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  1. The death of the author at the birth of social science: The cases of Harriet Martineau and Adolphe Quetelet.Brian P. Cooper & Margueritte S. Murphy - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):1-36.
  • The reordering of the Batswana Cosmology in the 1840 English-Setswana New Testament.Itumeleng D. Mothoagae - 2018 - HTS Theological Studies 74 (1):12.
    Ngwao ya Setswana [tradition and customs] has two dimensions: tumelo [belief system] and thuto [education]; it is found in cultural practices and observances such as bogwera [the rite of initiation], letsemma [ploughing], dikgafela [harvesting], bongaka [diviner-healers] and botsetsi ba ntlha le botsetsi jwa bobedi [first menses and first experience of childbirth] to name but a few. These practices were observed through the slaughtering of animals, usually cows, and sheep and were condemned and regarded by missionaries as hindrances to Christianity. Letters (...)
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  • Cook and the Cannibals: Nootka Sound, 1778.Noel Elizabeth Currie - 1994 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 13:71.
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  • God, Woman, Other.Victoria Barker - 2010 - Feminist Theology 18 (3):309-331.
    The disciplines of western philosophy and theology are linked by their development of concepts of the ‘other’, figured as what lies outside the ‘discourses of man. The relations between the two discourses of the other deserves the attention of feminists, given their ongoing debate of Simone de Beauvoir s claim that woman is the ‘absolute other in these discourses. While the theology of God s otherness responds to the particularity which is God, the logic that underlies this theology is of (...)
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