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Pathicity: Experiencing the World in an Atmospheric Way

  • Tonino Griffero EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: October 2, 2019

Received: 2019-05-02
Accepted: 2019-07-08
Published Online: 2019-10-02

© 2019 Tonino Griffero, published by De Gruyter

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Editorial for the Second Volume of Open Philosophy
  2. Topical issue: Does Public Art Have to Be Bad Art?, edited by Mark Kingwell
  3. Editorial Introduction to the Topical Issue “Does Public Art Have to Be Bad Art?”
  4. When Public Art Goes Bad: Two Competing Features of Public Art
  5. Object-hood’s Indecencies: Tilted Arc and the Lessons Learnt in Breakdown
  6. New Public Monuments: Urban Art and Everyday Aesthetic Experience
  7. The Public-Art Publics: An Analysis of Some Structural Differences among Public-Art Spheres
  8. Assessing the Intellectual Value of New Genre Public Art
  9. How Public is Public Art? A Critical Discourse Analysis of the Racial Subtext of Public Monuments at Canada’s Pier 21
  10. The Artists Village: Openly Intervening in the Public Spaces of the City of Singapore
  11. Public Art in the Private City: Control, Complicity and Criticality in Hong Kong
  12. Topical issue: Computer Modeling in Philosophy, edited by Patrick Grim
  13. Editorial introduction to the Topical Issue “Computer Modeling in Philosophy”
  14. The Curious Case of Connectionism
  15. The Evaluation of Discovery: Models, Simulation and Search through “Big Data”
  16. Signals and Spite in Fluctuating Populations
  17. Towards Computer Simulations of Virtue Ethics
  18. Towards More Realistic Modeling of Linguistic Color Categorization
  19. Using AI Methods to Evaluate a Minimal Model for Perception
  20. Modeling Working Memory to Identify Computational Correlates of Consciousness
  21. Computer Science and Metaphysics: A Cross-Fertilization
  22. A Computationally Assisted Reconstruction of an Ontological Argument in Spinoza’s The Ethics
  23. Computer Modeling in Philosophy of Religion
  24. What Simulations Teach Us About Ordinary Objects
  25. Topical issue: Experience in a New Key, edited by Dorthe Jørgensen
  26. Editorial Introduction for the Topical Issue “Experience in a New Key”
  27. Experience, Its Edges, and Beyond
  28. Religious Experience: Experience of Transparency and Resonance
  29. The Atmospheric Whereby: Reflections on Subject and Object
  30. Pathicity: Experiencing the World in an Atmospheric Way
  31. Antinomies of Metaphysical Experience between Theodor Adorno and Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe
  32. Hegel’s Phenomenology: On the Logical Structure of Human Experience
  33. What Is Experience? Foucauldian Perspectives
  34. Surfing the Public Square: On Worldlessness, Social Media, and the Dissolution of the Polis
  35. John Dewey’s Theory of Aesthetic Experience: Bridging the Gap Between Arts and Sciences
  36. Sculpture and the Sense of Place
  37. Retrieving Experience: On the Phenomenology of Experience in Hegel and Kierkegaard, Arendt and Gadamer
  38. Being, Appearing, and the Platonic Idea in Badiou and Plato
  39. Topical issue: Object-Oriented Ontology and Its Critics, edited by Graham Harman
  40. Editorial Introduction for the Topical Issue “Object-Oriented Ontology and Its Critics”
  41. Object-Oriented Baudrillard? Withdrawal and Symbolic Exchange
  42. The Obstinate Real: Barad, Escobar, and Object-Oriented Ontology
  43. The Problem of Causality in Object-Oriented Ontology
  44. The Coldness of Forgetting: OOO in Philosophy, Archaeology, and History
  45. Precariousness and Philosophical Critique: Towards an Open-Field Combat with Harman’s OOO
  46. A Case for the Primacy of the Ontological Principle
  47. Silent Spaces: Allowing Objects to Talk
  48. Enstranged Strangers: OOO, the Uncanny, and the Gothic
  49. The Ontographic Turn: From Cubism to the Surrealist Object
  50. Hyletic Phenomenology and Hyperobjects
  51. The Two Times of Objects: A Solution to the Problem of Time in Object-Oriented Ontology
  52. How Dumb Are Big Dumb Objects? OOO, Science Fiction, and Scale
  53. Object-Oriented Ontology’s View of Relations: a Phenomenological Critique
  54. Regular Articles
  55. Walking as Intelligent Enactment: A New Realist Approach
  56. Toward a Systematic, Rights-Based Moral Theory
  57. A Causal-Pluralist Metatheory of Observation
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