8 found
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John R. Pfeiffer [4]John Pfeiffer [3]John E. Pfeiffer [1]
  1.  38
    Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the Twenty-first Century (review).John R. Pfeiffer - 2010 - Utopian Studies 21 (2):375-379.
  2.  2
    Rumors of War and Infernal Machines: Technomilitary Agenda-setting in American and British Speculative Fiction.John R. Pfeiffer - 2006 - Utopian Studies 17 (3):551-553.
  3.  25
    Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari.John R. Pfeiffer - 2017 - Utopian Studies 28 (1):214-220.
    We are such stuff / As dreams are made on.Only an American could have seen in a single lifetime the growth of the whole tragedy of civilization from the primitive forest clearing. An Englishman grows up to think that the ugliness of Manchester and the slums of Liverpool have existed since the beginning of the world.LUCA [Last Universal Common Ancestor], the researchers say, was the common point of origin for three great domains of life—bacteria, archaea, which are bacteria-like single-cell prokaryotes, (...)
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  4. Science in Your Life.John Pfeiffer, James Clarke, Mildred Adams, Paul B. Sears & Lyman Bryson - 1940 - Philosophy of Science 7 (3):386-387.
  5.  42
    Symbolic Logic.John E. Pfeiffer, Robert S. Hahn, O. F. Krause, Charles Bomgren, Alexander B. Morris & J. C. Brown - 1951 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 16 (4):276-276.
  6.  17
    Why the West Rules—for Now: The Patterns of History and What They Reveal About the Future.John Pfeiffer - 2012 - Utopian Studies 23 (1):285-290.
  7. Shaw and Science Fiction, Volume Seventeen of The Annual of Bernard Shaw Studies.Milton T. Wolf, Fred D. Crawford & John R. Pfeiffer - 1998 - Utopian Studies 9 (2):342-348.
  8.  10
    10. Revolutionary Bodies in Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club Revolutionary Bodies in Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club (pp. 263-280). [REVIEW]Olivia Burgess, Jim Nawrocki, John Pfeiffer & Daniel Lukes - 2012 - Utopian Studies 23 (1):263-280.
    What is potent and compelling about utopia has shifted, quite decisively, away from the social blueprint model and toward a more open-ended exploration of desire and change. Fight Club is a significant marker in the development of a utopianism that is dynamic and adaptive, existing in the present of history rather than in a vacuum of idealism. Building on theories of revolution proffered by Slavoj Žižek and Frederic Jameson, I argue that within the novel the body becomes a potential site (...)
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