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Journal ArticleDOI

Eye and Mind

Mikel Dufrenne, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 1, pp 167-173
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This article is published in Research in Phenomenology.The article was published on 1980-01-01. It has received 275 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Philosophy of mind & Continental philosophy.

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Towards a dialogic understanding of the relationship between CSCL and teaching thinking skills

TL;DR: This paper uses critical literature review, conceptual analysis, and evidence from case studies to argue for the value of a dialogic interpretative framework that links the goal of teaching thinking with the method of CSCL, and suggests that dialogue is itself the primary thinking skill from which all others are derived.
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The Public Availability of Actions andArtefacts

TL;DR: This paper prioritises the relations between awareness, perception and the public availability of actions and artefacts and approaches a complex and difficult body of work from the perspective of technology design to extract some relevant insights and theoretical principles.
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Ocularcentrism and its Others: A Framework for Metatheoretical Analysis

TL;DR: There is a contemporary scepticism towards vision-based metaphors in management and organization studies that reflects a more general pattern across the social sciences as mentioned in this paper, which provides a useful basis for metatheoretical analysis of the philosophical discourse that informs organizational analysis.
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Simulation, safety and surgery

TL;DR: The place of simulation in contemporary healthcare education and training is explored, highlighting the challenges of recreating complex clinical settings which can support the development of competent, rounded and caring practitioners, and address issues around human factors as well as technical skill.
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‘The argument of the eye’? The cultural geographies of installation art:

TL;DR: In the mid 1980s Cosgrove described a geography based on the 'Argument of the Eye' as discussed by the authors, and since then geography, like the humanities more broadly, has seen the decline of vision's hegemony.