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"aporia" Definitions
  1. a situation in which two or more parts of a theory or argument do not agree, meaning that the theory or argument cannot be trueTopics Opinion and argumentc2

88 Sentences With "aporia"

How to use aporia in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "aporia" and check conjugation/comparative form for "aporia". Mastering all the usages of "aporia" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This week's episode, titled "Aporia," is a near-perfect hour of television, perhaps because "Fargo" doesn't have time to screw around any more.
Ricoeur agrees with many other thinkers that evil is not a thing per se, but rather exists in a sort of black hole of thought, an aporia.
Aporia in Adalbert Seitz's Macrolepidoptera of the World Aporia, the black- veined whites or blackveins, is a genus of pierid butterflies found in the Palearctic region.
Eupithecia aporia is a moth in the family Geometridae. It is found in Mongolia.
Calliostoma aporia is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Calliostomatidae.
Arousal Disasters is Jonathan Seet's second album, released by Aporia Records/MapleNationwide on 14 February 2003.
Takeuchi envisaged national literature as needing to address the aporia of the nation as a cultural practice.
On the verge of death, Aporia allowed Z-One to split him into three incarnations, in order to go back into past and alter it. The three incarnations, known as the Three Emperors of Yliaster, are also known as the three tragedies of Aporia's lifetime, because they are the embodiments of intregral moments of his despair. During the end of the WRGP, the Three Emperors combined back into Aporia, who appears in the peak of his life. Aporia duels against Yusei and loses, with his body being damaged as a result.
Julian Wolfreys, in his essay "Trauma, Testimony, and Criticism", characterizes trauma as aporia, a wound with unending trail. Valiur Rahaman, in his book Interpretations: Essays in Literary Theory (2011), explained aporia as a creative force in both the artist and their art; it is, for the artist, an edgeless edge of the text or a work of art.
Such a relationship intensely affects not only the context of aporia but its meaning as well: Ultimately, aporia cannot be separated from this etymological and cultural history. Such history provides insight into aporia's perplexing semantic qualities as well as into the historical context in which the word functions as an indicator of the limits of language in constructing knowledge.
He is repaired by Z-One and duels Jack, Leo and Luna in order to protect the Ark Cradle. He is defeated by them, and they show him that hope is stronger than despair. As a result, Aporia becomes filled with hope and decides to face Z-One in a duel. Aporia loses and is destroyed as a result.
In philosophy, an aporia () is a puzzle or state of puzzlement. In rhetoric, it is a declaration of doubt, made for rhetorical purpose and often feigned.
Aporia leucodice, the Himalayan blackvein, is a mid-sized to large butterfly of the family Pieridae, that is, the yellows and whites, which is found in India.
Kõiv was also the author of several novels. Widow and Aporia of Attica, Tragedy of Elea are two of his best known. In 1996 he published Aken.
Book Beta of the Metaphysics is a list of the aporiai that preoccupy the rest of the work. In Pyrrhonism aporia is intentionally induced as a means of producing ataraxia. Contemporary academic studies of the term further characterize its usage in philosophical discourses. In "Aporetics: Rational Deliberation in the Face of Inconsistency" (2009), Nicholas Rescher is concerned with the methods in which an aporia, or "apory", is intellectually processed and resolved.
Aporia agathon, the great blackvein, is a mid-sized butterfly of the family Pieridae, that is, the yellows and whites, which is found in Nepal, India, China and Southeast Asia.
Aporia harrietae, the Bhutan blackvein, is a mid-sized to large butterfly of the family Pieridae, that is, the yellows and whites, which is found in Bhutan and possibly in India.
Aporia is an undergraduate journal of philosophy. It was founded in 1983 by Ruth Chang, who was an undergraduate at Dartmouth at the time, and is now a professor of philosophy.
Definitions of the term aporia have varied throughout history. The Oxford English Dictionary includes two forms of the word: the adjective "aporetic", which it defines as "to be at a loss", "impassable", and "inclined to doubt, or to raise objections"; and the noun form "aporia", which it defines as the "state of the aporetic" and "a perplexity or difficulty". The dictionary entry also includes two early textual uses, which both refer to the term's rhetorical (rather than philosophical) usage. In George Puttenham's The Arte of English Poesie (1589), aporia is "the Doubtful, [so] called...because often we will seem to caste perils, and make doubts of things when by a plaine manner of speech we might affirm or deny [them]".
Plato's early dialogues are often called his 'aporetic' (Greek: ἀπορητικός) dialogues because they typically end in aporia. In such a dialogue, Socrates questions his interlocutor about the nature or definition of a concept, for example virtue or courage. Socrates then, through elenctic testing, shows his interlocutor that his answer is unsatisfactory. After a number of such failed attempts, the interlocutor admits he is in aporia about the examined concept, concluding that he does not know what it is.
And so, in the end, Socrates finds both his companions' theories to be unsatisfactory, and the dialogue ends in aporia, an English term derived from the ancient Greek ἀπορία meaning "philosophical confusion".
Rescher's study is indicative of the continuing presence of scholarly examinations of the concept of aporia and, furthermore, of the continuing attempts of scholars to translate the word, to describe its modern meaning.
The WRGP soon begins, with Team 5D's facing tough opponents before eventually confronting the Emperors themselves, who are revealed to be three different incarnations of Aporia, a cyborg sent from the future to destroy Neo Domino City to prevent a great calamity from befalling mankind in the future. Although Team 5D's defeats Aporia and wins the WRGP, a massive citadel known as the Ark Cradle appears and threatens to crash into Neo Domino City and destroy it. Team 5D's climbs aboard it to stop it. Before reaching the core of the fortress, they confront three individuals guarding its access: Aki and Crow face Sherry, who was promised to have her parents returned to her; Yusei faces Bruno, who recovered his memories of being Antinomy, another member of Iliaster; and Jack, Leo and Luna face Aporia.
It occurs in open forest, grazing land, orchards. lanes, gardens, meadows and thicketsUK Butterflies throughout most of Europe, temperate Asia, Korea, and Japan.Information on Aporia crataegi This species is extinct in the British Isles.
Toronto Star - Toronto, Ont. Feb 26, 2004 Page: G.03"Madrid @ Drake Hotel". Chart Attack - Jun 14, 2004. by Caitlin Hotchkiss That year the group released their debut album, Warm Waters, on record label Aporia.
In philosophy, an aporia is a philosophical puzzle or a seemingly insoluble impasse in an inquiry, often arising as a result of equally plausible yet inconsistent premises (i.e. a paradox). It can also denote the state of being perplexed, or at a loss, at such a puzzle or impasse. The notion of an aporia is principally found in Greek philosophy, but it also plays a role in post-structuralist philosophy, as in the writings of Jacques Derrida and Luce Irigaray, and it has also served as an instrument of investigation in analytic philosophy.
While little remains of Euthyphro's life, his depiction in Plato sparked interest in many generations of scholars and commentators. Diogenes Laërtius depicts him as being swayed away from the prosecution of his father following the aporia demonstrated in his eponymous dialogue.Diogenes Laërtius, 2.29 Inspired by this aporia, the Euthyphro dilemma arose within antiquity and was revived by Ralph Cudworth and Samuel Clarke in the 17th and 18th centuries,Terence Irwin, "Socrates and Euthyphro: The Argument and its Revival" (2006) remaining relevant in theological and philosophical discussions for centuries thereafter.
Aporia is the debut studio album by English alternative metal band Forever Never. It was released in 2006 by Copro Records. The digital release is entitled Aphoria V2, and contains the original twelve tracks and four live tracks.
Aporia hippia is a butterfly of the family Pieridae. It is found in the Amur region, Ussuri, Korea, and Japan. The wingspan is 30–42 mm. The larvae feed on Berberis species, including Berberis amurensis and Berberis thunbergi.
Discourse level rhetorical devices rely on relations between phrases, clauses and sentences. Often they relate to how new arguments are introduced into the text or how previous arguments are emphasized. Examples include antanagoge, apophasis, aporia, hypophora, metanoia and procatalepsis.
Since 1999 he has been Professor at the University of Castilla-La Mancha in Toledo (Spain). He has held visiting posts at the Universities of University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (Germany), University of Graz (Austria), University of Potsdam (Germany), University of Cambridge (United Kingdom), University of Munich (Germany), University of Vienna and the University of Oxford (United Kingdom). As director of the international scientific journal Dókos. Revista Filosófica - Philosophical Review (published in Ápeiron Ediciones (Madrid) and editor of the international series "Aporia / Aπορία" (De Gruyter)Aporia / Aπορία, De Gruyter the author is continuously engaged with highly relevant philosophical topics.
As Slings mentions, justice is a secondary theme in Clitophon; justice is primarily used to show the ignorance of Clitophon. Clitophon depicts the concentric definitions of justice's results with the latter definition expanding upon the former until the definition is closer to the object in search and aporia, confusion or puzzlement, is reached. However, in Clitophon, aporia is reached prematurely before Socrates gives his definition. The first set of definitions of the result of justice are definitions borrowed from Republic I with some differences; Clitophon lacks "the gainful" and places "the beneficial" at the beginning of the list rather than the end.
Slings, in his portrayals of the levels of Clitophon's character, defines Clitophon as an unabashed young man, who is defensive when provoked; this is seen in his hubristic claims to know of Socrates' speeches and methods, and his attack of Socrates. Wishing to gain the knowledge of how to attain justice for political advancement, Clitophon knows that to be told what he wants, he needs to claim aporia. However to actually experience aporia through elenchus, Clitophon needs to acknowledge ignorance and bad qualities. Clitophon remains ignorant to his bad qualities and assumes that he knows much in terms of Socrates' speeches and methodologies.
Her discussion of the myth of Poros, Penia, and Eros in Plato's Symposium especially reveals the concept's untranslatability. Penia, the "child of poverty", decides to forcefully impregnate herself with the inebriated Poros, the personification of plenty, who is always in opposition with aporia and thus defining aporia. The result of this union is Eros, who inherits the disparate characteristics of his parents (25). The perplexing aspect of the myth is revealed as one realizes that Penia is acting out of resourcefulness, a quality normally attributed to Poros, and Poros' inaction reveals his own passivity, a poverty of agency or poros.
Amechania (or Amekhania) was the ancient Greek spirit of helplessness. She was regarded as a close companion (and sister) of Penia and Ptocheia. She was virtually identical to Aporia. Amechania was mentioned by ancient Greek authors such as Alcaeus (Fragment 364) and Herodotus.
On March 24, 2020, Stevens released a collaborative album with his stepfather, Lowell Brams, entitled Aporia. In June, Stevens announced his eighth studio album, titled The Ascension, which was released on September 25. He also released the album's lead single "America" on July 3.
Aporia nabellica, the dusky blackvein, is a mid-sized to large butterfly of the family Pieridae, that is, the yellows and whites, which is found in India and Pakistan in the western Himalayas: Kashmir to Naini Tal from . It has a wingspan of 6 to 7 cm.
Zetetic Pyrrhonism, differing from the two, is "engaged in seeking". While an ephectic merely suspends judgment on a matter however arriving at that point, an aporetic skeptic engages in refutation, a form of argument before either reaching an ephectic state, an aporia (impasse), continued seeking or refutation.
A Neoist Research Project N.O. Cantsin, OpenMute, 2010 Oliver Marchart Neoismus Edition Selene, Wien, 1997, S. 16 THE ASSAULT ON CULTURE: UTOPIAN CURRENTS FROM LETTRISM TO CLASS WAR by Stewart Home. Ist edition Aporia Press and Unpopular Books, London 1988. 2nd UK edition AK Press, 1991. NEOISM, PLAGIARISM & PRAXIS by Stewart Home.
In Plato's Meno (84a-c), Socrates describes the purgative effect of reducing someone to aporia: it shows someone who merely thought he knew something that he does not in fact know it and instills in him a desire to investigate it. In Aristotle's Metaphysics, aporia plays a role in his method of inquiry. In contrast to a rationalist inquiry that begins from a priori principles, or an empiricist inquiry that begins from a tabula rasa, he begins the Metaphysics by surveying the various aporiai that exist, drawing in particular on what puzzled his predecessors: "with a view to the science we are seeking [i.e., metaphysics], it is necessary that we should first review the things about which we need, from the outset, to be puzzled" (995a24).
There are many different interpretations as to why the dialogue ends in aporia. Certain commentators, such as Iain Lane, view the Socratic method of elenchus as an end in itself; that debate is the central premise and function of the dialogue. Others, such as Gregory Vlastos, see the dialogue ending because of the specific deficiencies of the characters' definitions.
Black-veined white on the red clover Aporia crataegi, the black-veined white, is a large butterfly of the family Pieridae. A. crataegi is widespread and common. Its range extends from northwest Africa in the west to Transcaucasia and across the Palearctic to Siberia and Japan in the east. In the south, it is found in Turkey, Cyprus, Israel, Lebanon and Syria.
Lyotard argued that the modernists attempted to replace the beautiful with the release of the perceiver from the constraints of the human condition. For him, the sublime's significance is in the way it points to an aporia (impassable doubt) in human reason; it expresses the edge of our conceptual powers and reveals the multiplicity and instability of the postmodern world.
Between 1997 and 2002 she also studied philosophy and literature at Wrocław University, New York University and Europa-Universität Viadrina. In 2003 she completed a doctoral thesis on aporia in art discourses, which was published by Wilhelm Fink Verlag in 2004, under the title “Pollock. Verflechtung des Sichtbaren und des Lesbaren” (Engl. “Pollock. The Intertwining of the Visible and the Readable”).
Aporia is the rhetorical expression of doubt. The most famous example of this is undoubtedly Hamlet’s soliloquy, which begins: To be or not to be, that is the question. (Hamlet 3.1) Another example is in Antony’s famous speech at Caesar’s funeral, which includes examples such as: Did this in Caesar seem ambitious? When that the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept.
High Road is an album by Canadian folk rock band The Grapes of Wrath, released March 19, 2013 on Aporia Records."The Grapes of Wrath Return with 'High Road' LP". Exclaim!, February 12, 2013. It is the band's first album of new material since Field Trip in 2000, and the first to feature all three of the band's original members since 1991's These Days.
"Grapes of Wrath savouring sweet reunion: After nasty split and two decades apart, B.C. band is enjoying easy return". Toronto Star, October 7, 2012. To mark this release, the band was joined by guests Sam Roberts, Whitehorse, Ron Sexsmith, Hayden, Great Lake Swimmers and other notable Canadian musicians at Toronto's Mod Club. The band's latest album High Road was released in March 2013 through Aporia Records.
Clitophon is also a warning of how to not read protreptical dialogues and of the dangers of relying on these dialogues to gain insight. Clitophon did not want to think for himself, but rather to be told what to think by Socrates. As a replacement to protreptic speech, Slings proposes that Clitophon champions elenchus as the mode through which to attain virtue and justice by reaching aporia.
Another colony of Diggers connected to the Surrey and Wellingborough colony was set up in Iver, Buckinghamshire about from the Surrey Diggers colony at St George's Hill. The Iver Diggers' "Declaration of the grounds and Reasons, why we the poor Inhabitants of the Parrish of Iver in Buckinghamshire ..."A Declaration of the Grounds and Reasons (Iver) from Hopton, Andrew, ed. Digger Tracts, 1649–50. London: Aporia, 1989.
The word Cary derives from the Celtic caer meaning rock, crag or castle, making the term Castle Cary a double-play. Castle Cary is said to take half its name from River Cary, itself an aporia. The first Cary castle was besieged in 1138 and again in 1152. It was originally made of timber frame, as it would have been built by the Normans and inherited their building traditions in wood.
In a reference from 1657, J. Smith's Mystical Rhetoric, the term becomes "a figure whereby the speaker sheweth that he doubteth, either where to begin for the multitude of matters, or what to do or say in some strange or ambiguous thing" (OED). Herbert Weir Smyth's Greek Grammar (1956) also focuses on the rhetorical usage by defining aporia as "an artifice by which a speaker feigns doubts as to where he shall begin or end or what he shall do or say" (674). More modern sources, perhaps because they come after the advent of post-structuralism, have chosen to omit the rhetorical usage of the term. In William Harmon's A Handbook to Literature, for example, aporia is identified as "a difficulty, impasse, or point of doubt and indecision", while also noting that critics such as Jacques Derrida have employed the term to "indicate a point of undecidability, which locates the site at which the text most obviously undermines its own rhetorical structure, dismantles, or deconstructs itself" (39).
Burchill studied Visual Arts at the Sydney College of the Arts. During her time in Sydney, Burchill established the Super 8 Collective alongside Mark Titmarsh, Ross Gibson, Lindy Lee and Deirdre Beck, after the second Sydney Super 8 Film festival. In 1983 she completed her Bachelor of Arts with an interest in sculpture and film. For her honours exhibition she created the work, Aporia (1984), which spelt the word over a series of six canvases.
Movsesijan was born in 1966 in Belgrade, which at that time was a part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His paternal grandparents were Armenian and his grandfather Yeznik escaped the Ottoman military service and walked all the way to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He graduated from the Faculty of Dentistry at the University of Belgrade. He was the director of the movie Aporia (2006) and a screenwriter of the Svjetsko čudovište (2003).
Most Socratic inquiries consist of a series of elenchi and typically end in puzzlement known as aporia. FredeMichael Frede, "Plato's Arguments and the Dialogue Form", Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 1992, Oxford 1992, 201–19. points out Vlastos' conclusion in step #4 above makes nonsense of the aporetic nature of the early dialogues. Having shown a proposed thesis is false is insufficient to conclude some other competing thesis must be true.
Socrates generally applied his method of examination to concepts that seem to lack any concrete definition; e.g., the key moral concepts at the time, the virtues of piety, wisdom, temperance, courage, and justice. Such an examination challenged the implicit moral beliefs of the interlocutors, bringing out inadequacies and inconsistencies in their beliefs, and usually resulting in aporia. In view of such inadequacies, Socrates himself professed his ignorance, but others still claimed to have knowledge.
The Complete Works of Gerrard Winstanley, edited jointly by Thomas N. Corns, Ann Hughes and David Loewenstein, were published by the Oxford University Press in December 2009 at £229 (). A shorter and less comprehensive volume containing all the major works, Gerrard Winstanley: A Common Treasury edited by Andrew Hopton, was published in 1989 by Aporia () and reprinted several times since, most recently in 2011 (paperback) by Verso Books (UK) with an introduction by Tony Benn ().
Expatriate is the debut album from Toronto, Ontario, Canada-based indie rock group The Coast. The album was released in Canada on April 1, 2008 and in the UK on February 9, 2009 via Aporia Records. The album was released digitally in the US on August 19, 2008, and was released on CD on May 5, 2009 by Minneapolis-based indie record label Afternoon Records. Expatriate follows the band's critically acclaimed debut self-titled EP from 2006.
In the Theaetetus, he says such people are eu amousoi (εὖ ἄμουσοι), an expression that means literally, "happily without the muses".Theaetetus 156a In other words, such people are willingly ignorant, living without divine inspiration and access to higher insights about reality. In Plato's dialogues, Socrates always insists on his ignorance and humility, that he knows nothing, so called Socratic irony. Several dialogues refute a series of viewpoints, but offer no positive position of its own, ending in aporia.
During 2009, the Coast also spent every spare moment locked away in their rehearsal space writing and working on new material. In November 2009 they once again entered the Lincoln County Social Club, the same studio in which they recorded Expatriate, with 14 new tracks - the most they've ever tried to record. The album was once again produced with long-time friend and producer Chris Stringer (We're Marching On, Ohbijou, Rush). The 9-track record, entitled Queen Cities, was released in September 2010 by Aporia.
In front of the entrance to the underworld live Grief (Penthos), Anxiety (Curae), Diseases (Nosoi), Old Age (Geras), Fear (Phobos), Hunger (Limos), Need (Aporia), Death (Thanatos), Agony (Algea), and Sleep (Hypnos), together with Guilty Joys (Gaudia). On the opposite threshold is War (Polemos), the Erinyes, and Discord (Eris). Close to the doors are many beasts, including Centaurs, Scylla, Briareus, Gorgons, the Lernaean Hydra, Geryon, the Chimera, and Harpies. In the midst of all this, an Elm can be seen where false Dreams (Oneiroi) cling under every leaf.
When Aporia, Paradox and Antinomy died of old age, Z-One revived them as cyborgs in order to help him rewrite the future, which involves the destruction of New Domino City. As Z-One battles against Yusei, he is shown to have the face of an older Yusei. When the Meklord invasion began, Z-One performed an operation on himself to gain the appearance and abilities of Yusei, so he could help as many people as possible. Z-One fell into despair when he wasn't able to.
He recorded and released Melatonin independently in 2000 and Arousal Disasters on February 14, 2003 with Aporia Records/MapleNationwide. Thanks To Science, We've Got Love was produced in 2007 but was only made available on iTunes and other digital audio formats in early 2008. The End of the Beginning EP, released in 2009, was similarly only made available digitally. The material from "Thanks To Science, We've Got Love" was largely derived from compositions pitched for television and film with Offensive Tie Publishing in Boston.
Since this exhibition she has incorporated and explored monochromatic colour schemes that have influenced her continuing practice. Her early works from 1984-1987 use industrial material, screenprinting, airbrushing and video-scanning processes to explore the connection between language and images. In these works, words such as: MUTE, RETURN, APORIA, and EQUIVALENCE are enamelled on aluminium and canvas boards to highlight the limits of language and representation. In 1983, Burchill and McCamley’s working partnership began. McCamley studied film, semiotics and philosophy, which supplemented Burchill’s training in sculpture and film.
The first part of the work showcases Socratic dialectical style; Meno, unable to adequately define virtue, is reduced to confusion or aporia Plato, Meno, 80a-b. Socrates suggests that they seek an adequate definition for virtue together. In response, Meno suggests that it is impossible to seek what one does not know, because one will be unable to determine whether one has found it Plato, Meno, 80d. Socrates challenges Meno's argument, often called "Meno's Paradox" or the "Learner's Paradox," by introducing the theory of knowledge as recollection (anamnesis).
Formed in 1998 as a five piece, the original line-up included Mark Cossom (guitar) and Rob Agostini (vocals). This line-up played several performances and recorded a single in 1998 before Cossom and Agostini left the band amicably. Their departure caused the style of the music to become focused around longer songs with fewer sections, which gradually built up from quiet beginnings into overpowering crescendos and back down again. The band (now a three piece) released their debut album What's a World Without Laughter in September 1999 on the Toronto based Aporia Records label.
McCarry's most recent work has been cited for its "postmodern skepticism" and "epistemic aporia"--"literary reconstruction that profess to unmask" state-sponsored secrecy.Clues [an academic journal], 10/2018, Volume 36, Issue 2 These judgments are based on the work of Robert Snyder.e.g. Snyder, "McCarry's Recursive Fiction," Clues, October 2018 In 2007, novelist and former presidential speechwriter Patrick Andersson wrote that “a new generation of American spy novelists soon began [in the 1970s] to produce a body of work that has surpassed that of current British writers. The four most important are Charles McCarry, Robert Littell, Daniel Silva, and Alan Furst” Anderson, Patrick.
The earlier dialogues of Plato (424–348 BCE), relating the discourses of Socrates, raised the use of arguments to a formal dialectical method (), also called the Socratic method. Typically, Socrates' opponent would make what would seem to be an innocuous assertion. In response, Socrates, via a step-by-step train of reasoning, bringing in other background assumptions, would make the person admit that the assertion resulted in an absurd or contradictory conclusion, forcing him to abandon his assertion and adopt a position of aporia. The technique was also a focus of the work of Aristotle (384–322 BCE).
Christian Dotremont, (12 December 1922 – 20 August 1979), was a Belgian painter and poet who was born in Tervuren, Belgium. He was a founding member of the Revolutionary Surrealist Group (1946) and he also founded COBRA together with Danish artist Asger Jorn.Stewart Home, (1988) The Assault on Culture: Utopian currents from Lettrisme to Class War London : Unpopular Books and Aporia Press In this capacity he was responsible for bringing Henri Lefebvre's Critique de la vie quotidienne (1946) to the group's attention. He later became well known for his painted poems (French: Peinture mots), which he called logograms.
He also has Trap cards that can be activated from his hand. His main cards are his ten Timelord Monsters that can only stay on the field for one turn, but have devastating effects. His ace monster, Sephylon, the Ultimate Timelord, can remain on the field indefinitely, raises the attack points of other Timelords to 4,000, and gains attack points equal to the total attack points of other Timelords on the field. ; :Voiced by: Masakazu Nemoto (Japanese); Jamal Najum Khan (English) :Aporia is an android from the future, one of the last remaining humans after the Ener-D explosion.
The Coast is the debut EP from Toronto, Ontario, Canada-based indie rock group The Coast. The EP was first self-released in Canada on March 7, 2006, then released in the US by Aporia Records on May 29, 2007. The EP was produced by the band and Chris Hegge, who also provided backing vocals on "Evening's Heights." In 2004, when The Coast was known as The July 26th Movement, they released an EP titled Take a Walk Outside, featuring an early version of the song of the same name found on the self-titled EP. The EP garnered critical acclaim in Canadian music press.
The band also performed at the Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto on December 3, 2011 as part of the long-standing Christmas show: 'StagXmas Bash'. Bruce Adamson died December 15, 2015 in Toronto. Drummer Jeremy Elliott and Singer/Guitarist Julian Taylor now perform & record as part of the Julian Taylor Band, and have released two albums: 'Tech Noir' in 2014, and the double album 'Desert Star' on Aporia Records in 2016. For one night only on April 20th, 2020 the surviving members will take the stage at Lees Palace as the support act for their friend and former label mate, J. Englishman to celebrate the 20th Anniversary celebration of his debut album.
Bulent Diken (born 1964) is a Danish-Turkish philosopher and sociologist who teaches at Lancaster University. He has studied urban planning at the Aarhus School of Architecture.Bülent Diken He is known for his research on social theory, post-structuralism, nihilism, political philosophy, urban sociology, and immigration.Review: Immanent Aporia (A review of Nihilism by Bülent Diken)Margins of Nihilism/Nihilisms of the Margin (A review of Nihilism by Bülent Diken)The Culture of Exception Sociology Facing the CampSelf- Orientalise, Iran Inside Out, Contemporary PracticesA review of Bülent Diken's Strangers, Ambivalence and Social Theory, reviewed by Ioannis Armakolas During 1998-1999 he was an assistant professor at Roskilde University, Department of Geography.
The term literatronica, also literatronic (Marino, 2006), was coined by Colombian mathematician and author Juan B Gutierrez (2002) to refer to electronic literature. According to Gutierrez (2006): The literary hypertext authoring system known as Literatronica was developed by Juan B Gutierrez. Instead of relying solely on static hypertext links (for the system allows these as well), it uses an AI engine to recommend the best next pages based on what readers have already read. Literatronica radically revises the 1990s notions of literary hypertext as Modernist collage to the "original" notions of Arpanet as document sharing, where speed of access was put before what Espen Aarseth calls the aporia of links.
Eggs of black-veined white (Aporia crataegi) on apple leaf A butterfly laying eggs underneath the leaf Butterfly eggs are protected by a hard-ridged outer layer of shell, called the chorion. This is lined with a thin coating of wax which prevents the egg from drying out before the larva has had time to fully develop. Each egg contains a number of tiny funnel-shaped openings at one end, called micropyles; the purpose of these holes is to allow sperm to enter and fertilize the egg. Butterfly eggs vary greatly in size and shape between species, but are usually upright and finely sculptured.
For instance, a production at Oxford's Burton Taylor Theatre in March 2004, claimed to have been the first performance of the play in England since its putative recovery (although a successful amateur production had premiered at Essex University's Lakeside Theatre on 15 October 1998). A full production of the play, which noted the contested authorship, was mounted at the Next Theatre in Evanston, Illinois in 1998. Another production of the play, billed as William Shakespeare's Cardenio, was staged by the Lone Star Ensemble in 2002 in Los Angeles, directed by James Kerwin. In 2010 the Aporia Theatre began work on a new edit from translator and director Luis del Aguila and director Jonathan Busby.
Rather, the interlocutors have reached aporia, an improved state of still not knowing what to say about the subject under discussion. The exact nature of the elenchus is subject to a great deal of debate, in particular concerning whether it is a positive method, leading to knowledge, or a negative method used solely to refute false claims to knowledge.Stephen Salkever, "Methods of Interpreting Plato and his Dialogues" (Bryn Mawr Classical Review) W. K. C. Guthrie in The Greek Philosophers sees it as an error to regard the Socratic method as a means by which one seeks the answer to a problem, or knowledge. Guthrie claims that the Socratic method actually aims to demonstrate one's ignorance.
It is an approach that may be deployed in philosophy, in literary analysis, and even in the analysis of scientific writings. Deconstruction generally tries to demonstrate that any text is not a discrete whole but contains several irreconcilable and contradictory meanings; that any text therefore has more than one interpretation; that the text itself links these interpretations inextricably; that the incompatibility of these interpretations is irreducible; and thus that an interpretative reading cannot go beyond a certain point. Derrida refers to this point as an "aporia" in the text; thus, deconstructive reading is termed "aporetic." He insists that meaning is made possible by the relations of a word to other words within the network of structures that language is.
The Coast has shared the stage with the likes of Elbow, The French Kicks, Tokyo Police Club (who also provided a remix of The Coast's song "Tightrope" in 2008), Born Ruffians, Islands, The Duke Spirit, Ra Ra Riot, The Virgins, and Chairlift. The band was touted as one of the acts to watch in 2008 by Canada's national music monthly Exclaim! and Toronto's Eye Weekly. The band signed to Aporia Records in late 2007 and recorded their debut full-length album Expatriate. The album was released on April 1, 2008 in Canada, on August 19, 2008 in the US (digitally), February 2, 2009 in the UK, and May 5, 2009 on CD in the US by their new Minneapolis-based label Afternoon Records.
In 1943, Le Moult continued the publication with the development of numerous articles on Lepidoptera. Thus were published many works by Georges BernardiRévision des Aporia du groupe d'agathon (Pieridae), Miscellanea Entomologica, volume 41Études sur le genre Euchloe (Pieridae), Miscellanea Entomologica, volume 42]Révision de la classification des espèces holartiques des genres Pieris et Pontia (Pieridae), Miscellanea Entomologica, volume 44 and Marcel Caruel,Matériaux pour l'étude des formes de quelques Rhopalocères de la faune française, Miscellanea Entomologica, volumes 41, 42, 44, 45, 46 and 47 while Breuning published works on European Lamiinae.Nouveaux Cérambycides paléearctiques, Miscellanea Entomologica, volumes 40, 41 and 43Nouvelles formes de Dorcadions, Miscellanea Entomologica, volumes 43 and 45 The last volume published by Le Moult was #48 in 1936.
They were asked to support The Horrors at the Shockwaves NME Awards 2008 at The London Astoria. Ulterior followed up their hype with the collectable EP entitled 15, a limited edition 12" vinyl released in three different colours: white, cream and neon orange. After having gained notoriety across Europe and the UK music scene for their live shows, "consistently playing some of the most intense gigs in the past couple of years" – The Quietus, and having also garnered attention from the gothic rock scene after touring throughout Europe with The Sisters of Mercy (9–23 March 2009), Ulterior released their follow-up single, a 10" double A side vinyl entitled "Sister Speed"/"Aporia". 2008 saw Januskevicius move onto bass guitar as the band's direction further evolved.
In the Preface, Rescher identifies the work as an attempt to "synthesize and systematize an aporetic procedure for dealing with information overload (of 'cognitive dissonance', as it is sometimes called)" (ix). The text is also useful in that it provides a more precise (although specialized) definition of the concept: "any cognitive situation in which the threat of inconsistency confronts us" (1). Rescher further introduces his specific study of the apory by qualifying the term as "a group of individually plausible but collectively incompatible theses", a designation he illustrates with the following syllogism or "cluster of contentions": The aporia, or "apory" of this syllogism lies in the fact that, while each of these assertions is individually conceivable, together they are inconsistent or impossible (i.e. they constitute a paradox).
Dumezil has elaborated an interpretative theory according to which this aporia would be an intrinsic, fundamental feature of Indoeuropean deities of the primordial and sovereign level, as it finds a parallel in Vedic religion.G Dumezil Déesses latines et mythes vediques Bruxelles 1956 chapt. 3. The contradiction would put Fortuna both at the origin of time and into its ensuing diachronic process: it is the comparison offered by Vedic deity Aditi, the Not-Bound or Enemy of Bondage, that shows that there is no question of choosing one of the two apparent options: as the mother of the Aditya she has the same type of relationship with one of his sons, Dakṣa, the minor sovereign. who represents the Creative Energy, being at the same time his mother and daughter, as is true for the whole group of sovereign gods to which she belongs.
He has presented at several national and international conferences. Holmes teaches postgraduate nursing theory, forensic nursing, and policy courses at universities in Ottawa, Montréal, and Pittsburgh. As of 2014, he was a University Research Chair in Forensic Nursing (2009-2019), at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Nursing; a Full Professor, Director, and Associate Dean of the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Nursing; and the Editor-in-Chief of Aporia - the Nursing Journal. Holmes has also been an Honorary Visiting Professor at the University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia (2013-2016); Fort de Kock College of Health Sciences, West Sumatra, Indonesia (2013-2016); Binawan Institute of Health Sciences, Jakarta, Indonesia (2013-2016); the University of Chester, Faculty of Health and Social Care, Chester, United Kingdom (2008-2014); and City University, School of Community and Health Sciences, London, United Kingdom (2008-2013).
During a 2008 lecture and in a subsequent article Carotta presented an extension of his theory, which interprets the Gospel as a diegetic transposition (see above).. English version: "The Gospels as diegetic Transposition: A possible Solution to the Aporia 'Did Jesus exist?'". In 2009 Carotta wrote an article in which he supported the arguments for the authenticity of the so-called Orpheos Bakkikos, a supposedly syncretistic early Christian amulet showing the Crucifixion of Christ.. English version: "Orpheos Bakkikos — The Missing Cross". Carotta postulates that the lost amulet showed the funerary wax effigy of Caesar, presented on a tropaeum. In a 2011 article Carotta argued for a restitution of the Liberalia (17 March) as the correct date of Caesar's funeral ceremony, and for a dismissal of the chronology developed by 19th century German scholars.. In a 2012 book containing earlier and new articles he argued that Fulvia was the mother of Christianity and possibly the author of the ur-gospel.
According to Phillips, his version of the Socratic Method was inspired not only by the Greek interrogative elements practiced by Socrates of the elenctic (Greek for 'cross examination,' 'encounter,' 'inquiry'), aporia (Greek for 'doubt') and maieutic (Greek for 'midwifery,' in this case giving birth to ideas one harbors from within), but by the philosopher Justus Buchler's notions of human judgment and query, by philosopher Walter Kaufmann's notion of the "Socratic type" and view that the Socratic Method boils down to the sustained consideration of objections and alternatives to any given way of seeing things, as well as by Hannah Arendt's notion of the Socratic persona and performativity. A typical Socrates Cafe group meets in a public place, is open to anyone who wishes to attend, and Socratically explores a question which is chosen by vote or which is announced shortly in advance. Typically there are no prerequisites, and no reading or other preparation is required. Socrates Cafe Society www.Meetup.
Wayne Koestenbaum writes: > Mary Jo Bang's remarkable elegies recall the late work of Ingeborg > Bachmann—a febrile, recursive lyricism. Like Nietzsche or Plath, Bang flouts > naysayers; luridly alive, she drives deep into aporia, her new, sad country. > Her stanzas, sometimes spilling, sometimes severe, perform an uncanny death- > song, recklessly extended—nearly to the breaking point. David Orr writes: > This is perhaps why Mary Jo Bang largely succeeds in her new book of elegies > for her son, called, simply enough, “Elegy.” Bang’s previous four > collections are polished and frequently interesting, but they also contain > more than their share of overwrought and overthought poetry about > poetry....That can’t be said of “Elegy.” This is a tightly focused, > completely forthright collection written almost entirely in the bleakest key > imaginable. The poems aren’t all great, some of them aren’t even good, but > collectively they are overwhelming — which is both a compliment to Bang’s > talent and to the toughness of mind that allowed her to attempt this > difficult project in the first place.
In August 2011, Wayne announced that an album full of material was going to be released later in the year. The title of the album was Curios; 12 tracks that included both covers of other artist material and original recordings. There were two versions made available; a limited edition (numbered and signed), released through Eyes Wide Shut Recordings available from September to November 2011 and after that date, through Cherry Red Records, both in digital and CD format. Track listing: # "Naked & Savage" (originally by The Mission) # "Ordinary World" (originally by Duran Duran) # "Enjoy The Silence" (originally by Depeche Mode) # "Another Lonely Day" (originally by Ben Harper) # "Wichita Lineman" (originally by Glen Campbell) # "Ashes To Ashes" (originally by David Bowie) # "I Go To Sleep" (originally by Ray Davies) # "Where The Wild Roses Grow" (originally by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds with Kylie Minogue) # "Dangerous Eyes" # "Calling Your Name" (originally by All About Eve) # "Unravel" (originally by Björk) # "A Change In The Weather" (Aporia Mix) Bonus tracks include: "You'll Never Walk Alone", "Wichita Lineman" (Myosotis Mix), "Enjoy The Silence" (Thinner Air Mix).
Home's first books, which appeared between 1988 and 1995, are essentially an outgrowth and elaboration of his earlier SMILE writings, though without their fragmentary-aphoristic character and eclectic mix of genres. The Assault on Culture, written when Home was twenty-five, is an underground art history sketching Home's ultimately personal history of ideas and influences in post-World War II fringe radical art and political currents, and including – for the first time in a book – a tactically manipulated history of post-war culture to make it conclude with Neoism (and which it is sometimes claimed includes character assassinations of individual Neoists) that was continued in the later book Neoism, Plagiarism and Praxis. Despite its highly personal perspective and agenda, The Assault on Culture: Utopian currents from Lettrisme to Class War (Aporia Press and Unpopular Books, London, 1988) is considered a useful art- history work, providing an introduction to a range of cultural currents which had, at that time at least, been under-documented. The work has, however, been highly criticised for deficiencies in its view of utopian currents, including its personal biases, by such writers as Bob Black.. "Taking Culture with a Grain Assault", in Bob Black, Beneath the Underground.

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