Results 141 to 150 of about 69,347 (254)

Images Assisting Wor[l]ds: Black History Murals in South and West Philadelphia

open access: yesSociological Forum, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Black history murals are often understood as examples of state or corporate obfuscation of racial inequality, sometimes known as “artwashing”; or, conversely, as “insurgent” political interventions. Focusing on murals in historically Black neighborhoods in South and West Philadelphia, this article instead highlights the processual, but no less
Gareth Millington   +1 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Limits of the Possible: Third Sector Employability Support for Vulnerable Users and the Challenge of Job Quality

open access: yesSocial Policy &Administration, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Many third‐sector organisations (TSOs) deliver employability support for vulnerable groups, but can they address the quality of jobs their users enter? The question is timely in the UK, given structural constraints presented by its neoliberal labour market/welfare regime and the recently elected Labour Government's aim of moving job centres ...
Jonathan Payne   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Is music conscious? The argument from motion, and other considerations [PDF]

open access: yes, 2017
Music is often described in anthropomorphic terms. This paper suggests that if we think about music in certain ways we could think of it as conscious. Motional characteristics give music the impression of being alive, but musical motion is conventionally
O'Regan, Kevin
core  

Process and Dynamics in AI and Language Use

open access: yesTopics in Cognitive Science, EarlyView.
Abstract In this volumed, Randall Beer and Joanna Rączaszek‐Leonardi have opened an important discussion of what is further needed to enhance the reach of dynamical approaches to cognition. Focusing on issues concerning the nature of language and developments in language technology, we have attempted, in this brief contribution, to place their ...
Eleni Gregoromichelaki, Gregory J. Mills
wiley   +1 more source

Re‐spiritualising geographies of subjectivity through Daoism

open access: yesTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, EarlyView.
Short Abstract Drawing on Daoist philosophy, this intervention provides an alternative account of spiritual selfhood that harmonises disconnections between subjectivity and the Universe around the lived body. It invokes a cosmological selfhood through re‐spiritualising the bodily geographies of subjectivity.
Yu‐Shan Tseng
wiley   +1 more source

For the Times They Are A‐Changin': Towards a ‘Homeland Economics’ Paradigm of the European Union?

open access: yesJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, Volume 64, Issue 2, Page 467-490, March 2026.
Abstract There is an ongoing academic debate on whether geopolitical aspirations are reshaping the paradigm of the EU's neoliberal industrial and trade policy. The scrutiny has intensified with China's new economic power, the Trump and Biden administrations, Covid‐19 and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, the theory of paradigm changes expects that
Henrik Brockenhuus‐Schack   +1 more
wiley   +1 more source

HOW EXPERIENCED PHENOMENA RELATE TO THINGS THEMSELVES: KANT, HUSSERL, HOCHE, AND REFLEXIVE MONISM [PDF]

open access: yes, 2006
What we normally think of as the “physical world” is also the world as experienced, that is, a world of appearances. Given this, what is the reality behind the appearances, and what might its relation be to consciousness and to constructive processes in
Velmans, Prof Max
core  

Predictive processing's flirt with transcendental idealism

open access: yesNoûs, Volume 60, Issue 1, Page 87-109, March 2026.
Abstract The popular predictive processing (PP) framework posits prediction error minimization (PEM) as the sole mechanism in the brain that can account for all mental phenomena, including consciousness. I first highlight three ambitions associated with major presentations of PP: (1) Completeness (PP aims for a comprehensive account of mental phenomena)
Tobias Schlicht
wiley   +1 more source

Phenomenal knowledge and phenomenal causality

open access: yesNoûs, Volume 60, Issue 1, Page 212-232, March 2026.
Abstract There has been extensive debate over whether we can have phenomenal knowledge in the case of epiphenomenalism. This article aims to bring that debate to a close. I first develop a refined causal account of knowledge—one that is modest enough to avoid various putative problems, yet sufficiently robust to undermine the epiphenomenalist position.
Lei Zhong
wiley   +1 more source

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