Results for 'G. Harder'

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  1.  5
    A COMMENTARY ON MEGARA_- (G.P.) TSOMIS Das hellenistische Gedicht _Megara. Ein Kommentar. (Palingenesia 130.) Pp. 236. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2022. Cased, €50. ISBN: 978-3-515-13108-7. [REVIEW]Annette Harder - 2023 - The Classical Review 73 (2):455-457.
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  2.  3
    Motivations, changes and challenges of participating in food-related social innovations and their transformative potential: three cases from Berlin (Germany).Felix Zoll, Alexandra Harder, Lerato Nyaradzo Manatsa & Jonathan Friedrich - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-22.
    Dominant agri-food systems are increasingly seen as unsustainable in terms of environmental degradation, mass production or high food waste. In an attempt to counteract these developments and foster sustainability transitions in agri-food systems, a variety of actors are engaging in socially innovative models of food production and consumption. Using a multiple case study approach, our study examines three contrasting alternative economic models in the city of Berlin: community gardens, the app Too Good To Go (TGTG), and a cooperative supermarket. Based (...)
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  3.  80
    Supporting the best charities is harder than it seems.Steven G. Brown - 2016 - Journal of Global Ethics 12 (2):240-244.
    Once upon a time, I attempted to create a web-based one-stop-shop for global poverty relief called the Maximin Project. Drawing on aspects of that experience, I show that although some existing ways of rating and recommending charities are significantly better than others, there remain certain challenges that need to be overcome. Specifically, I argue that the emerging Effective Altruism movement, with its emphasis on measurable effectiveness, runs the risk of neglecting a whole range of projects that are necessary for a (...)
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  4.  10
    Commentary.G. Laurie - 2004 - Journal of Medical Ethics 30 (5):439-440.
    Dr Andorno and I have corresponded for some time on the question of a right not to know information. I enjoyed reading his paper and I am struck by the degree of agreement that we share. We both agree—for example, that unsolicited knowledge can be a burden which can significantly compromise an individual’s psychological integrity. We both share a desire to respect individual self determination. Also we each consider it reasonable for individuals to choose not to receive potentially harmful information. (...)
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  5.  16
    A proposal for teaching bioethics in high schools using appropriate visual education tools.Chiedozie G. Ike & Nancy Anderson - 2018 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 13 (1):11.
    Teaching bioethics with visual education tools, such as movies and comics, is a unique way of explaining the history and progress of human research and the art and science of medicine to high school students. For more than a decade, bioethical concepts have appeared in movies, and these films are useful for teaching medical and research ethics in high schools. Using visual tools to teach bioethics can have both interpretational and transformational effects on learners that will enhance their overall understanding (...)
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  6.  1
    A Theory of Basic Goods: Structure and Hierarchy.James G. Hanink - 1988 - The Thomist 52 (2):221-245.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A THEORY OF BASIC GOODS: STRUCTURE AND HIERARCHY* I. FTEN, PERHAPS ALWAYS, moral theory emerges from particular problems. Just how is obscure. The logic of discovery is elusive; and it is harder to explain how we have come to see matters rightly than to recognize that we do, in fact, see them rightly. What counts as a theory, moreover, calls for explication as much as does a theory's (...)
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  7.  10
    An innovative framework for supporting content-based authorship identification and analysis in social media networks.José Gaviria de la Puerta, Iker Pastor-López, Alberto Tellaeche, Borja Sanz, Hugo Sanjurjo-González, Alfredo Cuzzocrea & Pablo G. Bringas - forthcoming - Logic Journal of the IGPL.
    Content-based authorship identification is an emerging research problem in online social media networks, due to a wide collection of issues ranging from security to privacy preservation, from radicalization to defamation detection, and so forth. Indeed, this research has attracted a relevant amount of attention from the research community during the past years. The general problem becomes harder when we consider the additional constraint of identifying the same false profile over different social media networks, under obvious considerations. Inspired by this (...)
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  8.  30
    Ecce itervm stephanvs A. harder, R. regtuit, P. stork, G. Wakker (edd.): 'Nocheinmal zu …' Kleine schriften Von Stefan radt zu seinem 75. geburtstag . ( Mnemosyne suppl. 235.) pp. XII + 508. Leiden, boston, and cologne: Brill, 2002. Cased, €125/us$145. Isbn: 90-04-12794-. [REVIEW]James Diggle - 2004 - The Classical Review 54 (02):303-.
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  9.  19
    M. A. Harder, R. F. Regtuit, G. C. Wakker Theocritus . Pp. 267. Groningen: Egbert Forsten, 1996. Paper, Hfl. 75. ISBN: 90-6980-064-5. [REVIEW]Steven Jackson - 1998 - The Classical Review 48 (1):173-174.
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  10.  16
    Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger: Epistemic Standards and Moral Beliefs.Nicole Dular - 2020 - Logos and Episteme 11 (1):29-51.
    Much work in moral epistemology is devoted to explaining apparent asymmetries between moral and non-moral epistemology. These asymmetries include testimony, expertise, and disagreement. Surprisingly, these asymmetries have been addressed in isolation from each other, and the explanations offered have been piecemeal, rather than holistic. In this paper, I provide the only unified account on offer of these asymmetries. According to this unified account, moral beliefs typically have a higher epistemic standard than non-moral beliefs. This means, roughly, that it is typically (...)
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  11.  77
    Cicero and Horace Cicéron, Discours, Tome VII.: Pour M. Fonteius, Pour A. Cécina, Sur les Pouvoirs de Pompée. Texte établi et traduit par André Boulanger. (Collection des Universités de France.) Paris: 'Les Belles Lettres,' 1929. Paper, 20 fr. Ueber Ciceros Somnium Scipionis. Von Richard Harder. (Schriften der Königsberger Gelehrten Gesellschaft, Geisteswissenschaftliche Klasse, 6. Jahr, Heft 3.) Pp. 115–151. Halle (Saale): Niemeyer, 1929. Paper, Rm. 3. Quaestionum Tullianarum ad dialogum de Oratore partes philosophicas quae dicuntur spectantium specimen. Karl Prümm. Pp. 67. Saarbrück: Saarbrücker Druckerei und Verlag, 1927. Paper. Cicero's 'De Oratore' and Horace's 'Ars Poetica.' By G. C. Fiske. Pp. 152. (University of Wisconsin Studies in Language and Literature, No. 27.) Madison, 1929. Cloth. Arte poetica di Orazio. Introduzione e Commento di Augusto Rostagni. Pp. cxii + 133. (Biblioteca di Filologia classica.) Turin: Chiantore, 1930. Paper, L. 28. [REVIEW]T. B. L. Webster - 1930 - The Classical Review 44 (5):188-190.
  12. Ultrasound nails location of the elusive G spot.Linda Geddes - unknown
    FOR women, it is supposed to trigger one of the most intense orgasms imaginable, with waves of pleasure spreading out across the whole body. If the "G spot orgasm" seems semi-mythical, however, that's because there has been scant evidence of its existence. Now for the first time gynaecological scans have revealed clear anatomical differences between women who claim to experience vaginal orgasms involving a G spot and those who don't. It might mean that there is a G spot, after all. (...)
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  13.  6
    Object Sees the Subject: Political Anthropology of Sociological Fieldwork.G. B. Yudin - 2016 - Sociology of Power 28 (4):57-82.
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  14.  4
    Zur psychologie des ästhetischen genusses.G. Wernick - 1903 - Leipzig,: W. Engelmann.
    Excerpt from Zur Psychologie des Asthetischen Genusses Die erste Erfahrung, auf der uberhaupt die Existenz berechtigung einer Wissenschaft wie der Asthetik beruht, ist die, da durch Einwirkung gewisser Objekte auf unsere Sinne ein Wohlgefallen in uns erzeugt wird, das wir unmittelbar und mit ziemlicher Sicherheit von allen anderen Arten des Wohlgefallens unterscheiden. Wenn wir versuchen, diesen zunachst nur gefiihlten Unterschied zu begrifi'licher Klarheit emporzuheben, so bemerken wir, da das asthetische Wohl gefallen durch zwei Eigenschaften charakterisiert und von allen anderen Arten (...)
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  15. Tri lika kulʹtury.G. N. Volkov - 1986 - Moskva: "Molodai︠a︡ gvardii︠a︡".
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  16. Metod v deĭstvii: opyt t︠s︡elostnogo ovladenii︠a︡ naslediem K. Marksa.G. V. Stark - 1988 - Rostov-na-Donu: Izd-vo Rostovskogo universiteta. Edited by I︠U︡. R. Tishchenko.
     
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  17. Anticipating and Enacting Worlds: Moods, Illness and Psychobehavioral Adaptation.Matthew Crippen - forthcoming - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences:1-25.
    Predictive processing theorists have claimed PTSD and depression are maladaptive and epistemically distorting because they entail undesirably wide gaps between top-down models and bottom-up information inflows. Without denying this is sometimes so, the “maladaptive” label carries questionable normative assumptions. For instance, trauma survivors facing significant risk of subsequent attacks may overestimate threats to circumvent further trauma, “bringing forth” concretely safer personal spaces, to use enactive terminology, ensuring the desired gap between predicted worries and outcomes. The violation of predictive processing can (...)
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  18.  9
    The presocratic philosophers: a critical history with a selection of texts.G. S. Kirk & J. E. Raven - 1983 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by J. E. Raven & Malcolm Schofield.
    This book traces the intellectual revolution initiated by Thales in the sixth century BC to its culmination in the metaphysics of Parmenides.
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  19. Crime and Society — II.G. Jay Weinroth - 1973 - Philosophy in Context 2 (9999):28-33.
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  20.  9
    Sman paʼi bslab bya gces btus =.Gʹyu-Thog Yon-Tan-Mgon-Po - 2021 - Khrin-tuʼu: Si-khron mi-rigs dpe-skrun-khang.
    Selected writings, including those of Gʹyu-thog Yon-tan-mgon-po, 1126 to 1202, on the morality of Tibetan medicine.
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  21. Constraining condemning.Roger Wertheimer - 1998 - Ethics 108 (3):489-501.
    Our culture is conflicted about morally judging and condemning. We can't avoid it altogether, yet many layfolk today are loathe to do it for reasons neither they nor philosophers well understand. Their resistance is often confused (by themselves and by theorists) with some species of antiobjectivism. But unlike a nonobjectivist, most people think that (a) for us to judge and condemn is generally (objectively) morally wrong , yet (b) for God to do so is (objectively) proper, and (c) so too (...)
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  22.  7
    God.H. G. Wells - 1917 - New York,: The Macmillan company.
    H G WellsHerbert George Wells, an English writer, was born on 21st 1866 and died on 13 Aug 1946. He was renowned for his works of science fiction especially 'The Time Machine'. He is also referred as 'The Father of Science Fiction'.
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  23.  17
    Reading relative clauses in English.Edward Gibson, Timothy Desmet, Daniel Grodner, Duane Watson & Kara Ko - 2005 - Cognitive Linguistics 16 (2):313-353.
    Two self-paced reading experiments investigated several factors that influence the comprehension complexity of singly-embedded relative clauses (RCs) in English. Three factors were manipulated in Experiment 1, resulting in three main effects. First, object-extracted RCs were read more slowly than subject-extracted RCs, replicating previous work. Second, RCs that were embedded within the sentential complement of a noun were read more slowly than comparable RCs that were not embedded in this way. Third, and most interestingly, object-modifying RCs were read more slowly than (...)
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  24. Does Mary know I experience plus rather than quus? A new hard problem.Philip Goff - 2012 - Philosophical Studies 160 (2):223-235.
    Realism about cognitive or semantic phenomenology, the view that certain conscious states are intrinsically such as to ground thought or understanding, is increasingly being taken seriously in analytic philosophy. The principle aim of this paper is to argue that it is extremely difficult to be a physicalist about cognitive phenomenology. The general trend in later 20th century/early 21st century philosophy of mind has been to account for the content of thought in terms of facts outside the head of the thinker (...)
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  25.  11
    Fostering Medical Students’ Commitment to Beneficence in Ethics Education.Philip Reed & Joseph Caruana - 2024 - Voices in Bioethics 10.
    PHOTO ID 121339257© Designer491| Dreamstime.com ABSTRACT When physicians use their clinical knowledge and skills to advance the well-being of their patients, there may be apparent conflict between patient autonomy and physician beneficence. We are skeptical that today’s medical ethics education adequately fosters future physicians’ commitment to beneficence, which is both rationally defensible and fundamentally consistent with patient autonomy. We use an ethical dilemma that was presented to a group of third-year medical students to examine how ethics education might be causing (...)
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  26.  28
    The Quantified Animal: Precision Livestock Farming and the Ethical Implications of Objectification.Ynte K. van Dam, Peter H. Feindt, Bernice Bovenkerk & Jacqueline M. Bos - 2018 - Food Ethics 2 (1):77-92.
    Precision livestock farming (PLF) is the management of livestock using the principles and technology of process engineering. Key to PLF is the dense monitoring of variegated parameters, including animal growth, output of produce (e.g. milk, eggs), diseases, animal behaviour, and the physical environment (e.g. thermal micro-environment, ammonia emissions). While its proponents consider PLF a win-win strategy that combines production efficiency with sustainability goals and animal welfare, critics emphasise, inter alia, the potential interruption of human-animal relationships. This paper discusses the notion (...)
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  27.  22
    Gamification, Side Effects, and Praise and Blame for Outcomes.Sven Nyholm - 2024 - Minds and Machines 34 (1):1-21.
    Abstract“Gamification” refers to adding game-like elements to non-game activities so as to encourage participation. Gamification is used in various contexts: apps on phones motivating people to exercise, employers trying to encourage their employees to work harder, social media companies trying to stimulate user engagement, and so on and so forth. Here, I focus on gamification with this property: the game-designer (a company or other organization) creates a “game” in order to encourage the players (the users) to bring about certain (...)
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  28. XIX vi︠e︡k i ego nravstvennai︠a︡ kulʹtura.I︠U︡. G. Zhukovskīĭ - 1909 - S.-Peterburg: Tip. V.Ḟ. Kirshbauma.
     
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  29.  43
    Referring to Mathematical Objects via Definite Descriptions.Stefan Buijsman - 2017 - Philosophia Mathematica 25 (1):128-138.
    Linsky and Zalta try to explain how we can refer to mathematical objects by saying that this happens through definite descriptions which may appeal to mathematical theories. I present two issues for their account. First, there is a problem of finding appropriate pre-conditions to reference, which are currently difficult to satisfy. Second, there is a problem of ensuring the stability of the resulting reference. Slight changes in the properties ascribed to a mathematical object can result in a shift of reference (...)
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  30.  11
    Can Digitally Transformed Work Be Virtuous?Alejo José G. Sison - 2024 - Business Ethics Quarterly 34 (1):163-191.
    This essay inquires whether digitally transformed work can be virtuous and under what conditions. It eschews technological determinism in both utopian and dystopian versions, opting for the premise of free human agency. This work is distinctive in adopting an actor-centric and explicitly ethical analysis based on neo-Aristotelian, Catholic social teaching (CST), and MacIntyrean teachings on the virtues. Beginning with an analysis of digital disruption, it identifies the most salient human advantages vis-à-vis technology in digitally transformed work and provides philosophical anthropological (...)
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  31.  14
    A Deductive System for Boole’s ‘The Mathematical Analysis of Logic’ and Its Application to Aristotle’s Deductions.G. A. Kyriazis - forthcoming - History and Philosophy of Logic:1-30.
    George Boole published the pamphlet The Mathematical Analysis of Logic in 1847. He believed that logic should belong to a universal mathematics that would cover both quantitative and nonquantitative research. With his pamphlet, Boole signalled an important change in symbolic logic: in contrast with his predecessors, his thinking was exclusively extensional. Notwithstanding the innovations introduced he accepted all traditional Aristotelean syllogisms. Nevertheless, some criticisms have been raised concerning Boole’s view of Aristotelean logic as the solution of algebraic equations. In order (...)
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  32. Two- and Four-Year-Olds Learn to Adapt Referring Expressions to Context: Effects of Distracters and Feedback on Referential Communication.Danielle Matthews, Jessica Butcher, Elena Lieven & Michael Tomasello - 2012 - Topics in Cognitive Science 4 (2):184-210.
    Children often refer to things ambiguously but learn not to from responding to clarification requests. We review and explore this learning process here. In Study 1, eighty-four 2- and 4-year-olds were tested for their ability to request stickers from either (a) a small array with one dissimilar distracter or (b) a large array containing similar distracters. When children made ambiguous requests, they received either general feedback or specific questions about which of two options they wanted. With training, children learned to (...)
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  33.  8
    Orthodox justification of collective violence: An epistemological and systematic framework.Marian G. Simion - 2024 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (1):11.
    Using a religious studies methodology, this paper offers a detailed contextual mapping and a structural configuration of how collective violence is justified in Orthodox Christianity. The research design is explanatory, whereby the functional perspectives of doctrine, ethics and worship are all investigated and probed as phenomena of lived religion and orthopraxy. While predominantly initiatory and pedagogical, the paper also proposes a systematic platform for advanced research on this subject, by flagging contexts, themes and areas of inquiry that a researcher might (...)
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  34.  6
    Letter From The Editor.Margo G. Smith - 2023 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 51 (S2):1-1.
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  35.  30
    Tense, Aspect and Time Adverbials: Part II.Frank Heny - 1982 - Linguistics and Philosophy 5 (1):109-154.
    In Section 1, we questioned the evidence for iteration of tenses, even with abstraction. To permit abstraction would in any case risk neutralizing our distinction between tensed and untensed sentences. Sequence of tense phenomena, far from supporting iteration, were incompatible with it. Instead, we argued, tense always retains its full deictic character; tenses never have scope over each other. The future modal WILL is exceptional (Section 2), but abstraction is not required to deal with this.An important suggestion, first made in (...)
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  36. Conspiring with the Enemy: The Ethic of Cooperation in Warfare.Yvonne Chiu - 2019 - New York, NY, USA: Columbia University Press.
    *North American Society for Social Philosophy (NASSP) Book Award 2019.* -/- *International Studies Association (ISA) - International Ethics Section Book Award 2021.* -/- Although military mores have relied primarily on just war theory, the ethic of cooperation in warfare (ECW)—between enemies even as they are trying to kill each other—is as central to the practice of warfare and to conceptualization of its morality. Neither game theory nor unilateral moral duties (God-given or otherwise) can explain the explicit language of cooperation in (...)
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  37.  16
    A Sequent Systems without Improper Derivations.Katsumi Sasaki - 2022 - Bulletin of the Section of Logic 51 (1):91-108.
    In the natural deduction system for classical propositional logic given by G. Gentzen, there are some inference rules with assumptions discharged by the rule. D. Prawitz calls such inference rules improper, and others proper. Improper inference rules are more complicated and are often harder to understand than the proper ones. In the present paper, we distinguish between proper and improper derivations by using sequent systems. Specifically, we introduce a sequent system \(\vdash_{\bf Sc}\) for classical propositional logic with only structural (...)
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  38.  4
    Teaching old dogs new tricks—a personal perspective on a decade of efforts by a clinical ethics committee to promote awareness of medical ethics.Martin G. Tweeddale - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (suppl 1):41-43.
    To incorporate medical ethics into clinical practice, it must first be understood and valued by health care professionals. The recognition of this principle led to an expanding and continuing educational effort by the ethics committee of the Vancouver General Hospital. This paper reviews this venture, including some pitfalls and failures, as well as successes. Although we began with consultants, it quickly became apparent that education in medical ethics must reach all health care professionals—and medical students as well. Our greatest successes (...)
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  39.  42
    Should “Systems Thinkers” Accept the Limits on Political Forecasting or Push the Limits?Philip E. Tetlock, Michael C. Horowitz & Richard Herrmann - 2012 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 24 (3):375-391.
    Historical analysis and policy making often require counterfactual thought experiments that isolate hypothesized causes from a vast array of historical possibilities. However, a core precept of Jervis's “systems thinking” is that causes are so interconnected that the historian can only with great difficulty imagine causation by subtracting all variables but one. Prediction, according to Jervis, is even more problematic: The more sensitive an event is to initial conditions (e.g., butterfly effects), the harder it is to derive accurate forecasts. Nevertheless, (...)
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  40. Goods and bads.Alban G. Widgery - 1920 - Baroda: Edited by Sayaji Rao Gaekwar.
     
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  41. Imagination and fission futures.G. J. Shipley - 2002 - Analysis 62 (4):324–327.
  42.  15
    Are non‐protein coding RNAs junk or treasure?Nils G. Walter - 2024 - Bioessays 46 (4):2300201.
    The human genome project's lasting legacies are the emerging insights into human physiology and disease, and the ascendance of biology as the dominant science of the 21st century. Sequencing revealed that >90% of the human genome is not coding for proteins, as originally thought, but rather is overwhelmingly transcribed into non‐protein coding, or non‐coding, RNAs (ncRNAs). This discovery initially led to the hypothesis that most genomic DNA is “junk”, a term still championed by some geneticists and evolutionary biologists. In contrast, (...)
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  43.  3
    Creating of Hinduism’s Image in Religiosus-Philosophical Thoutht of the Bengal Renaissance.T. G. Skorokhodova - 2018 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 22 (1):18-29.
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  44.  2
    Logic and Language.David G. Stern - 1995 - In Wittgenstein on mind and language. New York: Oxford University Press.
    An analysis of the sources of Wittgenstein’s picture theory — which include not only his moment of insight on reading a magazine story about the use of models in a traffic court, but also the work of Russell, Hertz, and Boltzmann — provides the basis for an exploration of Wittgenstein’s articulation of a pictorial conception of representation in his wartime notebooks and its crystallization in the Tractatus. A discussion of Wittgenstein’s later criticism of the picture theory and his notion of (...)
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  45. Redaksioneel.A. G. Van Aarde - 1995 - HTS Theological Studies 51 (1):1-2.
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  46. Osnovni rysy pryrodnycho-naukovoho materializmu.G. S. Vaset︠s︡kiĭ - 1944
     
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  47.  2
    Taxonomias para os argumentos e contra-argumentos no debate sobre o princípio de identidade dos indiscerníveis.Leonardo G. S. Videira - 2023 - Revista Ética E Filosofia Política 1 (26):150-185.
    Este artigo visa apresentar uma taxonomia original dos argumentos mais difundidos contra o Princípio de Identidade dos Indiscerníveis ao longo da história da Filosofia, mas focando em versões defendidas no século XX e XXI; bem como uma taxonomia das respostas mais efetivas para esses argumentos usados no início do século XXI com uma breve avaliação sobre quais são as mais efetivas para cada argumento de ataque. O leitor também encontrará uma bibliografia atualizada sobre os debates envolvendo esses argumentos e contra-argumentos (...)
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  48. Can God's Existence be Disproved?G. E. Hughes - 1955 - In Antony Flew (ed.), New essays in philosophical theology. New York,: Macmillan. pp. 56-67.
  49.  18
    ‘Cock’ in Latin.G. P. Shipp - 1936 - The Classical Review 50 (05):164-165.
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  50.  21
    ΠΑнΛΟΣ, ‘Head’?G. P. Shipp - 1944 - The Classical Review 58 (02):52-.
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