Results for 'G. L. Chew'

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  1.  28
    Enhancement of lesion-induced mouse killing by preoperative gentling.D. J. Albert, G. L. Chew, A. Tobani & M. L. Walsh - 1981 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 18 (5):281-283.
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  2.  18
    Dr. Hollingworth on chewing as a technique of relaxation.G. L. Freeman - 1940 - Psychological Review 47 (6):491-493.
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  3. Some Philosophical Aspects of Particle Physics.M. L. G. Redhead - 1980 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 11 (4):279.
    The paper is concerned with explaining some of the principal theoretical developments in elementary particle physics and discussing the associated methodological problems both in respect of heuristics and appraisal. Particular reference is made to relativistic quantum field theory, renormalization, Feynman diagram techniques, the analytic S-matrix and the Chew — Frautschi bootstrap.
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  4.  66
    Real and Imagined Body Movement Primes Metaphor Comprehension.Nicole L. Wilson & Raymond W. Gibbs - 2007 - Cognitive Science 31 (4):721-731.
    We demonstrate in two experiments that real and imagined body movements appropriate to metaphorical phrases facilitate people's immediate comprehension of these phrases. Participants first learned to make different body movements given specific cues. In two reading time studies, people were faster to understand a metaphorical phrase, such as push the argument, when they had previously just made an appropriate body action (e.g., a push movement) (Experiment 1), or imagined making a specific body movement (Experiment 2), than when they first made (...)
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  5. Cognitive neuroscience of emotion.G. L. Clore & A. Ortony - 2000 - In Richard D. R. Lane, L. Nadel, G. L. Ahern, J. Allen & Alfred W. Kaszniak (eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion. Oxford University Press. pp. 24--61.
  6.  59
    The Decline of Sparta.G. L. Cawkwell - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (02):385-.
    In CQ n.s. 26 . 62–84 I argued that the defeat of Sparta in 371 B.C. was not due to the pursuit of unwise policies towards the other Greek states. Unwise policies there had been. Sparta being by no means superior to Athens in the formulation of foreign policy, but these did not affect the position on the eve of Leuctra when, with Thebes politically isolated, and with some of the Boeotians disaffected, Cieombrotus at the head of a numerically superior (...)
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  7.  32
    Agesilaus and Sparta.G. L. Cawkwell - 1976 - Classical Quarterly 26 (01):62-.
    In 404 Sparta stood supreme, militarily and politically master of Greece, in concord with Persia. By 362, the year at which Xenophon terminated his history on the sad note of ‘even greater confusion and uncertainty’, she was eclipsed militarily, never to win a great battle again; and so far from being master even of the Peloponnese that she would spend the rest of time struggling to recover her own ancestral domain of Messenia, no longer a world power, merely a local (...)
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  8.  64
    Early Greek tyranny and the people.G. L. Cawkwell - 1995 - Classical Quarterly 45 (01):73-.
    Over sixty years ago, it was written of early Greek tyranny that it ‘had arisen only in towns where an industrial and commercial regime tended to prevail over rural economy, but where an iron hand was needed to mobilize the masses and to launch them in assault on the privileged classes… But tyranny nowhere endured. After it had performed the services which the popular classes expected of it, after it had powerfully contributed to material prosperity and to the development of (...)
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  9.  3
    Ivan Timofeevich Frolov, 1929-1999.G. L. Belkina - 2004 - Moskva: Nauka. Edited by S. N. Korsakov.
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  10.  21
    Athenian Naval Power in The Fourth Century.G. L. Cawkwell - 1984 - Classical Quarterly 34 (02):334-.
    The reader of Demosthenes can hardly avoid the impression that there was something sadly awry with the Athenian naval system in the two decades prior to Chaeronea. The war in the north Aegean was essentially a naval war, and Demosthenes frequently enough blamedAthen's failure on her lack of preparation. ‘Why do you think, Athenians,… that all our expeditionary forces are too late for the critical moments?…In the business of the war and the preparation for it everything is in disorder, unreformed, (...)
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  11.  42
    Epaminondas and Thebes.G. L. Cawkwell - 1972 - Classical Quarterly 22 (02):254-.
    Epaminondas the soldier has been much admired. His two great battles rank as masterpieces of the military art. Epaminondas himself perhaps regarded them as his greatest achievements, to judge by his last words as reported by Diodorus . He had been carried from the battlefield of Mantinea with a spear stuck in his chest. The doctors declared that when the spear was removed he would die. After hearing that his own shield was safe and that the Boeotians had won, he (...)
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  12.  22
    Marxism and Bourgeois Marxology: Historical Stages of the Struggle.G. L. Belkina - 1977 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 16 (2):89-113.
    The Twenty-fifth Congress of the CPSU emphasized that under present-day conditions, problems of ideological struggle and conflict between the two social systems are assuming increasing importance. In this connection, particularly significant for us are questions pertaining to the deepening confrontation of socialism and capitalism in the realm of social philosophy, which, with the relaxation of international tensions and strengthening of scientific and cultural contacts, is in many respects acquiring new sharpness and assuming new forms. It is precisely in the sphere (...)
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  13.  21
    Demosthenes' Policy After The Peace Of Philocrates. I.G. L. Cawkwell - 1963 - Classical Quarterly 13 (01):120-.
    In 346 the Athenians were sadly deceived by Philip. The long war for Amphipolis had taken its toll and the people wanted relief, but the real motive of those who wanted peace in 346, both Philocrates with his principal abettor Demosthenes, and Eubulus and Aeschines, was to try to keep Philip out of Greece itself.2 In Elaphebolion the only debate was about means, whether, as Aeschines wanted, to try to get Phocis included in a Common Peace, or, as Demosthenes with (...)
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  14.  19
    Demosthenes' Policy After the Peace of Philocrates. II.G. L. Cawkwell - 1963 - Classical Quarterly 13 (02):200-.
    It is perhaps worth briefly discussing a subject on which Demosthenes has so much to say and on which there is so little satisfactory evidence. In every speech which he delivered after 346 he referred, in greater or less detail, to breaches of the Peace of Philocrates, and this insistence on Philip's may mislead us. The case of Cardia is suggestive. In 341, in the speech On the Chersonese, he sought to create the impression that Philip was acting in breach (...)
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  15.  24
    The Crowning of Demosthenes.G. L. Cawkwell - 1969 - Classical Quarterly 19 (01):163-.
    In the course of Demosthenes' lifetime, indeed within a mere decade, the whole balance of power in the Greek world was destroyed. By 338 the city states were completely overshadowed by the national state of Macedon, and it is the concern of all students of Demosthenes to analyse this dramatic change. The task is not easy. The evidence is most unsatisfactory. None of the great historians of the age has survived in other than a few precious fragments, and in the (...)
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  16. Epistemics and Economics: A Critique of Economic Doctrines.G. L. S. Shackle - 1975 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 26 (2):151-163.
  17. Expectation in Economics.G. L. S. Shackle - 1955 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 6 (21):66-78.
     
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  18.  20
    Early Colonisation.G. L. Cawkwell - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (02):289-.
    It is commonly supposed that in the eighth century B.c. there was a ‘population explosion’ in Greece which moved the Greeks to send out colonies. A. J. Graham in the Cambridge Ancient History iii, 3 is typical: ‘The basic active cause of the colonizing movement was overpopulation’; ‘at the very time when the Archaic colonising movement began, in the second half of the eighth century, there was a marked increase in population in Greece’ . The presumed connection between overpopulation and (...)
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  19.  32
    Franz Hampl: Alexander der Grosse. Pp. 92. Göttingen: Musterschmidt, 1958. Paper, DM. 3.60.G. L. Cawkwell - 1960 - The Classical Review 10 (01):80-81.
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  20.  32
    H. F. Harding: The Speeches of Thucydides. Pp. x + 373. Lawrence, Kansas: Coronado Press, 1973. Paper, $12.5O.G. L. Cawkwell - 1978 - The Classical Review 28 (2):346-346.
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  21.  28
    Lysander.G. L. Cawkwell - 1983 - The Classical Review 33 (01):73-.
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  22.  16
    Luis A. Losada: The Fifth Column in the Peloponnesian War. (Mnemosyne Supp. xxi.) Pp. 148. Leiden: Brill, 1972. Paper, fl. 48.G. L. Cawkwell - 1976 - The Classical Review 26 (1):139-139.
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  23.  38
    Sparta and Her Allies in the Sixth Century.G. L. Cawkwell - 1993 - Classical Quarterly 43 (02):364-.
    In the first book of his History Thucydides shows ‘the Spartans and the Allies’, to give the Peloponnesian League its formal title, making the decision that Athens had broken the Thirty Years Peace. After receiving the complaints of various allies, the Spartans discussed in the assembly the conduct of Athens and what should be done about it and ended by voting that the treaty had been broken and that the Athenians were in the wrong . This decision they communicated to (...)
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  24.  18
    The Crowning of Demosthenes.G. L. Cawkwell - 1969 - Classical Quarterly 19 (1):163-180.
    In the course of Demosthenes' lifetime, indeed within a mere decade, the whole balance of power in the Greek world was destroyed. By 338 the city states were completely overshadowed by the national state of Macedon, and it is the concern of all students of Demosthenes to analyse this dramatic change. The task is not easy. The evidence is most unsatisfactory. None of the great historians of the age has survived in other than a few precious fragments, and in the (...)
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  25.  17
    The Defence of Olynthus.G. L. Cawkwell - 1962 - Classical Quarterly 12 (01):122-.
    Demosthenes prophesied1 that, unless Athens stopped Philip in the north, she would have to deal with him in Greece itself, and the events of 346 proved him right. Right in this much, he has been presumed right in general, and the policies of those he opposed have received only scant consideration before being dismissed as the selfish pursuit of peace by the rich, who were so blinded by their material interests that they could not see the real issues involved. It (...)
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  26.  22
    The King's Peace.G. L. Cawkwell - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (01):69-.
    Nothing about Xenophon's Hellenica is more outrageous than his treatment of the relations of Persia and the Greeks. It was orthodoxy in the circle of Agesilaus that Theban medizing, barbarismos, had sabotaged the plans for a glorious anabasis and recalled him to the defence of his city . Not until the Thebans woo and win the fickle favour of the King , does anything like detail emerge. In the regrettable interlude, the less said the better. If the third speech of (...)
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  27.  20
    The Mathematics of Cleisthenes.G. L. Cawkwell - 1965 - The Classical Review 15 (02):202-.
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  28.  19
    The Oxyrhynchus Historian.G. L. Cawkwell - 1968 - The Classical Review 18 (03):288-.
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  29.  62
    The Oath of Plataea Peter Siewert: Der Eid von Plataiai. (Vestigia, 16.) Pp. xi+118. Munich: Beck, 1972. Cloth, DM.26.G. L. Cawkwell - 1975 - The Classical Review 25 (02):263-265.
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  30.  13
    The Peace of Philocrates again.G. L. Cawkwell - 1978 - Classical Quarterly 28 (01):93-.
    In REG 73 and 75 I discussed various points connected with the Peace of Philocrates, a number of which have been assailed by M. M. Markle in CQ N.S. 24 in an article entitled ‘The Strategy of Philip in 346 B.C.’. Time passes, and, although de Ste. Croix in his Origins of the Peloponnesian War , p.105, felt able to declare that ‘a book shortly to be published by M. M. Markle makes a valuable and original contribution to our understanding (...)
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  31.  20
    Algebraically closed commutative rings.G. L. Cherlin - 1973 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 38 (3):493-499.
  32.  11
    Business, time, and thought: selected papers of G.L.S. Shackle.G. L. S. Shackle - 1988 - New York: New York University Press. Edited by Stephen F. Frowen.
  33.  26
    L'errore di Cartesio e il gergo di Damasio.G. L. Brena - 2011 - Verifiche: Rivista Trimestrale di Scienze Umane 40 (1):5-23.
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  34. A dualistic model of ultimate reality and meaning: self-similarity in chaotic dynamics and Swedenborg.G. L. Baker - 1994 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 17 (3):184-196.
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  35.  17
    Antiquaries of Scotland.G. L. Cheesman - 1911 - The Classical Review 25 (06):188-189.
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  36.  10
    H. Jerome Keisler. The stability function of a theory. The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 43 , pp. 481–486.G. L. Cherlin - 1983 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 48 (2):496-497.
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  37.  17
    Saharon Shelah. On uniqueness of prime models. The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 44 , pp. 215–220.G. L. Cherlin - 1983 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 48 (2):497.
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  38.  25
    The model-companion of a class of structures.G. L. Cherlin - 1972 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 37 (3):546-556.
  39.  18
    Model theoretic algebra.G. L. Cherlin - 1976 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 41 (2):537-545.
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  40.  20
    The effects of electroconvulsive shock on extinction.G. L. Dempsey & A. Grant Young - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (2):129-131.
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  41. Uncertainty in Economics and Other Reflections.G. L. S. Shackle - 1957 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 7 (28):362-363.
  42. Dos propuestas sobre epistemología y ciencia en el siglo XVII novohispano: Carlos de Sigüenza y Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz.G. L. Benítez - 1996 - Diálogo Filosófico 36:367-384.
    Don Carlos de Sigüenza y sor Juana Inés de la Cruz no solo se encuentran en la encrucijada del paso de la edad media a la moderna, y del viejo al nuevo mundo, sino de la vieja a la nueva vía de reflexión y de la vieja a la nueva ciencia. Es lo que se intenta mostrar en estas páginas.
     
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  43. The seven deadly sins of research on affect.G. L. Clore, J. Storbeck, M. D. Robinson & D. Centerbar - 2005 - In Barr (ed.), Emotion and Consciousness. Guilford Press.
     
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  44. Forme di verita. Introduzione all'epistemologia.G. L. Brena & M. Buzzoni - 1996 - Epistemologia 19 (2):351-355.
     
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  45.  26
    One Health and Zoonotic Uncertainty in Singapore and Australia: Examining Different Regimes of Precaution in Outbreak Decision-Making.C. Degeling, G. L. Gilbert, P. Tambyah, J. Johnson & T. Lysaght - 2020 - Public Health Ethics 13 (1):69-81.
    A One Health approach holds great promise for attenuating the risk and burdens of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) in both human and animal populations. Because the course and costs of EID outbreaks are difficult to predict, One Health policies must deal with scientific uncertainty, whilst addressing the political, economic and ethical dimensions of communication and intervention strategies. Drawing on the outcomes of parallel Delphi surveys conducted with policymakers in Singapore and Australia, we explore the normative dimensions of two different precautionary (...)
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  46.  10
    The Imperialism of Thrasybulus.G. L. Cawkwell - 1976 - Classical Quarterly 26 (02):270-.
    The achievement of Thrasybulus on his last voyage has been variously estimated. Busolt saw no more than a series of strong-arm acts that added up to very little. Beloch spoke of the Second Athenian Empire. For others there were mere renewals of friendship. This note has as its starting-point that Thrasybulus sought to restore the fifth-century empire. If one looks merely at the list of places explicitly mentioned, the sum is not large. Thasos and its peraea, Samothrace and possibly its (...)
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  47. Is a new evolutionary synthesis necessary?G. L. Stebbins & F. J. Ayala - 2014 - In Francisco José Ayala & John C. Avise (eds.), Essential readings in evolutionary biology. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
     
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  48.  14
    The auction sales of the earl of Bute's instruments, 1793.G. L'E. Turner - 1967 - Annals of Science 23 (3):213-242.
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  49.  35
    Two concepts of psychologism.G. L. Pandit - 1971 - Philosophical Studies 22 (5-6):85 - 91.
  50.  31
    Do Neutron Star Gravitational Waves Carry Superfluid Imprints?G. L. Comer - 2002 - Foundations of Physics 32 (12):1903-1942.
    Isolated neutron stars undergoing non-radial oscillations are expected to emit gravitational waves in the kilohertz frequency range. To date, radio astronomers have located about 1,300 pulsars, and can estimate that there are about 2×108 neutron stars in the galaxy. Many of these are surely old and cold enough that their interiors will contain matter in the superfluid or superconducting state. In fact, the so-called glitch phenomenon in pulsars (a sudden spin-up of the pulsar's crust) is best described by assuming the (...)
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