The foundation of this work: ideally a safe, peaceful transition to safe peaceful spaces for all, as informed and enabled by the wholeness, the coordination of things, the natural and intellectual capacities of all beings, acting safely for all.
Quotes
"Dialogue is mutual search for a new reality, not debate to win with stronger arguments. In a dialogue propositions are pointers toward a common new reality; not against each other to win a verbal battle, but complementing each other in an effort to accommodate legitimate goals of all parties, inspired by theories and values, and constructive-creative-concrete enough to become a causa finalis". Galtuung
"I use the concept of affect as away of talking about a margin of manouverability, the 'where we might be able to go' and 'what we might be able to do' in every present situation. I guess 'affect' is a word I use for 'hope': Massumi
"A discourse is a system of words, actions, rules, beliefs, and institutions that share common values. Particular discourses sustain particular worldviews. We might even think of a discourse as a worldview in action. Discourses tend to be invisible--taken for granted as part of the fabric of reality."Fairclough
Emergence is “the principle that entities exhibit properties which are meaningful only when attributed to the whole, not to its parts.” Checkland
"What the designer cares about is whether the user perceives that some action is possible (or in the case of perceived non-affordances, not possible)." Norman
Friday, 23 April 2010
Marxist Research
Marx and Friedrich Engels
historical materialism
base/superstructure
teleology (teleological)
mode of production
dialectic
alienation
ideology"false consciousness"
Louis Althusser
overdetermination
decentring
interpellated
ideological
state apparatus
Antonio Gramsci
hegemony
historic bloc
Theodor Adorno and Herbert Marcuse
instrumental reason
repressive tolerance
David Harvey
gentrification
distantiation
Manuel Castells
spatiality
collective consumptionruptual unity
Manfredo Tafuri
Summary of Marxism
1. Marxism is a body of philosophical, economic and social beliefs about human nature and society, as well as a political movement based upon those beliefs.
2. Marxism is best understood not as a single set of ideas, but as a debate conducted for more than a century around the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
3. Marxism is a determinist theory of society that stresses the centrality of human productive activity in the organization of all aspects of social life.
4. Its central concern is the relationship between human consciousness and the "material life" created by the necessary activity of production.
5. In emphasizing the economic foundation of society, Marxism is opposed to other theories which claim that ideas are the fundamental basis of social reality.
6. Marxists study "objective" social relations and class interests rather than the thoughts, feelings and motivations of specific individuals.
7. The aim of a Marxist analysis is to expose the social relations underlying the inequality that characterizes the capitalist system.
Session
No comments:
Post a Comment