2011
DOI: 10.1057/9780230316720
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Humanity 2.0

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Cited by 93 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(81 reference statements)
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“…Le secteur alimentaire est condamné à innover, d'abord parce que le consommateur ne cesse de montrer son intérêt pour la variété et pour de nouveaux produits, ensuite parce que les nouveaux produits permettent aux entreprises de répondre aux objectifs de croissance 10 . Mais comment se distinguer sur un marché où l'introduction de nouveaux produits est fulgurante (3 000 en France chaque année) et le taux d'échecs, faramineux (90 % selon les chiffres du cabinet américain Booz Allen).…”
Section: Le Rôle Du Design Dans L'innovation Alimentaireunclassified
“…Le secteur alimentaire est condamné à innover, d'abord parce que le consommateur ne cesse de montrer son intérêt pour la variété et pour de nouveaux produits, ensuite parce que les nouveaux produits permettent aux entreprises de répondre aux objectifs de croissance 10 . Mais comment se distinguer sur un marché où l'introduction de nouveaux produits est fulgurante (3 000 en France chaque année) et le taux d'échecs, faramineux (90 % selon les chiffres du cabinet américain Booz Allen).…”
Section: Le Rôle Du Design Dans L'innovation Alimentaireunclassified
“…We should not lose sight of the fact that tourism design communicated with the projection of a particular version of 'human': technologically advanced, masculine and ruthless. To return to Fuller's (2011) apt analysis of 'Humanity 2.0', the Kazakh design of tourism conformed national identity to a blueprint of what it means to be modern, progressive and civilised. Ticking the cybernetic (technology, architecture), biomedical (a nation facelifted as a valorised/manly specimen) and ecological boxes (beautiful landscapes to visit), produced an 'acceptable', 'decent' brand.…”
Section: Post-truth and The New Spirit Of Capitalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such an argument for species differentiation between humans and animals brings Kateb into conflict with the movement which aims to elevate the status of animals, and with scholars who – following new trends in medicine, science and technology – point to dissolving the boundaries between human and animal. For example, Rose (2007) and Fuller (2011), while debating what it means to be human in the new circumstances, suggest that there is something qualitatively new in recorded history; that now the distinctiveness of humans is changing, if not slowly disappearing, now that we increasingly identify ourselves with the rest of nature. Thus, as we increasingly embrace technological and medical advances, with developments in cyber, bio, or nanotechnology, the meaning of being human and definitions of what is ‘animal’ and what is ‘human’ could be altered.…”
Section: Dignity: a Problematic Notionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, as we increasingly embrace technological and medical advances, with developments in cyber, bio, or nanotechnology, the meaning of being human and definitions of what is ‘animal’ and what is ‘human’ could be altered. As we are learning more about our continuity with the rest of nature in terms of the ecology, genetic make-up, evolutionary history and as the boundaries of the human and the animal are increasingly being seen as not fixed or impermeable or indistinguishable, the accepted notions of humanity are rapidly evolving (Fuller, 2011).…”
Section: Dignity: a Problematic Notionmentioning
confidence: 99%