Results for 'Fransina Stradling'

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  1.  8
    ‘From there everything changed’: conversion narrative in the biomimicry movement.Fransina Stradling & Valerie Hobbs - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    1. ‘Born into a world of stories’ (Bochner et al., 1997), humans share a propensity to experience and understand the world through narratives. We use narratives to situate ourselves physiologically...
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  2. The unacceptable face of evidence‐based medicine.J. R. Stradling & R. J. O. Davies - 1997 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 3 (2):99-103.
  3. ¿Leyenda invencible? La Herencia cultural del año 1588 y la historia de España e Inglaterra.Robert A. Stradling - 1990 - Contrastes 5:7-20.
    The construction of myths and legends takes place departing from specific historical events. These exert a significant intluence on the view of the past in generations to come, which in tum is essential for both historic interpretation and the configuration of national character. This is specially so when we ar concerned with the confroiitation with another country, as it is the case of the Armada between Spain and England. It is necessary to situate in its right place this significant historical (...)
     
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  4. Two Bookes of Constancie.Justus Lipsius, John Stradling & Rudolf Kirk - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (61):98-98.
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  5.  23
    Two Bookes of Constancie, written in Latine by Justus Lipsius, Englished by Sir John Stradling, Edited with an introduction by Roudlf Kirk, Notes by Clayton Morris Hall. (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. 1939. Pp. ix + 223. Price $4.50.). [REVIEW]M. H. Carré - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (61):98-.
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  6.  60
    Justus Lipsius On Constancy.John Sellars (ed.) - 2006 - Bristol Phoenix Press.
    This book makes available again a long out-of-print translation of a major sixteenth-century philosophical text. Lipsius' De Constantia (1584) is an important Humanist text and a key moment in the reception of Stoicism. A dialogue in two books, conceived as a philosophical consolation for those suffering through contemporary religious wars, it proved immensely popular in its day and formed the inspiration for what has become known as 'Neostoicism'. This movement advocated the revival of Stoic ethics in a form that would (...)
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