Call for reflections: global ethics forum: challenges, replies, alternatives
In: Journal of global ethics, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 112-113
ISSN: 1744-9634
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In: Journal of global ethics, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 112-113
ISSN: 1744-9634
In: Journal of global ethics, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 105-111
ISSN: 1744-9634
In: Journal of global ethics, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 1-5
ISSN: 1744-9634
Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- Introduction: Minding Bodies -- PART I: BECOMING EMBODIED SUBJECTS -- 1 Emotional Metamorphoses: The Role of in Becoming a Subject -- 2 Racial Grief and Melancholic Agency -- 3 A Knowing That Resided in My Bones: Sensuous Embodiment and Trans Social Movement -- 4 The Phrenological Impulse and the Morphology of Character -- 5 Personal Identity, Narrative Integration, and Embodiment -- 6 Bodily Limits to Autonomy: Emotion, Attitude, and Self-Defense -- PART II: EMBODIED RELATIONS, POLITICAL CONTEXTS -- 7 Relational Existence and Termination of Lives: When Embodiment Precludes Agency -- 8 A Body No Longer of One's Own -- 9 Premature (M)Othering: Levinasian Ethics and the Politics of Fetal Ultrasound Imaging -- 10 Inside the Frame of the Past: Memory, Diversity, and Solidarity -- 11 Collective Memory or Knowledge of the Past: "Covering Reality with Flowers" -- 12 Agency and Empowerment: Embodied Realities in a Globalized World -- List of Contributors -- Index
In: Re-Reading the Canon
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Section I: The Subject of Philosophy and the Philosophical Subject -- 1. Philosophy, Language, and Wizardry -- 2. Wittgenstein, Feminism, and the Exclusions of Philosophy -- 3. Speaking Philosophy in the Voice of Another: Wittgenstein, Irigaray, and the Inheritance of Mimesis -- Section II: Wittgensteinian Feminist Philosophy: Contrasting Visions -- 4. What Do Feminists Want in an Epistemology? -- 5. Making Mistakes, Rendering Nonsense, andMoving Toward Uncertainty -- 6. Tractatio Logico-Philosophica: Engendering Wittgenstein's Tractatus -- 7. The Moral Language Game -- 8. The Short Life of Meaning: Feminism and Nonliteralism -- Section III: Drawing Boundaries: Categories and Kinds -- 9. ''Back to the Rough Ground!'': Wittgenstein, Essentialism, and Feminist Methods -- 10. Wittgenstein Meets 'Woman' in the Language-Game of Theorizing Feminism -- 11. Using Wittgensteinian Methodology to Elucidate the Meaning of ''Equality'' -- 12. Eleanor Rosch and the Development of Successive Wittgensteinian Paradigms for Cognitive Science -- Section IV: Being Human: Agents and Subjects -- 13. Words and Worlds: Some Thoughts on the Significance of Wittgenstein for Moral and Political Philosophy -- 14. Big Dogs, Little Dogs, Universal Dogs: Ludwig Wittgenstein and Patricia Williams Talk About the Logic of Conceptual Rearing -- 15. Developing Wittgenstein's Picture of the Soul: Toward a Feminist Spiritual Erotics -- 16. ''No Master, Outside or In'': Wittgenstein's Critique of the Proprietary Subject -- Section V: Feminism's Allies: New Players, New Games -- 17. Wittgensteinian Vision(s) and ''Passionate Detachments'': A Queer Context for a Situated Episteme -- 18. Wittgenstein's Remarks on Colour as Remarks on Racism -- 19. Culture, Nature, Ecosystem (or Why Nature Can't Be Naturalized) -- 20. Moving to New Boroughs: Transforming the World by Inventing Language Games -- Bibliography -- Index -- Contributors