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88 result(s) for "Cave, Terence"
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Pan
One of Knut Hamsun's most famous works, 'Pan' tells the story of Thomas Glahn, a lone hunter accompanied only by his faithful dog, Aesop.
Imagining the Emergence of the Human: Reflections on Chris Johnson's Late Work
This paper offers a series of commentaries and reflections on certain of Christopher Johnson's lines of argument as perceived from the perspective of cognitive studies, with particular reference to the notion of embodied cognition. It opens with a brief outline of his work on the evolution of human intelligence in the context of the conceptually parallel question of the evolution of cognition. Subsequently, it raises questions about what this account does not include — notably an anthropological view of the role of literature — and what difference that absence might make. It further proposes that a spectrum view of the relationship between ‘body’ and ‘mind’ might helpfully supplement a view which is by implication oppositional and hierarchical. The overall concern of the paper is to reflect on what it might mean to ‘mediate thought’, and more specifically on the economy of such (cognitive) mediation.
Cornucopia
Cave's study of the texts of the French Renaissance shows an uneasy balance between the aspiration to copia and the textual methods to attain it, and the inherited cornucopian texts of Antiquity which both inform and limit this aspiration. Thus, central to the book's sense of an underlying crisis is the introduction of the figuration of abundance in Renaissance texts, the fragment presented here.
Cornucopia
Cornucopia Cave's study of the texts of the French Renaissance shows an uneasy balance between the aspiration to copia and the textual methods to attain it, and the inherited cornucopian texts of Antiquity which both inform and limit this aspiration. Thus, central to the book's sense of an underlying crisis is the introduction of the figuration of abundance in Renaissance texts, the fragment presented here.