@misc{Brendel2018, author = {Brendel, Heiko}, title = {'Hasty observations'?}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, number = {166}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43500}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-435000}, pages = {184 -- 208}, year = {2018}, abstract = {This article examines geographical field research in Albania and Montenegro under Austro-Hungarian occupation, which lasted from 1916 to 1918. It focusses on one of the most important German-speaking geographers of the early 20 th century, Eugen Oberhummer (1859-1944), a pupil of Friedrich Ratzel, the founder of German geo-politics. In 1917 and 1918, Oberhummer went on two expeditions to Montenegro and Albania during the First World War. He already had travelled in four continents and vaguely knew the Western Balkans from an expedition in 1907. It will be argued that the actual situation in Albania and Montenegro did not alter, but did rather reinforce Oberhummer's attitudes and opinions on the 'other' he encountered. Thus, the two war expeditions - Oberhummer primarily met high-ranking Austro-Hungarian officials and only few locals - confirmed his expectations basing on his 'Ratzelian' theoretical conceptions. It will further be argued that - in contrast to the much younger and less experienced 'scholars-at-arms' of the expedition of 1916 - war and violence were of secondary relevance for the well-travelled and renowned professor of geography in his late 50s. Neither in Oberhummer's articles nor in his diaries the war and the occupation of Albania and Montenegro made up an important part. In Oberhummer's 'Ratzelian' view, humans could not change or over-come the basic features of geography, as humans were clearly subordinated to the elemental forces of geography. People, over generations, adapted to geography, not the other way round. The on-going First World War was an opportunity for Oberhummer to travel to Albania and Montenegro, but the guerrilla warfare in large parts of Montenegro, the violence against the civilian population, and the fighting at the Albanian front were of secondary relevance and interest for him. Nevertheless, what Oberhummer observed offers great insights into the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Montenegro and Albania from the perspective of a renowned and - given the general circumstances - pleasantly relaxed Ratzelian geographer at the height of his academic career.}, language = {en} } @article{Petsche2007, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Will we find utopia? : converging technologies and human beings}, isbn = {978-3-89404-941-6}, year = {2007}, language = {en} } @article{Kern2004, author = {Kern, Andrea}, title = {Why do our reasons come to an end? : the concept of finite knowledge}, year = {2004}, language = {en} } @article{Stoecker2009, author = {St{\"o}cker, Ralf}, title = {Why animals can't act}, issn = {0020-174X}, doi = {10.1080/00201740902917135}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Given the many marvelous things animals can do and moreover the success we have in employing the intentional stance towards animals, it seems to be almost unthinkable to say that animals could not act at all. Nonetheless, this is exactly what I argue for. I claim that strictly speaking there is no animal action, only behaviour. I defend this claim in three steps. Firstly, I recapitulate some of the weighty grounds that speak in favour of animal agency. Secondly, I explain why I still doubt that animals act. The argument is that the account of agency that I take to be the most attractive one entails that animals can't act. Since this account of agency is non-standard, I spend the bulk of the paper with providing a sketch of what, according to it, actions are. Finally, I explain why it is still so natural and promising to regard animals as agents, although in fact they aren't. As one might put it: of course they act, only strictly speaking they don't.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Knoll2013, author = {Knoll, Lisa Joanna}, title = {When the hedgehog kisses the frog : a functional and structural investigatin of syntactic processing in the developing brain}, series = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, volume = {150}, journal = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, publisher = {MPI}, address = {Leipzig}, isbn = {978-3-941504-34-9}, pages = {157 S.}, year = {2013}, language = {en} } @misc{NoirayIskarousWhalen2014, author = {Noiray, Aude and Iskarous, Khalil and Whalen, Douglas H.}, title = {Variability in English vowels is comparable in articulation and acoustics}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {137}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-399196}, pages = {18}, year = {2014}, abstract = {The nature of the links between speech production and perception has been the subject of longstanding debate. The present study investigated the articulatory parameter of tongue height and the acoustic F1-F0 difference for the phonological distinction of vowel height in American English front vowels. Multiple repetitions of /i, ɪ, e, ɛ, {\ae}/ in [(h)Vd] sequences were recorded in seven adult speakers. Articulatory (ultrasound) and acoustic data were collected simultaneously to provide a direct comparison of variability in vowel production in both domains. Results showed idiosyncratic patterns of articulation for contrasting the three front vowel pairs /i-ɪ/, /e-ɛ/, and /ɛ-{\ae}/ across subjects, with the degree of variability in vowel articulation comparable to that observed in the acoustics for all seven participants. However, contrary to what was expected, some speakers showed reversals for tongue height for /ɪ/-/e/ that were also reflected in acoustics, with F1 higher for /ɪ/ than for /e/. The data suggest the phonological distinction of height is conveyed via speaker-specific articulatory-acoustic patterns that do not strictly match features descriptions. However, the acoustic signal is faithful to the articulatory configuration that generated it, carrying the crucial information for perceptual contrast.}, language = {en} } @misc{Ette2011, author = {Ette, Ottmar}, title = {Urbanity and literature}, series = {European Review}, journal = {European Review}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-413767}, pages = {17}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Transarea studies focus upon spaces as created by the movements that criss-cross them. From this point of view, from its very beginnings, literature is closely interrelated with a vectorial (and much less with a purely spatial) conception of history - and with urbanity, which plays a decisive role in Gilgamesh's travels through a (narrative) cosmos centered upon the city of Uruk. This article explores the city as a transareal space of movement in three examples of literature, with no fixed abode, around the turn of the millennium, i.e. Assia Djebar's Les Nuits de Strasbourg, Emine Sevgi Oezdamar's Istanbul-Berlin Trilogy, and Cecile Wajsbrot's L'ile aux musees. These three writers project, in a very specific way, cities in motion as anagrammatic and fractal structures.}, language = {en} } @article{Menke2003, author = {Menke, Christoph}, title = {Two Kinds of Pratice : on the relation between social discipline and the aesthetics of existence}, year = {2003}, language = {en} } @misc{Gasser2019, author = {Gasser, Lucy}, title = {Towards Eurasia}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, number = {164}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43358}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-433585}, pages = {188 -- 202}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In order to heed the call in world literature studies to work against disciplinary Eurocentrism by refiguring both what constitutes world literature and how this is read, in this article I propose world literature as an archive of world-making practices and as an impulse for the articulation of alternative methodological approaches. This takes world literature from the postcolonial South as, following Pheng Cheah, instantiating a modality of world literature in which the need for imagining worlds with alternative centres to those determined by coloniality is particularly acute. A response to this is facilitated and illustrated by a reading of Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore's Letters from Russia (1930), and South African writer/activist Alex La Guma's A Soviet Journey (1978). By drawing forward connections between the postcolonial South and the former Soviet Union, this complicates traditional colonial arrangements of the colonial 'centre' as cradle of civilisation and culture, as well as postcolonial scholarship's cumulative fetishisation of 'Europe', by allowing a reshuffling of the co-ordinates determining 'centres' and 'peripheries' and a more nuanced grasp of 'Europe' simultaneously. These imaginative journeys destabilise 'Europe' as closed category and call forth Eurasia as a more appropriate categorical-cartographical framework for thinking this space and the connections and (hi)story-telling it stages and fosters.}, language = {en} } @misc{BrunnerGengSotiropoulouetal.2014, author = {Brunner, Jana and Geng, Christian and Sotiropoulou, Stavroula and Gafos, Adamantios I.}, title = {Timing of German onset and word boundary clusters}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {136}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-399178}, pages = {52}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Previous studies suggest that there are special timing relations in syllable onsets. The consonants are assumed to be timed, on the one hand, with the vocalic nucleus and, on the other hand, with each other. These competing timing relations result in the C-center effect. However, the C-center effect has not consistently been found in languages with complex onsets. Moreover, it has occasionally been found in languages disallowing complex onsets. The present study investigates onset timing in German while discussing alternative explanations (not related to bonding) for the timing patterns observed. Six German speakers were recorded via Electromagnetic Articulography. The corpus contained items with four clusters (/sk/, /kv/, /gl/, and /pl/). The clusters occur in word-initial position, word-medial position, and across a word boundary preceding different vowels. The results suggest that segmental properties (i.e., oral-laryngeal coordination, coarticulatory resistance) determine the observed timing patterns, and specifically the absence or presence of the C-center effect.}, language = {en} } @article{Obermauer2005, author = {Obermauer, R.}, title = {Three-dimensional freedom : on the concept of freedom with Theodor W. Adorno and Cornelius Castoriadis}, year = {2005}, language = {en} } @misc{McLaughlin2017, author = {McLaughlin, Carly}, title = {They don't look like children}, series = {Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies}, journal = {Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-412803}, pages = {18}, year = {2017}, abstract = {In October 2016, following a campaign led by Labour Peer Lord Alfred Dubs, the first child asylum-seekers allowed entry to the UK under new legislation (the 'Dubs amendment') arrived in England. Their arrival was captured by a heavy media presence, and very quickly doubts were raised by right-wing tabloids and politicians about their age. In this article, I explore the arguments underpinning the Dubs campaign and the media coverage of the children's arrival as a starting point for interrogating representational practices around children who seek asylum. I illustrate how the campaign was premised on a universal politics of childhood that inadvertently laid down the terms on which these children would be given protection, namely their innocence. The universality of childhood fuels public sympathy for child asylum-seekers, underlies the 'child first, migrant second' approach advocated by humanitarian organisations, and it was a key argument in the 'Dubs amendment'. Yet the campaign highlights how representations of child asylum-seekers rely on codes that operate to identify 'unchildlike' children. As I show, in the context of the criminalisation of undocumented migrants', childhood is no longer a stable category which guarantees protection, but is subject to scrutiny and suspicion and can, ultimately, be disproved.}, language = {en} } @book{Menke1998, author = {Menke, Christoph}, title = {The sovereignty of art : aesthetic negativity in Adorno and Derrida}, publisher = {MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass}, isbn = {0-262-13340-7}, pages = {XIII, 310 S.}, year = {1998}, language = {en} } @article{Schneider1997, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius}, title = {The situatedness of thinking, knowing and speaking : Wittgenstein and Gendlin ; mit einer Antwort von Gendlin}, year = {1997}, language = {en} } @article{Krueger1998, author = {Kr{\"u}ger, Hans-Peter}, title = {The second nature of human beings : an invitation for John McDowell to discuss Helmuth Plessner's philosophical anthropology ; with a comment on Hans-Peter Kr{\"u}ger's paper by John McDowell, p. 120-125}, year = {1998}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-57864, title = {The Right to Research}, series = {McGill-Queen's Refugee and Forced Migration Studies}, journal = {McGill-Queen's Refugee and Forced Migration Studies}, editor = {Reed, Kate and Schenck, Marcia C.}, publisher = {McGill-Queens University Press}, address = {Montreal}, isbn = {978-0-228-01455-3}, pages = {xvi, 257}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Refugees and displaced people rarely figure as historical actors, and almost never as historical narrators. We often assume a person residing in a refugee camp, lacking funding, training, social networks, and other material resources that enable the research and writing of academic history, cannot be a historian because a historian cannot be a person residing in a refugee camp. The Right to Research disrupts this tautology by featuring nine works by refugee and host-community researchers from across Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. Identifying the intrinsic challenges of making space for diverse voices within a research framework and infrastructure that is inherently unequal, this edited volume offers a critical reflection on what history means, who narrates it, and what happens when those long excluded from authorship bring their knowledge and perspectives to bear. Chapters address topics such as education in Kakuma Refugee Camp, the political power of hip-hop in Rwanda, women migrants to Yemen, and the development of photojournalism in Kurdistan. Exploring what it means to become a researcher, The Right to Research understands historical scholarship as an ongoing conversation - one in which we all have a right to participate.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Rothermich2013, author = {Rothermich, Kathrin}, title = {The rhytm{\"i}s gonna get you: ERP and fMRI evidence on the interaction of metric and semantic processing}, series = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, volume = {147}, journal = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, publisher = {Direct World}, address = {Dresden}, isbn = {978-3-941504-31-8}, pages = {184 S.}, year = {2013}, language = {en} } @article{Krueger2004, author = {Kr{\"u}ger, Hans-Peter}, title = {The public nature of human beings : parallels between classical pragmatism and Helmuth Plessner's philosophical anthropology}, issn = {0015-1831}, year = {2004}, language = {en} } @article{BrilmyerTrentinXiang2019, author = {Brilmyer, S. Pearl and Trentin, Filippo and Xiang, Zairong}, title = {The ontology of the couple or, what queer theory knows about numbers}, series = {GLQ- A journal of lesbian and gay studies}, volume = {25}, journal = {GLQ- A journal of lesbian and gay studies}, number = {2}, publisher = {Duke University Press}, address = {Durham}, issn = {1064-2684}, doi = {10.1215/10642684-7367717}, pages = {223 -- 255}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @article{Kern1998, author = {Kern, Andrea}, title = {The obligation of judgment : Kant and Derrida}, year = {1998}, language = {en} } @book{Martins2020, author = {Martins, Ansgar}, title = {The migration of metaphysics into the realm of the profane}, series = {IJS studies in Judaica ; 20}, journal = {IJS studies in Judaica ; 20}, publisher = {Brill}, address = {Leiden}, isbn = {978-90-04-39905-1}, pages = {XVIII, 223}, year = {2020}, abstract = {In this study, I examine and interpret Kabbalistic traces in Theodor W. Adorno's philosophy. The fundamental issue is hardly new. The editor of Adorno's and Benjamin's writings, Rolf Tiedemann, has pointed to "the affinity between Adorno's thought and some motifs of Jewish mysticism.}, language = {en} } @misc{Hoffmann2017, author = {Hoffmann, Dierk}, title = {The GDR's Westpolitik and everyday anticommunism in West Germany}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, number = {167}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43518}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-435184}, pages = {17}, year = {2017}, abstract = {West German anticommunism and the SED's Westarbeit were to some extentinterrelated. From the beginning, each German state had attemted to stabilise itsown social system while trying to discredit its political opponent. The claim tosole representation and the refusal to acknowledge each other delineated governmentalaction on both sides. Anticommunism inWest Germany re-developed under theconditions of the Cold War, which allowed it to become virtually the reason ofstate and to serve as a tool for the exclusion of KPD supporters. In its turn, theSED branded the West German State as'revanchist'and instrumentalised itsanticommunism to persecute and eliminate opponents within the GDR. Bothphenomena had an integrative and exclusionary element.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kadyamusuma2011, author = {Kadyamusuma, McLoddy R.}, title = {The effect of brain damage and linguistic experience on shona lexicaltone processing}, address = {Potsdam}, pages = {165 S.}, year = {2011}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Peschke2009, author = {Peschke, Claudia}, title = {The dorsal stream in the auditory-motor integration of speech}, address = {Potsdam}, pages = {146 S.}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Raettig2010, author = {Raettig, Tim}, title = {The cortical infrastructure of language processing: evidence from functional and anatomical neuroimaging}, series = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, volume = {119}, journal = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, publisher = {Max Planck Inst. for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences}, address = {Leipzig}, isbn = {978-3-941504-03-5}, pages = {181 S.}, year = {2010}, language = {en} } @article{Kern2000, author = {Kern, Andrea}, title = {The Concept of the performative : between pragmatism and deconstruction}, year = {2000}, language = {en} } @article{RohlfingMitevaMoronettietal.2011, author = {Rohlfing, Anne-Katrin and Miteva, Yana and Moronetti, Lorenza and He, Liping and Lamitina, Todd}, title = {The caenorhabditis elegans mucin-like protein OSM-8 negatively regulates osmosensitive physiology via the transmembrane protein PTR-23}, series = {PLoS Genetics : a peer-reviewed, open-access journal}, volume = {7}, journal = {PLoS Genetics : a peer-reviewed, open-access journal}, number = {1}, publisher = {PLoS}, address = {San Fransisco}, issn = {1553-7390}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1001267}, pages = {17}, year = {2011}, abstract = {The molecular mechanisms of animal cell osmoregulation are poorly understood. Genetic studies of osmoregulation in yeast have identified mucin-like proteins as critical regulators of osmosensitive signaling and gene expression. Whether mucins play similar roles in higher organisms is not known. Here, we show that mutations in the Caenorhabditis elegans mucin-like gene osm-8 specifically disrupt osmoregulatory physiological processes. In osm-8 mutants, normal physiological responses to hypertonic stress, such as the accumulation of organic osmolytes and activation of osmoresponsive gene expression, are constitutively activated. As a result, osm-8 mutants exhibit resistance to normally lethal levels of hypertonic stress and have an osmotic stress resistance (Osr) phenotype. To identify genes required for Osm-8 phenotypes, we performed a genome-wide RNAi osm-8 suppressor screen. After screening,18,000 gene knockdowns, we identified 27 suppressors that specifically affect the constitutive osmosensitive gene expression and Osr phenotypes of osm-8 mutants. We found that one suppressor, the transmembrane protein PTR-23, is co-expressed with osm-8 in the hypodermis and strongly suppresses several Osm-8 phenotypes, including the transcriptional activation of many osmosensitive mRNAs, constitutive glycerol accumulation, and osmotic stress resistance. Our studies are the first to show that an extracellular mucin-like protein plays an important role in animal osmoregulation in a manner that requires the activity of a novel transmembrane protein. Given that mucins and transmembrane proteins play similar roles in yeast osmoregulation, our findings suggest a possible evolutionarily conserved role for the mucin-plasma membrane interface in eukaryotic osmoregulation.}, language = {en} } @article{Krueger2004, author = {Kr{\"u}ger, Hans-Peter}, title = {The abandonment of living nature as its historical goal}, year = {2004}, language = {en} } @article{Petsche2014, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, title = {The 'Chemistry of Space': The Sources of Hermann Grassmann's Scientific Achievements}, series = {Annals of science}, volume = {71}, journal = {Annals of science}, number = {4}, publisher = {Routledge, Taylor \& Francis Group}, address = {Abingdon}, issn = {0003-3790}, doi = {10.1080/00033790.2013.877339}, pages = {522 -- 576}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Albert Lewis's article (Annals of Science, 1977) analysing the influence of Friedrich Schleiermacher on Hermann Grassmann, stimulated many different studies on the founder of n-dimensional outer algebra. Following a brief outline of the various, sometimes diverging, analyses of Grassmann's creative thinking, new research is presented which confirms Lewis's original contribution and widens it considerably. It will be shown that: i. Grassmann, although a self-taught mathematician, was at the centre of a hitherto understated intellectual trend, which was defining for Germany. Initiated by Pestalozzi's concept of elementary mathematical education and culminating in the modern mathematics of the late 19th Century, it was reflected in the contributions of Grassmann, Riemann, Jacobi and Eisenstein. ii. Hermann Grassmann, his father Justus, and his brother Robert were all demonstrably influenced by Schleiermacher's dialectic; however the two brothers responded to it in very different ways. iii. Whilst the more philosophical parts of Hermann's 1844 Extension Theory are characterised by the influence of Schleiermacher and also by the mathematical knowledge of his father, the entire development of this work is the unfolding of a single idea based on the father's interpretation of combinatorial multiplication as a 'chemical conjunction', which was developed largely dialectically by Hermann.}, language = {en} } @article{Petsche2005, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Sustainable Development in the New L{\"a}nder}, isbn = {3-89404-935-9}, year = {2005}, language = {en} } @misc{Scianna2018, author = {Scianna, Bastian Matteo}, title = {Stuck in the past?}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {153}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-420615}, pages = {17}, year = {2018}, abstract = {After the Civil War the Spanish army functioned as a guardian of domestic order, but suffered from antiquated material and little financial means. These factors have been described as fundamental reasons for the army's low potential wartime capability. This article draws on British and German sources to demonstrate how Spanish military culture prevented an augmented effectiveness and organisational change. Claiming that the army merely lacked funding and modern equipment, falls considerably short in grasping the complexities of military effectiveness and organisational cultures, and might prove fatal for current attempts to develop foreign armed forces in conflict or post-conflict zones.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kappes2010, author = {Kappes, Juliane}, title = {Speech imitation in verbal repetition : evidence from healthy speakers and from speakers with aphasia}, publisher = {Der Andere Verlag}, address = {T{\"o}nning}, isbn = {978-3-89959-963-3}, pages = {136 S.}, year = {2010}, language = {en} } @misc{Kay2019, author = {Kay, Alex J.}, title = {Speaking the unspeakable}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam Philosophische Reihe}, number = {162}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-43423}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-434230}, pages = {14}, year = {2019}, abstract = {This article discusses the filmic representation of the infamous Wannsee Conference, when fifteen senior German officials met at a villa on the shore of a Berlin lake to discuss and co-ordinate the implementation of the so-called final solution to the Jewish question. The understanding reached during the course of the ninety-minute meeting cleared the way for the Europe-wide killing of six million Jews. The article sets out to answer the principal challenge facing anyone attempting to recreate the Wannsee Conference on film: what was the atmosphere of this conference and the attitude of the participants? Moreover, it discusses various ethical aspects related to the portrayal of evil, not in actions but in words, using the medium of film. In doing so, it focuses on the BBC/HBO television film Conspiracy (2001), directed by Frank Pierson, probing its historical accuracy and discussing its artistic credibility.}, language = {en} } @article{Schneider2005, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius}, title = {Speaking about the interior : a look at Gerhard Roth with Ludwig Wittgestein}, year = {2005}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Merrill2013, author = {Merrill, Julia}, title = {Song and speech perception : evidence from fMRI, lesion studies and musical disorder}, series = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, volume = {148}, journal = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, publisher = {Max Planck Inst. for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences}, address = {Leipzig}, isbn = {978-3-941504-32-5}, pages = {192 S.}, year = {2013}, language = {en} } @article{Schenck2020, author = {Schenck, Marcia C.}, title = {Small Strangers at the School of Friendship}, series = {German Historical Institute Bulletin: German Historical Institute Washington Bulletin}, volume = {2020}, journal = {German Historical Institute Bulletin: German Historical Institute Washington Bulletin}, number = {15: Histories of Migrant Knowledge: Transatlantic and Global Perspectives}, publisher = {German Historical Institute}, address = {Washington}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-494614}, pages = {41 -- 59}, year = {2020}, abstract = {"Why," Francisca Isidro wonders, "did we have to leave our families and move so far away, only to come back as cooks, waitresses, sales assistants, and the like?" And she recalls: "We came back from our time in East Germany with professions that were not held in particu-larly high regard in Mozambique. Nobody understood why we didn't return as engineers, doctors and teachers. 'A waitress?,' they would wonder. 'Why, they could have become a waitress in Mozambique. Nobody needs to spend so many years in school for that.'"2And with that, Ms. Isidro puts her fi nger right on a misapprehension at the heart of an ambitious state-led education migration program that saw 900 Mozambican children attend the School of Friendship (Schule der Freundschaft , SdF) in Staßfurt in the district of Magdeburg, in what today is Saxony-Anhalt, in the German Democratic Republic (GDR, or East Germany) from 1982 to 1988.3 Ms. Isidro returned to Mozambique as a trained salesperson for clothing, a profession she neither chose nor ever worked in again subsequently. Like her, these 900 children had to navigate the diverging values that particular environments bestowed upon knowledge. What they learned was interpreted diff erently in their home communities, at the SdF, and in their German host families}, language = {en} } @incollection{Demske2021, author = {Demske, Ulrike}, title = {Silent Heads in Early New High German}, series = {Headedness and/or grammatical anarchy?}, booktitle = {Headedness and/or grammatical anarchy?}, publisher = {Language Science Press}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {I -- XXIX}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The rising standard language in Early New High German (1350-1650) provides particularly interesting cases for the question of missing heads on all levels of language structure. A well-known example are subordinate clauses lacking a finite auxiliary verb, traditionally called Afinite Constructions. Based on new data, drawn from two treebanks of Early New High German, the present paper will briefly sketch the distribution of ACs, before establishing that they are in fact a type of ellipsis and do not cluster with other non-finite clauses in German. The remainder of the paper addresses the question what kind of information is missing in ACs and how this information is retrieved. Obviously, auxiliary drop in ENHG represents a type of ellipsis rarely attested in present-day German.}, language = {en} } @article{PiechottaRailaRicketal.2012, author = {Piechotta, Marion and Raila, Jens and Rick, Markus and Beyerbach, Martin and Hoppen, Hans-Otto}, title = {Serum transthyretin concentration is decreased in dogs with nonthyroidal illness}, series = {Veterinary clinical pathology}, volume = {41}, journal = {Veterinary clinical pathology}, number = {1}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Malden}, issn = {0275-6382}, doi = {10.1111/j.1939-165X.2011.00394.x}, pages = {110 -- 113}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Background: Hypothyroidism in dogs is often difficult to diagnose owing to nonspecific clinical signs and laboratory test results that can be mimicked by nonthyroidal illness (NTI). Thyroxine (T4) circulates in blood mainly bound to T4-binding globulin and, to a lesser degree, transthyretin (TTR) and albumin. The concentration of total T4 depends on the concentrations of these binding proteins. Objectives: We hypothesized that dogs with NTI and decreased serum total T4 concentrations would have decreased serum TTR concentrations. The objective of the study was to measure and compare serum TTR concentrations in healthy dogs, in dogs with NTI and low serum T4 concentrations, and in dogs with hypothyroidism. Methods: Assignment of dogs to 3 groups was based on physical examination and serum concentrations of T4 and TSH (mean +/- SD): for healthy dogs (n = 13), T4 was 24.8 +/- 3.6 nmol/L and TSH was 0.15 +/- 0.08 mu g/L; for dogs with NTI and low T4 (n = 20), T4 was 3.2 +/- 3.0 nmol/L and TSH was 0.18 +/- 0.13 mu g/L; and for hypothyroid dogs (n = 19), T4 was 5.3 +/- 4.3 nmol/L and TSH was 2.33 +/- 1.90 mu g/L). TTR concentrations in serum were determined semiquantitatively using western blot analysis. Results: Serum TTR concentration (mean +/- SD) was decreased in the dogs with NTI (24.8 +/- 7.9 mg/L) compared with that of hypothyroid dogs (41.1 +/- 21.4 mg/L, P = .0035). Differences were not found between TTR concentrations in clinically healthy dogs (33.3 +/- 10.1 mg/L) and hypothyroid dogs or dogs with NTI. Conclusions: Serum TTR concentrations were significantly decreased in dogs with NTI and low T4 compared with concentrations in hypothyroid dogs. Additional studies should be done to determine if TTR concentrations can discriminate between dogs with NTI and low T4 and dogs with primary hypothyroidism.}, language = {en} } @article{RoesslerBomhoffHaschkeetal.2011, author = {R{\"o}ssler, Patrick and Bomhoff, Jana and Haschke, Josef Ferdinand and Kersten, Jan and M{\"u}ller, R{\"u}diger}, title = {Selection and impact of press photography}, series = {Communications : the European journal of communication research}, volume = {36}, journal = {Communications : the European journal of communication research}, number = {4}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, address = {Berlin}, issn = {0341-2059}, doi = {10.1515/COMM.2011.021}, pages = {415 -- 439}, year = {2011}, abstract = {The selection of 'good' pictures has increasingly become a crucial factor when transmitting news to the recipients. Every day thousands of events are happening and millions of pictures are taken. By choosing photographs for newspapers and magazines, photographic editorial departments want to attract the recipients' attention, evoke emotions and get them to read their stories. But what exactly is a good picture that meets these expectations? Which criteria are decisive for selecting pictures and what effects of this selection can be measured on the recipients' side? This article presents the results of a research project carried out at the University of Erfurt in 2008 and conducted in collaboration with the German weekly magazine stern. It deals with the selection and impact of press photography by introducing the concept 'photo news factors'. Applying the traditional news value theory to pictures, photo news factors are defined as selection criteria that, on the part of the communicator, decide whether the press photos are worth publishing. Furthermore, they are assumed to exert an influence on the intensity of attention that a picture arouses.}, language = {en} } @misc{RoesslerBomhoffHaschkeetal.2011, author = {R{\"o}ssler, Patrick and Bomhoff, Jana and Haschke, Josef Ferdinand and Kersten, Jan and M{\"u}ller, R{\"u}diger}, title = {Selection and impact of press photography}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {103}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-93694}, pages = {25}, year = {2011}, abstract = {The selection of 'good' pictures has increasingly become a crucial factor when transmitting news to the recipients. Every day thousands of events are happening and millions of pictures are taken. By choosing photographs for newspapers and magazines, photographic editorial departments want to attract the recipients' attention, evoke emotions and get them to read their stories. But what exactly is a good picture that meets these expectations? Which criteria are decisive for selecting pictures and what effects of this selection can be measured on the recipients' side? This article presents the results of a research project carried out at the University of Erfurt in 2008 and conducted in collaboration with the German weekly magazine stern. It deals with the selection and impact of press photography by introducing the concept 'photo news factors'. Applying the traditional news value theory to pictures, photo news factors are defined as selection criteria that, on the part of the communicator, decide whether the press photos are worth publishing. Furthermore, they are assumed to exert an influence on the intensity of attention that a picture arouses.}, language = {en} } @article{SchulzeWenzel1997, author = {Schulze, Annedore and Wenzel, Vera}, title = {Scientific discourse and circumstances : the case of electroluminescence}, year = {1997}, language = {en} } @misc{Schwarz2018, author = {Schwarz, Anja}, title = {Schomburgk's Chook}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {141}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-412959}, pages = {16}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Focusing on the politics of museums, collections and the untold stories of the scientific 'specimens' that travelled between Germany and Australia, this article reconstructs the historical, interpersonal and geopolitical contexts that made it possible for the stuffed skin of an Australian malleefowl to become part of the collections of Berlin's Museum f{\"u}r Naturkunde. The author enquires into the kinds of contexts that are habitually considered irrelevant when a specimen of natural history is treated as an object of taxonomic information only. In case of this particular specimen human and non-human history become entangled in ways that link the fate of this one small Australian bird to the German revolutionary generation of 1848, to Germany's nineteenth-century colonial aspirations, to settler-Indigenous relations, to the cruel realities that underpinned the production of scientific knowledge in colonial Australia, and to a present-day interest in reconstructing Indigenous knowledges.}, language = {en} } @article{Gruene2013, author = {Gr{\"u}ne, Stefanie}, title = {Sartre on mistaken sincerity ('Being and Nothingness')}, issn = {0966-8373}, year = {2013}, language = {en} } @article{Sagnol2003, author = {Sagnol, Marc}, title = {Rose Auslander's Morariugasse (Interwar Czernowitz)}, issn = {0014-2115}, year = {2003}, abstract = {Topographical description of the Morariugasse (today Sagaidachny Street) in Czernowitz, in which Rose Auslander spent her childhood and youth. An attempt to trace reminiscences of this street and the world of her childhood in her poetic work}, language = {en} } @article{Menke1998, author = {Menke, Christoph}, title = {Rewriting the law : Thomas Locher's discourse 2}, year = {1998}, language = {en} } @book{Schenck2022, author = {Schenck, Marcia C.}, title = {Remembering African Labor Migration to the Second World}, series = {Palgrave Macmillan Transnational History Series}, journal = {Palgrave Macmillan Transnational History Series}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-031-06778-5}, issn = {2634-6273}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-031-06776-1}, pages = {XXVII, 377}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This open access book is about Mozambicans and Angolans who migrated in state-sponsored schemes to East Germany in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s. They went to work and to be trained as a vanguard labor force for the intended African industrial revolutions. While they were there, they contributed their labor power to the East German economy. This book draws on more than 260 life history interviews and uncovers complex and contradictory experiences and transnational encounters. What emerges is a series of dualities that exist side by side in the memories of the former migrants: the state and the individual, work and consumption, integration and exclusion, loss and gain, and the past in the past and the past in the present and future. By uncovering these dualities, the book explores the lives of African migrants moving between the Third and Second worlds. Devoted to the memories of worker-trainees, this transnational study comes at a time when historians are uncovering the many varied, complicated, and important connections within the global socialist world.}, language = {en} } @misc{Eckstein2018, author = {Eckstein, Lars}, title = {Recollecting bones}, series = {Postcolonial Studies}, journal = {Postcolonial Studies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-413654}, pages = {15}, year = {2018}, abstract = {This article critically engages with the different politics of memory involved in debates over the restitution of Indigenous Australian ancestral remains stolen by colonial actors in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and brought to Berlin in the name of science. The debates crystallise how deeply divided German scientific discourses still are over the question of whether the historical and moral obligations of colonial injustice should be accepted or whether researchers should continue to profess scientific disinterest'. The debates also reveal an almost unanimous disavowal of Indigenous Australian knowledges and mnemonic conceptions across all camps. The bitter ironies of this disavowal become evident when Indigenous Australian quests for the remains of their ancestral dead lost in the limbo of German scientific collections are juxtaposed with white Australian (fictional) quests for the remains of Ludwig Leichhardt, lost in the Australian interior.}, language = {en} } @book{Iorio2013, author = {Iorio, Marco}, title = {Reasons without reason}, series = {Philosophische Impulse}, volume = {10}, journal = {Philosophische Impulse}, publisher = {Synchron Wiss.-Verl. der Autoren}, address = {Heidelberg}, isbn = {978-3-939381-53-2}, pages = {208 S.}, year = {2013}, language = {en} } @misc{Bialas1999, author = {Bialas, Wolfgang}, title = {Rabinbach, Anson, In the shadow of catastrophe : German intellectuals between apocalypse and enlightenment; Berkeley [u.a.], Univ. of California Press, 1997}, year = {1999}, language = {en} } @article{Erpenbeck1996, author = {Erpenbeck, John}, title = {Psychotherapy as a Model of Value Change}, year = {1996}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schipke2012, author = {Schipke, Christine S.}, title = {Processing mechanisms of argument structure and case-marking in child development : natural correlates and behavioral evidence}, series = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, volume = {139}, journal = {MPI series in human cognitive and brain sciences}, publisher = {MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences}, address = {Leipzig}, isbn = {978-3-941504-23-3}, pages = {153 S.}, year = {2012}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{OPUS4-8463, title = {Proceedings : Anglistentag 2012 Potsdam}, series = {Proceedings of the conference of the German Association of University Teachers of English}, volume = {34}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the conference of the German Association of University Teachers of English}, editor = {R{\"o}der, Kathrin and Wischer, Ilse}, publisher = {Wissenschaftlicher Verlag}, address = {Trier}, isbn = {978-3-86821-488-8}, pages = {406}, year = {2013}, language = {en} } @article{Petsche2009, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Plato{\"i}s cave, knowledge management and the internet : some theses}, issn = {1576-2270}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @book{Gunnarsson2010, author = {Gunnarsson, Logi}, title = {Philosophy of personal identity and multiple personality}, series = {Routledge studies in contemporary philosophy}, volume = {17}, journal = {Routledge studies in contemporary philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {London, New York}, isbn = {978-0-415-80017-4}, pages = {230 S.}, year = {2010}, language = {en} } @book{Gunnarsson2010, author = {Gunnarsson, Logi}, title = {Philiosophy of Personal Identity and Multiple Personality}, series = {Routledge studies in contemporary philosophy}, volume = {17}, journal = {Routledge studies in contemporary philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {London, New York}, isbn = {978-0-415-80017-4}, pages = {230 S.}, year = {2010}, language = {en} } @article{Albertini2012, author = {Albertini, Francesca Yardenit}, title = {Peace and war in Moses Maimonides and Immanuel Kant a comparative study}, series = {The journal of Jewish thought \& philosophy}, volume = {20}, journal = {The journal of Jewish thought \& philosophy}, number = {2}, publisher = {Brill}, address = {Leiden}, issn = {1053-699X}, doi = {10.1163/1477285X-12341238}, pages = {183 -- 198}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Francesca Y. Albertini (1974-2011) compares Maimonides' idea of peace, as developed in MT Sefer shofetim (Book of Judges), with Kant's work on the notion of "eternal peace" (Zum ewigen Frieden). Both authors develop a historical vision pointed against the use of force and war in light of a framework not limited by historical time (messianic age, eternity). Despite all differences in method and historical context, the authors agree on the notion that universal ethics provides the basis of a determination of right grounded in the will. Maimonides' universal messianism as well as Kant's universal history emphasize the pivotal role and decisive responsibility of the human being in realizing, through reason, the reign of peace and prosperity on earth first envisioned by the biblical prophets. These utopias continue to challenge us, especially in this day and age.}, language = {en} } @misc{Altieri2018, author = {Altieri, Riccardo}, title = {Paul Fr{\"o}lich, American exile, and communist discourse about the Russian revolution}, series = {American Communist History}, journal = {American Communist History}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-413040}, pages = {13}, year = {2018}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-44423, title = {Orientalism and the reception of powerful women from the ancient world}, editor = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Wieber, Anja}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London}, isbn = {978-1-3500-5010-5}, doi = {10.5040/9781350077416}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {x, 321}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Why is Cleopatra, a descendent of Alexander the Great, a Ptolemy from a Greek-Macedonian family, in popular imagination an Oriental woman? True, she assumed some aspects of pharaonic imagery in order to rule Egypt, but her Orientalism mostly derives from ancient (Roman) and modern stereotypes: both the Orient and the idea of a woman in power are signs, in the Western tradition, of 'otherness' - and in this sense they can easily overlap and interchange. This volume investigates how ancient women, and particularly powerful women, such as queens and empresses, have been re-imagined in Western (and not only Western) arts; highlights how this re-imagination and re-visualization is, more often than not, the product of Orientalist stereotypes - even when dealing with women who had nothing to do with Eastern regions; and compares these images with examples of Eastern gaze on the same women. Through the chapters in this volume, readers will discover the similarities and differences in the ways in which women in power were and still are described and decried by their opponents.}, language = {en} } @misc{CiaccioGunnar2019, author = {Ciaccio, Laura Anna and Gunnar, Jacob}, title = {Native speakers like affixes, L2 speakers like letters?}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {169}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-44461}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-444617}, pages = {22}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In an overt visual priming experiment, we investigate the role of orthography in native (L1) and non-native (L2) processing of German morphologically complex words. We compare priming effects for inflected and derived morphologically related prime-target pairs versus otherwise matched, purely orthographically related pairs. The results show morphological priming effects in both the L1 and L2 group, with no significant difference between inflection and derivation. However, L2 speakers, but not L1 speakers, also showed significant priming for orthographically related pairs. Our results support the claim that L2 speakers focus more on surface-level information such as orthography during visual word recognition. This can cause orthographic priming effects in morphologically related prime-target pairs, which may conceal L1-L2 differences in morphological processing.}, language = {en} } @article{Menke1999, author = {Menke, Christoph}, title = {Modernity and subjectivity : from an aesthetic point of view}, year = {1999}, language = {en} } @article{Schneider1999, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius}, title = {Mind, matter, and our longing for the "One World"}, year = {1999}, language = {en} } @article{Schneider2000, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius}, title = {Metaphors and theoretical terms : problems in referring to the mental}, year = {2000}, language = {en} } @article{Schneider1997, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius}, title = {Metaphorically created objects : 'real' or 'only linguistic'?}, year = {1997}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Chiarcos2009, author = {Chiarcos, Christian}, title = {Mental salience and grammatical form : toward a framework for salience metrics in natural language generation}, address = {Potsdam}, pages = {492 S.}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Gunnarsson2000, author = {Gunnarsson, Logi}, title = {Making moral sense : beyond Habermas and Gauthier}, edition = {Digitally print. version (with corr.)}, publisher = {Cambridge Univ. Press}, address = {Cambridge u. a.}, isbn = {0-521-78023-3}, pages = {286 S.}, year = {2000}, language = {en} } @misc{Ette2016, author = {Ette, Ottmar}, title = {Magic screens}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {156}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-41366}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-413669}, pages = {12}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Garcilaso de la Vega el Inca, for several centuries doubtlessly the most discussed and most eminent writer of Andean America in the 16th and 17th centuries, throughout his life set the utmost value on the fact that he descended matrilineally from Atahualpa Yupanqui and from the last Inca emperor, Huayna Capac. Thus, both in his person and in his creative work he combined different cultural worlds in a polylogical way. (1) Two painters boasted that very same Inca descent - they were the last two great masters of the Cuzco school of painting, which over several generations of artists had been an institution of excellent renown and prestige, and whose economic downfall and artistic marginalization was vividly described by the French traveller Paul Mancoy in 1837.(2) While, during the 18th century, Cuzco school paintings were still much cherished and sought after, by the beginning of the following century the elite of Lima regarded them as behind the times and provincial, committed to an 'indigenous' painting style. The artists from up-country - such was the reproach - could not keep up with the modern forms of seeing and creating, as exemplified by European paragons. Yet, just how 'provincial', truly, was this art?}, language = {en} } @misc{TillackGraf2015, author = {Tillack-Graf, Anne-Kathleen}, title = {Madness and Sense}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {139}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-404566}, pages = {2}, year = {2015}, abstract = {kein abstract vorhanden}, language = {en} } @article{KraheMoeller2011, author = {Krah{\´e}, Barbara and M{\"o}ller, Ingrid}, title = {Links between self-reported media violence exposure and teacher ratings of aggression and prosocial behavior among German adolescents}, series = {Journal of adolescence}, volume = {34}, journal = {Journal of adolescence}, number = {2}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {London}, issn = {0140-1971}, doi = {10.1016/j.adolescence.2010.05.003}, pages = {279 -- 287}, year = {2011}, abstract = {The relations between adolescents' habitual usage of media violence and their tendency to engage in aggressive and prosocial behavior in a school setting were examined in a cross-sectional study with 1688 7th and 8th graders in Germany who completed measures of violent media exposure and normative acceptance of aggression. For each participant, ratings of prosocial and aggressive behavior were obtained from their class teacher. Media violence exposure was a unique predictor of teacher-rated aggression even when relevant covariates were considered, and it predicted prosocial behavior over and above gender. Path analyses confirmed a direct positive link from media violence usage to teacher-rated aggression for girls and boys, but no direct negative link to prosocial behavior was found. Indirect pathways were identified to higher aggressive and lower prosocial behavior via the acceptance of aggression as normative. Although there were significant gender differences in media violence exposure, aggression, and prosocial behavior, similar path models were identified for boys and girls.}, language = {en} } @misc{Krueger2015, author = {Kr{\"u}ger, Hans-Peter}, title = {Life-Philosophical Anthropology as the Missing Third: On Peter Gordon's Continental Divide}, series = {History of European ideas}, volume = {41}, journal = {History of European ideas}, number = {4}, publisher = {Routledge, Taylor \& Francis Group}, address = {Abingdon}, issn = {0191-6599}, doi = {10.1080/01916599.2014.981019}, pages = {432 -- 439}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Though Peter Gordon mentioned philosophical anthropology in his book Continental Divide, he has not yet realized how it works independently from Cassirer's and Heidegger's prejudices. The whole argument between them before, in and after Davos (1929) raged around the status of philosophical anthropology: How do the spiritualisation of life and the enlivening of the spirit come about? This was not just the central question for philosophical anthropology founded by Max Scheler, but also in Wilhelm Dilthey's life philosophy, which was systematized by Georg Misch. Cassirer and Heidegger shared three shortcomings with respect to the Life-philosophical Anthropology. Neither had a philosophy of nature or a philosophy of sociaty or a philosophy of history. The insight into the unfathomability of humans (Misch) is given a political edge in Helmuth Plessner's book Power and Human Nature (1931). Elevating it to the principle of democratic equality with respect to the worth of all cultures one opens up the potential for a form of civil competition that might supersede ethnocentric wars.}, language = {en} } @article{SchneiderSellmann2003, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius and Sellmann, James D.}, title = {Liberating Language in Linji and Wittgenstein}, year = {2003}, abstract = {Our aim in this paper is to explicate some unexpected and striking similarities and equally important differences, which have not been discussed in the literature, between Wittgenstein's methodology and the approach of Chinese Chan or Japanese Zen Buddhism. We say 'unexpected' similarities because it is not a common practice, especially in the analytic tradition, to invest very much in comparative philosophy. The peculiarity of this study will be further accentuated in the view of those of the 'old school' who see Wittgenstein as a logical positivist, and Zen as a religious excuse for militarism or sadomasochism. If the second claim were true, the following investigation would not only be futile but also impossible. That the first claim, concerning the 'old school' perspective on Wittgenstein, si incorrect, we will demonstrate in the ensuing discussion. By now more experts have come to accept hits claim and we hope that our comparative perspective will add even more momentum}, language = {en} } @article{Schulte1993, author = {Schulte, Christoph}, title = {Le psychiatre et la critique de la culture : Max Nordau}, isbn = {2-204-04858-5}, year = {1993}, language = {en} } @book{OPUS4-15469, title = {Knowledge Management and Philosophy : proceedings of the WM 2003 Workshop on Knowledge Management and Philosophy, Luzern, Switzerland, April 3-4, 2003}, series = {CEUR - Workshop Proceedings}, volume = {85}, journal = {CEUR - Workshop Proceedings}, editor = {Freyberg, Klaus and Petsche, Hans-Joachim and Klein, Bertin}, publisher = {RWTH}, address = {Aachen}, issn = {1613-0073}, year = {2003}, language = {en} } @misc{Ebke2012, author = {Ebke, Thomas}, title = {Knowledge agents Gaston Bachelard and the reorganization of knowledge}, series = {Studies in East European thought}, volume = {64}, journal = {Studies in East European thought}, number = {1-2}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Dordrecht}, issn = {0925-9392}, doi = {10.1007/s11212-012-9164-4}, pages = {143 -- 148}, year = {2012}, language = {en} } @misc{Ette2017, author = {Ette, Ottmar}, title = {Khal Torabully}, series = {Journal of the African Literature Association}, journal = {Journal of the African Literature Association}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-412609}, pages = {9}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Khal Torabully creates poetry and a poetics for those forgotten by history, a theorem and theory which construct a tangible and sensual landscape, allowing for an empathetically shared experience and expressing the dramatic climax of the third phase of accelerated globalization: a project that would be unthinkable without the cultural theory we now have at our disposal in the present surge of globalization. In his poetic and theoretical texts, he has paid a literary tribute to the Coolies, usually from India, but also China and many other countries. Given Torabully's Mauritian roots, but also the worldwide migration of the Coolies themselves, the world of Coolitude is culturally and linguistically extremely diverse, making the act of translation very relevant and giving it multiple meanings. Literature brings these forgotten lives back to life and allows us to share this experience thanks to its aesthetic force. It traces the movements, which sketch trajectories functioning to this day as palimpsest-like vectors of our own paths and trajectories. The author of Chair Corail, Fragments Coolies breaks the chain of mutual exclusions, replacing it with a type of writing belonging to a wider array of expressive modes which in diasporic situations unleash polylogical and archipelagic imaginaries.}, language = {en} } @misc{Spahn2014, author = {Spahn, Hannah}, title = {John Ragosta, Religious Freedom}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {158}, issn = {1866-8380}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-41536}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-415362}, pages = {880 -- 882}, year = {2014}, abstract = {kein abstract}, language = {en} } @article{Petsche2010, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, title = {It began with Pestalozzi and Schleiermacher : Reflections on the polymath Hermann Grassmann (1809 - 1877)}, issn = {1027-488x}, year = {2010}, language = {en} } @article{Gruene2011, author = {Gr{\"u}ne, Stefanie}, title = {Is there a Gap in Kant's B Deduction?}, issn = {0967-2559}, year = {2011}, language = {en} } @article{Gruene2011, author = {Gr{\"u}ne, Stefanie}, title = {Is there a Gap in Kant's B Deduction?}, series = {International journal of philosophical studies}, volume = {19}, journal = {International journal of philosophical studies}, number = {3}, publisher = {Routledge, Taylor \& Francis Group}, address = {Abingdon}, issn = {0967-2559}, doi = {10.1080/09672559.2011.595196}, pages = {465 -- 490}, year = {2011}, abstract = {In 'Beyond the Myth of the Myth: A Kantian Theory of Non-Conceptual Content', Robert Hanna argues for a very strong kind of non-conceptualism, and claims that this kind of non-conceptualism originally has been developed by Kant. But according to 'Kant's Non-Conceptualism, Rogue Objects and the Gap in the B Deduction', Kant's non-conceptualism poses a serious problem for his argument for the objective validity of the categories, namely the problem that there is a gap in the B Deduction. This gap is that the B Deduction goes through only if conceptualism is true, but Kant is a non-conceptualist. In this paper, I will argue, contrary to what Hanna claims, that there is not a gap in the B Deduction.}, language = {en} } @misc{Kuettner2018, author = {K{\"u}ttner, Uwe-Alexander}, title = {Investigating inferences in sequences of action}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam: Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam: Philosophische Reihe}, number = {161}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-42631}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-426310}, pages = {26}, year = {2018}, abstract = {This paper offers an exploratory Interactional Linguistic account of the role that inferences play in episodes of ordinary conversational interaction. To this end, it systematically reconsiders the conversational practice of using the lexico-syntactic format oh that's right to implicitly claim "just-now" recollection of something previously known, but momentarily confused or forgotten. The analyses reveal that this practice typically occurs as part of a larger sequential pattern that the participants orient to and which serves as a procedure for dealing with, and generating an account for, one participant's production of an inapposite action. As will be shown, the instantiation and progressive realization of this sequential procedure requires local inferential work from the participants. While some facets of this inferential work appear to be shaped by the particular context of the ongoing interaction, others are integral to the workings of the sequence as such. Moreover, the analyses suggest that participants' understanding of oh that's right as embodying an implicit memory claim rests on an inference which is based on a kind of semantic-pragmatic compositionality. The paper thus illustrates how inferences in conversational interaction can be systematically studied and points to the merits of combining an interactional and a linguistic perspective.}, language = {en} } @article{OPUS4-32739, title = {Introduction to Hermann Grassmann : roots and traces ; autographs and unknown documents}, editor = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, isbn = {978-3-03-460154-2}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @article{KolbeHannaWischer2021, author = {Kolbe-Hanna, Daniela and Wischer, Ilse}, title = {Introduction}, series = {Anglistik: Focus on English Linguistics: Varieties Meet Histories}, volume = {32}, journal = {Anglistik: Focus on English Linguistics: Varieties Meet Histories}, number = {1}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}tsverlag Winter}, address = {Heidelberg}, issn = {2625-2147}, doi = {10.33675/ANGL/2021/1/4}, pages = {5 -- 10}, year = {2021}, language = {en} } @misc{OPUS4-31186, title = {International Grassmann Conference : Potsdam and Szcecin ; September 16 - 19, 2009 ; video documentation}, editor = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim and Lenke, Peter}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}tsverlag Potsdam}, address = {Potsdam}, isbn = {978-3-86956-093-9}, pages = {4 DVD-Video (ca.1.019 Min.)}, year = {2010}, language = {en} } @article{Rost2003, author = {Rost, S.}, title = {Individualization, socialization and communization : John Dewey's model of public life and the Self in George Herbert Mead}, year = {2003}, language = {en} } @incollection{Tipold2023, author = {Tipold, Marc}, title = {In the shadow of Valerian}, series = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology : Reconfigurations and Representations of an Imperial Power}, booktitle = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology : Reconfigurations and Representations of an Imperial Power}, publisher = {Franz Steiner Verlag}, address = {Stuttgart}, isbn = {978-3-515-13400-2}, pages = {267 -- 287}, year = {2023}, language = {en} } @article{Gunnarsson2014, author = {Gunnarsson, Logi}, title = {In defense of ambivalence and alienation}, series = {Ethical theory and moral practice}, volume = {17}, journal = {Ethical theory and moral practice}, number = {1}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Dordrecht}, issn = {1386-2820}, doi = {10.1007/s10677-013-9464-x}, pages = {13 -- 26}, year = {2014}, language = {en} } @incollection{Hassler2018, author = {Haßler, Gerda}, title = {History of european vernacular grammar writing}, series = {Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics}, booktitle = {Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics}, editor = {Aronoff, Mark and Abbi, Anvita}, publisher = {Oxford University}, address = {New York}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The grammatization of European vernacular languages began in the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance and continued up until the end of the 18th century. Through this process, grammars were written for the vernaculars and, as a result, the vernaculars were able to establish themselves in important areas of communication. Vernacular grammars largely followed the example of those written for Latin, using Latin descriptive categories without fully adapting them to the vernaculars. In accord with the Greco-Latin tradition, the grammars typically contain sections on orthography, prosody, morphology, and syntax, with the most space devoted to the treatment of word classes in the section on "etymology." The earliest grammars of vernaculars had two main goals: on the one hand, making the languages described accessible to non-native speakers, and on the other, supporting the learning of Latin grammar by teaching the grammar of speakers' native languages. Initially, it was considered unnecessary to engage with the grammar of native languages for their own sake, since they were thought to be acquired spontaneously. Only gradually did a need for normative grammars develop which sought to codify languages. This development relied on an awareness of the value of vernaculars that attributed a certain degree of perfection to them. Grammars of indigenous languages in colonized areas were based on those of European languages and today offer information about the early state of those languages, and are indeed sometimes the only sources for now extinct languages. Grammars of vernaculars came into being in the contrasting contexts of general grammar and the grammars of individual languages, between grammar as science and as art and between description and standardization. In the standardization of languages, the guiding principle could either be that of anomaly, which took a particular variety of a language as the basis of the description, or that of analogy, which permitted interventions into a language aimed at making it more uniform.}, language = {en} } @book{PetscheKannenbergKessleretal.2009, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim and Kannenberg, Lloyd and Kessler, Gottfried and Liskowacka, Jolanta}, title = {Hermann Grassmann - Roots and traces : autographs and unknown documents}, series = {Grassmann-Trilogie}, volume = {2}, journal = {Grassmann-Trilogie}, publisher = {Birkh{\"a}user Basel}, address = {Basel}, isbn = {978-3-0346-0154-2}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-0346-0155-9}, pages = {XI; 256 S.; Ill.}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @book{PetscheLewisLiesenetal.2011, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim and Lewis, Albert C. and Liesen, J{\"o}rg and Russ, Steve}, title = {Hermann Grassmann - from past to future : Grassmann's work in context ; Grassmann Bicentennial Conference, September 2009}, series = {Grassmann-Trilogie}, volume = {3}, journal = {Grassmann-Trilogie}, publisher = {Birkh{\"a}user}, address = {Basel}, isbn = {978-3-0346-0404-8}, pages = {XX, 580 S. : Ill., graph. Dars}, year = {2011}, language = {en} } @article{Stoecker2004, author = {Stoecker, Ralf}, title = {Help, intervention and involvement}, year = {2004}, language = {en} } @article{Schulte1994, author = {Schulte, Christoph}, title = {Hegel{\"i}s contempt or the importance of being earnest in moral philosophy}, isbn = {0-8153-1457-4}, year = {1994}, language = {en} } @article{KruegerHenrichIrrlitz2003, author = {Kr{\"u}ger, Hans-Peter and Henrich, D. and Irrlitz, G.}, title = {German-language philosophy 1949-1989 and in the future : an interview with Dieter Henrich and Gerd Irrlitz}, year = {2003}, language = {en} } @article{Adamik2021, author = {Adamik, Verena}, title = {From Utopian Island to global empire}, series = {Utopian Studies}, volume = {31}, journal = {Utopian Studies}, number = {3}, publisher = {Penn State University Press}, address = {University Park, Pa}, doi = {doi: 10.5325/utopianstudies.31.3.0457}, pages = {457 -- 474}, year = {2021}, abstract = {This article discusses how Alex Garland's The Beach (1996) engages with conceptions of utopian islands, nation, and colonialism in modernity and how it, from this basis, develops a different spatiality that reflects on a more deterritorialized form of imperial domination within late twentieth-century globalization, as exercised by the United States. The novel is shown to subvert, but not to abolish, two spatial formations that originated in early modernity: nation and utopia. Building on Jean Baudrillard's elaborations regarding simulation and simulacra, the article argues that The Beach creates a hyperreal narrative that does away with the idea of isolated, bounded spaces and that in form and content corresponds with the worldwide dominance of the United States at the end of the twentieth century.}, language = {en} } @article{Schneider1997, author = {Schneider, Hans Julius}, title = {From actions to symbols : Wittgenstein's method and the pragmatic turn}, year = {1997}, language = {en} } @article{Heidt2022, author = {Heidt, Irene}, title = {Fostering critical language teacher education through autoethnography}, series = {Standortbestimmungen in der Fremdsprachenforschung}, journal = {Standortbestimmungen in der Fremdsprachenforschung}, editor = {Wilden, Eva and Alfes, Luisa and Cantone-Altintas, Katja F. and {\c{C}}{\i}kr{\i}k{\c{c}}{\i}, Sevgi and Reimann, Daniel}, publisher = {WBV}, address = {Bielefeld}, isbn = {978-3-7639-7304-0}, doi = {10.3278/9783763973057}, pages = {228 -- 243}, year = {2022}, language = {en} } @misc{Scianna2018, author = {Scianna, Bastian Matteo}, title = {Forging an Italian hero?}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {152}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-416866}, pages = {18}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Over the last two decades, Amedeo Guillet (1909-2010) has been turned into a public and military hero. His exploits as a guerrilla leader in Italian East Africa in 1941 have been exaggerated to forge a narrative of an honourable resistance against overwhelming odds. Thereby, Guillet has been showcased as a romanticized colonial explorer who was an apolitical and timeless Italian officer. He has been compared to Lawrence of Arabia in order to raise his international visibility, while his genuine Italian brand is perpetuated domestically. By elevating him to an official role model, the Italian Army has gained a focal point for military heroism that was also acceptable in the public memory as the embodiment of a 'glorious' defeat narrative.}, language = {en} } @misc{OPUS4-50235, title = {Focus on English Linguistics}, series = {Anglistik : international journal of English studies}, volume = {32}, journal = {Anglistik : international journal of English studies}, number = {1}, editor = {Kolbe-Hanna, Daniela and Wischer, Ilse}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}tsverlag Winter}, address = {Heidelberg}, issn = {2625-2147}, year = {2021}, language = {en} } @article{Stoecker2003, author = {Stoecker, Ralf}, title = {First person authority and the merits of minimal monism}, year = {2003}, language = {en} } @misc{Hassler2015, author = {Haßler, Gerda}, title = {Evidentiality and the expression of speaker's stance in Romance languages and German}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Philosophische Reihe}, number = {138}, issn = {1866-8380}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-404492}, pages = {28}, year = {2015}, abstract = {In recent years, the category of evidentiality has also come into use for the description of Romance languages and of German. This has been contingent on a change in its interpretation from a typological category to a semantic-pragmatic category, which allows an application to languages lacking specialised morphemes for the expression of evidentiality. We consider evidentiality to be a structural dimension of grammar, the values of which are expressed by types of constructions that code the source of information which a speaker imparts. If we look at the situation in Romance languages and in German, drawing a boundary between epistemic modality and evidentiality presents problems that are difficult to solve. Adding markers of the source of the speaker's knowledge often limits the degree of responsibility of the speaker for the content of the utterance. Evidential adverbs are a frequently used means of marking the source of the speaker's knowledge. The evidential meaning is generalised to marking any source of knowledge, what can be regarded as a result of a process of pragmaticalisation. The use of certain means which also carry out evidential markings can even contribute to the blurring of the different kinds of evidentiality. German also has modal verbs which in conjunction with the perfect tense of the verb have a predominantly evidential use (sollen and wollen). But even here the evidential marking is not without influence on the modality of the utterance. The Romance languages, however, do not have such specialised verbs for expressing evidentiality in certain contexts. To do this, they mark evidentiality - often context bound - by verb forms such as the conditional and the imperfect tense. This article shall contrast the different architectures used in expressing evidentiality in German and in the Romance languages.}, language = {en} } @article{Petsche2011, author = {Petsche, Hans-Joachim}, title = {Ernst Abbe's reception of Grassmann in the light of Grassmann's reception of Schleiermacher}, isbn = {978-3-03-460404-8}, year = {2011}, language = {en} } @article{PollatosGramann2011, author = {Pollatos, Olga and Gramann, Klaus}, title = {Electrophysiological evidence of early processing deficits in alexithymia}, series = {Biological psychology}, volume = {87}, journal = {Biological psychology}, number = {1}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0301-0511}, doi = {10.1016/j.biopsycho.2011.02.016}, pages = {113 -- 121}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Alexithymia describes difficulties to identify and describe one's emotions. Previous research focused on difficulties associated with the later processing stages of appraisal in alexithymia. We tested whether early processing deficits are apparent in alexithymic persons and whether these abnormalities contribute to later processing difficulties. 20 participants were selected and identified as either having high (HDA) or low (LDA) degrees of alexithymia. IAPS pictures were presented while EEG was recorded. For HDA subjects processing of emotional pictures was accompanied by reduced P1 amplitudes most pronounced for pleasant and neutral pictures. In response to unpleasant pictures the P3 amplitudes were reduced. These amplitude modulations were predicted only by one alexithymia facet. P1 amplitudes systematically covaried with P3 amplitudes supporting the assumption that deficits in early emotional processing contribute to later processing deficits.}, language = {en} }