Inter Faculty (Journal)
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Dialogue interculturel / Intercultural Dialogue
Some considerations in response to the session on Cultural Identity and Variation
Sortir de la violence: un chantier pour les sciences humaines et sociales / Exiting Violence: A Project for the Humanities and Social Sciences
Violence imports on the physical and moral integrity of the individual person, of groups, of whole societies, and sometimes even, beyond. However, exiting violence is not merely a matter of putting an end to violence, it is also one of once again giving meaning to the lives of individuals and collectivities where violence had destroyed or badly altered it. It is finding a means for victims and perpetrators to be able to live together; it is to refuse to become trapped in the terrible events of the past just as it is to refuse to forget or deny them.???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
Some considerations from the point of view of philosophy in response to the session on Environment and Landscape
As cultural heritage from Japan (Okinawa), karate conveys not only body forms (or corporal shapes) of its culture of origin; it also gives insight into deeper cultural concepts. The use of time and space and a particular rhythmicity can be analysed in the practice of karate kata, and particularly in theTensho kata.This analysis is supported here by an anthropo-didactic study that highlights the pervasive cultural dimension of this kata in relation to the practice of other Japanese art forms, and even posits it as an overarching principle of Japanese culture. For this purpose,a parallel between the musicology of traditional Japanese music and the Tenshokarate kata is discussed here.???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?? ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?? ???????????????????????
Overview of the Session on Disaster and Civil Society
An overview of the issues discussed in the session on Disaster and Civil Society
Nature, Culture: Trajecting Beyond Modern Dualism
Modern dualism, opposing the subject to the object, and therefore culture to nature, has made possible modern science and technology, and consequently modern civilization, but it has eventually produced an unsustainable world, which progressively destroys its own basement: the Earth. In order to survive, we have to overcome dualism, but is that rationally possible?Making use of the concepts oftrajection and trajective chains, this paper shows that not only concrete reality is trajective(neither purely objective nor purely subjective), but that modern physics itself has come to this evidence. Accordingly, beyond the abstraction of dualism, we have to conceive of reality anew, including in the field of the natural sciences.???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
Some considerations from a linguistic point of view in response to the session on Social Justice and Equality Beyond Violence