Results for 'A. D. Burke'

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  1. Dewey's Pragmatism as an Alternative to End-State and Anarchist Utopias: A Review of Erin McKenna's The Task of Utopia: A Pragmatist and Feminist Perspective. [REVIEW]A. D. Burke - 2004 - Journal of Thought 39 (3):129-134.
     
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  2.  12
    A determination of the binding free energy between vacancies and silicon solute atoms in aluminium using an equilibrium method.J. Burke & A. D. King - 1970 - Philosophical Magazine 21 (169):7-22.
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  3.  21
    Tinbergen's “four questions” provides a formal framework for a more complete understanding of prosocial biases in favour of attractive people.Ian D. Stephen, Darren Burke & Danielle Sulikowski - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  4.  10
    Breaking the Boundaries Collective – A Manifesto for Relationship-based Practice.D. Darley, P. Blundell, L. Cherry, J. O. Wong, A. M. Wilson, S. Vaughan, K. Vandenberghe, B. Taylor, K. Scott, T. Ridgeway, S. Parker, S. Olson, L. Oakley, A. Newman, E. Murray, D. G. Hughes, N. Hasan, J. Harrison, M. Hall, L. Guido-Bayliss, R. Edah, G. Eichsteller, L. Dougan, B. Burke, S. Boucher, A. Maestri-Banks & Members of the Breaking the Boundaries Collective - 2024 - Ethics and Social Welfare 18 (1):94-106.
    This paper argues that professionals who make boundary-related decisions should be guided by relationship-based practice. In our roles as service users and professionals, drawing from our lived experiences of professional relationships, we argue we need to move away from distance-based practice. This includes understanding the boundary stories and narratives that exist for all of us – including the people we support, other professionals, as well as the organisations and systems within which we work. When we are dealing with professional boundary (...)
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  5.  26
    Die Pädagogik des Isokrates als Grundlegung des humanistischen Bildungsideals, im Vergleich mit den zeitgenössischen und den modernen Theorien dargestellt. Von August Burk (Studien zur Geschichte und Kultur des Altertums, XII. Band, ¾. Heft). Pp. viii + 231. Würzburg: Selbstverlag Univ. Professor Dr. Drerup, Hofpromenade 1, 1923. 6s. net. [REVIEW]A. D. Nock - 1925 - The Classical Review 39 (7-8):210-210.
  6.  18
    On turning the philosophy of education outside‐in.D. R. Burke & V. A. Howard - 1969 - British Journal of Educational Studies 17 (1):5 - 15.
  7.  15
    On turning the philosophy of education outside‐in.D. R. Burke & V. A. Howard - 1969 - British Journal of Educational Studies 17 (1):5-15.
  8.  19
    Drugs In Sport: Have They Practiced Too Hard? A Response to Schneider and Butcher.Michael D. Burke - 1997 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 24 (1):47-66.
  9.  38
    Drugs In Sport: Have They Practiced Too Hard? A Response to Schneider and Butcher.Michael D. Burke & Terence J. Roberts - 1997 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 24 (1):47-66.
  10.  39
    The Precautionary Principle for Shift-Work Research and Decision-Making.Charleen D. Adams, Erika Blacksher & Wylie Burke - 2019 - Public Health Ethics 12 (1):44-53.
    Shift work is a fixture of our 24-hour economy, with approximately 18 per cent of workers in the USA engaging in shift work, many overnight. Since shift work has been linked to an increased risk for an array of serious maladies, including cardiometabolic disorders and cancer, and is done disproportionately by the poor and by minorities, shift work is a highly prevalent economic and occupational health disparity. Here we draw primarily on the state of science around shift work and breast (...)
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  11.  4
    Repeated Application of Transcranial Diagnostic Ultrasound Towards the Visual Cortex Induced Illusory Visual Percepts in Healthy Participants.Nels Schimek, Zeb Burke-Conte, Justin Abernethy, Maren Schimek, Celeste Burke-Conte, Michael Bobola, Andrea Stocco & Pierre D. Mourad - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14:500655.
    Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the visual cortex can induce phosphenes as can non-diagnostic ultrasound, the latter while participants have closed their eyes during Stimulation. Here we sought to study potential alteration of a visual target (a white crosshair) due to application of diagnostic ultrasound to the visual cortex. We applied a randomized series of actual or sham diagnostic ultrasound to the visual cortex of healthy participants while they stared at a visual target, with the ultrasound device placed where TMS (...)
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  12.  13
    Bile ducts as a source of pancreatic β cells.Zoë D. Burke, Chia-Ning Shen & David Tosh - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (9):932-937.
    In recent years, there have been a number of well‐documented examples demonstrating that one cell type can be converted to another. Two such examples are the appearance of ectopic pancreas in the liver and formation of hepatic tissue in the pancreas. The conversion of liver to pancreas raises the intriguing possibility of generating insulin‐producing β cells for therapeutic transplantation into diabetics. There is now a striking addition to the growing list of pancreatic conversions: the formation of pancreatic tissue in the (...)
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  13.  36
    Powerlessness and Personalization.Victoria I. Burke & Robin D. Burke - 2019 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 33 (2):319-343.
    Is privacy the key ethical issue of the internet age? This coauthored essay argues that even if all of a user’s privacy concerns were met through secure communication and computation, there are still ethical problems with personalized information systems. Our objective is to show how computer-mediated life generates what Ernesto Laclou and Chantal Mouffe call an “atypical form of social struggle”. Laclau and Mouffe develop a politics of contingent identity and transient articulation (or social integration) by means of the notions (...)
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  14.  57
    Alperson, Philip, ed. Diversity and Community: An Interdisciplinary Reader. Oxford: Blackwell, 2002.£ 55.00;£ 16.99 pb. Audi, Robert. Epistemology: A Contemporary Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge, New York: Routledge, 2003. $22.95 pb. [REVIEW]Michael Barnhardt, F. Thomas Burke, D. Micah Hester, Robert B. Talisse & Allen Carlson - forthcoming - Philosophy Today.
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  15.  50
    Beyond totem and idol, the sexuate other.Luce Irigaray & Karen I. Burke - 2007 - Continental Philosophy Review 40 (4):353-364.
    The author interprets idolatry, totemism, sacrilege and taboo through her theory of sexual difference and her study of Eastern spirituality. She argues that the taboo on spirituality in Western culture has cancelled difference, resulting in our current forms of idolatry. Preserving difference, however, would allow the transcendence of the human other to exist. The task of learning to respect difference is central to human spirituality and spiritual progression. The article is a translation of “La transcendance de l’autre” in Autour d’idôlatrie: (...)
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  16.  5
    Canon and Authority: Essays in Old Testament Religion and Theology.George W. Coats & Burke O. Long - 1977 - Augsburg Fortress Publishing.
    Opposition: Obedience and authority in Exodus 32-34 / George W. Coats -- The theological significance of contradiction within the Book of the Covenant / Paul D. Hanson -- The renewed authority of Old Testament wisdom for contemporary faith / Wayne Sibley Towner -- A stylistic study of the priestly creation story / Bernhard W. Anderson -- "I will not cause it to return" in Amos 1 and 2 / Rolf P. Knierim.
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  17.  18
    Shelah's pcf theory and its applications.Maxim R. Burke & Menachem Magidor - 1990 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 50 (3):207-254.
    This is a survey paper giving a self-contained account of Shelah's theory of the pcf function pcf={cf:D is an ultrafilter on a}, where a is a set of regular cardinals such that a
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  18.  12
    (Anti)Realist Implications of a Pragmatist Dual-Process Active-Externalist Theory of Experience.Tom Burke - 2008 - Philosophia Scientiae 12 (1):187-211.
    Les questions relatives à l’opposition réalisme/antiréalisme sont abordées à la lumière d’une philosophie pragmatiste de l’esprit. On élabore une philosophie pragmatiste de l’esprit dans les termes d’une théorie ‘externaliste-active’ de l’expérience vue comme double processus. Cette théorie pose en principe deux types d’expérience tels que la ‘mentalité’ (en tant que capacité à penser, émettre des hypothèses, formuler des théories, raisonner, délibérer) constitue l’un des deux types d’expérience. La correspondance formelle de la théorie avec les faits est caractérisée en termes de (...)
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  19.  9
    (Anti)Realist Implications of a Pragmatist Dual-Process Active-Externalist Theory of Experience.Tom Burke - 2008 - Philosophia Scientiae 12:187-211.
    Les questions relatives à l’opposition réalisme/antiréalisme sont abordées à la lumière d’une philosophie pragmatiste de l’esprit. On élabore une philosophie pragmatiste de l’esprit dans les termes d’une théorie ‘externaliste-active’ de l’expérience vue comme double processus. Cette théorie pose en principe deux types d’expérience tels que la ‘mentalité’ (en tant que capacité à penser, émettre des hypothèses, formuler des théories, raisonner, délibérer) constitue l’un des deux types d’expérience. La correspondance formelle de la théorie avec les faits est caractérisée en termes de (...)
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  20.  5
    John Dewey's Essays in Experimental Logic.Tom Burke - 2007 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    Offering a new edition of Dewey's 1916 collection of essays This critical edition of John Dewey's 1916 collection of writings on logic, Essays in Experimental Logic—in which Dewey presents his concept of logic as the theory of inquiry and his unique and innovative development of the relationship of inquiry to experience—is the first scholarly reprint of the work in one volume since 1954. Essays in Experimental Logic, edited by D. Micah Hester and Robert B. Talisse, uses the authoritative texts from (...)
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  21.  17
    Gertrude Stein, the Cone Sisters, and the Puzzle of Female Friendship.Carolyn Burke - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (3):543-564.
    For ten years, between 1903 and 1913, Gertrude Stein saw human relationships as painful mathematical puzzles in need of solutions. Again and again, she converted the predicaments of her personal life into literary material, the better to solve and to exorcise them. The revelation that relationships had a structural quality came to her during the composition of Q.E.D. , when she grasped the almost mathematical nature of her characters' emotional impasse. Stein's persona in the novel comments on their triangular affair, (...)
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  22.  31
    Antigone’s Transgression.Victoria I. Burke - 1999 - Dialogue 38 (3):535-546.
    RésuméCet article concerne le conflit entre le domaine du divin et celui de l'humain dans la lecture hégélienne de l'Antigone de Sophocle. Je soutiens que la lecture de l'Antigone par Hegel sous-estime la négativité du sacré et que, contrairement à ce que pense Hegel, l'action d'Antigone ne peut pas être dépassée, parce que son telos n'est pas l'unité, mais plutôt le rétablissement de ce que Bataille appellerait la continuité, ou l'indifférencié. Le sens du récit de l'Antigone excède ainsi l'usage qu'en (...)
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  23.  6
    Le concept de concept dans la philosophie de Deleuze: polymorphisme(s) et pluralisme(s).Deven Burks - 2021 - Paris: L'Harmattan. Edited by Benoît Goetz.
    Chapitre premier. Le concept de concept : un "concept" à sept composantes -- chapitre II. Statut problématique du concept de concept : le danger d'auto-réfutation -- chapitre III. Renvoi à une instance génétique plus profonde : la question de la pensée pure ... -- chapitre IV. Interférence et autrui dans le discours philosophique.
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  24. Aiming to kill: The ethics of suicide and euthanasia. By Nigel Biggar, religion and the death penalty: A call for reckoning. Edited by Erik C. Owens, John D. Carlson, and Eric P. Elshtain and theological fragments: Explorations in unsystematic theology. By Duncan B. Forrester. [REVIEW]John K. Burk - 2007 - Heythrop Journal 48 (3):489–491.
  25.  18
    Richard Price and Edmund Burke: The Duty to Participate in Government.D. O. Thomas - 1959 - Philosophy 34 (131):308-322.
    Richard Price argued for democratic institutions on the ground that each individual has a moral responsibility for the good government of his community. This assumption that political responsibilities are moral responsibilities was in turn derived from the belief that each individual has a continuous duty to create in his own personality and in his relations with his fellow men the conditions of the virtuous life. Popular political responsibility was thus defended by the extension of a rigorous moral athleticism into the (...)
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  26.  24
    Political Economy to the Fore: Burke, Malthus and the Whig Response to Popular Radicalism in the Age of the French Revolution.D. McNally - 2000 - History of Political Thought 21 (3):427-448.
    In the face of new forms of popular radicalism in the 1790s, British Whigs turned increasingly hostile to the French Revolution and doctrines of radical social improvement. Yet, rather than turn to Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France to frame their anti-radical arguments, Whiggism took up the claims of Thomas Malthus' Essay on the Principle of Population. By eschewing the voluntarist idiom of Burke's Reflections in favour of a Newtonian rhetoric which resonated with the discursive traditions of (...)
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  27.  23
    Toward a Reconstruction of Medical Morality.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):65-71.
    At the center of medical morality is the healing relationship. It is defined by three phenomena: the fact of illness, the act of profession, and the act of medicine. The first puts the patient in a vulnerable and dependent position; it results in an unequal relationship. The second implies a promise to help. The third involves those actions that will lead to a medically competent healing decision. But it must also be good for the patient in the fullest possible sense. (...)
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  28.  30
    Richard Price and Edmund Burke: The Duty to Participate in Government.D. O. Thomas - 1959 - Philosophy 34 (131):308 - 322.
    Richard Price argued for democratic institutions on the ground that each individual has a moral responsibility for the good government of his community. This assumption that political responsibilities are moral responsibilities was in turn derived from the belief that each individual has a continuous duty to create in his own personality and in his relations with his fellow men the conditions of the virtuous life. Popular political responsibility was thus defended by the extension of a rigorous moral athleticism into the (...)
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  29.  3
    John Dewey's Essays in Experimental Logic.D. Micah Hester & Robert B. Talisse (eds.) - 2007 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    _Offering a new edition of Dewey’s 1916 collection of essays_ This critical edition of John Dewey’s 1916 collection of writings on logic, _Essays in Experimental Logic—_in which Dewey presents his concept of logic as the theory of inquiry and his unique and innovative development of the relationship of inquiry to experience—is the first scholarly reprint of the work in one volume since 1954. _Essays in Experimental Logic, _edited by D. Micah Hester and Robert B. Talisse, uses the authoritative texts from (...)
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  30. Toward a reconstruction of medical morality.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):65 - 71.
    At the center of medical morality is the healing relationship. It is defined by three phenomena: the fact of illness, the act of profession, and the act of medicine. The first puts the patient in a vulnerable and dependent position; it results in an unequal relationship. The second implies a promise to help. The third involves those actions that will lead to a medically competent healing decision. But it must also be good for the patient in the fullest possible sense. (...)
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  31.  30
    Edmund Burke, His Political Philosophy. [REVIEW]W. L. D. - 1975 - Review of Metaphysics 28 (3):562-563.
    O’Gorman proposes a fresh interpretation of Burke by taking seriously the fact that his political thought was articulated as a series of responses to practical political problems and by examining, chronologically, the main political problems that occupied him throughout his career. A chapter is devoted to Burke’s response to each of the following problems: the validity of political parties, the nature of the British Constitution, the imperial problems of America, Ireland, and India, and the challenge of the French (...)
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  32.  18
    Edmund Burke and the invention of modern conservatism, 1830–1914: An intellectual history. [REVIEW]D. N. Byrne - 2023 - Intellectual History Review 33 (2):364-366.
    The rising tide of conservatism, a flow that has resulted in the re-modelling, indeed the reduction, of the public sphere and the re-organisation of civil society in all of the economically develop...
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  33.  5
    A vindication of politics: on the common good and human flourishing.Matthew D. Wright - 2019 - Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.
    Natural law political theory grounds the authority of law in the law's capacity to advance the common good, but questions about what this common good is and how it relates to political life remain highly contested. The influential new natural law theory of John Finnis reduces political association to the operation of government and makes it a merely instrumental good that serves to secure and facilitate individual and social goods. Political community, on this account, does not realize any further human (...)
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  34.  30
    Philosophy of the Sublime as Theory and Experience.D. D. Desjardins - 2019 - Philosophy and Literature 43 (1):71-88.
    Writing On the Sublime and Beautiful, Edmund Burke tells us the ideas most capable of making an impression are those related to self-preservation and society. Such ideas are bound to our passions. Passions belonging to self-preservation turn on pain or danger.1 Those belonging to society do as well, although in this work, Burke dwells exclusively on pain. Because he tells us the king of terrors is death, we might infer pain is inferior to danger, the latter more formidable. (...)
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  35.  2
    Reorienting Rhetoric: The Dialectic of List and Story.John D. O'Banion - 1991 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Written in the form it discusses, _Reorienting Rhetoric _is both a narrative weaving out of a theme and a systematic treatment of a set of these ideas. The theme is the role of narration in the history of Western rhetoric. The ideas include the gradual tendency to privilege only systematic language, to discard all traditional modes of thinking, and to view narrative as an object but not as a means of thinking. _Reorienting Rhetoric_ argues that narration is a mode of (...)
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  36.  4
    Reorienting Rhetoric: The Dialectic of List and Story.John D. O'Banion - 1987 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Written in the form it discusses, _Reorienting Rhetoric _is both a narrative weaving out of a theme and a systematic treatment of a set of these ideas. The theme is the role of narration in the history of Western rhetoric. The ideas include the gradual tendency to privilege only systematic language, to discard all traditional modes of thinking, and to view narrative as an object but not as a means of thinking. _Reorienting Rhetoric_ argues that narration is a mode of (...)
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  37. The Problem of Perception.A. D. Smith - 2002 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    The Problem of Perception offers two arguments against direct realism--one concerning illusion, and one concerning hallucination--that no current theory of ...
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  38. A Social Concept in Decline.Debra A. Arvanites & Burke T. Ward - forthcoming - Contemporary Issues in Business Ethics.
     
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  39.  55
    The Politics of the Book.Stuart D. Warner - 1990 - Philosophy and Theology 4 (3):223-252.
    The principal object of Ihis essay is to elucidate some of the story of how a theory that was so entrenched in the minds of intellectuals, namely, natural rights theory, fell so out of favor. This is the story of how the terror, fear, and destruction that became part of the French Revolution was laid at the feet of natural rights theory by three powerful figures: Burke, Bentham, and Hegel. It was these three figures, more than any others, who (...)
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  40. The Problem of Perception.A. D. Smith - 2002 - Philosophical Quarterly 54 (217):640-642.
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  41. Working memory and conscious awareness.A. D. Baddeley - 1993 - In A. Collins, S. Gathercole, Martin A. Conway & P. E. Morris (eds.), Theories of Memory. Lawrence Erlbaum.
  42.  25
    On the universality of the nonstationary ideal.Sean D. Cox - 2018 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 64 (1-2):103-117.
    Burke proved that the generalized nonstationary ideal, denoted by NS, is universal in the following sense: every normal ideal, and every tower of normal ideals of inaccessible height, is a canonical Rudin‐Keisler projection of the restriction of NS to some stationary set. We investigate how far Burke's theorem can be pushed, by analyzing the universality properties of NS with respect to the wider class of ‐systems of filters introduced by Audrito and Steila. First we answer a question of (...)
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  43. Memory systems.A. D. Baddeley, D. L. Schacter & E. Tulving - 1994 - In Memory Systems. MIT Press.
  44.  99
    Descartes and the Late Scholastics.A. D. Smith - 2002 - Mind 111 (442):360-363.
  45. Of primary and secondary qualities.A. D. Smith - 1990 - Philosophical Review 99 (2):221-254.
  46. Translucent experiences.A. D. Smith - 2008 - Philosophical Studies 140 (2):197--212.
    This paper considers the claim that perceptual experience is “transparent”, in the sense that nothing other than the apparent public objects of perception are available to introspection by the subject of such experience. I revive and strengthen the objection that blurred vision constitutes an insuperable objection to the claim, and counter recent responses to the general objection. Finally the bearing of this issue on representationalist accounts of the mind is considered.
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  47.  24
    Developmental and acquired dyslexia: A comparison.A. D. Baddeley, N. C. Ellis, T. R. Miles & V. J. Lewis - 1982 - Cognition 11 (2):185-199.
  48. Physicalism in Mathematics.A. D. Irvine - 1993 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 183 (3):638-640.
     
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  49. Nauchnyĭ poisk i religioznai︠a︡ vera.A. D. Aleksandrov - 1974
     
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  50. Problemy nauki i pozit︠s︡ii︠a︡ uchenogo: statʹi i vystuplenii︠a︡.A. D. Aleksandrov - 1988 - Leningrad: "Nauka," Leningradskoe otd-nie.
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