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“Worlds, Worlding”

Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy, 2023
Heidegger’s discussion of the concept and the phenomenology of ‘world’ is defined by its dual meaning, referring to both the unity of a single, encompassing whole and a number of different meaning contexts, i.e., ‘worlds’ in the plural. Heidegger’s emphasis on the verbal meaning of world (‘worlding’) and the discussion of problems such as the ‘world ...
Tobias Keiling, Ian Alexander Moore
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Conclusion: One World, Two Worlds, Many Worlds?*

2012
The idea of countering the threat of nuclear war with the establishment of “one world government” gained popularity after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but by 1950 succumbed to the realities of the Cold War. The world was seemingly split in two, a democratic-capitalist West squaring off against a Communist world.
van Lente, Dick, Augustine, D
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World Politics, World Literature, World Cinema

Global Society, 2010
The aesthetic turn in international relations (IR) has raised important questions about the boundaries of the discipline. This article seeks to tackle the question of (inter)disciplinarity by taking the concepts of world politics, world literature, and world cinema and asking how far they can be investigated within a single intellectual framework.
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World-Economy, World-Ecology, World Literature

Green Letters, 2012
(2012). World-Economy, World-Ecology, World Literature. Green Letters: Vol. 16, Global and Postcolonial Ecologies, pp. 15-30.
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World Polity, World Culture, World Society

International Political Sociology, 2009
Expressing reservations about conceptualizing a world society, the question is posed: Can we use sociological theory and in particular a concept of society and still avoid “conceptualizing the question of globalization as one of homogeneity, cohesion, a whole,” or should we instead find ways to focus on “multiple and changing connections?” Framing the ...
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Neural worlds and real worlds

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
States of the brain represent states of the world. But at least some of the mind–brain's internal representations, such as a sensation of heat or a sensation of red, do not resemble the external realities that they represent: mean kinetic energy (temperature) or electromagnetic reflectance (colour).
Patricia S, Churchland   +1 more
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World Wide World

Science, 2000
T he Earth Browser is a unique software product that makes viewing world environmental information as easy as browsing the Web. Although it provides some of the same information as weather tracking programs ([1][1]), Earth Browser goes considerably beyond simple weather data by providing up-to-the-
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