Results for 'Yucca Mountain'

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  1.  42
    Animist Intersubjectivity as Argumentation: Western Shoshone and Southern Paiute Arguments Against a Nuclear Waste Site at Yucca Mountain[REVIEW]Danielle Endres - 2013 - Argumentation 27 (2):183-200.
    My focus in this essay is Shoshone and Paiute arguments against the Yucca Mountain site that claim that because Yucca Mountain is a culturally significant sacred place it should not be used to store nuclear waste. Within this set of arguments for the cultural value of Yucca Mountain, I focus on arguments that claim that the proposed nuclear waste site will damage Yucca Mountain and its ecosystem—the mountain, plants, and animals themselves. (...)
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  2.  31
    Environmental Risk and the Iron Triangle: The Case of Yucca Mountain.Kristin S. Shrader-Frechette - 1995 - Business Ethics Quarterly 5 (4):753-777.
    Despite significant scientific uncertainties and strong public opposition, there appears to be an “iron triangle” of industry, government,and consultants/contractors promoting the siting of the world’s first permanent geological repository for high-level nuclear waste and spent fuel, proposed for Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Arguing that representatives of this iron triangle have ignored important epistemological and ethical difficulties with the proposed facility, I conclude that the business climate surrounding this triangle appears to leave little room for consideration of ethical issues related (...)
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  3.  8
    In a Yucca-tomic Pickle: J. Samuel Walker: The Road to Yucca Mountain: The Development of Radioactive Waste Policy in the United States. University of California Press, Berkeley, 2009, 228 pp, US$34.95 HB.Linda Marie Richards - 2010 - Metascience 19 (3):475-477.
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  4. Risk Models and Geological Judgments: The Case of Yucca Mountain.K. Shrader-Frechette - 1995 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 164:197-197.
  5.  8
    J. Samuel Walker. The Road to Yucca Mountain: The Development of Radioactive Waste Policy in the United States. xi + 228 pp., illus., bibl., index. Los Angeles/Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009. $34.95. [REVIEW]Alex Wellerstein - 2010 - Isis 101 (4):928-929.
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  6. Auditory periphery and cochlear nucleus.David C. Mountain - 1995 - In Michael A. Arbib (ed.), Handbook of Brain Theory and Neural Networks. MIT Press. pp. 115--119.
  7. Human Evolutionary Genetics.J. L. Mountain - 2001 - In N. J. Smelser & B. Baltes (eds.), International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. pp. 6984--91.
  8.  61
    Mortgaging the future: Dumping ethics with nuclear waste.Kristin Shrader-Frechette - 2005 - Science and Engineering Ethics 11 (4):518-520.
    On August 22, 2005 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued proposed new regulations for radiation releases from the planned permanent U.S. nuclear-waste repository in Yucca Mountain, Nevada. The goal of the new standards is to provide public-health protection for the next million years — even though everyone admits that the radioactive wastes will leak. Regulations now guarantee individual and equal protection against all radiation exposures above the legal limit. Instead E.P.A. recommended different radiation exposure-limits for different time periods. (...)
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  9.  86
    Equity and nuclear waste disposal.Kristin Shrader-Frechette - 1994 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 7 (2):133-156.
    Following the recommendations of the US National Academy of Sciences and the mandates of the 1987 Nuclear Waste Policy Amendments Act, the US Department of Energy has proposed Yucca Mountain, Nevada as the site of the world's first permanent repository for high-level nuclear waste. The main justification for permanent disposal (as opposed to above-ground storage) is that it guarantees safety by means of waste isolation. This essay argues, however, that considerations of equity (safer for whom?) undercut the safety (...)
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  10.  19
    Merry Christmas!!!Canberra Olympic Pool, Iron Mountain, C. P. D. Law, Jim Berlis Electrical & Anthony Squires - forthcoming - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology.
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  11.  17
    A Pragmatic Consideration of Ethical Issues Relating to Personal Genomics.Andro Hsu, Joanna Mountain, Anne Wojcicki & Linda Avey - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (6-7):1-2.
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  12.  21
    Family Ties: The Use of DNA Offender Databases to Catch Offenders' Kin.Henry T. Greely, Daniel P. Riordan, Nanibaa' A. Garrison & Joanna L. Mountain - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (2):248-262.
    “The sins of the fathers are to be laid upon the children.”Just after midnight on March 21, 2003, a drunk stood on a footbridge over a motorway in a village in Surrey in southern England. After eight pints of beer, he was drunk enough to decide to drop a brick from the overpass into traffic to see if he could hit something; unfortunately, he was not so drunk that he missed. The brick crashed through the windshield on the driver's side (...)
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  13.  24
    Family Ties: The Use of DNA Offender Databases to Catch Offenders' Kin.Henry T. Greely, Daniel P. Riordan, Nanibaa' A. Garrison & Joanna L. Mountain - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (2):248-262.
    The authors examine the scientific possibility and the legal and ethical implications of using DNA forensic technology, through partial matches to DNA from crime scenes, to turn into suspects the relatives of people whose DNA profiles are in forensic databases.
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  14.  8
    Stone: an ecology of the inhuman.Jeffrey Jerome Cohen - 2015 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    Stone maps the force, vivacity, and stories within our most mundane matter, stone. For too long stone has served as an unexamined metaphor for the "really real": blunt factuality, nature's curt rebuke. Yet, medieval writers knew that stones drop with fire from the sky, emerge through the subterranean lovemaking of the elements, tumble along riverbeds from Eden, partner with the masons who build worlds with them. Such motion suggests an ecological enmeshment and an almost creaturely mineral life.Although geological time can (...)
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  15.  8
    Temporal Limits on What Engineers Can Plan.Michael Davis - 2019 - Science and Engineering Ethics 25 (5):1609-1624.
    My question is: How far into the future is it possible for engineers as such to plan? For example, the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository was to have been designed to store nuclear waste safely for between ten thousand and one million years. Is that the sort of planning engineers as such can do? The planning engineers do would not be philosophically interesting were it not in general so often successful, much more successful than the gambles of ordinary (...)
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  16.  37
    Hydrogeology and framing questions having policy consequences.Kristin Shrader-Frechette - 1997 - Philosophy of Science 64 (4):160.
    Assessing the hydrogeological modeling at the Yucca Mountain and Maxey Flats nuclear repositories reveals a number of important ways in which theory choice can go wrong. The two cases suggest that there are at least six important criteria for evaluating the suitability of scientific models to be used for predictions intended to serve public policy. More generally, the paper argues that applied philosophy of science, as practiced in environmental policymaking, requires one to employ ethical rationality as well as (...)
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  17. Deep Time Contagion.Andy Weir - 2012 - Continent 2 (3):167-169.
    Introduction Jamie Allen Time, of all the dimensions readily presented to experience, seems to do so most readily through things. Stuff, in supposed counter-valence to the negentropic resilience of living things, appears to us as that which degrades through time, and demarcates a more technical chronometry of sequential events. Situated outside the rotting of fruit and the ticking of clocks, a “deep time” persists. Like the ultra-hearing of the bat, and the infra-vision of the boa-constrictor, there exist living and non-living (...)
     
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  18.  1
    Mountain and Water in Europe. 최재묵 - 2012 - Environmental Philosophy 13:125-133.
  19.  13
    Making Mountains out of Heaps.Dale Murray - 2010-09-24 - In Fritz Allhoff & Stephen E. Schmid (eds.), Climbing ‐ Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 169–179.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Free‐Rider Problem The Sorites Paradox So, is it Rational for Me to Contribute by Not Climbing? Concluding Remarks and Implications Notes.
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  20. Do mountains exist? Towards an ontology of landforms.Barry Smith & David Mark - 2003 - Environment and Planning B (Planning and Design) 30 (3):411–427.
    Do mountains exist? The answer to this question is surely: yes. In fact, ‘mountain’ is the example of a kind of geographic feature or thing most commonly cited by English speakers (Mark, et al., 1999; Smith and Mark 2001), and this result may hold across many languages and cultures. But whether they are considered as individuals (tokens) or as kinds (types), mountains do not exist in quite the same unequivocal sense as do such prototypical everyday objects as chairs or (...)
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  21.  5
    Mountaineering and the Value of Self‐Sufficiency.Philip A. Ebert & Simon Robertson - 2010-09-24 - In Fritz Allhoff & Stephen E. Schmid (eds.), Climbing ‐ Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 93–105.
    This chapter contains sections titled: What is Self‐Sufficiency? The Value of Self‐Sufficiency Objections Concluding Remarks Notes.
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  22.  4
    The Mountain Spirit.Michael Tobias & Harold Drasdo - 1980 - Orion.
    Photographs and essays by leading authorities in the field provide diverse perspectives on the aesthetics of mountains and mountain climbing.
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  23.  7
    Hunger Mountain: a field guide to mind and landscape.David Hinton - 2012 - Boston: Shambhala.
    Come along with David Hinton on a series of walks through the wild beauty of Hunger Mountain, near his home in Vermont—excursions informed by the worldview he's imbibed from his many years translating the classics of Chinese poetry and ...
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  24.  15
    Mountain Majesties above Fruited Plains. Rolston - 2008 - Environmental Ethics 30 (1):3-20.
    Those residing in the Rocky Mountains enjoy both nature and culture in ways not characteristic of many inhabited landscapes. Landscapes elsewhere in the United States and in Europe involve a nature-culture synthesis. An original nature, once encountered by settlers, has been transformed by a dominating culture, and on the resulting landscape, there is little experience of primordial nature. On Rocky Mountain landscapes, the model is an ellipse with two foci. Much of the landscape is in synthesis, but there is (...)
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  25.  9
    Mines, mountains, and the making of a vertical consciousness in Germany ca. 1800.Patrick Anthony - 2020 - Centaurus 62 (4):612-630.
    The insight that scientific theories are “practice-laden” has animated scholarship in the history of science for nearly three decades. This article examines a style of geographical thought that was, I argue, movement-laden. The thought-style in question has been described as a “vertical consciousness that engulfed science in the early nineteenth century,” and is closely associated with the geographical vision of Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859). Humboldt’s science spanned nature’s horizontal and vertical axes, from Saxon mines to Andean summits, and from the (...)
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  26.  14
    Black Mountain College Case: Transformation Trends in Art Education in the First Half of the 20th century.Jana Migašová - 2019 - Espes 9 (2):51-58.
    In the 19th century, a gradual reform of art education began, which achieved its peak in the 1930s. This process manifested itself in the form of schools with an explicit anti-academic spirit – the Bauhaus in Europe and Black Mountain College in the United States. In this paper, I contend that such attempt at reform has never repeated again after the Black Mountain College case, where the combination of John Dewey’s educational principles, Josef Albers’ peculiar conception of art (...)
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  27.  9
    Black Mountain College Case: Transformation Trends in Art Education in the First Half of the 20th century.Jana Migašová - 2020 - Espes 9 (1):51-58.
    In the 19th century, a gradual reform of art education began, which achieved its peak in the 1930s. This process manifested itself in the form of schools with an explicit anti-academic spirit – the Bauhaus in Europe and Black Mountain College in the United States. In this paper, I contend that such attempt at reform has never repeated again after the Black Mountain College case, where the combination of John Dewey’s educational principles, Josef Albers’ peculiar conception of art (...)
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  28.  16
    Black Mountain College Case: Transformation Trends in Art Education in the First Half of the 20th century.Jana Migašová - 2019 - Espes. The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 9 (2):51-58.
    In the 19th century, a gradual reform of art education began, which achieved its peak in the 1930s. This process manifested itself in the form of schools with an explicit anti-academic spirit – the Bauhaus in Europe and Black Mountain College in the United States. In this paper, I contend that such attempt at reform has never repeated again after the Black Mountain College case, where the combination of John Dewey’s educational principles, Josef Albers’ peculiar conception of art (...)
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  29.  5
    Black Mountain College Case: Transformation Trends in Art Education in the First Half of the 20th century.Jana Migašová - 2020 - Espes. The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 8 (2):51-58.
    In the 19th century, a gradual reform of art education began, which achieved its peak in the 1930s. This process manifested itself in the form of schools with an explicit anti-academic spirit – the Bauhaus in Europe and Black Mountain College in the United States. In this paper, I contend that such attempt at reform has never repeated again after the Black Mountain College case, where the combination of John Dewey’s educational principles, Josef Albers’ peculiar conception of art (...)
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  30.  24
    Mountaineering, Myth and the Meaning of Life: psychoanalysing alpinism.Rufus Duits - 2020 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 47 (1):33-48.
    I attempt to provide a new answer to the enduring question of why people take the acute risks of climbing mountains. In so doing, I aim to explain, but not necessarily justify, participation in suc...
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  31. Mountains and Their Boundaries.Daniel Z. Korman - 2023 - In Miguel Garcia-Godinez (ed.), Thomasson on Ontology. Springer Verlag. pp. 243-264.
    I examine Amie Thomasson’s account of the metaphysics of mountains and their boundaries, from her “Geographic Objects and the Science of Geography.” I begin by laying out a puzzle about mountains that generates some pressure towards accepting that we are somehow responsible for their having the boundaries that they do. As a foil for Thomasson’s own account, I present two competing theories of geographic objects—one on which they are thoroughly mind-dependent, and one on which they are thoroughly mind-independent—neither of which (...)
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  32.  7
    The master from mountains and fields: prose writings of Hwadam, Sŏ Kyŏngdŏk.Kyŏng-dŏk Sŏ - 2023 - Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press. Edited by Isabelle Sancho.
    The Master from Mountains and Fields is a fully annotated translation of the prose texts from the "collected works" of Sŏ Kyŏngdŏk (1489-1546), an influential Confucian scholar from the early Chosŏn period (1392-1910). A native of Songdo (also known as Kaesŏng) in present-day North Korea, Sŏ has loomed large in the Korean cultural imagination and appeared as an exceptional sage and popular hero in numerous tales, dramas, and films, yet his writings are little known outside the academic milieu. Also called (...)
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  33.  15
    Cold Mountain: 100 Poems by the T'ang Poet Han-Shan.Chauncey S. Goodrich, Burton Watson & Han-Shan - 1971 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 91 (4):515.
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  34.  27
    Cold Mountain; 100 Poems by the Tʿang Poet Han-ShanCold Mountain; 100 Poems by the Tang Poet Han-Shan.Chauncey S. Goodrich & Han-Shan - 1973 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (3):415.
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  35.  27
    Cold Mountain: 100 Poems by the T'ang poet Han-shan.David Hawkes, Burton Watson & Han-Shan - 1962 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 82 (4):596.
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  36.  1
    Seven mountains: the inner climb to commitment and caring.Marilyn Mason - 1997 - New York: Dutton.
    Using mountain climbing as a metaphor for building meaningful relationships with others, the author examines such topics as risk, facing fears, trust, asking for support, and letting go.
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  37.  8
    Mountain Mandalas: Shugendō in Kyūshū, by Allan G. Grapard.Emanuela Sala - 2019 - Buddhist Studies Review 36 (1):127-130.
    Mountain Mandalas: Shugend? in Ky?sh?, by Allan G. Grapard. Bloomsbury. 2016. 320 pp. Hb. £90. ISBN–13: 9781474249003. Pb. £31. ISBN-13: 9781350044937. Ebook £34.54. ISBN-13: 9781474249027.
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  38.  31
    Mountain Gloom and Mountain Glory: The Development of the Aesthetics of the Infinite.Marjorie Hope Nicolson - 1960 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 19 (1):108-109.
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  39.  27
    Embodiment in high-altitude mountaineering: Sensing and working with the weather.Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson, Lee Crust & Christian Swann - 2019 - Body and Society 25 (1):90-115.
    In order to address sociological concerns with embodiment and learning, in this article we explore the ‘weathering’ body in a currently under-researched physical-cultural domain. Weather experiences, too, are under-explored in sociology, and here we examine in depth the lived experience of weather and, more specifically, ‘weather work’ and ‘weather learning’ in one of the most extreme and corporeally challenging environments on earth: high-altitude mountains. Drawing on a theoretical framework of phenomenological sociology, and an interview-based research project with 19 international, high-altitude (...)
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  40.  7
    Mountain Holiness: A Photographic Narrative.Deborah Vansau Mccauley, Laura E. Porter & Patricia Parker Brunner - 2003 - Univ Tennessee Press.
    "Deborah McCauley and Laura Porter's text combines descriptions of the pictures with the history of the churches and interviews with members. They create a representative window into the material and oral culture of central Appalachia's independent Holiness heritage. Mountain Holiness is a book that will fascinate anyone who cares about these traditions, as well as anyone concerned with the preservation of America's most vital folkways."--BOOK JACKET.
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  41.  27
    Mountains of Sublimity, Mountains of Fatigue: Towards a History of Speechlessness in the Alps.Philipp Felsch - 2009 - Science in Context 22 (3):341-364.
    ArgumentThe discovery of the Alps in the second half of the eighteenth century spawned an aesthetics of sublimity that enabled overwhelmed beholders of mountains to overcome their confusion symbolically by transforming initial speechlessness into pictures and words. When travelers ceased to be content with beholding mountains, however, and began climbing them, the sublime shudder turned into something else. In the snowy heights, all attempts to master symbolically the challenging landscape was thwarted by vertigo, somnolence, and fatigue. After 1850, physiologists intervened, (...)
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  42. Gunk Mountains: A puzzle.Sharon E. Berry - 2019 - Analysis 79 (1):3-10.
    This note points out a conflict between some common intuitions about metaphysical possibility. On the one hand, it is appealing to deny that there are robust counterfactuals about how various physically impossible substances would interact with the matter that exists at our world. On the other hand, our intuitions about how concepts like MOUNTAIN apply at other metaphysically possible worlds seem to presuppose facts about ‘solidity’ which cash out in terms of these counterfactuals. I consider several simple attempts to (...)
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  43.  19
    Black Mountain College: A Creative Art Space Where It Was Safe to Fail.Palmer Jonathan & Trombetta Maria - 2017 - World Futures 73 (1):16-22.
    Black Mountain College is remembered as an artistic utopian alternative to institutional learning. Its faculty and students included some of the most important creative thinkers of the 20th century. Its foundation was built on the philosophy of “learning by doing.” But what made Black Mountain such a dynamic educational environment? Today, the financial burden of higher education places a lasting strain on students that inhibits creative growth. Does the educational structure of the college system impede our learning? Black (...)
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  44. Brokeback Mountain as Horse Opera.Robert Yanal - unknown
    Upon the release of Brokeback Mountain, the conservative film critic, Michael Medved, in a television interview, predicted that a gay western – or maybe he called it a gay cowboy movie – would not attract an audience, presumably on grounds that the intersection of the audience for gay movies and the audience for westerns would yield, as the logicians say, the null set. Medved was proven wrong, as Brokeback, which cost $14 million to produce, went on to earn $83 (...)
     
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  45.  10
    Becoming Mountain.Ian Buchanan - 2017 - Revista de Filosofia Aurora 29 (46):215.
    Like the concept of the assemblage, the body without organs is much written about, but unlike the assemblage there are no specific schools of thought associated with the body without organs, much less any agreed definitions. As such, it tends to be used in a very vague manner, with most accounts of it ignoring its practical dimension and instead focusing on its aesthetic (Artaud) and philosophical (Spinoza) origins. However, Deleuze quite explicitly positions the assemblage as a contribution to an understanding (...)
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  46.  63
    A Mountain by Any Other Name: A Response to Koji Tanaka.Yasuo Deguchi, Jay L. Garfield & Graham Priest - 2013 - Philosophy East and West 63 (3):335-343.
  47.  13
    Mountain, masculine mining: An interpretation of entbergen.Ave Mets - 2018 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 29:119-149.
    ABSTRACT Unverborgenheit is truth in Heidegger's Greek-inspired view that happens in Entbergen, or bringing forth. Technology is a way of bringing forth and the truths brought forth in ancient and contemporary science-based technologies are essentially different, the latter being destined by enframing or Gestell that is the essence of contemporary science and technology. Here I give an etymological-ecological-feminist interpretation to the essences of ancient and contemporary technologies as ontogeneses and their unconcealments. A turning point is also identified, on the basis (...)
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  48.  12
    Mountain guides: between ethics and socioeconomic trends.Thierry Long, Damien Bazin & Bernard Massiéra - 2012 - Journal of Moral Education 41 (3):369-388.
    This study analysed mountain guides’ representations of environmental responsibility and explored the paradox that these professionals face: using nature as a source of income while trying to preserve it. The study was mainly guided by the philosophical literature on this topic and made use of the concepts of sustainable development and nature. This exploratory work therefore contributes to the new field of environmental social psychology. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and the qualitative analysis showed that mountain guides have a (...)
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  49.  35
    Mountain Goddess: Gender and Politics in a Himalayan Pilgrimage.David N. Lorenzen & William S. Sax - 1995 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 115 (3):505.
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  50.  19
    Mountain Majesties above Fruited Plains: Culture, Nature, and Rocky Mountain Aesthetics.Iii Holmes Rolston - 2008 - Environmental Ethics 30 (1):3-20.
    Those residing in the Rocky Mountains enjoy both nature and culture in ways not characteristic of many inhabited landscapes. Landscapes elsewhere in the United States and in Europe involve a nature-culture synthesis. An original nature, once encountered by settlers, has been transformed by a dominating culture, and on the resulting landscape, there is little experience of primordial nature. On Rocky Mountain landscapes, the model is an ellipse with two foci. Much of the landscape is in synthesis, but there is (...)
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