon. Response to Five Philosophers: Toward a Feminist Theory of the State Some Decades Later. Back to top  
Journal of the History of Philosophy, Vol. 55, #3, 2017 Books That Shaped the Historiography of Philosophy Paul Guyer. The Bounds of Sense and the Limits of Analysis. Articles Carlo Davia. Aristotle and the Endoxic Method. Ruth Boeker. Locke on Personal Identity: A Response to the Problems of His Predecessors. Lawrnece Pasternack. Restoring Kant’s Conception of the Highest Good. Christopher Yeomans. Perspectives without Privileges: The Estates in Hegel’s Political Philosophy. Colin Koopman. The Will, the will to Believe, and William James: An Ethics of Freedom as Self-Transformation. Fabio Gironi. A Kantian Disagreement between Father and Son: Roy Wood Sellars and Wilfrid Sellars on the Categories. Book Reviews David Ebrey reviews The Possibility of Inquiry: Meno's Paradox from Socrates to Sextus by Gail Fine. Jakob Leth Fink reviews Levels of Argument: A Comparative Study of Plato's Republic and Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics by Dominic Scott. Stephen D. Dumont reviews On Being and Cognition: Ordinatio by John Duns Scotus. Mary Sirridge reviews Nicholas of Amsterdam: Commentary on the Old Logic by Egbert P. Bos. Erik De Bom reviews Truth and Irony: Philosophical Meditations on Erasmus by Terence J. Martin. Andreas Blank reviews Julius Caesar Scaliger, Renaissance Reformer of Aristotelianism: A Study of His Exotericae Exercitationes by Kuni Sakamoto. Yitzhak Y. Melamed reviews The Influence of Abraham Cohen de Herrera's Kabbalah on Spinoza's Metaphysics by Miquel Beltràn. Michael A. Rosenthal reviews The Collected Works of Spinoza by Benedictus de Spinoza. Kristen Irwin reviews Bayle, Jurieu, and the Dictionnaire Historique et Critique by Mara van der Lugt. F. Scott Scribner reviews Fichte's Addresses to the German Nation Reconsidered ed. by Daniel Breazeale and Tom Rockmore. Lawrence J. Hatab reviews Nietzsche's Earth: Great Events, Great Politics by Gary Shapiro. Andrew Bowie reviews Adorno and Existence by Peter E. Gordon. Books Received Back to top  
Journal of Nietzsche Studies, Vol. 48, #2, 2017 Abbreviations and Citations of Friedrich Nietzsche’s Works Proceedings from The North American Nietzsche Society Paul Katsafanas. NANS Editorial Note. Christopher Janaway. On the Very Idea of “Justifying Suffering”. Beatrix Himmelmann. Nietzsche’s Ethics of Power and the Ideas of Right, Justice, and Dignity Matt Dill. On Parasitism and Overflow in Nietzsche’s Doctrine of Will to Power. Akshay Ganesh. Nietzsche on Honor and Empathy. Daniel I. Harris. Nietzsche and Aristotle on Friendship and Self-Knowledge. Patrick Hassan. Does Rarity Confer Value?: Nietzsche on the Exceptional Individual. Book Reviews Interanimations: Receiving Modern German Philosophy by Robert B. Pippin, and: Nietzsche, Psychology, and First Philosophy by Robert B. Pippin. Review by Christopher Fowles. Nietzsche and The Birth of Tragedy by Paul Raimond Daniels. Review by Vinod Acharya. Nietzsche, Tension, and the Tragic Disposition by Matthew Tones Review by Elisabeth Flucher. Nietzsche nella Rivoluzione conservatrice ed. by Francesco Cattaneo, Carlo Gentili, and Stefano Marino. Review by Selena Pastorino. Nietzsche and Dostoevsky: On the Verge of Nihilism by Paolo Stellino. Review by Christoph Schuringa.  Back to top
Journal of Philosophical Logic, Vol. 46, #4, 2017 Original Papers Nicholas Asher, Soumya Paul, Antoine Venant. Message Exchange Games in Strategic Contexts. Richard Booth, Jake Chandler. The Irreducibility of Iterated to Single Revision. Ken Akiba. A Unification of Two Approaches to Vagueness: The Boolean Many-Valued Approach and the Modal-Precisificational Approach. Andrew Tedder. On Structural Features of the Implication Fragment of Frege’s Grundgesetze. Elisa Paganini. Vague Objects within Classical Logic and Standard Mereology, and without Indeterminate Identity. Back to top
Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 113, #12, 2016 Articles Wade Munroe. Words on Psycholinguistics. Andrea Iacona. Two Notions of Logical Form. New Books Back to top  
Journal of Practical Ethics, Vol. 5, #1, 2017 Articles Lea Ypi. Structural Injustice and the Place of Attachment. Stephen M. Gardiner. Accepting Collective Responsibility for the Future. Masaki Ichinose. The Death Penalty Debate: Four Problems and New Philosophical Perspectives. Back to top
Mind, Vol. 126, #502, 2017 Articles Donovan Wishon. Russellian acquainatace and Frege’s Puzzle. Luca Incurvati; Julien Murzi. Maximally Consistent Sets of Instances of Naive Comprehension. Igor Douven; Lieven Decock. What Verities May Be. Daniel Waxman. Deflationism, Arithmetic, and the Argument from Conservativeness. Jack Spencer. Able to Do the Impossible. Stephan Krämer. Everything, and Then Some. Anil Gomes. Naïve Realism In Kantian Phrase. Discussions Jake Chandler. Preservation, Commutativity and Modus Ponens: Two Recent Triviality Results. Richard Bradley. Supporters and Underminers: Reply to Chandler. Hans Rott. Preservation and Postulation: Lessons from the New Debate on the Ramsey Test. Book Reviews The Logical Structure of Kinds, by Eric Funkhouser. Review by Joseph Laporte. The Possibility of Inquiry: Meno’s Paradox from Socrates to Sextus, by Gail Fine. Review by David Bronstein. Aesthetics as Philosophy of Perception, by Bence Nanay. Review by Ophelia Deroy. Persons, Interests, and Justice, by Nils Holtug. Review by Tim Campbell. Between Probability and Certainty: What Justifies Belief, by Martin Smith. Review by Kelly Becker. Back to top
Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Vol. 6, 2016 (located on Tanner New Journal shelf) Acknowledgments // List of Contributors Introduction by Mark Timmons Articles Stephen Darwall: Taking Account of Character and Being an Accountable Person. Claudia Card: Taking Pride in Being Bad. Kate Abramson: Character as a Mode of Evaluation. Jack Woods: The Normative Force of Promising. Hallie Liberto: Promissory Obligation: Against a Unified Account. Susan Wolf: Two Concepts of Rule Utilitarianism. David Schmitz: After Solipsism. Barry Maguire: Extrinsic Value and the Separability of Reasons. Kenneth Walden: The Relativity of Ethical Explanation. Paul Hurley: Two Senses of Moral Verdict and Moral Overridingness. Erich Hatala Matthes: Love in Spite of. Gilbert Harman: Moral Reasoning. Index Back to top
Philosophy Compass, Vol. 12, #7, 2017 Naturalistic Philosophy John Turri. Experimental work on the norms of assertion. Marco J. Nathan and Guillermo Del Pinal. The Future of Cognitive Neuroscience? Reverse Inference in Focus. Philosophy of Religion Michael Almeida. Theistic Modal Realism I: The Challenge of Theistic Actualism. Michael Almeida. Theistic Modal Realism II: Theoretical Benefits. Bronwyn Finnigan. Buddhism and animal ethics. Back to top
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 95, #1, 2017 Articles Peter Millican. Hume’s Fork, and his Theory of Relations. Ryan Wasserman. Vagueness and the Laws of Metaphysics. Simon M. Huttegger. Inductive Learning in Small and Large Worlds. Jonas Åkerman. Indexicals and Reference-Shifting: Towards a Pragmatic Approach. Weng Hong Tang. Transparency and Partial Beliefs. Una Stojnić. One's Modus Ponens: Modality, Coherence and Logic. Book Symposium : Outside Color Mazviita Chirimuuta. Précis of Outside Color. Joshua Gert. Outside Color from Just Outside. Anil Gupta. M. Chirimuuta's Adverbialism about Color. Mohan Matthen. Realism, Relativism, Adverbialism: How Different are they? Comments on Mazviita Chirimuuta's Outside Color. Mazviita Chirimuuta. Replies. Back to top
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interanimes1 · 6 years
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Okaerinasai goshujin sama!
▶ Mais diversão e anime? Visite também nossas redes! ⬇⬇
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ3cKmacIJbAikNkv7KhCvA …
TWITTER : https://twitter.com/InterAnimes1
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/interanimes/
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#maid #anime #otaku #rezero #maidcafe 
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tannertoctoo-blog · 8 years
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March 22, 2017
Biology & Philosophy, Vol. 32, #2, 2017 British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Environmental Ethics, Vol. 38, #3, 2016 Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Vol. 20, #1, 2017 Ethics, Vol. 127, #3, 2017 Hastings Center Report, Vol. 47, #2, 2017 Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 140, #4, 2017 Journal of Nietzsche Studies, Vol. 48, #1, 2017 Journal of Value Inquiry, Vol. 51, #1, 2017 Law and Philosophy, Vol. 36, #2, 2017 Metaphilosophy, Vol. 48, #1-2, 2017 Philosophical Investigations, Vol. 40, #2, 2017 Philosophical Perspectives, Vol. 30, #1, 2016 Philosophical Studies, Vol. 174, #4, 2017 Philosophers’ Imprint, Vol. 17, nos. 1- 6, 2017 Social Theory and Practice, Vol. 43, #2, 2017 Studia Logica, Vol. 105, #2, 2017 Synthese, Vol. 194, #3, 2017
Biology & Philosophy, Vol. 32, #2, 2017 Editorial Michael Weisberg. Editorial. Original Papers Thomas Pradeu. Thirty Years of Biology & Philosophy: Philosophy of Which Biology? Steve Donaldson, Thomas Woolley, Nick Dzugan, Jason Goebel. Prediction in Evolutionary Systems. Roberto Fumagalli. On the Neural Enrichment of Economic Models: Recasting the Challenge. Eric Funkhouser. Is Self-Deception an Effective Non-Cooperative Strategy? Alison K. McConwell, Adrian Currie. Gouldian Arguments and the Sources of Contingency. John J. Welch. What's Wrong with Evolutionary Biology? Brief Communication Pierre-Luc Germain, Lucie Laplane. Metastasis as Supra-Cellular Selection? A Reply to Lean and Plutynski. Review Essays Ellen Clarke, Cecilia Heyes. The Swashbuckling Anthropologist: Henrich on The Secret of Our Success. Carl Brusse. Making do Without Selection—Review Essay of “Cultural Evolution: Conceptual Challenges” by Tim Lewens. Back to Top
British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Editorial Michael Beaney. Editorial. Articles Marta Heckel. Plato on the Role of Contradiction in Education. Stephen Howard. Why did Leibniz Fail to Complete his Dynamics? Joshua Cockayne. Contemporaneity and Communion: Kierkegaard on the Personal Presence of Christ. Katrina Mitcheson. Scepticism and Self-Transformation in Nietzsche – On the Uses and Disadvantages of a Comparison to Pyrrhonian Scepticism. Katherina Kinzel. Wilhelm Windelband and the Problem of Relativism. Stefan Brandt. Sellars and Quine on Empiricism and Conceptual Truth. Symposium on Schelling and Freedom Sebastian Gardner. The Metaphysics of Human Freedom: From Kant’s Transcendental Idealism to Schelling’s Freiheitsschrift. Peter Dews. Theory Construction and Existential Description in Schelling’s Treatise on Freedom. Sebastian Gardner. Reply to Dews, and a Plea for Schelling. Review Article Johannes Zachhuber. Anima Mundi: The Rise of the World Soul Theory in Modern German Philosophy. Book Reviews Naoya Iwata. Clitophon's Challenge: Dialectic in Plato's Meno, Phaedo, and Republic. Demetrios Dedes. The Philosophy of Gemistos Plethon: Platonism in Late Byzantium, Between Hellenism and Orthodoxy. Lynda Gaudemard. Reforming the Art of Living: Nature, Virtue, and Religion in Descartes's Epistemology. Kristopher G. Phillips. Historical Dictionary of Descartes and Cartesian Philosophy. Sheldon Richmond. Spinoza’s Critique of Religion and Its Heirs: Marx, Benjamin, and Adorno. Charlotte Alderwick. Interanimations: Receiving Modern German Philosophy. Hanne Appelqvist. Representation and Reality in Wittgenstein’s Tractatus. Back to Top
Environmental Ethics, Vol. 38, #3, 2016 Articles Jame Schaefer. Imprudence and Intergenerational Injustice: The Ongoing Vices of Opting for Nuclear Fueled Electricity. Debra J. Erickson. The Case for Casuistry in Environmental Ethics. Discussion Papers Kalpita Bhar Paul, Meera Baindur. Leopold’s Land Ethic in the Sundarbans: A Phenomenological Approach. Samantha Clark. Nothing Really Matters: Jean-Paul Sartre, Negation, and Nature. Mark Michael. Environmental Pragmatism, Community Values, and the Problem of Reprehensible Implications. Ovadia Ezra. Global Distributive Justice: An Environmental Perspective. Book Reviews Andrea R. Gammon. Emplotting Virtue: A Narrative Approach to Environmental Virtue Ethics. Brian Treanor. The Wisdom of Frugality: Why Less is More—More or Less. Back to Top
Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Vol. 20, #1, 2017 Editorial A . W. Musschenga, F. R. Heeger. Editorial Note. Albert W. Musschenga, Gerben Meynen. Moral Progress: An Introduction. Original Papers Caroline T. Arruda. The Varieties of Moral Improvement, or Why Metaethical Constructivism Must Explain Moral Progress. Julia Hermann. Possibilities of Moral Progress in the Face of Evolution. Markus Christen, Darcia Narvaez. Comparing and Integrating Biological and Cultural Moral Progress. Jeremy Evans. A Working Definition of Moral Progress. Jesse S. Summers. Rationalizing our Way into Moral Progress. Jan Willem Wieland. Willful Ignorance. Anders Schinkel, Doret J. de Ruyter. Individual Moral Development and Moral Progress. Toni Rønnow-Rasmussen. On Locating Value in Making Moral Progress*. Michele M. Moody-Adams. Moral Progress and Human Agency. Dale Jamieson. Slavery, Carbon, and Moral Progress. Book Reviews Mark Alfano. Christoph Luetge, Hannes Rusch, & Matthias Uhl (eds.), Experimental Ethics: Toward an Empirical Moral Philosophy. Daniela Zumpf. Axel Honneth (2015), Die Idee des Sozialismus. Christoph Schmidt-Petri. Tatjana Visak & Robert Garner (Eds.): The Ethics of Killing Animals. Sebastian Köhler. Chrisman, Matthew. The Meaning of ‘Ought’. Beyond Descriptivism and Expressivism in Metaethics. Jesse Kirkpatrick. Nancy Sherman, Afterwar. Karsten Witt. Tim Lewens, The Biological Foundations of Bioethics. Annette Dufner, Bettina Schoene-Seifert. Weyma Lübbe: Nonaggregationismus. Joanne Beswick. Pabst Battin, Margaret (Editor). ‘The Ethics of Suicide’. Historical Sources. Gerald Lang. Lippert-Rasmussen, Kasper. Luck Egalitarianism. Back to Top
Ethics, Vol. 127, #3, 2017 Articles Paulina Sliwa. Moral Understanding as Knowing Right from Wrong. David Owens. Wrong by Convention. Symposium on Ethics and Decision Theory Seth Lazar. Introduction. Seth Lazar. Deontological Decision Theory and Agent-Centered Options. Lara Buchak. Taking Risks behind the Veil of Ignorance. J. Robert G. Williams. Indeterminate Oughts. Sergio Tenenbaum. Action, Deontology, and Risk: Against the Multiplicative Model. Discussions Eva Schmidt. New Trouble for “Reasons as Evidence”: Means That Don’t Justify the Ends. Stephen J. White. Transmission Failures. Review Essay F. M. Kamm. The Purpose of My Death: Death, Dying, and Meaning. Book Reviews Adam Swift. Danielle Allen, Tommie Shelby, Marcelo Suárez-Orozco, Michael Rebell, and Quiara Alegría Hudes, Education and Equality. Mattias Iser. Neera Chandhoke, Democracy and Revolutionary Politics. Elisabeth Pacherie. John M. Doris, Talking to Our Selves: Reflection, Ignorance, and Agency. Jonathan Mitchell. Paul Katsafanas, The Nietzschean Self: Moral Psychology, Agency and the Unconscious. Stephen C. Angle. Sungmoon Kim, Public Reason Confucianism: Democratic Perfectionism and Constitutionalism in East Asia. Cindy Holder. Loren E. Lomasky and Fernando R. Tesón, Justice at a Distance: Extending Freedom Globally. Uri D. Leibowitz. Patricia Marino, Moral Reasoning in a Pluralistic World. Andrea C. Westlund. Martha Nussbaum, Anger and Forgiveness: Resentment, Generosity, Justice. Stephen Kearns. Carolina Sartorio, Causation and Free Will. Christopher Howard. Mark Schroeder, Expressing Our Attitudes: Explanation and Expression in Ethics. David Wiens. Leif Wenar, Blood Oil: Tyrants, Violence, and the Rules That Run the World. Back to Top
Hastings Center Report, Vol. 47, #2, 2017 Editorial Laura Haupt. Space for the Prisoner's Point of View. Articles Paul P. Christopher, Lorena G. Garcia-Sampson, Michael Stein, Jennifer Johnson, Josiah Rich and Charles Lidz. Enrolling in Clinical Research While Incarcerated: What Influences Participants’ Decisions? Keramet Reiter. Coercion and Access to Health Care. Moti Gorin, Steven Joffe, Neal Dickert and Scott Halpern. Justifying Clinical Nudges. Søren Holm. Authenticity, Best Interest, and Clinical Nudging. Jessica Mozersky, Vardit Ravitsky, Rayna Rapp, Marsha Michie, Subhashini Chandrasekharan and Megan Allyse. Toward an Ethically Sensitive Implementation of Noninvasive Prenatal Screening in the Global Context. Essays Mildred Z. Solomon and Bruce Jennings. Bioethics and Populism: How Should Our Field Respond? Spencer Phillips Hey and Aaron S. Kesselheim. Reprioritizing Research Activity for the Post-Antibiotic Era: Ethical, Legal, and Social Considerations. Case Study Connie R. Shi, Manjinder S. Kandola, Matthew Tobey and Elizabeth Singer. Managing Opioid Withdrawal for Hospital Patients in Custody. Commentary Arthur W. Frank. Bioethics and “Rightness”. Lawrence O. Gostin. Best Evidence Aside: Why Trump's Executive Order Makes America Less Healthy. Ruchika Mishra. Implementing California's Law on Assisted Dying. Tyler Tate. The Clue. Book Review Michael Hauskeller. Rethinking Reprogenetics. Departments Susan Gilbert. Facts, Values, and Journalism. Back to Top
Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 140, #4, 2017 Editorial Domènec Melé, Josep M. Rosanas, Joan Fontrodona. Ethics in Finance and Accounting: Editorial Introduction. Original Papers Natàlia Cugueró-Escofet, Josep M. Rosanas. The Ethics of Metrics: Overcoming the Dysfunctional Effects of Performance Measurements Through Justice. Alina Beattrice Vladu, Oriol Amat, Dan Dacian Cuzdriorean. Truthfulness in Accounting: How to Discriminate Accounting Manipulators from Non-manipulators. Yves Fassin, Will Drover. Ethics in Entrepreneurial Finance: Exploring Problems in Venture Partner Entry and Exit. Christopher J. Cowton, Leire San-Jose. On the Ethics of Trade Credit: Understanding Good Payment Practice in the Supply Chain. Bradley Lail, Jason MacGregor, James Marcum, Martin Stuebs. Virtuous Professionalism in Accountants to Avoid Fraud and to Restore Financial Reporting. Miguel Alzola. Beware of the Watchdog: Rethinking the Normative Justification of Gatekeeper Liability. Arleta A. A. Majoch, Andreas G. F. Hoepner, Tessa Hebb. Sources of Stakeholder Salience in the Responsible Investment Movement: Why Do Investors Sign the Principles for Responsible Investment? Herwig Pilaj. The Choice Architecture of Sustainable and Responsible Investment: Nudging Investors Toward Ethical Decision-Making. Janine Maniora. Is Integrated Reporting Really the Superior Mechanism for the Integration of Ethics into the Core Business Model? An Empirical Analysis. S. Prakash Sethi, Terrence F. Martell, Mert Demir. An Evaluation of the Quality of Corporate Social Responsibility Reports by Some of the World’s Largest Financial Institutions. Back to Top
Journal of Nietzsche Studies, Vol. 48, #1, 2017 Editorial Abbreviations and Citations of Friedrich Nietzsche’s Works. Jessica N. Berry. Letter From the Editor. Proceedings from the North American Nietzsche Society Jessica N. Berry. Editorial Note. Guy Elgat. Judgments That Have Value “Only as Symptoms”: Nietzsche on the Denial of Life in Twilight of the Idols. Daniel I. Harris. Compassion and Affirmation in Nietzsche. Manuel Dries. Memento Mori, Memento Vivere: Early Nietzsche on History, Embodiment, and Value. Neil Sinhababu. Nietzschean Pragmatism. Brian Leiter. Nietzsche’s Naturalism and Nineteenth-Century Biology. P. J. E. Kail. Emden’s Nietzsche. Christian J. Emden. Nietzsche, Naturalism, and Normativity: A Reply to Brian Leiter and Peter Kail. Book Reviews Hugo Drochon. Nietzsche and Political Thought ed. by Keith Ansell-Pearson (review). Philip Mills. Nietzsche. L’antiphilosophie I. 1992–1993 by Alain Badiou (review). Keith Ansell-Pearson. On Nietzsche by Georges Bataille (review). Niklas Corall. Klassiker Auslegen 57: Friedrich Nietzsche—Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft ed. by Christian Benne and Jutta Georg (review). Wander Andrade de Paula. Arte e niilismo. Nietzsche e o Enigma do Mundo by João Constâncio (review). Laura Langone. Nietzsche and Buddhist Philosophy by Antoine Panaïoti (review). Kaitlyn Creasy. Naturalizing Heidegger: His Confrontation with Nietzsche, His Contributions to Environmental Philosophy by David E. Storey (review). Back to Top
Journal of Value Inquiry, Vol. 51, #1, 2017 Original Papers Rochelle DuFord. An Expanded Conception of Sentimental Value. Martijn Boot. The Right Balance. Violetta Igneski. The Human Right to Subsistence and the Collective Duty to Aid. Fergus Peace. Consequentialism, Goodness, and States of Affairs. Joshua Stuchlik. The Closeness Problem for Double Effect: A Reply to Nelkin and Rickless. Martin Sticker. When the Reflective Watch-Dog Barks: Conscience and Self-Deception in Kant. Wouter F. Kalf. Against Hybrid Expressivist-Error Theory. Simon Coghlan. The Essential Connection Between Human Value and Saintly Behavior. Katharina Nieswandt. Anscombe on the Sources of Normativity. Colin Hickey. Biomedical Enhancement and the Kantian Duty to Cultivate Our Talents. Book Reviews Luca Malatesti. Schramme, Thomas, ed. Being amoral. Iddo Landau. John Kleinig, Simon Keller, and Igor Primoratz, The Ethics of Patriotism: A Debate. Jessica Flanigan. Mark Navin, Values and Vaccine Refusal: Hard Questions in Ethics, Epistemology, and Health Care. Back to Top
Law and Philosophy, Vol. 36, #2, 2017 Symposium on Allen Buchanan’s The Heart of Human Rights. Editorial Matthew Lister. Guest Editor’s Introduction to Symposium on Allen Buchanan, The Heart of Human Rights. Book Reviews Brooke Ackerly. Interpreting the Political Theory in the Practice of Human Rights. Erin I. Kelly. Law and Institutional Legitimacy in the Practice of Human Rights. Mathias Risse. Approaching Human Rights Law Philosophically: Reflections on Allen Buchanan, The Heart of Human Rights. Allen Buchanan. Reply to Talbott, Ackerly, Kelly, and Risse. Dale Smith. Book Review. Back to Top
Metaphilosophy, Vol. 48, #1-2, 2017 Article Bob Plant. On the Domain of Metaphilosophy. D. Goldstick. The Salto Vitale Method in Philosophy. Niklas Forsberg. Thinking About a Word—Love, for Example. Bryan Frances. Extensive Philosophical Agreement and Progress. Frank Martela. Moral Philosophers as Ethical Engineers: Limits of Moral Philosophy and a Pragmatist Alternative. Staffan Angere. The Square Circle. Todd Jones and Michael Pravica. When Do Scientific Explanations Compete? Steps Toward a Heuristic Checklist. Hanne Appelqvist. What Kind of Normativity is the Normativity of Grammar? Tom Rockmore. Piketty, Marxian Political Economy, and the Law of the Falling Rate of Profit. Oliver Laas. Disagreements Over Analogies. James Andow. A Partial Defence of Descriptive Evidentialism About Intuitions: A Reply to Molyneux. Back to Top
Philosophical Investigations, Vol. 40, #2, 2017 Articles Tony Lynch and Nishanathe Dahanayake. Atheism and Morality, Guilt and Shame: Why the Moral Complacency of the New Atheism is a Mistake. Karsten Schoellner. Practical Philosophy. Ivan Milić and Stefan Reining. A Wittgensteinian Role-Based Account of Assertion. Øystein Daae Gjertsen. Symptoms of a Misunderstanding in Contemporary Academic Philosophy. Antonio Negro and Carlo Penco. Kenny's Wrong Formula. Critical Notice Roger A. Shiner. Meaning and Morality: Essays on the Philosophy of Julius Kovesi. Reviews Christopher Hamilton. Late Philosophical Writings. John Rist. The Great Riddle: Wittgenstein and Nonsense, Theology and Philosophy. Julie Daigle. The Religious Philosophy of Simone Weil: An Introduction. Aloisia Moser. Wittgenstein on Internal and External Relations: Tracing All the Connections. Back to Top
Philosophical Perspectives, Vol. 30, #1, 2016 Special Issue: Metaphysics Original Articles Ralf M. Bader. Contingent Identity and Counterpart Theory. Sara Bernstein. Grounding Is Not Causation. Cian Dorr. To Be F Is To Be G. Peter Finocchiaro and Meghan Sullivan. Yet Another “Epicurean” Argument. Jeremy Goodman. An Argument For Necessitism. Paul Hovda. Parthood-Like Relations: Closure Principles And Connections To Some Axioms Of Classical Mereology. Mark Johnston. Personites, Maximality And Ontological Trash. Jon Erling Litland and Juhani Yli-Vakkuri. Vagueness & Modality—An Ecumenical Approach. Michaela Markham McSweeney. An Epistemic Account Of Metaphysical Equivalence. Daniel Nolan. Chance and Necessity. Jeffrey Sanford Russell. Qualitative Grounds. Aaron Segal. A Puzzle About Points. Jason Turner. Curbing Enthusiasm About Grounding. Jennifer Wang. Fundamentality And Modal Freedom. J. Robert G. Williams. Representational Scepticism: The Bubble Puzzle. Back to Top
Philosophical Studies, Vol. 174, #4, 2017 With Symposium on "Knowledge and Closure" Original Papers Dominic Gregory. Counterfactual Reasoning and Knowledge of Possibilities. Joachim Wündisch. Does Excusable Ignorance Absolve of Liability for Costs? Andreas Stokke. Metaphors and Martinis: A Response to Jessice Keiser. Alex Davies. Elaborations and Intuitions of Disagreement. Cristina Borgoni, Yannig Luthra. Epistemic Akrasia and the Fallibility of Critical Reasoning. Scott Brown. Against Instantiation as Identity. Bob Beddor. Justification as Faultlessness. Rachael Briggs, Graeme A. Forbes. The Growing-Block: Just One Thing After Another? Matt Duncan. Dualists Needn't be Anti-Criterialists (Nor Should They Be). Matt Duncan. Erratum To: Dualists Needn't be Anti-Criterialists (Nor Should They Be). Justin A. Capes, Philip Swenson. Frankfurt Cases: The Fine-Grained Response Revisited. Kyle Swan. Legal Ounishment of Immorality: One More into the Breach. Assaf Sharon, Levi Spectre. Evidence and the Openness of Knowledge. Juan Comesaña. On Sharon and Spectre’s Argument Against Closure. Stephen Yablo. Open Knowledge and Changing the Subject. Assaf Sharon, Levi Spectre. Replies to Comesaña and Yablo. Back to Top
Philosophers’ Imprint, Vol. 17, nos. 1- 3, 2017 Articles Samuel Cumming, Gabriel Greenberg, Rory Kelly. Conventions of Viewpoint Coherence in Film. Antonia LoLordo. Jonathan Edwards's Monism. Sam Baron, Mark Colyvan, David Ripley. How Mathematics Can Make a Difference. Ryan Preston-Roedder. Civic Trust. Abelard Podgorski. Rational Delay. Mark Textor. Towards a Neo-Brentanian Theory of Existence. Back to Top
Social Theory and Practice, Vol. 43, #2, 2017 Editorial Articles Alberto G. Urquidez. Jorge Garcia and the Ordinary Use of "Racist Belief". Lior Erez. Anti-Cosmopolitanism and the Motivational Preconditions for Social Justice. Matt S. Whitt. Felon Disenfranchisement and Democratic Legitimacy. Martijn Boot. Problems of Incommensurability. Franz Mang. Public Reason Can Be Reasonably Rejected. Desiree Lim. Selecting Immigrants by Skill: A Case of Wrongful Discrimination? Chrisoula Andreou. Advantage, Restraint, and the Circumstances of Justice. Jason Chen. The Core of Oppression: Why Is it Wrong? Referees Back to Top
Studia Logica, Vol. 105, #2, 2017 Original Papers Pablo F. Castro. Tableau Systems for Deontic Action Logics Based on Finite Boolean Algebras, and Their Complexity. Stefano Bonzio, José Gil-Férez, Francesco Paoli, Luisa Peruzzi. On Paraconsistent Weak Kleene Logic: Axiomatisation and Algebraic Analysis. Michael Schippers, Gerhard Schurz. Genuine Coherence as Mutual Confirmation Between Content Elements. M. Garapa, E. Fermé, M. D. L. Reis. Studies on Brutal Contraction and Severe Withdrawal. Bruno Jacinto, Stephen Read. General-Elimination Stability. Stanislav O. Speranski. Notes on the Computational Aspects of Kripke’s Theory of Truth. Book Reviews Valentin Goranko. Dov Gabbay, Reactive Kripke Semantics. Back to Top
Synthese, Vol. 194, #3, 2017 Special Issue: The future of social cognition: paradigms, concepts and experiments (first 10 papers), edited by Nivedita Gangopadhyay Articles Nivedita Gangopadhyay. The Future of Social Cognition: Paradigms, Concepts and Experiments. Peter Carruthers. Mindreading in Adults: Evaluating Two-Systems Views. Hannes Rakoczy. In Defense of a Developmental Dogma: Children Acquire Propositional Attitude Folk Psychology Around Age 4. Joel Smith. What is Empathy For? Quassim Cassam. What Asymmetry? Knowledge of Self, Knowledge of Others, and the Inferentialist Challenge. Søren Overgaard. The Unobserability Thesis. Albert Newen. Defending the Liberal-Content View of Perceptual Experience: Direct Social Perception of Emotions and Person Impressions. Somogy Varga. The Case for Mind Perception. Shaun Nichols. The Essence of Mentalistic Agents. Daniel D. Hutto. Basic Social Cognition Without Mindreading: Minding Minds Without Attributing Contents. Vassilios Karakostas, Elias Zafiris. Contextual Semantics in Quantum Mechanics from a Categorical Point of View. Martin Flament Fultot. Modulation : An Alternative to Instructions and Forces. Niels Skovgaard-Olsen. The Problem of Logical Omniscience, the Preface Paradox, and Doxastic Commitments. Eli Pitcovski. Getting the Big Picture. Minyao Huang. A Plea for Radical Contextualism. Christopher Willard-Kyle. Do Great Minds Really Think Alike? Back to Top
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