Autoras/es: Academia.edu Weekly Digest
(Fecha original del artículo: Septiembre 2016)
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Traducción al castellano del libro de Thomas Patterson "Karl Marx, Anthropologist"
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No se de dónde saqué la historia de que Howard Hughes, en su momento uno de los individuos más ricos del planeta, había enloquecido, hacia el final de su vida, y pasaba sus días encerrado en una habitación mirando siempre la misma película, sin bañarse nunca ni cortarse el pelo ni las uñas. También me parece haber leído que Hughes, en un rapto de locura había salido con su auto por la ruta y le había entregado su testamento al empleado de una "gasolinera". Y digo "gasolinera" en lugar de "estación de servicio" porque la siguiente etapa de la historia me remite a una película que creo haber...
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The aim of this article is to offer an empirical contribution to the debate on the political significance of class, and especially the relationship between class position and political participation. The 'death of class' debate has primarily addressed only one aspect of politics – voting. The perspective offered here widens the scope of analysis to include the main forms of political action available to citizens in modern democracies. In this article, a comparative cross-national approach is adopted, using data on 20 European countries that are included in the first wave of the European...
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Includes documents, letters, and poetics statements on the founding of the Berkeley Poetry Revew in 1974 as well as poems by Rob Sean Wilson, including "Because the Snow Which Falls" (including a Chinese translation by Tee Kim Tong) and ""Naugatuck River Flow" & poems by Robert Hass, John Ashbery, Linda Norton, Aaron Shurin, Charles Bernstein, Angel Dominguez et al: https://www.scribd.com/document/321341859/Berkeley-Poetry-Review-43
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We could understand the phenomenal success of the TV series "The Sopranos" if we presume that Tony Soprano, the mafia man, is no else but a secret expression of each and one of us. I claim in this article that Soprano embodies each and every one of the average viewers in this series. Soprano, as I see it, tells us our story on ourselves. We all secretly imagine ourselves as "Tony Soprano", having omnipotent powers that can diminish all our haters with one fell swoop – However, furthermore, we all secretly desire that fate or "heavens" ("providence" in religious language) will protect us...
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In a note to G.R.S. Mead's "Quests Old and New", where he found a section devoted to Hans Vaihinger's main ideas, Fernando Pessoa reflects on the consequences of the fictionalist approach to both our perception of the I and the value of consciousness. These questions correspond to some statements that we find in Nietzsche's writings, which in particular Vaihinger refers to in his Die Philosophie des Als-ob. Our aim is thus to compare Nietzsche's and Pessoa's view of the I and consciousness, and to deal with their psychology by making reference to Vaihinger's fictionalism.
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