5 resultados para Ancient Political Philosophy
em WestminsterResearch - UK
Resumo:
Games and applications with gamified elements have been used in teaching and learning widely. Gamified applications attract the interest of students and teachers because they assist them to achieve their cognitive and pedagogical purposes. This paper describes a study that explores the use of a gamified learning application designed to introduce students at key stages 3 and 4 (ages 14-15) to ancient Greek Philosophy. The study involves 3 tests and 3 different groups of students and aimed to explore if the application improves students' knowledge and understanding and to compare different styles of subject delivering. This paper presents and discusses in details the results of the first test.
Resumo:
The Anthropocene marks a new geological epoch in which human activity (and specifically Western production and consumption practices) has become a geological force. It also profoundly destabilizes the grounds of Western political philosophy. Visions of a dynamic earth system wholly indifferent to human survival liquefy modernity’s division between nature and politics. Critical thought has only begun to scratch the surface of the Anthropocene’s re-naturalization of politics. This special issue of Resilience: International Policies, Practices and Discourses explores the politics of resilience within the wider cultural and political moment of the Anthropocene. It is within the field of resilience thinking that the implications of the Anthropocene for forms of governance are beginning to be sketched out and experimental practices are undertaken. Foregrounding the Anthropocene imaginary’s re-naturalization of politics enables us to consider the political possibilities of resilience from a different angle, one that is irreducible to neoliberal post-political rule.
Resumo:
The book explores the aesthetic and political implications of the relationship between magic and mimesis in the work of those early twentieth-century writers, artists and filmmakers who were most self-consciously experimental, including James Joyce, Ezra Pound, Dziga Vertov and Sergei Eisenstein.
Resumo:
A publication emerging out of a successful international conference I co-organised on noise in 2010. The first of two volumes, this one focuses on noise as an aesthetic, political and cultural concept, and a range of noise practices beyond purely sonic ones, such as audiovisual noise and noise in communication theory. It argues that noise is fundamental to contemporary communication practices and facilitates a reversal of perspective in how these practices can be understood