Results for ' Cold War, WIDF, Marguerite Thibert, Liaison Bureau, anticommunism'

988 found
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  1.  5
    Dépasser la guerre froide? Marguerite Thibert et la création du Bureau de liaison (1960).Françoise Thébaud - 2023 - Clio 57:235-249.
    Appuyé sur un document, cet article esquisse l’histoire d’une organisation mal connue et éphémère : « le Bureau de liaison issu de la rencontre internationale des femmes 1960 », rencontre dont l’initiative revient à la Fédération démocratique internationale des femmes. Il explicite également le rôle qu’y a joué la militante française Marguerite Thibert, animé de l’espoir de dépasser la guerre froide. Mais la neutralité et l’équilibre politiques souhaités pour parler au nom de toutes les femmes se heurtent aux (...)
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  2.  16
    Daniel Sarewitz 23. Human Well-Being and Federal Science.Cold War Roots - 2011 - In Sandra G. Harding (ed.), The Postcolonial Science and Technology Studies Reader. Duke University Press.
  3. Review of Edwards' The Closed World. [REVIEW]Cold War America - 1998 - Minds and Machines 8:463-468.
  4.  8
    American Science in an Age of Anxiety: Scientists, Anticommunism, and the Cold War. Jessica Wang.Ellen Schrecker - 2000 - Isis 91 (1):193-194.
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  5.  10
    Cold War Undercurrents: The Extreme-Right Variants in East Asia.Yoonkyung Lee - 2021 - Politics and Society 49 (3):403-430.
    This study examines the mobilization of the Far Right in Korea and Japan in the 2000s and probes how and why the actors and political claims of East Asian extremists differ from their counterparts in Europe and North America. The Far Right forces in Korea and Japan are politically regressive in glorifying the authoritarian or colonial past and cling to unchanging ideological claims from the postwar decades in their current targeting of old-time, internal “others.” This divergence is explained by the (...)
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  6. Consultation-liaison psychiatry.Marguerite Lederberg & Tomer Levin - 1981 - In Sidney Bloch & Stephen A. Green (eds.), Psychiatric ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
  7.  13
    Poetic Influence in Hollywood: Rebel without a Cause and Star Wars.Marguerite Waller - 1980 - Diacritics 10 (3):57.
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  8. A glance into how the cold war and governmental loyalty investigations came to affect a leading U.S. radiation geneticist: Lewis J. Stadler’s nightmare. [REVIEW]Edward J. Calabrese - 2017 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 12:8.
    This paper describes an episode in the life of the prominent plant radiation geneticist, Lewis J. Stadler during which he became a target of the Federal Bureau of Investigation concerning loyalty to the United States due to possible associations with the communist party. The research is based on considerable private correspondence of Dr. Stadler, the FBI interrogatory questions and Dr. Stadler’s answers and letters of support for Dr. Stadler by leading scientists such as, Hermann J. Muller.
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  9.  27
    "If" Reality Is the Best Metaphor," It Must Be Virtual".Marguerite R. Waller - 1997 - Diacritics 27 (3):90-104.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:If “Reality is the Best Metaphor,” It Must Be VirtualMarguerite R. Waller (bio)What is the search for the next great compelling application but a search for the human identity?—Doug Coupland, Microserfs... we can look forward to a richly textured and complex cyberspace, where we are at all times human, and can become bits of pixel dust flying through a virtual landscape.—3-D, multiuser, interactive, on-line virtual reality producer“Avatars are Next,” (...)
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  10.  26
    Pretending Peace: Provisional political trust and sincerity in Kant and Améry.Marguerite La Caze - 2017 - In Sorin Baiasu & Sylvie Loriaux (eds.), Sincerity in Politics and International Relations. New York: Routledge. pp. 156-72.
    Kant suggests in The Metaphysics of Morals that we may sometimes say something untrue or insincere since others are free to interpret our statements as they wish. (1996, 6:238) Yet he also argues that even in conflict situations we should be truthful so as to not eliminate trust and to make it possible for a rightful condition to arise. My paper considers the conditions Kant believes essential to maintain basic trust so that in better times peace is possible. It also (...)
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  11.  9
    Cold War Freud: Psychoanalysis in an Age of Catastrophes.Dagmar Herzog - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    In Cold War Freud Dagmar Herzog uncovers the astonishing array of concepts of human selfhood which circulated across the globe in the aftermath of World War II. Against the backdrop of Nazism and the Holocaust, the sexual revolution, feminism, gay rights, and anticolonial and antiwar activism, she charts the heated battles which raged over Freud's legacy. From the postwar US to Europe and Latin America, she reveals how competing theories of desire, anxiety, aggression, guilt, trauma and pleasure emerged and (...)
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  12.  53
    The Cold War Context of the Golden Jubilee, Or, Why We Think of Mendel as the Father of Genetics.Audra J. Wolfe - 2012 - Journal of the History of Biology 45 (3):389 - 414.
    In September 1950, the Genetics Society of America (GSA) dedicated its annual meeting to a "Golden Jubilee of Genetics" that celebrated the 50th anniversary of the rediscovery of Mendel's work. This program, originally intended as a small ceremony attached to the coattails of the American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) meeting, turned into a publicity juggernaut that generated coverage on Mendel and the accomplishments of Western genetics in countless newspapers and radio broadcasts. The Golden Jubilee merits historical attention as both (...)
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  13.  15
    Cold War atmosphere: Distorted information and facts in the case of Free Europe balloons.Georgi Georgiev - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (3):153-177.
    Radio Free Europe used balloons to drop leaflets in an attempt to supplement radio with printed words in the 1950s—a historical moment when closing borders, censoring the press, jamming foreign radios, tapping telephone lines, and tracking letters from abroad created an almost hermetically sealed space without many means for exchanging information across the Iron Curtain. This article traces how distorted and limited information shaped Cold War propaganda and practices of information-gathering. The article further examines unpredictable environmental factors that were (...)
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  14.  41
    Cold War Pavlov: Homosexual aversion therapy in the 1960s.Kate Davison - 2021 - History of the Human Sciences 34 (1):89-119.
    Homosexual aversion therapy enjoyed two brief but intense periods of clinical experimentation: between 1950 and 1962 in Czechoslovakia, and between 1962 and 1975 in the British Commonwealth. The specific context of its emergence was the geopolitical polarization of the Cold War and a parallel polarization within psychological medicine between Pavlovian and Freudian paradigms. In 1949, the Pavlovian paradigm became the guiding doctrine in the Communist bloc, characterized by a psychophysiological or materialist understanding of mental illness. It was taken up (...)
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  15.  79
    How the Cold War Transformed Philosophy of Science: To the Icy Slopes of Logic.George A. Reisch - 2005 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This intriguing and ground-breaking book is the first in-depth study of the development of philosophy of science in the United States during the Cold War. It documents the political vitality of logical empiricism and Otto Neurath's Unity of Science Movement when these projects emigrated to the US in the 1930s and follows their de-politicization by a convergence of intellectual, cultural and political forces in the 1950s. Students of logical empiricism and the Vienna Circle treat these as strictly intellectual non-political (...)
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  16.  5
    Françoise Thébaud, Une traversée du siècle. Marguerite Thibert, femme engagée et fonctionnaire internationale.Joëlle Droux - 2023 - Clio 57:347-350.
    Pour celles et ceux qui prisent le grand large, la lecture de l’ouvrage de F. Thébaud, Une traversée du siècle. Marguerite Thibert, femme engagée et fonctionnaire internationale, s’impose. Dans cet ouvrage au long cours (près de 700 pages), l’auteure, spécialiste de l’histoire des femmes et du genre, nous convie en effet à partager un impressionnant périple temporel : celui d’une inconnue illustre, Marguerite Thibert (1886‑1982). Inconnue du grand public, Marguerite Thibert était déjà une per...
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  17.  20
    Cold-War Twins: Mikhail Alpatov's a Universal History of Arts_ and Ernst Gombrich's _the Story of Art.Vardan Azatyan - 2009 - Human Affairs 19 (3):289-296.
    Cold-War Twins: Mikhail Alpatov's a Universal History of Arts and Ernst Gombrich's the Story of Art This article deals with the "afterlife" of a methodological disagreement in the Vienna School of Art History between the positions of Alois Riegl and Julius von Schlosser in Mikhail Alpatov's and Ernst Gombrich's art history survey texts published during the Cold War on different sides of the Iron Curtain. Though these surveys are methodological antipodes, the difference itself, I argue, is possible only (...)
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  18.  18
    Cold war liberalism in West Germany: Richard Löwenthal and ‘Western civilization’.Riccardo Bavaj - 2023 - History of European Ideas 49 (3):607-624.
    Richard Löwenthal’s response to the challenges of ‘1968’ was more complex than that of most of his liberal colleagues. He did not simply remain beholden to the interpretative patterns of a German ‘special path’ (Sonderweg). He also, and increasingly so, drew on the conceptual framework of ‘Western civilization’ to make sense of and cope with the socio-cultural transformations of his times. What many like-minded intellectuals perceived solely as a ‘deviation from the West’, he also viewed as a ‘crisis of the (...)
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  19.  11
    Cold-War ideology : an apologetics for global ethnic conflict?Robert C. Trundle - 1996 - Res Publica 38 (1):49-72.
    Kant had a notion of our determined and freely-choosing behavior which illuminates basic assumptions of contemporary ideologies. A myopic embracement of only one or the other behavior has been superseded by a new entanglement which renders moot ordinary political classifications. Fascism had typically affirmed the radical freedom of an Uebermensch as well as a superior race and racism; Marxist communism a radical determinism as well as inevitable class warfare. But during the Cold War, especially since the 1960s, there arose (...)
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  20.  15
    Communicationism: Cold War Humanism.Arvind Rajagopal - 2020 - Critical Inquiry 46 (2):353-380.
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  21.  16
    Rationalizing Capitalist Democracy: Cold War Origins of Rational Choice Liberalism.S. M. Amadae - 2003 - Chicago, IL, USA: University of Chicago Press.
    This book discusses how rational choice theory grew out of RAND's work for the US Air Force. It concentrates on the work of William J. Riker, Kenneth J. Arrow, James M. Buchanan, Russel Hardin, and John Rawls. It argues that within the context of the US Cold War with its intensive anti-communist and anti-collectivist sentiment, the foundations of capitalist democracy were grounded in the hyper individualist theory of non-cooperative games.
  22.  12
    The Lab and the Land: Overcoming the Arctic in Cold War Alaska.Matthew Farish - 2013 - Isis 104 (1):1-29.
    ABSTRACT The militarization of Alaska during and after World War II created an extraordinary set of new facilities. But it also reshaped the imaginative role of Alaska as a hostile environment, where an antagonistic form of nature could be defeated with the appropriate combination of technology and training. One of the crucial sites for this reformulation was the Arctic Aeromedical Laboratory, based at Ladd Air Force Base in Fairbanks. In the first two decades of the Cold War, its employees (...)
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  23.  19
    Introduction: Perspectives on Cold War Science in Small European States.Matthias Heymann & Janet Martin-Nielsen - 2013 - Centaurus 55 (3):221-242.
    With this introduction we aim to illuminate Western Europe's place on the map of Cold War science and, specifically, to draw attention to the differences in and the diversity of Western European Cold War science in comparison to the United States. By discussing narratives of Cold War science in small states and asking how they fit into the European condition, we suggest that the fact of being a small state affects the conditions for and the scope of (...)
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  24.  17
    Internationalization of Cold War systems analysis: RAND, IIASA and the institutional reasons for methodological change.Matthias Duller - 2016 - History of the Human Sciences 29 (4-5):172-190.
    This article has a dual purpose. First, it looks at the transfer of the methodology of systems analysis from the RAND Corporation to the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in the wake of an East–West bridge-building effort during the Cold War. Second, it draws out a more general argument about how the institutional structures of these research organizations condition their methodological orientations. Acknowledging the complexity of factors influencing methodological choices at RAND and IIASA, the article concentrates on the (...)
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  25.  19
    The Cold War and Academic Governance: The Lattimore Case at Johns Hopkins, by Lionel S. Lewis. [REVIEW]Don Rimmington - 1998 - Minerva 36 (1):81-84.
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  26.  37
    Hannah Arendt among the Cold War Liberals.Samuel Moyn - 2023 - Journal of the History of Ideas 84 (3):533-558.
    Abstract:Hannah Arendt wasn't a liberal, she repeatedly declared. Yet in a series of ways she was a fellow traveler of Cold War liberals. And caught up as she also was in neo-imperial and racist entanglements that go entirely unmentioned in promotional accounts of Cold War liberalism and have barely begun to be challenged even today, she helps cast their thought in relief. Yet there is a proviso. From another, exceptional, and unique perspective—that of their Middle Eastern politics—Cold (...)
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  27.  15
    Le culte de la cheffe dans le monde communiste. Eugénie Cotton, « mère mondiale ».Loukia Efthymiou - 2023 - Clio 57:161-172.
    À travers l’étude du système à effet intégrateur de rituels et de cérémonials célébrant la présidente de l’UFF et de la FDIF Eugénie Cotton, promue en autorité universelle dont les vertus renvoient au modèle marial, le présent travail explore la mise en place dans le monde communiste de la guerre froide du versant féminin du culte du leader. Afin d’en saisir les spécificités par rapport à un phénomène historique dont la riche production historiographique des vingt dernières années consacre naturellement et (...)
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  28. Cold War Internationalism.Sandrine Kott - 2017 - In Glenda Sluga & Patricia Clavin (eds.), Internationalisms: a twentieth-century history. New York, New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  29.  53
    Cold War at Porton Down: Informed Consent in Britain's Biological and Chemical Warfare Experiments.Ulf Schmidt - 2006 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 15 (4):366-380.
    By the end of the Second World War the advancing allied forces discovered a new nerve gas in Germany. It was called Tabun. Codenamed GA, it was found to be extremely toxic. British experts were immediately dispatched to examine the agent. On arrival, they discovered that German scientists had also developed even more toxic nerve agents, including Sarin, known as GB. The first organized testing of Sarin on humans began in October 1951 at Porton Down in Wiltshire, Britain's biochemical warfare (...)
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  30.  50
    Revising the History of Cold War Research Ethics.Susan E. Lederer & Jonathan D. Moreno - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (3):223-237.
    : President Clinton's charge to the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments included the identification of ethical and legal standards for evaluating government-sponsored radiation experiments conducted during the Cold War. In this paper, we review the traditional account of the history of American research ethics, and then highlight and explain the significance of a number of the Committee's historical findings as they relate to this account. These findings include both the national defense establishment's struggles with legal and insurance issues (...)
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  31.  23
    Pragmatism and the cold war.Robert Talisse - 2008 - In Cheryl Misak (ed.), The Oxford handbook of American philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This is a short essay written for the forthcoming *Handbook of American Pragmatism* (Cheryl Misak, ed., Oxford University Press). The author argues that the standard narrative, according to which pragmatism went into eclipse in the years of the Cold War is nonviable.
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  32.  25
    Intelligence and Internationalism: The Cold War Career of Anton Bruun.Peder Roberts - 2013 - Centaurus 55 (3):243-263.
    The Danish marine biologist Anton Frederik Bruun (1901–1961) is chiefly remembered as an explorer of the deep-sea fauna and a key figure in international scientific organizations during the 1950s. As the Cold War increasingly permeated the marine sciences and it became too expensive for small states to operate deep-sea research vessels, he became an asset to the USA's oceanographic establishment as it sought to first assess Soviet strength (in terms of research, technology and logistical capacity) and then to build (...)
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  33.  10
    The Eames Office, the Cold War and the Avant-Garde: Making the Lab of Tomorrow.Ryan Bishop - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (7-8):71-94.
    The design office of Charles and Ray Eames was a collaborative, interdisciplinary, multimedia affair linking Hollywood, the State Department, universities, the corporate sector and international fairs during the height of the Cold War. Bringing together design, furniture, cutting-edge technology and experimental, avant-garde informed-multiscreen projections, the Eames Office operated as a humanities/IT/media/arts lab. For the 1964 World’s Fair, the Eameses created ‘The Information Machine’ for IBM. The techniques of display and experimental juxtaposition of images, sound and new media capacities later (...)
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  34.  11
    Cultural Cold War [review of Frances Stonor Saunders, The Cultural Cold War: the CIA and the World of Arts and Letters ].David Blitz - 2001 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 21 (2).
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  35.  26
    Post‐Cold War Europe, postmodernity, identities.Jérôme Chateau - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (1):257-261.
  36. Cold War II.Noam Chomsky - unknown
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  37.  12
    Ethno-biology during the Cold War: Biocca's Expedition to Amazonia.Daniele Cozzoli - 2016 - Centaurus 58 (4):281-309.
    This article focuses on the ethno-biological expedition to the Amazon headed by Ettore Biocca between November 1962 and July 1963. Biocca, a parasitologist by training, assembled a multidisciplinary team to carry out an ethno-biological study of Amazon natives. The expedition work covered the natives' customs, myths, chants, diseases and the hallucinogenic compounds and curare they used, and took into account plants and animals common to the Amazon environment. This article aims to contribute to the understanding of the 20th-century Western approach (...)
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  38.  14
    Beyond the Cold War: Isaiah Berlin for the Twenty-First Century.George Crowder - 2020 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 32 (4):434-457.
    ABSTRACT Isaiah Berlin’s “Two Concepts of Liberty” is clearly set within a Cold War context. However, its framework of ideas is also applicable to a range of twenty-first century social and political issues. First, Berlin’s “inversion thesis” concerning liberty captures a salient pattern of thought in radical Islamism. Second, his understanding of the power of belonging and recognition bears significantly on the rise of authoritarian nationalism and populism. Third, his value pluralism implies a critique of global neoliberalism and support (...)
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  39.  18
    Rethinking cold war cartography: destabilising the ontology of Soviet military city plans.M. Davis - unknown
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  40.  46
    Post-cold war reflections on the study of international human rights.Jack Donnelly - 1994 - Ethics and International Affairs 8:97–117.
    Donnelly's essay reconstructs the scholarly discourse on human rights that began with the initial mid-1970s "innovative and controversial" approach of linking human rights to foreign policy.
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  41.  29
    Revisiting Cold War Ideology in the Secure City: Towards a Political Economy of Urbicide.Michael Dudley - 2007 - Theory and Event 10 (2).
  42.  22
    Nationalism, Ideology, and the Cold War Space Race.Samantha Kallen - 2019 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 10 (2).
    One of the most enduring legacies of the Cold War period was the rivalry between the Soviet Union and the United States. This is especially true if one considers the ‘Space Race,’ of the mid 1950s-1960s, where each country tried to out-do the other in all manner of space technology. This paper, while acknowledging the importance held by military and scientific goals, argues that it was matters of nationalism and prestige that provided the biggest motivation for the creation of (...)
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  43.  10
    Cold War social science: transnational entanglements: by Mark Solovey and Christian Dayé, eds., Cham, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., 2021, xxvi +400 pp., 9 ill., €139 (Hardback); $159, ISBN 978-3-030-70246-5.John Krige - 2022 - Annals of Science 79 (3):416-417.
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  44.  27
    The Cold War and After: History, Theory, and the Logic of International Politics.Peter Layton - 2015 - The European Legacy 20 (3):303-304.
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  45.  12
    Cold War Romans.Margaret Malamud - 2007 - Arion 14 (3):121-154.
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  46.  11
    The Vaccination Cold War.Jonathan D. Moreno, Judit Sándor & Ulf Schmidt - 2021 - Hastings Center Report 51 (5):12-17.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 51, Issue 5, Page 12-17, September‐October 2021.
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  47.  4
    Liberalism against itself: cold war intellectuals and the making of our times.Samuel Moyn - 2023 - London: Yale University Press.
    By the middle of the twentieth century, many liberals looked glumly at the world modernity had brought about, with its devastating wars, rising totalitarianism, and permanent nuclear terror. They concluded that, far from offering a solution to these problems, the ideals of the Enlightenment, including emancipation and equality, had instead created them. The historian of political thought Samuel Moyn argues that the liberal intellectuals of the Cold War era--among them Isaiah Berlin, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Karl Popper, Judith Shklar, and Lionel (...)
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  48. Cold War Civil Rights: Race and the Image of American Democracy (Book).Bill Mullen - 2003 - Science and Society 67 (3):378.
     
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  49.  7
    Michael Oakeshott's Cold War liberalism.Terry Nardin & Edmund Neill (eds.) - 2015 - New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    During the Cold War, political thinkers in the West debated the balance between the requirements of liberal democracy and national security. This debate is relevant to East Asia and especially to Korea, where an ideological-military standoff between a democracy and a totalitarian system persists. The thinkers often identified as "Cold War liberals"--Isaiah Berlin, Karl Popper, Raymond Aron, Friedrich Hayek, and Michael Oakeshott--are worth revisiting in this context. Of these, Oakeshott is the least well understood in East Asia and (...)
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  50.  9
    Convergence in Cold War Physics: Coinventing the Maser in the Postwar Soviet Union.Climério Paulo da Silva Neto & Alexei Kojevnikov - 2019 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 42 (4):375-399.
    Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, EarlyView.
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