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  1. 17. Aug. 2006 · Transient mental illnesses can best be looked at in terms of the ecological niches in which they can appear and thrive. They are easy cases for making up people, precisely because their very transience leads cynics to suspect they are not really real, and so could plausibly be said to be made up.

  2. 20. Jan. 2021 · This chapter explores the notions and methods of Ian Hacking, a dynamic nominalist who studies the interaction between classification and the classified individuals in the human sciences. Hacking analyzes the looping effect of human kinds, the ecological niches, the natural and interactive kinds, and the historical ontology of people.

    • Martínez Rodríguez, María Laura
    • 2021
  3. Hacking stellt in Aussicht, dass der Drang der Menschen, alle Personen genau zu klassifizieren, aus Kontrolllust herrührt: „Is making up people intimately linked to control?“ Ein weiterer Punkt bietet das Phänomen des Selbstmords.

  4. IAN HACKING. to work, and the owner had a clear set of concepts about how to employ workers according to. the ways in which he was obliged to classify them. I am more familiar with the creation of kinds among the masses than with interventions that act upon individuals, though I did look into one rare kind of insanity.

  5. 20. Jan. 2021 · In Chapter 4, Making up people. A project of more than three decades, I present the notions Ian Hacking uses to work in the human sciences. Hacking defines himself as a dynamic...

  6. 2. Juni 2023 · A study of how websites influence the identities and practices of people diagnosed with CFS/ME, based on Ian Hacking's theory of diagnostic classifications. The chapter explores how websites contribute to somatic monitoring, experiential regulation, and pre-emptive defensiveness, and how these responses may affect the public profile of CFS/ME.

  7. Hacking, Ian (1985) `Making Up People', in T.L. Heller, M. Sosna and D.E. Wellbery (eds) Reconstructing Individualism. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.