Results for 'Ohio Wooster'

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  1.  5
    East-West Studies on the Problem of the Self: Papers presented at the Conference on Comparative Philosophy and Culture held at the College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, April 22–24, 1965.Alburey Castell, P. T. Raju & Ohio Wooster - 1968 - Springer.
    The general characteristics of the decades after the last World War, so far as the human situation goes, include two phenomena: these decades are marked by man's dissatisfaction with himself, his confession of ignorance of himself, his anxiety about his future, and also his earnest search for the ground of his being, which can give him a feeling of security with reference to his life here and hereafter; they are also marked by man's pride about his achievements in science and (...)
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  2.  20
    ESSAYS ON KIERKEGAARD & WITTGENSTEIN Edited by Richard H. Bell and Ronald E. Hustwit, The College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, 1978.J. Kellenberger - 1978 - Philosophical Investigations 1 (4):64-66.
  3. East-West Studies on the Problem of the Self Papers Presented at the Conference on Comparative Philosophy and Culture Held at the College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, April 22-24, 1965.P. T. Raju & Alburey Castell - 1968 - Martinus Nijhoff.
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  4. New Plane and Solid Geometry.Wooster Woodruff Beman - 1900 - The Monist 10:473.
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  5. ew Plane and Solid Geometry. [REVIEW]Wooster Woodruff Beman - 1900 - Ancient Philosophy (Misc) 10:473.
     
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  6.  10
    Critiques and Essays in CriticismTheory of LiteratureT. S. Eliot: The Design of His Poetry.Isabel Creed Hungerland, Robert Wooster Stallman, Rene Wellek, Austin Warren & Elizabeth Drew - 1950 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 8 (3):196.
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  7.  6
    Latin Woostered and Hard-Boiled: The Classical Style of P. G. Wodehouse and Raymond Chandler.Kathleen Riley - 2018 - Arion 26 (2):17.
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  8. Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geological Survey, Sandusky, Ohio.Reef Area of Western Lake Erie - 1968 - In Peter Koestenbaum (ed.), Proceedings. [San Jose? Calif.,: [San Jose? Calif.. pp. 188.
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  9.  70
    Ohio impromptu, genre and Beckett on film.Garin Dowd - 2006 - In .
    Samuel Beckett’s choice of the title Ohio Impromptu to name the play first performed to an audience of academics and scholars at Columbus Ohio in 1981 is one manifestation of its author’s interest in the question of literary genre; more generally, in Beckett’s dramatic works one encounters a meticulous attention to the activity of categorisation, even if the energy is often directed toward the creation of phantom genres for spectral exemplars. This essay concerns itself with Ohio Impromptu (...)
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  10.  10
    Ohio University Archives & Special Collection MS Collection #118 - 1940-1988.Scott Davidson, John E. Drabinski, Michelle Huynh, Kris Sealey, Amina Taylor, Vanessa Gabler & Kari Johnston - 1991 - Bulletin de la Société Américaine de Philosophie de Langue Française 3 (3):221-226.
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  11.  8
    Ohio Court Finds Blue Cross Liable for Misleading Copayment Charges.L. G. B. - 1995 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (4):409-410.
    On August 29, 1995, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio ruled that certain practices of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Ohio relating to the calculation of copayments on insurance claims violated provisions of ERISA, and thus BCBSO could be liable for unpaid benefits and breach of fiduciary duty ). According to BCBSO's Explanation of Benefits and Schedule of Benefits, beneficiaries were responsible for a 20 percent copayment for hospital charges, and the remaining (...)
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  12.  21
    The ohio study in light of national data and clinical experience.Tracy C. Schmidt - 2004 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 14 (3):235-240.
    : The Siminoff, Burant, and Youngner study in Ohio is strikingly consistent with data from a national study. Both suggest that there might be significant public acceptance of future policies that violate the dead donor rule, or that further extend the boundary between life and death to include brain-damaged patients short of "brain death." Experience with donation suggests that many individuals would donate their loved ones' organs when they have concluded that the brain injury is not survivable, even if (...)
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  13.  5
    Consent: Ohio Appellate Court affirms confidentiality claim.L. Michel - 1997 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 26 (4):355-356.
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  14. The College of Wooster.Ishwar C. Harris - 1995 - In S. Radhakrishnan, Rama Rao Pappu & S. S. (eds.), New Essays in the Philosophy of Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan. Sri Satguru Publications. pp. 6--225.
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  15. Ohio University.Troy Organ - 1995 - In S. Radhakrishnan, Rama Rao Pappu & S. S. (eds.), New Essays in the Philosophy of Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan. Sri Satguru Publications. pp. 6--75.
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  16.  4
    Ohio Valley.Diana M. Greenlee - 2001 - In Terry L. Hunt, Carl P. Lipo & Sarah L. Sterling (eds.), Posing Questions for a Scientific Archaeology. Bergin & Garvey. pp. 217.
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  17.  6
    The Ohio Conference on Political Cinema.N. Wood - 1979 - Télos 1979 (42):159-162.
  18.  15
    The Bioethics Network of Ohio.Brenden Minogue - 1993 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (1):107.
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  19.  19
    The State of Ohio’s Auditors, the Enumeration of Population, and the Project of Eugenics.Cameron Graham, Martin E. Persson, Vaughan S. Radcliffe & Mitchell J. Stein - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 187 (3):565-587.
    In 1856, the State of Ohio began an enumeration of its population to count and identify people with disabilities. This paper examines the ethical role of the accounting profession in this project, which supported the transatlantic eugenics movement and its genocidal attempts to eliminate disabled persons from the population. We use a theoretical approach based on Levinas who argued that the self is generated through engagement with the Other, and that this engagement presupposes a responsibility to and for the (...)
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  20. Sven WALTER Ohio State University.Terry Terry & Quite Contrary - 2002 - Grazer Philosophische Studien: Internationale Zeitschrift für Analytische Philosophie; Gps 63:103-122.
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  21.  36
    Hegelianism in Nineteenth-Century Ohio.Loyd D. Easton - 1962 - Journal of the History of Ideas 23 (3):355.
  22. The Ohio Hegelians. History of American Thought, vols. 1-3. Vol. 1: The Temple of Truth. Vol. 2: The Earthward Pilgrimage. Vol. 3: The Concepts and Theories of Modern Physics. [REVIEW]James A. Good, Peter Kaufmann, Moncure D. Conway & J. Stallo - 2007 - Utopian Studies 18 (2):277-280.
  23.  10
    The psychological laboratory of Ohio State University.A. P. Weiss - 1927 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 10 (5):434.
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  24. Friedman@math.ohio-state.Edu.Harvey M. Friedman - unknown
    It has been accepted since the early part of the Century that there is no problem formalizing mathematics in standard formal systems of axiomatic set theory. Most people feel that they know as much as they ever want to know about how one can reduce natural numbers, integers, rationals, reals, and complex numbers to sets, and prove all of their basic properties. Furthermore, that this can continue through more and more complicated material, and that there is never a real problem.
     
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  25.  3
    The Ohio Hegelians. History of American Thought, vols. 1-3. Vol. 1: The Temple of Truth. Vol. 2: The Earthward Pilgrimage. Vol. 3: The Concepts and Theories of Modern Physics. [REVIEW]Toby Widdicombe - 2007 - Utopian Studies 18 (2):277-280.
  26. Horace Mann in Ohio: a study of the application of his public school ideals to college administration..George Allen Hubbell - 1900 - New York: The Macmillan co. [etc.].
     
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  27.  39
    An analysis of winesburg, ohio.John J. Maroney - 1956 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 15 (2):245-252.
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  28. Latin in an Ohio School.W. H. Johnson - 1914 - Classical Weekly 8:32.
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  29.  15
    The Self in Eastern and Western Thought: The Wooster Conference.W. Norris Clarke & Beatrice Burkel - 1966 - International Philosophical Quarterly 6 (1):101-109.
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  30. Four Dead in Ohio : Revolutionary Music and American Protests.Andrew R. Wilczak - 2023 - In Eleanor Peters (ed.), Music in crime, resistance, and identity. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  31. Four Dead in Ohio : Revolutionary Music and American Protests.Andrew R. Wilczak - 2023 - In Eleanor Peters (ed.), Music in crime, resistance, and identity. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  32.  7
    The intersection of food justice and religious values in secular spaces: insights from a nonprofit urban farm in Columbus, Ohio.Kelsey Ryan-Simkins - 2021 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (3):767-781.
    Critical food scholars have argued that activists’ political ideologies and environmental values are important influences on their food justice projects. However, this body of work has given little attention to religion and spirituality even though religious studies scholars maintain that religious values affect environmental and social action. Bringing together these perspectives considers the way religious values and meaning making intersect with actions toward food justice outside of traditionally religious spaces. This paper draws on qualitative research, including a dozen interviews and (...)
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  33. "Strange Fevers, Burning Within": The Neurology of Winesburg, Ohio.Andrew Corey Yerkes - 2011 - Philosophy and Literature 35 (2):199-215.
    Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio, published in 1919, is an episodic collection of character sketches based mostly around the perspective of George Willard, a small-town journalist who listens to the stories of various characters, often described in grotesque terms, whose passionate inner lives contrast with their limited outwardly lived existences. The initial critical response to these stories was to regard Anderson as a sort of cheap Freudian who was making an obvious criticism of American Puritanism and conformity. One reviewer, Regis (...)
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  34.  3
    A Photographer's Guide to Ohio.Ian Adams - 2011 - Ohio University Press.
    In A Photographer’s Guide to Ohio Ian Adams, Ohio’s leading landscape photographer, guides readers to some of the most photogenic sites in the Buckeye State. Natural beauty and historic architecture are prime subjects for photographers, and in a state that boasts 3,600 buildings on the National Register of Historic Places and is home to the world’s largest Amish communities, the photographic subjects seem endless. With nearly one hundred color photographs, Adams demonstrates through his own work how to capture (...)
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  35.  23
    Malign and benign neglect: a local food system and the myth of sustainable redevelopment in Appalachia Ohio.Angela M. Chapman & Harold A. Perkins - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (1):113-127.
    Local food systems seem virtuous in the larger context of the neoliberalization of global food systems and increasing food insecurity. However, local food systems are critiqued for reproducing neoliberalism when they prioritize niche-market consumerism over enhancing access for poor people. Advocates, in contrast, insist local food systems contribute to an equitable political economy of food if they are place-based and inclusive. Local food systems must not, according to them, be condemned monolithically in light of their neoliberal tendencies, but evaluated instead (...)
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  36.  11
    Sensegiving doesn't always make sense: framing the implementation of performance-based funding in Ohio.Amanda Maxwell & Victoria Barbosa Olivo - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    Organizational sensegiving is a framework that details influencing others in an organization’s process of making meaning of new information. In this study, we examined sensegiving through performance-based funding (PBF) discourse of state actors to Ohio citizens. Utilizing critical discourse analysis, 14 media releases were analyzed, focusing on linguistic construction to examine discursive strategies used by public institution presidents and politicians implementing PBF. This study contributes to the existing literature by exploring how state actors are sensegivers to citizens, stating their (...)
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  37.  9
    The House on College Avenue: The Comptons at Wooster, 1891-1913. James R. Blackwood.Roger H. Stuewer - 1969 - Isis 60 (3):414-415.
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  38.  39
    Wayne's World Growing up in Cleveland, Ohio, 1941-1963.Wayne J. Urban - 1995 - Educational Studies 26 (4):301-320.
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  39.  17
    Gardens and Green Spaces: placemaking and Black entrepreneurialism in Cleveland, Ohio.Justine Lindemann - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (4):867-878.
    This paper presents a case study of Gardens and Green Spaces (GGS), a resident-driven, grant-funded project in Cleveland, Ohio working toward community change. Through both placemaking and entrepreneurial strategies, the main grant objectives are to effect change at the intersection of food (and agriculture), arts, and culture in Kinsman, a 96% Black Neighborhood on Cleveland’s east side. While community development (CD) projects are often designed by outside ‘experts’ who inform the scope and focus of grant-funded projects, this project is (...)
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  40.  4
    “Every Shrub Seemed Pregnant with Her Charms”: A Woman, Her Wonder, and the Ohio Country in Gilbert Imlay’s The Emigrants.Eric Miller - 2020 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 39:159-179.
    Gilbert Imlay’s 1793 epistolary novel The Emigrants, which dramatizes several characters’ journey across the Alleghenies to occupy and develop a tract in the Ohio country, features the use of allusions and commonplaces that illuminate this fiction’s provocative campaign to conciliate physiocracy, proto-feminism, and the new philosophy with the expulsion of indigenous people in the region. Imlay uses Pope, Sterne and Thomson to justify and eroticize U.S. expansiveness. The heroine Caroline T—n embodies, especially, the wondering, wonderful vindication of a world-historical (...)
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  41.  3
    “Every Shrub Seemed Pregnant with Her Charms”: A Woman, Her Wonder, and the Ohio Country in Gilbert Imlay’s The Emigrants.Eric Miller - 2020 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 39:159-179.
    Gilbert Imlay’s 1793 epistolary novel The Emigrants, which dramatizes several characters’ journey across the Alleghenies to occupy and develop a tract in the Ohio country, features the use of allusions and commonplaces that illuminate this fiction’s provocative campaign to conciliate physiocracy, proto-feminism, and the new philosophy with the expulsion of indigenous people in the region. Imlay uses Pope, Sterne and Thomson to justify and eroticize U.S. expansiveness. The heroine Caroline T—n embodies, especially, the wondering, wonderful vindication of a world-historical (...)
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  42.  5
    Life and Mind. Edmund Ware Sinnott. Yellow Springs, Ohio: The Antioch Press, 1956. Pp. 29. $0.50.John De Lucca - 1958 - Philosophy of Science 25 (2):140-140.
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  43.  15
    Sur les rives de l’Ohio : la cité utopique de Lezay-Marnésia.Roland Bonnel - 1994 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 13:43.
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  44.  30
    Hegel's first american followers, the ohio Hegelians: J. B. stallo, Peter Kaufmann, moncure Conway, August willich.Herbert Wallace Schneider - 1967 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 5 (4):378.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:378 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY these churches to deal reasonably with frontier conditions and popular prejudices is common knowledge, but it is often forgotten that their founder and guide during the critical days of growth was also an exponent of the late Scottish Enlightenment. To make this careful analysis of Campbell's philosophy, as an extraordinary specimen of empirical method, is a welcome achievement by an experienced empiricist. The volume also (...)
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  45. The evolution‐creation controversy: Opinions of ohio school board presidents.Michael Zimmerman - 1991 - Science Education 75 (2):201-214.
     
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  46.  8
    Howard P Kainz, An Introduction to Hegel: The Stages of Modern Philosophy, Athens: Ohio University Press, 1996, pp xi + 102.Christopher Bennett - 1997 - Hegel Bulletin 18 (2):43-45.
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  47. Mediated publics and the crises of democracy. Keynote address, Ohio Valley Philosophy of Education Society.M. Boler - 2006 - Philosophical Studies in Education 37:25 - 38.
     
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  48.  21
    The Warfare of Democratic Ideas. By Francis M. myers. (Antioch Press, Ohio. 1956. Pp. 248. $3.50.).David Pole - 1957 - Philosophy 32 (123):377-.
  49.  14
    Decentering Rushdie: Cosmopolitanism and the Indian Novel in English, Pranav Jani, Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2010.Paul Stasi - 2012 - Historical Materialism 20 (1):232-243.
    Decentering Rushdie argues that postcolonial studies has consistently underestimated the investment of the English-language Indian novel in the nation by focusing on a handful of texts that conform to Western assumptions about the bankruptcy of the postcolonial nation-state. Taking Salman Rushdie’s work as the sign of a presumed homology between postcolonialism and a postmodern distrust of totality, Jani demonstrates that his novels are hardly representative of the range of Indian writing in English. Instead, in a series of expert readings of (...)
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  50.  32
    Samuel Eliot Morison: The Ancient Classics in a Modern Democracy. Commencement Address delivered at the College of Wooster, 12 June 1939. Pp. 26. London: Oxford University Press, 1939. Paper, 3s. [REVIEW]E. R. Dodds - 1940 - The Classical Review 54 (02):112-.
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