Scale
Supposedly mature adults with no sense of scale or proportionality.”
Jason Pargin • I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom
Liberalism in the sense I am using it refers to the rule of law, a system of formal rules that restrict the powers of the executive, even if that executive is democratically legitimated through an election.
Francis Fukuyama • Liberalism and Its Discontents
Scale in its practice in humanist reason is thus both a concept and a metaconcept, insofar as it represents to us not only a theory of objects and a theory analyses, but an argument for the relation between objects and analyses, grounded in the claim that they both “have” scale.
Eric Hayot • Humanist Reason
It is also a broader cultural sensibility composed out of the steady drip-drip of bureaucratic acts, a loose constellation of practices and postures that is diffused throughout society via the legal and executive branches of the modern state. In short, suspicion is less heroic and more humdrum and routinized than we might think.
Rita Felski • The Limits of Critique
charisma required distance from the audience.
Conor Friedersdorf • The Charisma-vs.-Charm Election
Scale suggests that any object appears different—or does not even exist at all—if you change the scale of perception.
Joshua DiCaglio • Scale Theory
because scale deals with perspective, it is intertwined with notions of the subject, experience, consciousness, and interpretation.
Joshua DiCaglio • Scale Theory
scale requires technological adjuncts, because scale is only produced when we move beyond the perceptual limits of the human body.
Joshua DiCaglio • Scale Theory
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