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Mutual Vulnerability
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John Charles Simon
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December 10, 2021
Published Online: 2021-12-10
Published in Print: 2021-10-25
© 2021 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Table of Contents
- An Answer to a Question that Cannot Be Answered: A Pragmatist Approach to Viktor Frankl’s and Primo Levi’s Theoretical Perspectives on Humor
- Jacques Tati and the Philosophy of the Sight Gag
- Kierkegaard: A Seducer Resorting to Irony, Comic Jest and Humor
- The Reservations of the Funny: Ethics of Studying Funny Communication
- When No Laughing Matter Is No Laughing Matter: The Challenges in Developing a Cognitive Theory of Humor
- Internet Memes, Memory, and Orders of Repackaging
- Discussion: Article for Further Debate
- A Wise Person Proportions Their Beliefs with Humor
- Mutual Vulnerability
- Proportion and the Personality of Humor
- The Laughing Philosopher: The Affectionate Laughter of Agnes Heller
- Philosophical Satire and Criticism
- Bestiarium Academicum
- Humor in Philosophy Education
- Free-Range Philosophy: Modes of Philosophical Analysis across the Discipline … and across the Road
- Symposium, edited by Lauren Olin Steven Gimbel, Isn’t That Clever: A Philosophical Account of Humor and Comedy. Routledge 2017. Critics
- Killing It
- Seismology of Gimbel’s Isn’t That Clever: Finding Its Faults
- (Morally) Risky Business
- A Clever Errand
- Author’s Response
- Isn’t That Response Clever? A Reply to Critics
- Symposium, edited by Lauren Olin Lydia Amir, Philosophy, Humor, and the Human Condition. Taking Ridicule Seriously. Palgrave Macmillan 2019. Critics
- Taking Lydia Seriously
- Reason, Desire and the Ridiculous
- The Philosophy of Homo risibilis
- Homo risibilis: The Incongruous Perspective of Reason
- Author’s Response
- Forget Humor! Embraced Ridicule as Self-transcendence
- Book Reviews
- Call for Papers, Book Reviews, Guidelines
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Table of Contents
- An Answer to a Question that Cannot Be Answered: A Pragmatist Approach to Viktor Frankl’s and Primo Levi’s Theoretical Perspectives on Humor
- Jacques Tati and the Philosophy of the Sight Gag
- Kierkegaard: A Seducer Resorting to Irony, Comic Jest and Humor
- The Reservations of the Funny: Ethics of Studying Funny Communication
- When No Laughing Matter Is No Laughing Matter: The Challenges in Developing a Cognitive Theory of Humor
- Internet Memes, Memory, and Orders of Repackaging
- Discussion: Article for Further Debate
- A Wise Person Proportions Their Beliefs with Humor
- Mutual Vulnerability
- Proportion and the Personality of Humor
- The Laughing Philosopher: The Affectionate Laughter of Agnes Heller
- Philosophical Satire and Criticism
- Bestiarium Academicum
- Humor in Philosophy Education
- Free-Range Philosophy: Modes of Philosophical Analysis across the Discipline … and across the Road
- Symposium, edited by Lauren Olin Steven Gimbel, Isn’t That Clever: A Philosophical Account of Humor and Comedy. Routledge 2017. Critics
- Killing It
- Seismology of Gimbel’s Isn’t That Clever: Finding Its Faults
- (Morally) Risky Business
- A Clever Errand
- Author’s Response
- Isn’t That Response Clever? A Reply to Critics
- Symposium, edited by Lauren Olin Lydia Amir, Philosophy, Humor, and the Human Condition. Taking Ridicule Seriously. Palgrave Macmillan 2019. Critics
- Taking Lydia Seriously
- Reason, Desire and the Ridiculous
- The Philosophy of Homo risibilis
- Homo risibilis: The Incongruous Perspective of Reason
- Author’s Response
- Forget Humor! Embraced Ridicule as Self-transcendence
- Book Reviews
- Call for Papers, Book Reviews, Guidelines