Results for ' Eurasia'

93 found
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  1. An Institutionalist Account.".Post-Soviet Eurasia - 1994 - Theory and Society 23 (1).
  2.  4
    Eurasia and East–West Boundaries.Goody Goody - 2003 - Diogenes 50 (4):115-118.
    The notion that there was a profound cultural boundary between Europe (defined as Christian) and Asia (defined as other, including Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism …) was dear to the hearts of the Europeans at least from the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. But it is as much a figment of European creation as the notion of a physical boundary. Of course there were cultural differences of a graduated kind and important political-military ones with the western developments of ships and guns (using (...)
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  3. Why eurasia, why europe, why Poland?Jared Diamond - 2001 - In A. Koj & Piotr Sztompka (eds.), Images of the World: Science, Humanities, Art. Jagiellonian University. pp. 111.
     
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  4.  14
    Mongol Eurasia in the Trecento Veneto.Anne Dunlop - 2020 - Convivium 7 (1):114-135.
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  5.  74
    Eurasia and East–West Boundaries.Jack Goody - 2003 - Diogenes 50 (4):115-118.
    The notion that there was a profound cultural boundary between Europe (defined as Christian) and Asia (defined as other, including Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism …) was dear to the hearts of the Europeans at least from the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. But it is as much a figment of European creation as the notion of a physical boundary. Of course there were cultural differences of a graduated kind and important political-military ones with the western developments of ships and guns (using (...)
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  6.  13
    China–India relations in Eurasia: Historical legacy and the changing global context.Danil Bochkov, Ivan Safranchuk & Igor Denisov - 2020 - Human Affairs 30 (2):224-238.
    The relationship between the People’s Republic of China and the Republic of India has traditionally been seen in terms of the interaction of two different trends—cooperation and competition. At the same time, the positive or negative dynamics of China–Indian contacts have mostly been shaped by the extent to which the political leadership of China and India have been prepared at various times to be guided by pragmatic interests and the desire to overcome the legacy of the past. This set of (...)
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  7.  31
    Learning to Unlearn: Decolonial Reflections From Eurasia and the Americas.Madina Vladimirovna Tlostanova & Walter Mignolo - 2012 - Ohio State University Press.
    _Learning to Unlearn: Decolonial Reflections from Eurasia and the Americas _is a complex, multisided rethinking of the epistemic matrix of Western modernity and coloniality from the position of border epistemology. Colonial and imperial differences are the two key concepts to understanding how the logic of coloniality creates ontological and epistemic exteriorities. Being at once an enactment of decolonial thinking and an attempt to define its main grounds, mechanisms, and concepts, the book shifts the politics of knowledge from “studying the (...)
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  8.  20
    La “guerra” contra Irak: Eurasia, la variable oculta.Herminia Foo Kong Dejo - 2004 - Polis 7.
    Postula el presente artículo que tras la invasión a Irak estamos en presencia de una carrera bélica de los Estados Unidos, con un trasfondo geopolítico. Señala que la actual administración estadounidense busca ejercer su dominación imperial desde el poder hegemónico, renunciando a la política y al multilateralismo, sabiéndose la única potencia emergente de la postguerra fría. Tras los atentados en Nueva York y Washington habría surgido un nuevo modelo de seguridad basado en una reconceptualización de enemigo, que combina las doctrinas (...)
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  9.  29
    European Transfigurations—Eurafrica and Eurasia: Coudenhove and Trubetzkoy Revisited.Thorsten Botz-Bornstein - 2007 - The European Legacy 12 (5):565-575.
    The Eurasianist movement launched a theory according to which Russia does not belong to Europe but forms, together with its Asian colonies, a separate continent named “Eurasia” whose Eastern border is the Pacific Ocean. Similarily, in the early 1920s, Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, the founder of the Pan-European movement, developed, the idea of “Eurafrica.” I compare the writings of Coudenhove and those of Nicolas S. Trubetzkoy and show how the idea of Europe was used as an anti-essentialist model of a cultural (...)
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  10.  13
    Europa en la era de Eurasia y del Indo-Pacífico.Fernando Delage Carretero - 2023 - Araucaria 25 (53).
    El desplazamiento del centro de gravedad de la economía mundial hacia Asia, la transición geopolítica hacia un sistema multipolar cuya principal variable es la rivalidad entre Estados Unidos y China por el dominio del Asia marítima, y el desafío que plantea a la identidad universalista europea el auge de un continente cuyos valores culturales y concepción de la política se apoyan en otras perspectivas, sitúan a Europa ante un escenario inédito pero que condicionará en buena medida su futuro. El ascenso (...)
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  11.  67
    Russia in Eurasia.A. S. Panarin - 1995 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 34 (3):77-94.
    The 1990s are marked by a change of major landmarks in the cultural-historical self-awareness of the peoples of Russia, Europe, and perhaps the entire world. Not long ago at all, "post-Soviet" social science was celebrating its liberation from the "formation" dogma in favor of a civilizational approach. This meant, first, a way out of the socialist ghetto, which had been shut off from the rest of the world and had defended this isolation with the thesis of an "irreconcilable struggle between (...)
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  12.  44
    Russia in Eurasia-Geopolitical challenges and civilization responses.A. S. Panarin - 1996 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 34 (3):77-94.
    The 1990s are marked by a change of major landmarks in the cultural-historical self-awareness of the peoples of Russia, Europe, and perhaps the entire world. Not long ago at all, "post-Soviet" social science was celebrating its liberation from the "formation" dogma in favor of a civilizational approach. This meant, first, a way out of the socialist ghetto, which had been shut off from the rest of the world and had defended this isolation with the thesis of an "irreconcilable struggle between (...)
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  13.  15
    Artistic Exchanges Across Afro-Eurasia. A Global Taste for Metal Artifacts from Mamluk Syria and Egypt in Italy, West Africa, and China in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries.Vera-Simone Schulz - 2020 - Convivium 7 (2):132-157.
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  14.  16
    Sino-Russian cooperation as the basis for Greater Eurasia.Alexander Lukin - 2020 - Human Affairs 30 (2):174-188.
    China and Russia are the main driving forces of Eurasian integration. Russia is pursuing its “pivot to Asia,” while China is branching out to the West through its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The interests of Russia and China meet in Eurasia and their friendly relations have led to several cooperation projects there. The most important are linkages between the Eurasian Economic Union and Silk Road Economic Belt Initiative and the plan to create a broader Eurasian Economic Partnership or (...)
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  15.  9
    Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia: Generals, Merchants, and Intellectuals. Edited by Michal Biran, Jonathan Brack, and Francesca Fiaschetti.Valerie Hansen - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 142 (3):764-765.
    Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia: Generals, Merchants, and Intellectuals. Edited by Michal Biran, Jonathan Brack, and Francesca Fiaschetti. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2020. Pp. xv + 335. $85, £70 (cloth); $29.95, £25 (paper, ebook).
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  16.  8
    Eurasian Business Perspectives: Proceedings of the 24th Eurasia Business and Economics Society Conference.Ender Demir, Chonlada Sajjanit, Marek Angowski, Aneta Jarosz-Angowska, Eva Smolková, Peter Štarchoň, Shaizatulaqma Kamalul Ariffin, Ainul Mohsein Abdul Mohsin, Yashar Salamzadeh, Beaneta Vasileva, Giao Reynolds, Susan Lambert, Jyotirmoy Podder, Kim Szery, Riza Yosia Sunindijo, Kevin Suryaatmaja, Dermawan Wibisono, Achmad Ghazali, Raminta Benetyte, Rytis Krusinskas, Grzegorz Zimon, Mihaela Mikić, Dinko Primorac, Bojan Morić Milovanović & Adam Górny - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume of Eurasian Studies in Business and Economics includes selected papers from the 24th Eurasia Business and Economics Society (EBES) Conference, held in Bangkok. The theoretical and empirical papers gathered here cover diverse areas of business and management from different geographic regions; yet the main focus is on the latest findings on evolving marketing methods, analytics, communication standards, and their effects on customer value and engagement. The volume also includes related studies that analyze sustainable consumer behavior, and business (...)
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  17.  19
    Bioarchaeological Analysis Mutual Relations of Populations Armenian Highlands and Eurasia Using Craniological and Dental Nonmetric Traits.Anahit Yu Khudaverdyan - 2012 - Asian Culture and History 4 (2):p48.
    Undertaken here is a multidimensional craniometric analysis of more than 254 ethnic groups of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages from the territory of Eurasia. On the basis of the received information, cluster analysis was done and has shown the genetic condensations of ethnoses and vectors of relatives or, conversely, distinctions between them. Craniometric and odontologic investigation of the Bronze Age is interesting and in connection with discussion about the origin of Indo-Europeans and about the place of their ancestral home. (...)
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  18.  26
    Semiosis and Nomadic Art in Eurasia.Nadezhda Nikolenko - 2012 - Cultura 9 (2):151-162.
    Despite, or perhaps as a form of resistance to contemporary globalization tendencies, the Central Asia region has chosen a way of life that combines modernconditions with deeply ingrained ancient customs and traditions. The gap between the by-gone glorious nomadic past in the communities of the Great Steppe and the socio-cultural and economic setup of the independent countries in this region, for instance Russia and Kazakhstan, is huge, and without access to modern structures of knowledge dissemination, the cultural heritage of these (...)
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  19. Language, identity, and conflict : a comparative study of language in ethnic conflict in Europe and Eurasia.Diarmait Mac Giolla Chríost - 2010 - In Ann Brooks (ed.), Social Theory in Contemporary Asia. Routledge.
  20.  2
    Introduction: China’s interactions in Eurasia.Marek Hrubec - 2020 - Human Affairs 30 (2):131-133.
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  21.  11
    Alexandria between Antiquity and Islam: Commerce and Concepts in First Millennium Afro-Eurasia.Garth Fowden - 2019 - Millennium 16 (1):233-270.
    Late antique Alexandria is much better known than the early Islamic city. To be fully appreciated, the transition must be contextualized against the full range of Afro-Eurasiatic commercial and intellectual life. The Alexandrian schools ‘harmonized’ Hippocrates and Galen, Plato and Aristotle. They also catalyzed Christian theology especially during the controversies before and after the Council of Chalcedon (451) that tore the Church apart and set the stage for the emergence of Islam. Alexandrian cultural dissemination down to the seventh century is (...)
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  22. The centre-periphery myth of the world: origin of universalism in Eurasia.Håkon Stang - 1981 - Oslo, Norway: University of Oslo, Professoratet i konflikt- og fredsforskning.
  23.  6
    Eurasian Business Perspectives: Proceedings of the 24th Eurasia Business and Economics Society Conference.Mehmet Huseyin Bilgin, Hakan Danis, Ender Demir & Ugur Can (eds.) - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume of Eurasian Studies in Business and Economics includes selected papers from the 24th Eurasia Business and Economics Society Conference, held in Bangkok. The theoretical and empirical papers gathered here cover diverse areas of business and management from different geographic regions; yet the main focus is on the latest findings on evolving marketing methods, analytics, communication standards, and their effects on customer value and engagement. The volume also includes related studies that analyze sustainable consumer behavior, and business strategy-related (...)
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  24.  11
    Caspar Meyer, Greco-Scythian Art and the Birth of Eurasia. From Classical Antiquity to Russian Modernity, Oxford 2013.Sujatha Chandrasekaran - 2017 - Klio 99 (2):791-796.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Klio Jahrgang: 99 Heft: 2 Seiten: 791-796.
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  25.  12
    The Symbol of the Beast. The Animal-Style Art of Eurasia.Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen & Dagny Carter - 1957 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 77 (4):288.
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  26. Why are stative-active languages rare in Eurasia?Johanna Nichols - 2008 - In Mark Donohue & Søren Wichmann (eds.), The typology of semantic alignment. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  27.  65
    Perspectives on Sustainability Assessment: An Integral Approach to Historical Changes in Social Systems and Water Environment in the Ili River Basin of Central Eurasia, 1900–2008.Tomohiro Akiyama, Jia Li, Jumpei Kubota, Yuki Konagaya & Mitsuko Watanabe - 2012 - World Futures 68 (8):595-627.
    This article proposes an alternative approach in sustainability assessment. The conceptual framework was developed by modifying Ken Wilber's All Quadrants, All Levels (AQAL) approach, and focuses on the inter-relatedness/inter-connection of various perspectives inherent to the concept of sustainability. To look at how our framework can facilitate the practice of sustainability assessment, we apply the framework to examine the relationships between social systems and the environmental changes in the Ili River basin across the period 1900?2008. This approach enables us to investigate (...)
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  28.  12
    Ukraine and World Order: Today’s Scramble for Eurasia.Timothy W. Luke - 2022 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2022 (199):151-162.
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  29.  16
    Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia.Michal Biran & Thomas T. Allsen - 2003 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 123 (2):446.
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  30.  8
    The sasanian empire - (e.W.) Sauer (ed.) Sasanian persia. Between Rome and the steppes of eurasia. Pp. XXII + 314, figs, ills, maps. Edinburgh: Edinburgh university press, 2017. Cased, £85. Isbn: 978-1-4744-0101-2. [REVIEW]Parsa Ghasemi - 2020 - The Classical Review 70 (1):200-203.
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  31.  18
    From bosporan to Russian art. C. Meyer Greco-scythian art and the birth of eurasia. From classical antiquity to Russian modernity. Pp. XXX + 431, ills, maps. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2013. Cased, £95, us$160. Isbn: 978-0-19-968233-1. [REVIEW]Michele Minardi - 2015 - The Classical Review 65 (1):258-260.
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  32.  11
    Michal Biran, Jonathan Brack, and Francesca Fiaschetti, eds., Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia: Generals, Merchants, and Intellectuals. Oakland: University of California Press, 2020. Pp. xv, 335; black-and-white figures. $85. ISBN: 978-0-5202-9874-3. Table of contents available online at https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520298743/along-the-silk-roads-in-mongol-eurasia[REVIEW]Devin DeWeese - 2022 - Speculum 97 (2):476-478.
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  33.  3
    Yalçɩn-Heckmann, Lale (ed.): Moral Economy at Work. Ethnographic Investigations in Eurasia. New York: Berghahn Books, 2021. 208 pp. ISBN 978-1-80073-235-3. (Max Planck Studies in Anthropology and Economy, 8) Price: $ 135.00. [REVIEW]Yuson Jung - 2022 - Anthropos 117 (2):597-598.
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  34.  5
    Michal Biran, Jonathan Brack, and Francesca Fiaschetti (eds.), Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia. Generals, Merchants, and Intellectuals, Oakland: University of California Press 2020, xiii + 338 pp., ISBN 9780520298743.Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia. Generals, Merchants, and Intellectuals. [REVIEW]Jürgen Paul - 2021 - Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East 98 (2):572-575.
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  35. Nationhood and the national question in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Eurasia: An institutionalist account. [REVIEW]Rogers Brubaker - 1994 - Theory and Society 23 (1):47-78.
  36.  28
    Belt & Road initiative and Russia: From mistrust towards cooperation.Ladislav Zemánek - 2020 - Human Affairs 30 (2):199-211.
    The aim of this article is to analyse relations between China and Russia over the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in the context of deepening Sino-Russian relations and the general rise of Eurasia. China and Russia are pivotal non-Western Eurasian powers in political, economic and military terms and the key motors of Eurasian multi-faceted integration. Both countries pursue their own interests and present their own projects and initiatives. Nevertheless, over the last few years, Sino-Russian cooperation has become strategic and (...)
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  37.  41
    Occidentalism: Jack Goody and Comparative History: Introduction.Mike Featherstone - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (7-8):1-15.
    This article introduces the special section on the contribution of Jack Goody, which focuses on The Theft of History. Goody attacks the notion of a radical division between Europe and Asia, which has become built into the commonsense academic wisdom and categorical apparatus of the social sciences and humanities. Eurocentrism is a constant target as he scrutinizes and finds wanting the claims of the West to have invented modern science, cultural renaissances, the free city, capitalism, democracy, love and secularism. Goody’s (...)
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  38.  45
    Cultural Innovations and Demographic Change.Peter J. Richerson - unknown
    Demography plays a large role in cultural evolution through its effects on the effective rate of innovation. If we assume that useful inventions are rare, then small isolated societies will have low rates of invention. In small populations, complex technology will tend to be lost as a result of random loss or incomplete transmission (the Tasmanian effect). Large populations have more inventors and are more resistant to loss by chance. If human populations can grow freely, then a population-technology-population positive feedback (...)
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  39.  33
    The theology of the early Greek philosophers.Werner Jaeger - 1947 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. Edited by Edward S. Robinson.
    This second collection of studies by Peter Golden continues his explorations of the Türk Empire (mid-sixth to mid-eighth centuries), the stateless polities that appeared after its collapse, and of the Khazar Qaghanate (mid-seventh century to ca. 965-969), its imperial successor state in the western Eurasian steppes. Building on earlier traditions, the Türks created a paradigm for state building in the Eurasian steppes that persisted into the early modern era. Examined here are issues relating to the rise of the Türks and (...)
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  40.  36
    Evolution of religious capacity in the genus homo: Origins and building blocks.Margaret Boone Rappaport & Christopher Corbally - 2018 - Zygon 53 (1):123-158.
    The large, ancient ape population of the Miocene reached across Eurasia and down into Africa. From this genetically diverse group, the chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and humans evolved from populations of successively reduced size. Using the findings of genomics, population genetics, cognitive science, neuroscience, and archaeology, the authors construct a theoretical framework of evolutionary innovations without which religious capacity could not have emerged as it did. They begin with primate sociality and strength from a basic ape model, and then explore (...)
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  41.  59
    Rethinking Paleoanthropology.Peter J. Richerson - unknown
    Ongoing advances in paleoclimatology and paleoecology are producing an ever more detailed picture of the environments in which our species evolved. This picture is important to understanding the processes by which our large brain evolved. Our large brain and its productions—toolmaking, complex social institutions, language, art, religion—are our most striking differences from our closest living relatives. Indeed, humans are unique in the animal world for our brain size relative to body mass and in the elaboration of our cultures. We are (...)
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  42.  11
    Throwing the dice of history with Marx: the plurality of historical worlds from Epicurus to modern science.Marcus Bajema - 2023 - Boston: Brill.
    By digging through the stratigraphy of the history of ideas we can find within and beyond Marxism an 'aleatory current' that values the role of chance in history. Using this perspective, the book builds a case for a historical materialism that is stripped of all teleology. Starting in the ancient Mediterranean with Epicurus, it traces the history of conceiving history as plural up to Marxism and modern science. It shows that concrete historical 'worlds' such as ancient Mesoamerica and Eurasia (...)
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  43.  10
    Civilizations, Autonomy, and War.Richard Sakwa - 2022 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2022 (201):84-108.
    ExcerptThe Ukraine war since February 2022 has exposed stark cleavages in international politics. The end of history long ago ended, and with it the conviction that Western civilization and its distinctive form of modernity would become universal.1 The clash of civilizations, in the model outlined by Samuel Huntington, has also been shown to be misdirected, although not entirely misguided.2 There is a struggle between civilizations, but the line is drawn not between the great religious blocs but along rather different lines. (...)
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  44.  15
    The ideas of Eurasian philosophers through the prism of Roerich's heritage.Egor Vladimirovich Turley - 2021 - Философия И Культура 10:56-79.
    This article draws parallels between the representations of the classics of Eurasianism and their contemporaries, namely N. K. Roerich, H. I. Roerich and Y. N. Roerich, on the peculiar mid-world that is formed by Russia within and around it. It is indicated that the concept of interrelation of biogeosystems with peoples and civilizations inhabiting them, defined by the Eurasian term “developmental site”, is familiar from natural-philosophic concepts of the earlier period. In the era of the development of the ideas of (...)
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  45.  42
    Signaling Theory and Technologies of Communication in the Paleolithic.Steven L. Kuhn - 2014 - Biological Theory 9 (1):42-50.
    Between 300,000 and 250,000 years ago early humans in Africa and Eurasia began to use durable material substances and objects as media for signaling. Initially material signals were confined to ochre and other pigments, but over time objects such as beads were also added as technologies for sending messages. Changes in the types of materials used, their durability and costs, and the contexts of their disposal indicate a series of transitions in how early humans employed signaling media. Signaling theory (...)
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  46.  50
    Passing strange: The convergence of evolutionary science with scientific history.William H. McNeill - 2001 - History and Theory 40 (1):1–15.
    In the second half of the twentieth century, a surprising change in the notion of scientific truth gained ground when an evolutionary cosmology made the Newtonian world machine into no more than a passing phase of the cosmos, subject to exceptions in the neighborhood of Black Holes and other unusual objects. Physical and chemical laws ceased to be eternal and universal and became local and changeable, that is, fundamentally historical instead, and faced an uncertain, changeable future just as they had (...)
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  47.  7
    ReOrienting Histories of Medicine: Encounters Along the Silk Roads, by Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim.C. Pierce Salguero - 2022 - Buddhist Studies Review 39 (1):151-153.
    ReOrienting Histories of Medicine: Encounters Along the Silk Roads, by Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim. Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. xvi+236 pp.; Hb $115.00 USD; Pb $39.95. ISBN-13: 9781472512574.
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  48.  17
    The Anthropocene and anthropology: Micro and macro perspectives.Chris Hann - 2017 - European Journal of Social Theory 20 (1):183-196.
    Noting a lack of consensus in the recent literature on the Anthropocene, this article considers how social anthropologists might contribute to its theorizing and dating. Empirically it draws on the author’s long-term fieldwork in Hungary. It is argued that ethnographic methods are essential for grasping subjectivities, including temporal orientations and perceptions of epochal transformation. When it comes to historical periodization, however, ethnography is obviously insufficient and proposals privileging the last half-century, or just the last quarter of a century, seem inadequate. (...)
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  49.  16
    Про підвищення якості сучасної вищої освіти і духовно-морального виховання молоді: Німецький та інший європейський досвід.S. V. Blaginina, S. P. Pylypenko & O. M. Osnatch - 2019 - Гуманітарний Вісник Запорізької Державної Інженерної Академії 75:90-104.
    The relevance of the study has two sides — individual and general. In its essential aspect, it is the development of achievements of predecessors by consistently taking into account the latest data on trends and changes in the interconnected spheres of education, economics and culture. In the individual aspect, it is about improving the professional means of improving the efficiency of teaching foreign languages in order to form students with a high level of linguistic-professional competence. Public relevance is the goal (...)
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  50.  15
    Bearing Fruit: Miocene Apes and Rosaceous Fruit Evolution.Robert N. Spengler, Frank Kienast, Patrick Roberts, Nicole Boivin, David R. Begun, Kseniia Ashastina & Michael Petraglia - 2023 - Biological Theory 18 (2):134-151.
    Extinct megafaunal mammals in the Americas are often linked to seed-dispersal mutualisms with large-fruiting tree species, but large-fruiting species in Europe and Asia have received far less attention. Several species of arboreal Maloideae (apples and pears) and Prunoideae (plums and peaches) evolved large fruits starting around nine million years ago, primarily in Eurasia. As evolutionary adaptations for seed dispersal by animals, the size, high sugar content, and bright colorful visual displays of ripeness suggest that mutualism with megafaunal mammals facilitated (...)
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