/ 1968

MUSEUMS AND ETHICS: ROBBYNG THE PAST

In this research we explore one of the questions which is part of museum ethics. That is the question of the rights of museums to lay claim to artifacts that are parts of cultural heritage of different countries. The question has arisen even more in public debates during the last ten years with a tendency of growing importance. There are several important parts of this problem. One of them stems from the fact that many museums have collected their artifacts without even asking too many questions about the origin of donated objects, although many artifacts have been collected legally. Many researchers, also, open the question of authenticity of those who claim the artifacts. They ask, for example, as the Etruria civilization does not exist any more, to whom the objects that are part of this great vanished civilization should be returned to? Should that be Italy?

/ 1968

ART AND WORK

/ 1968

ON COMMUNICATIVE COMPETENCE

/ 1968

JURAJ BOBER: MACHINE, MAN, SOCIETY

/ 1968

VISUAL CULTURE IN MEDIA EPOCH

The paper examines the complex phenomena in contemporary visual culture and media-mediated world. At the same time, the text critically responds to the hypothesis about the growth and development of visual culture in the era of total mediatization. In fact, the dialectic nature of visual culture is considered here through the mediation of conflict and its two characteristic moments: the moment of alienation, and the moment of critical and potentially subversive activity. Thus, the dialectic nature of visuality in today’s age can be guided by principles of hope and revolution, or those of destruction, with help of market rules and operation of media culture.

/ 1968

ETHICS AND DYSLEXIA: BOUNDARIES OF MEDIA CULTURE

The text problematizes the status of media ethics in relation to general theoretic discourse, investigating its grounding as an applied ethic discipline. The article opens with consideration of the media ethics in its relation to traditional ethic concepts of various orientations and schools of thinking, later to focus on a more specific media topics. Speculative results of critical reflections on subjects such as modern media ethics lead to conclusion that nowadays – due to ever increasing influence of mass communication media and the so called new media – could be more appropriate to reflect on the phenomenon of media common ways in tracks of classical Hegel’s Sittlichkeit, instead of media ethics based on legal regulations in the field, that is on individualistic concepts of civil ethics. Theories of Marshal MacLuan and Paul Virilio also discussed and actualized in this essay support such an approach.

/ 1968

RADIO AND TV ONTOLOGY

/ 1968

EDITOR’S NOTE

/ 1968

EDITOR’S NOTE

/ 1968

EDITOR’S NOTE