The thought of matter: materialism, conceptuality, and the transcendence of immanence
In: Philosophical projections
162 results
Sort by:
In: Philosophical projections
In: The New Global Society
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction -- 1: The Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494 -- 2: Globalization and Culture: Two Views -- 3: Culture and Ideology -- 4: The Pre-History of Globalization -- 5: Maps and Language -- 6: Language, Culture, and Politics -- 7: The Transmission of the Modernist Dream: Ideological and Cultural Transfers -- 8: The Movement of Goods and People -- 9: Conclusions -- Glossary -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Further Reading -- Index -- Picture Credits -- About the Contributors.
In: The journal of philosophical economics: reflections on economic and social issues, Volume IV Issue 1, Issue Articles
ISSN: 1844-8208
From its inception, the world-systems perspective was not only enormously influential in long-term, large-scale social research; it also attracted a set of serious critiques. These fell into the general areas of the emergence of the capitalist world-economy; reductionism in the mode of argument; surplus appropriation and accumulation, including the question of class; and the general exclusion of an analysis of any role for "culture." It is concrete developments in world-systems analysis over the past three decades, although not to the exclusion of explicit responses to critiques, that have gone a long way in addressing these concerns. They fall most notably into the areas of commodity chains, households, world-ecology, and the structures of knowledge.
In: Environmental politics, Volume 19, Issue 3, p. 490-492
ISSN: 0964-4016
In: Environmental politics, Volume 19, Issue 1, p. 169-170
ISSN: 0964-4016
In: The journal of philosophical economics: reflections on economic and social issues, Volume I Issue 1, Issue Articles
ISSN: 1844-8208
The "structures of knowledge" designates the long-term intellectual and institutional division in knowledge production, the arena of cognition and intentionality (the "socio-cultural") that we recognize as the relational hierarchy between the sciences and the humanities, or the "two cultures", and it is just as integral to the development of the modern world as the realms of material production and distribution (the "economic") or of decision making and coercion (the "political"). The modern discipline of economics emerged from a medium-term restructuring of the structures of knowledge in the late nineteenth century along with the other, multiple, social sciences between the sciences and the humanities each with proprietary subject matters, theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches. The contemporary crisis in the field of knowledge production is part of the overall exhaustion of the processes reproducing the structures of the modern world-system. Contemporary economics in this "far-from-equilibrium" world should be well placed to contribute to an understanding of the alternative futures available today. But this would entail a reexamination of its inherited theoretical approaches and methodological practices.
International audience ; The "structures of knowledge" designates the long-term intellectual and institutional division in knowledge production, the arena of cognition and intentionality (the "socio-cultural") that we recognize as the relational hierarchy between the sciences and the humanities, or the "two cultures", and it is just as integral to the development of the modern world as the realms of material production and distribution (the "economic") or of decision making and coercion (the "political"). The modern discipline of economics emerged from a medium-term restructuring of the structures of knowledge in the late nineteenth century along with the other, multiple, social sciences between the sciences and the humanities each with proprietary subject matters, theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches. The contemporary crisis in the field of knowledge production is part of the overall exhaustion of the processes reproducing the structures of the modern world-system. Contemporary economics in this "far-from-equilibrium" world should be well placed to contribute to an understanding of the alternative futures available today. But this would entail a reexamination of its inherited theoretical approaches and methodological practices.
BASE
International audience ; The "structures of knowledge" designates the long-term intellectual and institutional division in knowledge production, the arena of cognition and intentionality (the "socio-cultural") that we recognize as the relational hierarchy between the sciences and the humanities, or the "two cultures", and it is just as integral to the development of the modern world as the realms of material production and distribution (the "economic") or of decision making and coercion (the "political"). The modern discipline of economics emerged from a medium-term restructuring of the structures of knowledge in the late nineteenth century along with the other, multiple, social sciences between the sciences and the humanities each with proprietary subject matters, theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches. The contemporary crisis in the field of knowledge production is part of the overall exhaustion of the processes reproducing the structures of the modern world-system. Contemporary economics in this "far-from-equilibrium" world should be well placed to contribute to an understanding of the alternative futures available today. But this would entail a reexamination of its inherited theoretical approaches and methodological practices.
BASE
In: Before farming: the archaeology and anthropology of hunter-gatherers, Volume 2007, Issue 3, p. 1-6
ISSN: 1476-4261
In: The Journal of psychodrama, sociometry, and group psychotherapy, Volume 58, Issue 3, p. 107-118
ISSN: 1940-5014
In: Asian affairs, Volume 32, Issue 3, p. 300-306
ISSN: 1477-1500
In: Journal of conflict and security law, Volume 6, Issue 12, p. 165-170
ISSN: 1467-7954
In: Hobbes studies, Volume 13, Issue 1, p. 34-45
ISSN: 1875-0257