Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1208937> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 40 of
40
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1208937 subject Q7145043.
- Q1208937 subject Q7169420.
- Q1208937 subject Q8280415.
- Q1208937 abstract "Template:ForMultitude is a term for a group of people who cannot be classed under any other distinct category, except for their shared fact of existence. The term has a history of use reaching back to antiquity, but took on a strictly political concept when it was first used by Machiavelli and reiterated by Spinoza. The multitude is a concept of a population that has not entered into a social contract with a sovereign political body, such that individuals retain the capacity for political self-determination. A multitude typically classified as a quantity exceeding 100. For Hobbes the multitude was a rabble that needed to enact a social contract with a monarch, thus turning them from a multitude into a people. For Machiavelli and Spinoza both, the role of the multitude vacillates between admiration and contempt. Recently the term has returned to prominence as a new model of resistance against global systems of power as described by political theorists Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri in their international best-seller Empire (2000) and expanded upon in their Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire (2004). Other theorists recently began to use the term include political thinkers associated with Autonomist Marxism and its sequelae, including Sylvère Lotringer, Paolo Virno, and thinkers connected with the eponymous review Multitudes.".
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink Home.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink 1736236.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink fcmultitude3.htm.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink montag_afraid_multitude.pdf.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink index.php4?id=65&issue=105.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink multitude.htm.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink marx_2549.jsp.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink economics-multitude.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink multitude_and_stoicism.pdf.
- Q1208937 wikiPageExternalLink showarticle.cfm?SectionID=41&ItemID=7645.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1149540.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1228496.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q127393.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q131169.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1399.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q174359.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q193034.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q289333.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q310341.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q3242115.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q35802.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q37621.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q515190.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q5570811.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q625231.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q7145043.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q7169420.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q747790.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q779301.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q8280415.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q918655.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q924424.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q970102.
- Q1208937 wikiPageWikiLink Q978370.
- Q1208937 comment "Template:ForMultitude is a term for a group of people who cannot be classed under any other distinct category, except for their shared fact of existence. The term has a history of use reaching back to antiquity, but took on a strictly political concept when it was first used by Machiavelli and reiterated by Spinoza.".
- Q1208937 label "Multitude".