POPULARITY
Que nossas vidas terão cada vez mais dispositivos robóticos em casa e fora dela, não há muitas dúvidas. Mas como está a discussão ética e filosófica acerca disso? O que a ciência já tem a dizer sobre isso? Primeira de duas partes do episódio duplo.Confira o papo entre o leigo curioso, Ken Fujioka, e o cientista PhD, Altay de Souza.>> OUÇA (55min 43s)*Naruhodo! é o podcast pra quem tem fome de aprender. Ciência, senso comum, curiosidades, desafios e muito mais. Com o leigo curioso, Ken Fujioka, e o cientista PhD, Altay de Souza.Edição: Reginaldo Cursino.http://naruhodo.b9.com.br*APOIO: INSIDERIlustríssima ouvinte, ilustríssimo ouvinte do Naruhodo,Chegamos mais uma vez no momento INSIDER.Daí você me pergunta:-- "Ai, Ken, você diz que usa INSIDER há muito tempo... Mas não é só roupa pro calor?"E eu te respondo: em que planeta você está vivendo?É, amigas e amigos, a INSIDER tem roupa para o frio, sim!Para ela, eu indico o Casaco Wingsuit INSIDER: muita elegância com estilo.Para ele, eu indico o Moletom Heavy Hoodie INSIDER: estruturado e minimalista.E você sabe, só as roupas para o frio INSIDER:- Têm regulação térmica- Têm visual sofisticado e urbano- Não precisa passar- São antiodor- São leves por fora, quentes por dentro- Têm alta durabilidadeEntão, vem experimentar INSIDER você também e aproveitar os descontos especiais para ouvintes do NARUHODO.Para isso, o jeito mais fácil é usar o endereço: creators.insiderstore.com.br/NARUHODOOu clicar no link da descrição deste episódio: o cupom NARUHODO será aplicado automaticamente no carrinho.INSIDER: inteligência em cada escolha.#InsiderStore*REFERÊNCIASCROS2025 - Plenary Session 2 - Kerstin Haringhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agvOrAaJvI4&ab_channel=SBRoboticaMy Keepon Robot Comes To Your Homehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UeAgX8NRpc4Keepon dancing to Spoon's "Don't You Evah"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPdP1jBfxzoHeider and Simmel (1944) animationhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTNmLt7QX8EThe Water-Serpent in Karadjeri Mythology https://www.jstor.org/stable/40327334O sagrado e o profano: A Essência das religiõeshttps://www.amazon.com.br/sagrado-profano-Ess%C3%AAncia-das-religi%C3%B5es/dp/8546901902I'm Not Playing Anymore! A Study Comparing Perceptions of Robot and Human Cheating Behaviorhttps://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-35888-4_38No fair!! An interaction with a cheating robothttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/5453193?casa_token=QYZSai856j0AAAAA:8N3StpSF8O_fxXmbJom9GNXvVe_QUxyPa9fXDiHyOgUQyUTMVAewcma02NYsNB_jXJPajo0u3QMental State Attribution to Robots: A Systematic Review of Conceptions, Methods, and Findingshttps://dl.acm.org/doi/full/10.1145/3526112Children–robot interaction: a pilot study in autism therapyhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0079612307640217Vulnerable robots positively shape human conversational dynamics in a human–robot teamhttps://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1910402117PETS PROVIDE SIGNIFICANT SUPPORT TO OLDER ADULTS LIVING ALONE: RESULTS FROM THE NATIONAL POLL ON HEALTHY AGINGhttps://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6840478/Research status of elderly-care robots and safe human-robot interaction methods https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnins.2023.1291682/fullEffectiveness of Robot Paro in Intramural Psychogeriatric Care: A Multicenter Quasi-Experimental Studyhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S152586101500345XEthical considerations in the use of social robots for supporting mental health and wellbeing in older adults in long-term care https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/robotics-and-ai/articles/10.3389/frobt.2025.1560214/fullRobots for Use in Autism Research https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071811-150036A Scoping Review of the Use of Robotics Technologies for Supporting Social-Emotional Learning in Children with Autismhttps://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10803-023-06193-2Naruhodo #172 - Por que as nuvens têm o formato de alguma coisa?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYmiVVGtQEcNaruhodo #175 - Jogar videogame deixa as pessoas mais violentas? - Parte 1 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lr2Ivgzg86kNaruhodo #176 - Jogar videogame deixa as pessoas mais violentas? - Parte 2 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iyd7mbTR9DMNaruhodo #435 - Jogar videogame pode ajudar a curar doenças?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Ob___Y97d4Naruhodo #429 - Qual o impacto das bets em nossas vidas?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8lC8YEJRcQNaruhodo #135 - Como eu sei que você é você e não eu? - Parte 1 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fq-VjuiTOY0Naruhodo #136 - Como eu sei que você é você e não eu? - Parte 2 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRZkLKL6QH0Naruhodo #379 - Como nós nos tornamos nós?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fI9rqAJfcUUNaruhodo #407 - Existe razão sem emoção?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUxluRrHV3ENaruhodo #404 - Por que algumas pessoas gostam de terminar as coisas e outras não?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTSZ--4TKMkNaruhodo #222 - Existe cognição quântica?https://www.youtube.com/watch?Frase:v=J3jjmo7ly18Naruhodo #263 - O que é transumanismo?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ni9JH0IzxBYNaruhodo #277 - O que é singularidade? - Parte 1 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-5xGhHrpKsNaruhodo #278 - O que é singularidade? - Parte 2 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euBpSfbX3lkNaruhodo #109 - O cérebro humano é um computador?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3RCSFfV-OQNaruhodo #183 - É possível juntar exatas, humanas e biológicas numa nova ciência? - Parte 1 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oqajpETpt4Naruhodo #184 - É possível juntar exatas, humanas e biológicas numa nova ciência? - Parte 2 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPt2fTNFnOsNaruhodo #259 - Por que as coisas parecem óbvias depois que passamos por elas? - Parte 1 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsgAdq_iu-ANaruhodo #260 - Por que as coisas parecem óbvias depois que passamos por elas? - Parte 2 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWTaLWjT-ZUNaruhodo #380 - Por que temos animais domésticos? - Parte 1 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__zJRw5Fcw8Naruhodo #381 - Por que temos animais domésticos? - Parte 2 de 2https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjS_GVsL3tw*APOIE O NARUHODO!O Altay e eu temos duas mensagens pra você.A primeira é: muito, muito obrigado pela sua audiência. Sem ela, o Naruhodo sequer teria sentido de existir. Você nos ajuda demais não só quando ouve, mas também quando espalha episódios para familiares, amigos - e, por que não?, inimigos.A segunda mensagem é: existe uma outra forma de apoiar o Naruhodo, a ciência e o pensamento científico - apoiando financeiramente o nosso projeto de podcast semanal independente, que só descansa no recesso do fim de ano.Manter o Naruhodo tem custos e despesas: servidores, domínio, pesquisa, produção, edição, atendimento, tempo... Enfim, muitas coisas para cobrir - e, algumas delas, em dólar.A gente sabe que nem todo mundo pode apoiar financeiramente. E tá tudo bem. Tente mandar um episódio para alguém que você conhece e acha que vai gostar.A gente sabe que alguns podem, mas não mensalmente. E tá tudo bem também. Você pode apoiar quando puder e cancelar quando quiser. O apoio mínimo é de 15 reais e pode ser feito pela plataforma ORELO ou pela plataforma APOIA-SE. Para quem está fora do Brasil, temos até a plataforma PATREON.É isso, gente. Estamos enfrentando um momento importante e você pode ajudar a combater o negacionismo e manter a chama da ciência acesa. Então, fica aqui o nosso convite: apóie o Naruhodo como puder.bit.ly/naruhodo-no-orelo
Benjamin und Christiane von "Autonomie & Algorithmen" sind zu Gast und wir fragen uns: Warum und in welcher Weise lesen wir menschliche Eigenschaften in künstliche Systeme wie etwa Large Language Models hinein. Wir klären, was der Begriff Anthropomorphisierung bedeutet, blicken in die Kultur-, Technik- und Wissenschafts-Geschichte und gehen den Psychologischen Grundlagen nach. Mit Daniel Dennetts "Intentional Stance" stelle ich eine philosophische Theorie der Anthropomorphisierung vor und Christiane präsentiert mehrere psychologische Studien, die die Frage nach dem "Warum" strategisch eingrenzen. Am Ende fragen wir noch nach der Moral von der Geschicht': Sollten KI-Systeme, Programme, Computer und Roboter menschenähnlich designet werden? Quellen: Autonomie und Algorithmen: https://autonomie-algorithmen.letscast.fm/ Der Geschichte des künstlichen Menschen habe ich mich hier gewidmet: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/der-geist-in-der-maschine/ Meine Folge zum Androiden Data: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/the-measure-of-a-man-die-philosophie-von-star-trek/ Daniel Dennett: The Intentional Stance: https://amzn.to/4jTk30j * The intentional stance in theory and practice: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Daniel-Dennett/publication/271180035_The_Intentional_Stance/links/5f3d3b01a6fdcccc43d36860/The-Intentional-Stance.pdf?__cf_chl_rt_tk=bBjx1ddFsxZJuACwVDbqmVMInS7vJnRXqyEoNxptu0I-1739429482-1.0.1.1-aChSHpHXHglMNSA.7vG24WbtILS87p2TmOfxv9ywH_w Karel Capek (1922). Werstands Universal Robots. Tschechisch. Deutsche Übersetzung (gemeinfrei) bei: https://www.hs-augsburg.de/~harsch/germanica/Chronologie/20Jh/Pick/pic_wurv.html Harald Salfellner (2019). Der Prager Golem - Jüdische Sagen aus dem Ghetto. https://amzn.to/4aXv0K1 * Alan Turing (1950). Computing Machinery and Intelligence. Mind: A Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy, 59(236), 433-460. https://doi.org/10.1093/mind/LIX.236.433 Joseph Weizenbaum (1960). ELIZA—a computer program for the study of natural language communication between man and machine. Communications of the ACM, 9(1), 36-45. https://doi.org/10.1145/365153.365168 Valentino Braitenberg (1986). Vehicles - Experiments in Synthetic Psychology. MIT Press. http://cognaction.org/cogs105/readings/braitenberg1.pdf Heider, F., & Simmel, M. (1944). An experimental study of apparent behavior. The American journal of psychology, 57(2), 243-259. https://doi.org/10.2307/1416950 Reeves, B., & Nass, C. I. (1996). The media equation: How people treat computers, television, and new media like real people and places. Center for the Study of Language and Information; Cambridge University Press. https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1996-98923-000 Epley, N., Waytz, A., & Cacioppo, J. T. (2007). On seeing human: A three-factor theory of anthropomorphism. Psychological Review, 114(4), 864–886. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-295X.114.4.864 Gazzola, V., Rizzolatti, G., Wicker, B., & Keysers, C. (2007). The anthropomorphic brain: the mirror neuron system responds to human and robotic actions. Neuroimage, 35(4), 1674-1684. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.02.003 Roesler, E., Manzey, D., & Onnasch, L. (2021). A meta-analysis on the effectiveness of anthropomorphism in human-robot interaction. Science Robotics, 6(58), eabj5425. https://doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.abj5425 Mandl, S., Laß, J.S., Strobel, A. (2024). Associations Between Gender Attributions and Social Perception of Humanoid Robots. In: Camarinha-Matos, L.M., Ortiz, A., Boucher, X., Barthe-Delanoë, AM. (eds) Navigating Unpredictability: Collaborative Networks in Non-linear Worlds. PRO-VE 2024. IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, vol 726. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-71739-0_6 *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich. Oder in Amazons Formulierung: Als Amazon-Partner verdiene ich an qualifizierten Verkäufen.
durée : 00:57:50 - Avec philosophie - par : Géraldine Muhlmann, Antoine Ravon - Georg Simmel a publié, en 1900, une "Philosophie de l'argent". Pour lui, l'apparition de la monnaie exprime un état de confiance des individus dans l'organisation sociale. La monnaie permet de stabiliser la valeur des choses, ce qui engendre encore plus de confiance dans la société… - réalisation : Nicolas Berger - invités : Louis Quéré Sociologue, directeur de recherches au CNRS; André Orléan Économiste, directeur d'études à l'EHESS
Laura Ruis, a PhD student at University College London and researcher at Cohere, explains her groundbreaking research into how large language models (LLMs) perform reasoning tasks, the fundamental mechanisms underlying LLM reasoning capabilities, and whether these models primarily rely on retrieval or develop procedural knowledge. SPONSOR MESSAGES: *** CentML offers competitive pricing for GenAI model deployment, with flexible options to suit a wide range of models, from small to large-scale deployments. https://centml.ai/pricing/ Tufa AI Labs is a brand new research lab in Zurich started by Benjamin Crouzier focussed on o-series style reasoning and AGI. Are you interested in working on reasoning, or getting involved in their events? Goto https://tufalabs.ai/ *** TOC 1. LLM Foundations and Learning 1.1 Scale and Learning in Language Models [00:00:00] 1.2 Procedural Knowledge vs Fact Retrieval [00:03:40] 1.3 Influence Functions and Model Analysis [00:07:40] 1.4 Role of Code in LLM Reasoning [00:11:10] 1.5 Semantic Understanding and Physical Grounding [00:19:30] 2. Reasoning Architectures and Measurement 2.1 Measuring Understanding and Reasoning in Language Models [00:23:10] 2.2 Formal vs Approximate Reasoning and Model Creativity [00:26:40] 2.3 Symbolic vs Subsymbolic Computation Debate [00:34:10] 2.4 Neural Network Architectures and Tensor Product Representations [00:40:50] 3. AI Agency and Risk Assessment 3.1 Agency and Goal-Directed Behavior in Language Models [00:45:10] 3.2 Defining and Measuring Agency in AI Systems [00:49:50] 3.3 Core Knowledge Systems and Agency Detection [00:54:40] 3.4 Language Models as Agent Models and Simulator Theory [01:03:20] 3.5 AI Safety and Societal Control Mechanisms [01:07:10] 3.6 Evolution of AI Capabilities and Emergent Risks [01:14:20] REFS: [00:01:10] Procedural Knowledge in Pretraining & LLM Reasoning Ruis et al., 2024 https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.12580 [00:03:50] EK-FAC Influence Functions in Large LMs Grosse et al., 2023 https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.03296 [00:13:05] Surfaces and Essences: Analogy as the Core of Cognition Hofstadter & Sander https://www.amazon.com/Surfaces-Essences-Analogy-Fuel-Thinking/dp/0465018475 [00:13:45] Wittgenstein on Language Games https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/wittgenstein/ [00:14:30] Montague Semantics for Natural Language https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/montague-semantics/ [00:19:35] The Chinese Room Argument David Cole https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/chinese-room/ [00:19:55] ARC: Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus François Chollet https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.01547 [00:24:20] Systematic Generalization in Neural Nets Lake & Baroni, 2023 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06668-3 [00:27:40] Open-Endedness & Creativity in AI Tim Rocktäschel https://arxiv.org/html/2406.04268v1 [00:30:50] Fodor & Pylyshyn on Connectionism https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0010027788900315 [00:31:30] Tensor Product Representations Smolensky, 1990 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/000437029090007M [00:35:50] DreamCoder: Wake-Sleep Program Synthesis Kevin Ellis et al. https://courses.cs.washington.edu/courses/cse599j1/22sp/papers/dreamcoder.pdf [00:36:30] Compositional Generalization Benchmarks Ruis, Lake et al., 2022 https://arxiv.org/pdf/2202.10745 [00:40:30] RNNs & Tensor Products McCoy et al., 2018 https://arxiv.org/abs/1812.08718 [00:46:10] Formal Causal Definition of Agency Kenton et al. https://arxiv.org/pdf/2208.08345v2 [00:48:40] Agency in Language Models Sumers et al. https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.02427 [00:55:20] Heider & Simmel's Moving Shapes Experiment https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-65532-0 [01:00:40] Language Models as Agent Models Jacob Andreas, 2022 https://arxiv.org/abs/2212.01681 [01:13:35] Pragmatic Understanding in LLMs Ruis et al. https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.14986
Stephen Watt is the Provost Professor of English at Indiana University. His research interests include drama and theatre of the 19th and 20th centuries, Irish Studies, and the contemporary university and his recent works include Bernard Shaw's Fiction, Material Psychology, and Affect: Shaw, Freud, Simmel (2018), “Something Dreadful and Grand”: American Literature and the Irish-Jewish Unconscious (2015), and Beckett and Contemporary Irish Writing (2009). In this interview he discusses his new book, From the 'Troubles' to Trumpism: Ireland and America, 1960-2023 (Anthem Press, 2024), a personal history of Irish, American and Irish-American politics and culture since the 1960s. The essays in this book combine historical investigation with cultural criticism to illuminate the present moment, particularly the present American moment. In this regard, the dates 1960 and 2023 in the book's subtitle are by no means accidental. The first three chapters concern the history of America's relationship with Ireland during the administrations of the presidents whose terms spanned the immediate pre-history and history of the Troubles. After a glance backward at American and Irish relations in the nineteenth century, the first chapter focuses on the 1960 election of John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president in America's history and the first to visit Ireland during his term of office. It also juxtaposes Kennedy's jubilant 1963 trip to Ireland with Ronald Reagan's more complicated homecoming in 1984. From there, the book traces Irish-American connections via the presidencies of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, Joe Biden and Donald Trump, as well as Michael D. Higgins. Aidan Beatty is a lecturer in the history department at Carnegie Mellon University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Stephen Watt is the Provost Professor of English at Indiana University. His research interests include drama and theatre of the 19th and 20th centuries, Irish Studies, and the contemporary university and his recent works include Bernard Shaw's Fiction, Material Psychology, and Affect: Shaw, Freud, Simmel (2018), “Something Dreadful and Grand”: American Literature and the Irish-Jewish Unconscious (2015), and Beckett and Contemporary Irish Writing (2009). In this interview he discusses his new book, From the 'Troubles' to Trumpism: Ireland and America, 1960-2023 (Anthem Press, 2024), a personal history of Irish, American and Irish-American politics and culture since the 1960s. The essays in this book combine historical investigation with cultural criticism to illuminate the present moment, particularly the present American moment. In this regard, the dates 1960 and 2023 in the book's subtitle are by no means accidental. The first three chapters concern the history of America's relationship with Ireland during the administrations of the presidents whose terms spanned the immediate pre-history and history of the Troubles. After a glance backward at American and Irish relations in the nineteenth century, the first chapter focuses on the 1960 election of John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president in America's history and the first to visit Ireland during his term of office. It also juxtaposes Kennedy's jubilant 1963 trip to Ireland with Ronald Reagan's more complicated homecoming in 1984. From there, the book traces Irish-American connections via the presidencies of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, Joe Biden and Donald Trump, as well as Michael D. Higgins. Aidan Beatty is a lecturer in the history department at Carnegie Mellon University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Stephen Watt is the Provost Professor of English at Indiana University. His research interests include drama and theatre of the 19th and 20th centuries, Irish Studies, and the contemporary university and his recent works include Bernard Shaw's Fiction, Material Psychology, and Affect: Shaw, Freud, Simmel (2018), “Something Dreadful and Grand”: American Literature and the Irish-Jewish Unconscious (2015), and Beckett and Contemporary Irish Writing (2009). In this interview he discusses his new book, From the 'Troubles' to Trumpism: Ireland and America, 1960-2023 (Anthem Press, 2024), a personal history of Irish, American and Irish-American politics and culture since the 1960s. The essays in this book combine historical investigation with cultural criticism to illuminate the present moment, particularly the present American moment. In this regard, the dates 1960 and 2023 in the book's subtitle are by no means accidental. The first three chapters concern the history of America's relationship with Ireland during the administrations of the presidents whose terms spanned the immediate pre-history and history of the Troubles. After a glance backward at American and Irish relations in the nineteenth century, the first chapter focuses on the 1960 election of John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president in America's history and the first to visit Ireland during his term of office. It also juxtaposes Kennedy's jubilant 1963 trip to Ireland with Ronald Reagan's more complicated homecoming in 1984. From there, the book traces Irish-American connections via the presidencies of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, Joe Biden and Donald Trump, as well as Michael D. Higgins. Aidan Beatty is a lecturer in the history department at Carnegie Mellon University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stephen Watt is the Provost Professor of English at Indiana University. His research interests include drama and theatre of the 19th and 20th centuries, Irish Studies, and the contemporary university and his recent works include Bernard Shaw's Fiction, Material Psychology, and Affect: Shaw, Freud, Simmel (2018), “Something Dreadful and Grand”: American Literature and the Irish-Jewish Unconscious (2015), and Beckett and Contemporary Irish Writing (2009). In this interview he discusses his new book, From the 'Troubles' to Trumpism: Ireland and America, 1960-2023 (Anthem Press, 2024), a personal history of Irish, American and Irish-American politics and culture since the 1960s. The essays in this book combine historical investigation with cultural criticism to illuminate the present moment, particularly the present American moment. In this regard, the dates 1960 and 2023 in the book's subtitle are by no means accidental. The first three chapters concern the history of America's relationship with Ireland during the administrations of the presidents whose terms spanned the immediate pre-history and history of the Troubles. After a glance backward at American and Irish relations in the nineteenth century, the first chapter focuses on the 1960 election of John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president in America's history and the first to visit Ireland during his term of office. It also juxtaposes Kennedy's jubilant 1963 trip to Ireland with Ronald Reagan's more complicated homecoming in 1984. From there, the book traces Irish-American connections via the presidencies of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, Joe Biden and Donald Trump, as well as Michael D. Higgins. Aidan Beatty is a lecturer in the history department at Carnegie Mellon University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
Stephen Watt is the Provost Professor of English at Indiana University. His research interests include drama and theatre of the 19th and 20th centuries, Irish Studies, and the contemporary university and his recent works include Bernard Shaw's Fiction, Material Psychology, and Affect: Shaw, Freud, Simmel (2018), “Something Dreadful and Grand”: American Literature and the Irish-Jewish Unconscious (2015), and Beckett and Contemporary Irish Writing (2009). In this interview he discusses his new book, From the 'Troubles' to Trumpism: Ireland and America, 1960-2023 (Anthem Press, 2024), a personal history of Irish, American and Irish-American politics and culture since the 1960s. The essays in this book combine historical investigation with cultural criticism to illuminate the present moment, particularly the present American moment. In this regard, the dates 1960 and 2023 in the book's subtitle are by no means accidental. The first three chapters concern the history of America's relationship with Ireland during the administrations of the presidents whose terms spanned the immediate pre-history and history of the Troubles. After a glance backward at American and Irish relations in the nineteenth century, the first chapter focuses on the 1960 election of John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president in America's history and the first to visit Ireland during his term of office. It also juxtaposes Kennedy's jubilant 1963 trip to Ireland with Ronald Reagan's more complicated homecoming in 1984. From there, the book traces Irish-American connections via the presidencies of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, Joe Biden and Donald Trump, as well as Michael D. Higgins. Aidan Beatty is a lecturer in the history department at Carnegie Mellon University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Lorena Simmels Roman „Ferymont“ (Verbrecher Verlag 2024) spielt im fiktiven gleichnamigen Heimatort der Protagonistin im Schweizer Seenland, in den die Ich-Erzählerin vom Studium in Berlin für eine Saison zurückkehrt, um als landwirtschaftliche Hilfskraft zu arbeiten. Durch die Begegnung mit Menschen, die jedes Jahr nach Ferymont reisen, um als Saisonkräfte zu arbeiten, rückt neben dem Thema der Freundschaft das Ungleichgewicht zwischen den west- und osteuropäischen Regionen in den Fokus. Auch die Differenz zwischen Stadt und Land wird über die Herkunft der Ich-Erzählerin und ihr temporäres Zurückgehen aufs Land thematisiert. In “Ferymont” wird eine Region im Herzen Europas portraitiert - das Hauptaugenmerk von Lorena Simmel liegt dabei auf einer Realität, die oft unsichtbar bleibt und von der uns Lorena im Gespräch ebenso erzählt hat wie von ihrer Arbeit am Roman, dem Versuch des solidarischen Erzählens und der Nähe von Paradies und Horror auf dem Land und in der Natur. Diese Folge entstand im Rahmen der europäischen Literaturtage, die vom 7. bis 10. November 2024 im Klangraum Krems Minoritenkirche stattfanden und in diesem Jahr unter dem Motto “Zerschnittene Welt. Stadt & Land” standen.
On the maelstrom of the metropolis. [Full episode only available to subscribers. Join at patreon.com/bungacast] We kick of the 2024/25 syllabus with the first theme, The Future of Place, asking, is politics possible without a sense of place. We discuss Georg Simmel's short essay "Metropolis and Mental Life" and Marshall Berman's All That Is Solid Melts into Air (chapter 5, on New York). How does Simmel relate the metropolitan condition to a historical passage from the 18th century to the 19th? Is city life intellectual and blasé, versus small town emotionality? Is narcissism built into modernity? Is there an aristocratic individualist revolt in evidence today? Do we need places to hang out in before we can do political organising? Are we nostalgic for top-down modernisation? Readings: "Metropolis and Mental Life" All That Is Solid Melts into Air (chapter 5, on New York)
Schick, schicker, chic! In Schale haben wir uns diesmal geworfen, wie aus dem Ei gepellt und mit fremden Federn (Iiicks!) geschmückt, denn in dieser Folge unseres kleinen Literaturmagazins geht es um "Mode". Unsere beiden Radiogeschmacksexperten binden sich das Korsett und machen sich auf in die Welt des Glitz und Glams, aber auch in das Reich der Wörter, denn auch Sprache kann mode sei, so ist das nämlich. Wir tragen den alten Wertherlook auf, huldigen zusammen mit Zuckerberg graugeshirtet dem Normcore, endorsen Jugendwörter und fahren uns den Simmel in die Oberstübchen hinein, dass es schöner nicht geht. Unser original EBMD-Autor:innenpool indes näht, schneidert, häkelt und strickt lehr- und kleidsame Stoffe zusammen und unsere wunderbaren Sprecher:innen verwandeln sie zu purem Glamour. So sitzen wir vor den Podcastendgeräten und schauen auf zum auditiven Laufsteg auf dem allerlei Aufregendes vorbei getragen wird. Viel Spaß damit wünscht Ihr Pappy, der Redaktionspapagey Die Autor:innen - Harald Kappel - Bastian Kienitz - Christian Knieps - Carsten Stephan - David Telgin - Dinçer Güçyeter Die Sprecher:innen - Verena Schmidt - Ella:r Gülden - FD
Un saludo queridos amigos y mecenas. Antes de tratar de la influyente obra de Max Weber vamos a hacer un alto y repasar a otros historicistas que profundizaron el relativismo modernista de Dilthey, tal es el caso de Windelband, Simmel o Spengler. Troeltsch y Meinecke representan un cierto esfuerzo por salir del túnel de tal relativismo dando una importancia objetiva a la religión. En cuanto a Spengler, nacionalista convencido, enemigo de las democracias liberales y admirador de Mussolini, nos habla de la incompatibilidad de las civilizaciones (a diferencia de las fantasías socialdemócratas de la alianza de civilizaciones de la que fue "embajador" el ex presidente español José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero). 📗ÍNDICE COMPLETO 0. Resumen y definiciones. 1. WINDELBAND Y SU DISTINCIÓN METODOLÓGICA (no metafísica). 2. RICKERT: LA RELACIÓN DE LOS VALORES DE LA CIVILIZACIÓN Y EL HECHO HISTÓRICO. 3. SIMMEL: EL HISTORIADOR ES EL JUEZ DE LA HISTORIA. 4. SPENGLER: SI CAE ALEMANIA, CAE OCCIDENTE. 5. TROELTSCH: LA OBJETIVIDAD DE LA RELIGIÓN. 6, MEINECKE: HAY QUE NEUTRALIZAR EL VENENO DEL HISTORICISMO. Aquí puedes escuchar la introducción al Neokantismo del XIX >>> https://go.ivoox.com/rf/128446079 Aquí puedes escuchar una introducción al historicismo alemán del XIX >>> https://go.ivoox.com/rf/129410137 🎼Música de la época: 📀 Tema inicial: concierto para violín op. 36 de Arnold Schönberg concluido en 1936, año del fallecimiento de Spengler. 📀 Tema final: Pennies From Heaven, banda sonora de la película de título homónimo y que fue nominada al óscar a la mejor canción original en 1936. 🎨Imagen: Oswald Spengler (29 de mayo de 1880-Múnich, 8 de mayo de 1936) fue un filósofo e historiador alemán. Es recordado principalmente por su obra La decadencia de Occidente (Der Untergang des Abendlandes). 👍Pulsen un Me Gusta y colaboren a partir de 2,99 €/mes si se lo pueden permitir para asegurar la permanencia del programa ¡Muchas gracias a todos!
Ein Vortrag des Bioinformatikers Martin LercherModeration: Katrin Ohlendorf ********** Wissenschaft braucht Kreativität. Ohne Kreativität kein Fortschritt. Aber wo kommt sie her? Der Bioinformatiker Martin Lercher erklärt, wie Forschende auf neue Ideen kommen. Und diese Tools funktionieren nicht nur in der Wissenschaft! Martin Lercher ist Professor für Bioinformatik und Leiter der Arbeitsgruppe Computergestützte Zellbiologie an der Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf. Heißt: Er nähert sich biologischen Fragestellungen mit Informatik. Unter anderem forscht er etwa zur Evolution der Photosynthese oder zum Wachstum biologischer Organismen. Außerdem befasst er sich mit den kreativen Prozessen in der Naturwissenschaft, der sogenannten Night Science. Neben Artikel-Veröffentlichungen zum Thema betreibt er dazu auch zusammen mit Itai Yanai, Professor an der NYC, den Podcast "Night Science".Seinen Vortrag "Night Science – wie kommen Wissenschaftler*innen auf neue Ideen?" hat er am 7. März 2024 auf Einladung der HHU Düsseldorf als Bürgeruniversität gehalten, und zwar im Rahmen der Vortragsreihe "Forschung im Fokus", ein gemeinsames Projekt der HHU als Bürgeruniversität und der Evangelischen Stadtakademie. **********Schlagworte: +++ Wissenschaft +++ Forschung +++ Kreativität +++ Ideen +++ Night Science +++ Day Science +++ Selektive Wahrnehmung +++ Interdisziplinarität +++**********Zusätzliche InformationenBioinformatiker Martin Lercher**********Quellen aus der Folge:Artikelsammlung von Martin Lercher und seinem Kollegen Itai Yanai zu Night ScienceNight-Science-Podcast von Martin Lercher und Itai YanaiVideo: Animation von Heider und Simmel (1944)Video: Test für selektive Wahrnehmung von Daniel SimonsVersuch zur selektiven Wahrnehmung von Martin Lercher und Itai YanaiAlle Quellen findet ihr hier.**********Mehr zum Thema bei Deutschlandfunk Nova:Kreativität: Was Amy Winehouse und Albert Einstein kreativ gemacht hatOrganisationsforschung: Was Unternehmen kreativ machtNeurodiversität: Anders, aber völlig richtig im Kopf**********Den Artikel zum Stück findet ihr hier.**********Ihr könnt uns auch auf diesen Kanälen folgen: Tiktok und Instagram.
Heute vor 100 Jahren wurde der österreichische Journalist und Schriftsteller Johannes Mario Simmel geboren.
Lieske, Tanya www.deutschlandfunk.de, Büchermarkt
Lieske, Tanya www.deutschlandfunk.de, Büchermarkt
Seine Bücher wurden über 73 Millionen Mal verkauft und in 30 Sprachen übertragen. Johannes Mario Simmel gehört bis heute zu den erfolgreichsten Schriftstellern im deutschsprachigen Raum. Seine Romantitel wie „Es muss nicht immer Kaviar sein“, „Der Stoff, aus dem die Träume sind“ oder „Hurra, wie leben noch“ sind legendär. Warum waren seine Werke so beliebt beim Publikum und gar nicht wohlgelitten in der Literaturkritik? Wie zeitgemäß ist Simmels erzählerische Mischung aus melancholischem Moralismus und literarischem Sentiment? Was ließe sich aus Simmels turbulenter Lebensgeschichte, aber auch aus seiner beeindruckenden Autorenbiografie lernen? Carsten Otte diskutiert mit Claudia Graf-Grossmann -Buchautorin und Simmel-Biografin, Michael Köhlmeier – Schriftsteller, Hannes Hintermeier - Literaturkritiker (FAZ)
Justizminister Buschmann bekräftigt Nein zu EU-Lieferkettengesetz, Internationale Lebensmittelpreise sinken auf Drei-Jahres-Tief, Edeka-Händler Simmel berichtet von Drohungen nach Anti-Nazi-Botschaft
durée : 00:58:03 - Avec philosophie - par : Géraldine Muhlmann - Tandis que Simmel s'intéresse à la valeur sociale que revêtent les objets lorsqu'ils entrent dans le jeu social, Perec s'intéresse à la réception de “l'appel publicitaire” par un jeune couple des années 1960. Quelle relation entretenons-nous avec les objets que nous achetons et que nous consommons ? - invités : Barbara Carnevali Directrice d'études à l'EHESS, membre du Centre d'études sociologiques et politiques Raymond-Aron (CESPRA); Florence De Chalonge Professeure de littérature française du XXe siècle à l'université de Lille
Stellt euch vor, es ist Supermarkt-Stammtisch und der elitäre Simmel, dass bodenständige Kaufland und der verloderte Netto treffen auf den problembehafteten Lidl. Und mittendrin Chris, der vorm Feiertag noch schnell was einkaufen will. Es ist halt weiterhin 'ne wilde Zeit. Da hilft nur Window Color Art zur Beruhigung.
This month's book is The Storytelling Animal by Jonathan Gottschall.Check out the Heider and Simmel animation mentioned in the episode.Be sure to check out https://demojockeys.com/ for our full list of past and upcoming books, previous episodes, and more.Next month's book is Range by David Epstein.Music: The Wu Town Shuffle by Mr. Lincoln
Sosyal dikkati tutma gücü nedir? Simmel’ın ”Yoksul” makalesi, tutsak ikilemi, Giddens’ın ”Ontolojik güven” kavramı ve çok daha fazlasını bu bölümde […]
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.07.21.550065v1?rss=1 Authors: Schuster, B. A., Sowden, S., Rybicki, A. J., Fraser, D. S., Press, C., Hickman, L., Holland, P., Cook, J. L. Abstract: Difficulties in reasoning about others' mental states (i.e., mentalising / Theory of Mind) are highly prevalent among disorders featuring dopamine dysfunctions (e.g., Parkinson's disease) and significantly affect individuals' quality of life. However, due to multiple confounding factors inherent to existing patient studies, currently little is known about whether these socio-cognitive symptoms originate from aberrant dopamine signalling or from psychosocial changes unrelated to dopamine. The present study therefore investigated the role of dopamine in modulating mentalising in a sample of healthy volunteers. We used a double-blind, placebo-controlled procedure to test the effect of the D2 antagonist haloperidol on mental state attribution, using an adaptation of the Heider & Simmel (1944) animations task. On two separate days, once after receiving 2.5mg haloperidol and once after receiving placebo, 33 healthy adult participants viewed and labelled short videos of two triangles depicting mental state (e.g., surprising) and non-mental state (e.g., following) interactions. Using Bayesian mixed effects models we observed that haloperidol decreased accuracy in labelling both mental- and non-mental state animations. Our secondary analyses suggest that dopamine modulates inference from mental- and non-mental state animations via independent mechanisms, pointing towards two putative pathways underlying the dopaminergic modulation of mental state attribution: Action representation and a shared mechanism supporting mentalising and emotion recognition. We conclude that dopamine is causally implicated in Theory of Mind. Our results have implications for the neurochemical basis of socio-cognitive difficulties in patients with dopamine dysfunctions and generate new hypotheses about the specific dopamine-mediated mechanisms underlying social cognition. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Marx's Capital looms large today, a century and a half after first publication, a massive tome that attempts to document and map out the dynamics of a society consumed by capital accumulation. The complexity and scope, as well as its voluminous incompleteness upon his death, have left many readers perplexed, looking for a ‘royal road' to comprehension. However, this has led to a number of misreadings, with commentators often trying to pick at what they assume is the core of the text, leaving the rest behind. Against this, Thomas Kemple in his new book Marx's Wager: Das Kapital and Classical Sociology (Palgrave MacMillan, 2022) argues that understanding Capital mean's reading it not just for the economic equations, but the social and moral insights as well. Rather than see Marx's quotations of literature and poetry as an embellishment to spice up the economic analysis, he sees it performing moral and analytic work as well, allowing Marx to explore the nature of capitalism at a much broader level than narrow economics will allow. Putting Marx in dialogue with his contemporaries, particularly Durkheim, Weber and Simmel, Kemple finds Marx's work to be much more dynamic and comprehensive than many of his readers have previously realized. This little book offers close textual analysis that will enable readers to approach Marx with fresh eyes, seeing elements of their society and themselves in the text that may have previously gone unnoticed. Thomas Kemple is a professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of several books, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market and the Grundrisse, Intellectual Work and the Spirit of Capitalism: Weber's Calling and most recently Simmel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Marx's Capital looms large today, a century and a half after first publication, a massive tome that attempts to document and map out the dynamics of a society consumed by capital accumulation. The complexity and scope, as well as its voluminous incompleteness upon his death, have left many readers perplexed, looking for a ‘royal road' to comprehension. However, this has led to a number of misreadings, with commentators often trying to pick at what they assume is the core of the text, leaving the rest behind. Against this, Thomas Kemple in his new book Marx's Wager: Das Kapital and Classical Sociology (Palgrave MacMillan, 2022) argues that understanding Capital mean's reading it not just for the economic equations, but the social and moral insights as well. Rather than see Marx's quotations of literature and poetry as an embellishment to spice up the economic analysis, he sees it performing moral and analytic work as well, allowing Marx to explore the nature of capitalism at a much broader level than narrow economics will allow. Putting Marx in dialogue with his contemporaries, particularly Durkheim, Weber and Simmel, Kemple finds Marx's work to be much more dynamic and comprehensive than many of his readers have previously realized. This little book offers close textual analysis that will enable readers to approach Marx with fresh eyes, seeing elements of their society and themselves in the text that may have previously gone unnoticed. Thomas Kemple is a professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of several books, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market and the Grundrisse, Intellectual Work and the Spirit of Capitalism: Weber's Calling and most recently Simmel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/critical-theory
Marx's Capital looms large today, a century and a half after first publication, a massive tome that attempts to document and map out the dynamics of a society consumed by capital accumulation. The complexity and scope, as well as its voluminous incompleteness upon his death, have left many readers perplexed, looking for a ‘royal road' to comprehension. However, this has led to a number of misreadings, with commentators often trying to pick at what they assume is the core of the text, leaving the rest behind. Against this, Thomas Kemple in his new book Marx's Wager: Das Kapital and Classical Sociology (Palgrave MacMillan, 2022) argues that understanding Capital mean's reading it not just for the economic equations, but the social and moral insights as well. Rather than see Marx's quotations of literature and poetry as an embellishment to spice up the economic analysis, he sees it performing moral and analytic work as well, allowing Marx to explore the nature of capitalism at a much broader level than narrow economics will allow. Putting Marx in dialogue with his contemporaries, particularly Durkheim, Weber and Simmel, Kemple finds Marx's work to be much more dynamic and comprehensive than many of his readers have previously realized. This little book offers close textual analysis that will enable readers to approach Marx with fresh eyes, seeing elements of their society and themselves in the text that may have previously gone unnoticed. Thomas Kemple is a professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of several books, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market and the Grundrisse, Intellectual Work and the Spirit of Capitalism: Weber's Calling and most recently Simmel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
Marx's Capital looms large today, a century and a half after first publication, a massive tome that attempts to document and map out the dynamics of a society consumed by capital accumulation. The complexity and scope, as well as its voluminous incompleteness upon his death, have left many readers perplexed, looking for a ‘royal road' to comprehension. However, this has led to a number of misreadings, with commentators often trying to pick at what they assume is the core of the text, leaving the rest behind. Against this, Thomas Kemple in his new book Marx's Wager: Das Kapital and Classical Sociology (Palgrave MacMillan, 2022) argues that understanding Capital mean's reading it not just for the economic equations, but the social and moral insights as well. Rather than see Marx's quotations of literature and poetry as an embellishment to spice up the economic analysis, he sees it performing moral and analytic work as well, allowing Marx to explore the nature of capitalism at a much broader level than narrow economics will allow. Putting Marx in dialogue with his contemporaries, particularly Durkheim, Weber and Simmel, Kemple finds Marx's work to be much more dynamic and comprehensive than many of his readers have previously realized. This little book offers close textual analysis that will enable readers to approach Marx with fresh eyes, seeing elements of their society and themselves in the text that may have previously gone unnoticed. Thomas Kemple is a professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of several books, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market and the Grundrisse, Intellectual Work and the Spirit of Capitalism: Weber's Calling and most recently Simmel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
Marx's Capital looms large today, a century and a half after first publication, a massive tome that attempts to document and map out the dynamics of a society consumed by capital accumulation. The complexity and scope, as well as its voluminous incompleteness upon his death, have left many readers perplexed, looking for a ‘royal road' to comprehension. However, this has led to a number of misreadings, with commentators often trying to pick at what they assume is the core of the text, leaving the rest behind. Against this, Thomas Kemple in his new book Marx's Wager: Das Kapital and Classical Sociology (Palgrave MacMillan, 2022) argues that understanding Capital mean's reading it not just for the economic equations, but the social and moral insights as well. Rather than see Marx's quotations of literature and poetry as an embellishment to spice up the economic analysis, he sees it performing moral and analytic work as well, allowing Marx to explore the nature of capitalism at a much broader level than narrow economics will allow. Putting Marx in dialogue with his contemporaries, particularly Durkheim, Weber and Simmel, Kemple finds Marx's work to be much more dynamic and comprehensive than many of his readers have previously realized. This little book offers close textual analysis that will enable readers to approach Marx with fresh eyes, seeing elements of their society and themselves in the text that may have previously gone unnoticed. Thomas Kemple is a professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of several books, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market and the Grundrisse, Intellectual Work and the Spirit of Capitalism: Weber's Calling and most recently Simmel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sense & Signal Podcast: Bad Storytelling is Destroying the World - In Conversation with Hana Gala Jodah and Dan discuss hospitality, leadership, storytelling, complexity, and Donald Trump with leadership consultant and Seattle Colleges faculty member Hana Gala. They delve into how her experience growing up in Communist Czechoslovakia informs her approach to leadership, her journey into the hospitality industry, what attracted her to teaching, and how she transitioned into becoming an international leadership consultant. See the Timestamp section for more topics. ABOUT HANA GALA Hana brings a unique blend of both practical experience from the world of business operations (hotels, high-end restaurants) as well as conceptual theoretical background rooted in academic training and applied research (Charles University, University of Oxford, Cornell pUniversity). Hana has been an instructor in the Bachelor of Applied Science program in Hospitality Management at South Seattle College for over a decade. She is passionate about connecting students to the industry and designing curriculum that is practical yet challenging and meeting students where they are on their trajectory of professional and personal growth. Hana has been an active member of many industry associations (SHFM, NACE, HFTP), consulted with multiple Fortune 500 companies (Microsoft, Coca-Cola) and is a certified executive coach and embodiment specialist. She's particularly interested in discovering purpose FIND OUT MORE ABOUT HANA GALA https://leadership.associates/ https://leadership.associates/about-and-team/hana-kabele/ New website coming out by Christmas! Some resources: https://www.bravenewwork.com/ https://thecynefin.co/about-us/about-cynefin-framework/ MORE ABOUT JODAH JENSEN https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodah/ MORE ABOUT DAN TARKER https://www.linkedin.com/in/dantarker/ https://www.danieltarker.com TIMESTAMPS 01:39 -Is leadership situational? 03:58 - Hospitality management & leadership 06:32 - Etymology of the word hospitality 07:12 - The gods and hospitality 07:55 - Importance of physical safety and leadership 10:26 -Hana's journey from hospitality manager to teacher to leadership consultant 17:36 - Helping people do well as leadership motivator 22:39 - Bifurcation of education and the workplace 24:44 - Travesty of compelled silence and losing individuality in the workplace 27:09 - Should the workplace be required to provide meaning and purpose to workers? 29:48 - Finding purpose and meaning as process of self-discovery 30:45 - Complexity theory & bad storytelling 32:26 - Jennifer Garvey-Burger 32:48 - Heider and Simmel psychology video 1944 34:49 - There's no failure, only feedback 36:19 - Using storytelling to build value from within 37:18 - We are hardwired to be storytellers 39:04 - We are shitty storytellers 40:54 - Kark Weick and Organizational Leader as Story and Meaning Maker 42:18 - Leaders and coaches as storytelling mentors 44:30 - James McGregor Burns and political leadership 46:50 - Increasing complexity of leadership due to online world and globalization 49:53 - Vaclav Havel 51:28 - Relationship between the individual and the system 58:35 - Ionesco's Rhinoceros and non-conformity 1:05:20 - Should we do an episode on Donald Trump? 1:14:36 - Key takeaways 1:17:23 - How to contact Hana #leadership #hospitality #storytelling #politicalleadership #meaning #purpose #complexity --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/daniel-tarker/message
Der österreichische Schriftsteller Johannes Mario Simmel (1924-2009) war einer der bekanntesten Bestsellerautoren im deutschsprachigen Raum - mehr als 70 Millionen Bücher wurden von ihm verkauft. Zudem schrieb er zahlreiche erfolgreiche Drehbücher. International bekannt wurde er 1960 mit seinem Roman «Es muss nicht immer Kaviar sein». Die Literaturkritik warf ihm in den frühen Jahren vor, Trivialliteratur zu schreiben, später hat sie sich versöhnlicher über sein Schaffen geäussert. Die Nazizeit und der Rechtsextremismus waren zentrale Themen in Simmels Büchern, nicht zuletzt aufgrund seiner Familiengeschichte, denn seine Verwandten väterlicherseits waren fast alle dem Holocaust zum Opfer gefallen. Simmel setzte sich sein Leben lang gegen Rassismus und für soziale Gerechtigkeit ein. 1968 war Johannes Mario Simmel bei Roswitha Schmalenbach zu Gast. Er erzählt, wie er in Zeiten, in denen er an einem Roman arbeitet, ganz diszipliniert um 6 Uhr aufsteht, sich hinsetzt und schreibt und dabei alles um sich herum vergisst. Er erzählt aber auch über seine Kindheit, über seinen ersten Berufswunsch Gärtner zu werden, wie er dann aber Chemie studiert hat, bei Kriegsende als Dolmetscher und später als Kulturredaktor gearbeitet hat. Und er spricht über seine Liebe zur Musik. Historische Reprise vom 18. Februar 1968
Vortrag von Dr. Niklas Gebele bei einer Tagung zu Märchen und Psychotherapie, 2022 Triggerwarnung: Der Vortrag enthält einen Audioclip aus Sex Education, indem sexuelle Gewalt und Traumatisierung thematisiert werden! Video: Experiment von Heider & Simmel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTNmLt7QX8E Studie: Heider, F., & Simmel, M. (1944). An experimental study in apparent behavior. The American Journal of Psychology, 57, 243-259. Studie: Reagan, A. et al. (2016). The emotional arcs of stories are dominated by six basic shapes. EPJ Data Science, 5,31. Video: Sex Education: Aimee spricht über ihr Trauma Video: Der Herr der Ringe: Aragorn Video: Cobra Kai: Hawk Video: Gabby´s Dollhouse: Just Breathe Buch: Märchen, Mythen, Netflix – Zum Arbeiten mit populären Narrativen in der Psychotherapie, Psychosozial-Verlag, 2021 Artikel: Zum Arbeiten mit populären Narrativen in der Psychotherapie: Es gibt nur einen Gott und sein Name ist Tod. Psychotherapeutenjournal, 18, 17-23, 2019.
Gut durch die Zeit. Der Podcast rund um Mediation, Konflikt-Coaching und Organisationsberatung.
Das Modell der Konflikteskalation nach Heinz Messmer orientiert sich am systemtheoretischen Verständnis von Konflikten. Konflikte sind nach Luhmann Widerspruchskommunikation. Das bedeutet vor allem, dass der Widerspruch, den A gegenüber B „hat“, kommuniziert(worden) sein muss. Nur kommunizierte Widersprüche sind Widerspruchskommunikation und damit Konflikte. Bloße Gedanken und Gefühle, die aber noch keinen Eingang in die Kommunikation gefunden haben, gehören noch gewissermaßen noch nicht zur kommunikativen Realität.
SVP of Sales and Marketing Caroline Simmel with Empire Communities joins the Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio podcast to share 2022 milestones, new products and current Atlanta BeltLine developments. Simmel joins host Carol Morgan on the All About Real Estate segment. Recently an empty nester and a new owner of two adorable Golden Retriever puppies, Simmel has 20-plus years of experience within the industry and is currently in her 16th year with Empire Communities. The company is a Toronto-based new home building company that takes pride in creating inspiring places to live. Expanding its United States footprint, Empire Communities has developments not only in southern Ontario but also in Atlanta, Chattanooga, Houston, Austin, San Antonio and Charlotte. With significant success this year, Empire Communities opened and closed several of its communities. The company is using this in-between stage to ramp up a large pipeline of new communities as a chance to reset and pay attention to market dynamics. Simmel said, “We've had a lot of success this year, as most home builders have. We rode a ride for almost two years post-pandemic.” The method behind Empire Communities is to build purposeful and lifestyle-driven neighborhoods, given that its consumer audience is very lifestyle oriented. The builder anticipates many mixed-use communities from the pipeline to land in Atlanta and Chattanooga. Located in West Midtown, the Empire Communities Homebase experience is a centrally located, state-of-the-art sales center created for homebuyers. Sales assistance, lending support, design expertise, customer care and closing are all located at this streamlined one-stop-shop. Homebase is located about a mile from Longreen, one of Empire's newest communities. Residing a block away from the Atlanta BeltLine, Longreen offers well-designed stacked condos and townhomes. The product price range extends from the low $300,000s to the $600,000s, with the option of one, two or three-bedroom homes, anywhere from 650 to 2,000 square feet. Simmel said, "We're very BeltLine driven in terms of our land positions." Located on six acres of land right on the Atlanta Beltline, Stein Steel offers stacked condos and townhomes in Reynoldstown. These homes will boast old-world industrial designs, including brick lots, large windows and loft-inspired designs. Stein Steel also features an on-site restaurant called Breaker Breaker, built by the Meritt Lancaster group, the developer of Krog Street. On 34 acres settled in Chosewood Park, Zephyr delivers 359 townhomes and stacked condos priced from the high $200s for condos and $500s for townhomes. Different districts, including the Groove, the Grove and the Grow, each offer unique features like retail components and community gardens. This community conveniently sits across the street from the future Atlanta BeltLine Park. Tune in to the full interview above to learn more about Empire Communities or visit www.EmpireCommunities.com. Never miss an episode of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio! Subscribe to the podcast here. You can also get a recap of any past episode on the Radio page. Listen to the full interview above! A special thank you to Denim Marketing for sponsoring Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. A comfortable fit for companies of all shapes and sizes, Denim Marketing understands marketing strategies are not one-size-fits-all. The agency works with your company to create a perfectly tailored marketing strategy that will adhere to your specific needs and niche. Try Denim Marketing on for size by calling 770-383-3360 or by visiting www.DenimMarketing.com. The Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio “All About Real Estate” segment, presented by Denim Marketing, highlights the movers and shakers in the Atlanta real estate industry – the home builders, developers, Realtors and suppliers working to provide the American dream for Atlantans. For more information on how you can be featured...
En los Episodios 23, 24 y 25, con Marta García Villar, Fernando de Córdoba y Sergio San Juan, hubo un tema en común: La narrativa. En este episodio de 15 minutos reflexiono sobre el papel de la narrativa no como disciplina sino como la estructura fundamental de la mente. Si la vida es el territorio, las historias son el mapa. Notas del episodio: https://marcmula.com/podcast/26-narrativa-historias-mapa Temas del episodio: – Heider y Simmel: explicar una historia con solo 2 triángulos y 1 círculo. – Narrativa como estructura de la mente. – El papel de las historias en nuestra identidad. – Teoría de la mente: atribuir pensamientos e intenciones a seres animados e inanimados. – Por qué los políticos se obsesionan con "controlar el relato". – Las historias como "zona de seguridad" para gestionar nuestras realidades internas. – El sesgo de retrospectiva. – La falacia narrativa. – El mapa no es el territorio.
La deriva dell'amore come specchio della società Di tutti i rapporti umani la prostituzione è forse il caso più pregnante di degradazione reciproca alla condizione di puro mezzo. Questo può essere visto come il momento più forte e più profondo che storicamente collega la prostituzione in modo assai stretto all'economia monetaria, l'economia dei «mezzi» nel senso più stretto della parola. G. Simmel, Filosofia del denaro (1900), p. 5
Mientras continúan preparando el diploma sobre transformaciones sociales de La Cosa Nostra, los profesores Miguel Chávez y Alberto Mayol comentan sobre los cambios culturales en Simmel y Elias. Consultas a elpoderimporta@gmail.com
Abrir en caso de... Un no sé qué, que qué se yo. ¿Vivir o morir?. El miedo a la muerte se cura con sabiduría. "Cioran". Recuerda que para que todo esto siga funcionando hace falta apoyo. Piensa en quién podría estar interesado y recomiéndaselo, deja un corazoncito en el audio, comenta qué te ha parecido, súbelo a tus redes sociales o incluso aporta tu granito de arena de forma económica pulsado en el botón apoyar de este mismo podcast. Todo suma. ¡GRACIAS! Quizá Cioran (1911-1995) —en palabras de Saint-John Perse, «el mayor prosador de la lengua francesa desde Paul Valéry»— sea uno de los escritores y pensadores más controvertidos del siglo XX , no ya por la naturaleza de sus reflexiones, sino por la contundencia de las mismas. Lector voraz de Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, y también de Heidegger, Simmel o Weininger, a los diecisiete años se inscribe en la facultad de Filosofía de Bucarest. Sufre importantes crisis de insomnio y pasa las noches sin dormir alternando entre la biblioteca y el burdel, en compañía de los pordioseros y de las prostitutas, con los cuales le gustaba charlar. Fue compañero de universidad de Ionesco y Eliade, con quienes forjó una amistad que duraría toda la vida. Tras una juventud de activismo político, se marchará a París, ciudad en la que mantuvo, durante muchos años, una existencia errática, sin hogar fijo y vagando de pensión en pensión. Emil Cioran sabía que la vida era trigo sucio, pero en lugar de hacer lo que hacemos todos, es decir, callar y pensar que, bueno, que en fin, que ajo y agua, él lo dijo, lo escribió, lo denunció, se encaró con la vida, le cantó las cuarenta a la vida, legándonos una obra transida de lucidez, desenfado y clarividencia. Frente a tantos pensadores útiles , ¿de qué sirve leer a Cioran, tan nihilista, tan en desacuerdo con la existencia? Entre otras muchas cosas, sirve para recordarnos que ningún filósofo nos saca de una verdadera encrucijada vital: para quien está negado para la felicidad, no hay sabiduría que valga. Podemos encontrar sus obras editadas, pero en cambio apenas existen trabajos que indaguen en las entrañas de su pensamiento, y precisamente ahí es donde reside el logro principal de este Cioran. Manual de antiayuda . Con abundantes guiños humorísticos y con una magistral aprehensión de las ideas, Alberto Domínguez nos propone un singular acercamiento a la obra de Cioran, logrando que el lector penetre con jovialidad en un pensar audaz, perturbador y siempre sugestivo. Y no solo eso: la ironía y la crítica acerca de las grandes flaquezas de nuestra civilización vertebran un texto que aspira a cumplir una de las máximas de nuestro autor, la de que «solo se deberían escribir libros para decir cosas que uno no se atrevería a confiar a nadie». Narración: Olga Paraíso Más contenido aquí: 📢Nuevo canal informativo en Telegram: https://t.me/historiasparaserleidas 📌Twitter https://twitter.com/HLeidas 🛑BIO Olga Paraíso: https://instabio.cc/Hleidas Mención especial a los Taberneros Galácticos que apoyan este Podcast, sin vosotros esto no sería posible. ¡MUCHAS GRACIAS por vuestros likes y comentarios ya que son muy importantes para el posicionamiento de este Podcast. Gracias por compartir, hasta el próximo!! PLAYLIST ABRIR EN CASO DE...📍https://www.ivoox.com/abrir-en-caso-de_bk_list_9953984_1.html Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/european-studies
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/eastern-european-studies
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/architecture
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/german-studies
The late 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe were times of intense technological, social and political change and transformation, and so it's no surprise that much of the art and literature of this period was equal in its innovative intensity, attempting to make sense of times that were radically out of joint. Traditional scholarship on this period has focused on the alienation and disassociation that can be experienced when trying to keep up with the frenetic pace of modern life. But is this what the artists and writers of the day were trying to communicate to their audience? Without discounting the alienating effects of modernity, Malika Maskarinec has stepped in with a fascinating monograph on the period, The Forces of Form in German Modernism (Northwestern UP, 2018), which challenges and complicates this reading, drawing our attention to other themes present in the work of the period. Turning to various archival sources to see what the artists and their peers were interested in, Maskarinec finds a collection of figures reflecting on questions of the forces and forms that hold bodies together against the weight of gravity. In this intellectual milieu, buildings and statues capacity to hold themselves up can be part of profound aesthetic experience, abstract shapes maintaining their position on a page can stir feelings of empathy, and even simple everyday activities such as laying down, standing up and walking around are activities of profound existential importance. Touching on figures such as Schopenhauer, Rodin, Simmel, Klee and Kafka, Maskarinec's book is overflowing with insights that will help students and scholars of the period revisit these works with fresh eyes, and like the artists and writers discussed, she will prove an excellent interlocutor for all those interested in what it means to be human. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Today I'm joined by a co-worker & friend, Don Simmel. Don teaches automotive repair & has worked in the automotive field for 20+ years. He sat down with me today to discuss the ins and outs of teaching automotive repair to college students. Website- https://autodiagpodcast.com/Facebook Group- https://www.facebook.com/groups/223994012068320
Spoilerfrei bis Minute 35. Anhand des Films "Der Babadook" setzen wir uns mit der Soziologie des Tabus, insbesondere des Tabus fehlender Mutterliebe auseinander. Der eine mag den Film, der andere nicht. Was hat Horror mit Techniksoziologie zu tun? Ein zentrales Merkmal der Technik ist die Stabilisierung von Sozialität durch Ursache-Wirkungs-Ketten. Demgegenüber ist ein Wesenszug des Horrors das Durchbrechen von Normalität. Horrorfilme sind demnach dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass Technik im Horrorfilm wirkungslos bleibt. Darüber hinaus: Herrscht in Deutschland eine Halloweenflaute? Ist das wiederholte Anschauen von Filmen so etwas wie cineastische Nekrophilie? Was sind unsere Lieblingsgenres? Gibt es eine Soziologie des Krokodilhorrorfilms? Wir lesen Szenen unterschiedlich. Max Weber und Georg Simmel zum Tabu fehlender Mutterliebe. Was im Diskurs steht, ist kein Tabu, doch die Soziologie kann es erkennen, die Gesellschaft selber aber nicht. Ein wenig Wissenschaftstheorie. Ein bisschen Simmel, Toleranz durch Ignoranz. Sehen wir im Babadook eine archaisch-schamanische Psychotherapie? Wir machen einen Ausflug in die parapsychologische Beratungsstalle Freiburgs und ihrer Arbeitsweise. Außerdem: Alles Einbildung oder kann der Babadook tapezieren? Sehen wir ein Happy End oder ist das Filmende eine Fehldeutungsquelle für eine nahende Katastrophe? Wir streiten, sind uneins und suchen den Kompromiss. Musik: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_SkUsk07Z-I&ab_channel=Myuu
A class on doubling, literal and metaphorical, e.g. Lady Macbeth and Lady Macduff, Hecate, etc. The meaning of doubling. The conglomeration and dissolution of social groups. Simmel (of course!) on spatial relations as both the condition and the symbol of human relations. The quickness of friends (in anticipation of Antony and Cleopatra). Miscellaneous digressions, not all my fault.
(February 11, actually, but I think if I change the title I may change the link.) We start with Earle Stanley Gardner on writing by the word -- then on to Kawabata and the spookiness of the story. Then The Merchant of Venice, and the significance of the rings and their value. The reason Shylock is a stranger, and that all the Jews in Venice are: because Deuteronomy permits lending at interest to a stranger, so the Christians wanted to be strangers to the Jews so made the Jews strangers to them. The stranger in Simmel mentioned: "The wanderer [the merchant] is he who comes today and goes tomorrow; the stranger is he who comes today and stays tomorrow." At least I am sure it may be so in Venice.