Results for 'Attorney General Eliot Spitzer'

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  1. In the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.Attorney General Eliot Spitzer - unknown
    February 1, 2000 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES......................................................................................... .......................ii STATEMENT OF INTEREST............................................................................................ ................. v..
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  2. N. Rakover.Deputy Attorney General - 2001 - Global Bioethics 14 (2-3).
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  3. Shifty characters.Eliot Michaelson - 2014 - Philosophical Studies 167 (3):519-540.
    In “Demonstratives”, David Kaplan introduced a simple and remarkably robust semantics for indexicals. Unfortunately, Kaplan’s semantics is open to a number of apparent counterexamples, many of which involve recording devices. The classic case is the sentence “I am not here now” as recorded and played back on an answering machine. In this essay, I argue that the best way to accommodate these data is to conceive of recording technologies as introducing special, non-basic sorts of contexts, accompanied by non-basic conventions governing (...)
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  4.  10
    Digital Tradition: Arrangement and Labor in IstanbuL’s Recording Studio Culture.Eliot Bates - 2016 - New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press.
    Istanbul is home to a multimillion dollar transnational music industry, which every year produces thousands of digital music recordings, including widely distributed film and television show soundtracks. Today, this centralized industry is responding to a growing global demand for Turkish, Kurdish, and other Anatolian ethnic language productions, and every year, many of its top-selling records incorporate elaborately orchestrated arrangements of rural folksongs. What accounts for the continuing demand for traditional music in local and diasporic markets? How is tradition produced in (...)
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  5.  49
    Online Communication.Eliot Michaelson, Jessica Pepp & Rachel Sterken - 2021 - The Philosophers' Magazine 94:90-95.
    We explore the speech act of amplification and its newfound prominence in online speech environments. Then we point to some puzzles this raises for the strategy of ‘fighting speech with more speech’.
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  6.  16
    La liberté comme non-domination, un idéal féministe?Éliot Litalien - 2013 - Ithaque 13:175-198.
    La pensée féministe s’inscrit, le plus généralement, dans un courant critique face aux pratiques et théories politiques ou philosophiques dominantes. Bien que la pensée féministe puisse trouver ses sources dans le libéralisme du XVIIIe siècle, elle s’en est séparée, dans les dernières décennies du XX e siècle, pour pouvoir mieux le critiquer. Les auteures féministes ne sont toutefois pas seules à voir dans le libéralisme une pensée politique à rejeter ou, au moins, à réformer. La « redécouverte » de la (...)
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  7. Competition Theory and Channeling Explanation.Christopher H. Eliot - 2011 - Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 3 (20130604):1-16.
    The complexity and heterogeneity of causes influencing ecology’s domain challenge its capacity to generate a general theory without exceptions, raising the question of whether ecology is capable, even in principle, of achieving the sort of theoretical success enjoyed by physics. Weber has argued that competition theory built around the Competitive Exclusion Principle (especially Tilman’s resource-competition model) offers an example of ecology identifying a law-like causal regularity. However, I suggest that as Weber presents it, the CEP is not yet a (...)
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  8.  83
    Method and Metaphysics in Clements's and Gleason's Ecological Explanations.Christopher Eliot - 2005 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 38 (1):85-109.
    To generate explanatory theory, ecologists must wrestle with how to represent the extremely many, diverse causes behind phenomena in their domain. Early twentieth-century plant ecologists Frederic E. Clements and Henry A. Gleason provide a textbook example of different approaches to explaining vegetation, with Clements allegedly committed, despite abundant exceptions, to a law of vegetation, and Gleason denying the law in favor of less organized phenomena. However, examining Clements's approach to explanation reveals him not to be expressing a law, and instead (...)
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  9.  38
    Visualization, pattern recognition, and forward search: effects of playing speed and sight of the position on grandmaster chess errors.Christopher F. Chabris & Eliot S. Hearst - 2003 - Cognitive Science 27 (4):637-648.
    A new approach examined two aspects of chess skill, long a popular topic in cognitive science. A powerful computer‐chess program calculated the number and magnitude of blunders made by the same 23 grandmasters in hundreds of serious games of slow (“classical”) chess, regular “rapid” chess, and rapid “blindfold” chess, in which opponents transmit moves without ever seeing the actual position. Rapid chess led to substantially more and larger blunders than classical chess. Perhaps more surprisingly, the frequency and magnitude of blunders (...)
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  10.  37
    Biodiversity as a General, Scientific Concept.Christopher H. Eliot - 2015 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 18 (1):41-43.
    Morar et al. argue that justifications for conservation based on assessments of biodiversity are vacuous, because ‘biodiversity’ is a flawed concept. However, their analysis of the concept mistakes how scientific concepts function. The concept ‘biodiversity’ stands up to their criticisms.
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  11.  13
    East-West.Eliot Deutsch - 1986 - Environmental Ethics 8 (4):293-299.
    I argue for the possibility of a creative relationship between man and nature which will inform the basic decision makings that confront us in the concrete concems of environmental ethics today. This relationship, which I call “natural reverence,” is essentially an attitudinal one which recognizes the togethemess of man and nature in freedom. Contrasting Kant’s treatment of the sublime with certain ideas to be found in Indian philosophy-namely, the idea of a radical discontinuity, thought to obtain between “reality” and “nature” (...)
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  12.  12
    East-West.Eliot Deutsch - 1986 - Environmental Ethics 8 (4):293-299.
    I argue for the possibility of a creative relationship between man and nature which will inform the basic decision makings that confront us in the concrete concems of environmental ethics today. This relationship, which I call “natural reverence,” is essentially an attitudinal one which recognizes the togethemess of man and nature in freedom. Contrasting Kant’s treatment of the sublime with certain ideas to be found in Indian philosophy-namely, the idea of a radical discontinuity, thought to obtain between “reality” and “nature” (...)
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  13.  49
    Chimeras and "human dignity".Josephine Johnston & Christopher Eliot - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (3):6 – 8.
    One argument Robert and Baylis do not raise in their article on the creation of interspecies chimeras using human cellular material is that the creation of these chimeras would, or could, offend human dignity. Yet, human dignity is one of the most common concerns raised in public debates, academic arguments, and policy documents regarding biotechnology in general, and the creation animal-human chimeras in particular. … The concept is ill-defined within bioethics and … risks being dismissed as meaningless or uselessly (...)
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  14.  54
    Leibniz’s Monads and Bradley’s Finite Centers.T. Stearns Eliot - 1916 - The Monist 26 (4):566-576.
  15.  6
    Leibniz’s Monads and Bradley’s Finite Centers.T. Stearns Eliot - 1916 - The Monist 26 (4):566-576.
  16.  26
    A companion to world philosophies.Eliot Deutsch & Ronald Bontekoe (eds.) - 1999 - Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
    Written by an international assembly of leading philosophers, this volume offers students, teachers and general readers a rich and sophisticated introduction to the major non-Western philosophical traditions - particularly Chinese, Indian, Buddhist and Islamic philosophies. African and Polynesian thinking are also covered by way of historical and contemporary survey articles.The text is organized around a series of central topics concerning conceptions of reality and divinity, of causality, of truth, of the nature of rationality, of selfhood, of humankind and nature, (...)
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  17.  67
    Hempel’s Provisos and Ceteris Paribus Clauses.Christopher H. Eliot - 2011 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 42 (2):207-218.
    The problem of ceteris paribus clauses and Hempel’s problem of provisos are closely-related difficulties. Both challenge advocates of accounts of scientific theories involving laws understood as universal generalizations, and they have been treated as identical problems. Earman and Roberts argue that the problems are distinct. Towards arguing against them, I characterize the relationship between Hempel’s provisos and one way of expressing ceteris paribus clauses. I then describe the relationship between the problems attributed to the clauses, suggesting that they form a (...)
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  18.  47
    The Development of Leibniz’s Monadism.T. Stearns Eliot - 1916 - The Monist 26 (4):534-556.
  19.  23
    Trust and privacy in the context of user-generated health data.Brandon Williams, Eliot Storer, Charles Lotterman, Rachel Conrad Bracken, Svetlana Borodina & Kirsten Ostherr - 2017 - Big Data and Society 4 (1).
    This study identifies and explores evolving concepts of trust and privacy in the context of user-generated health data. We define “user-generated health data” as data captured through devices or software and used outside of traditional clinical settings for tracking personal health data. The investigators conducted qualitative research through semistructured interviews with researchers, health technology start-up companies, and members of the general public to inquire why and how they interact with and understand the value of user-generated health data. We found (...)
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  20.  12
    Leopards in the Temple: Restoring Scientific Integrity to the Commercialized Research Scene.Trudo Lemmens - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (4):641-657.
    Leopards break into the temple and drink to the dregs what is in the sacrificial pitchers; this is repeated over and over again; finally it can be calculated in advance, and it becomes part of the ceremony.–Franz KaflaFor more than two decades, significant controversies have been brewing over the efficacy and safety of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors and other treatments for depression, and also over the expansion of their use for the treatment of a variety of other conditions. These controversies (...)
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  21.  13
    Leopards in the Temple: Restoring Scientific Integrity to the Commercialized Research Scene.Trudo Lemmens - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (4):641-657.
    Leopards break into the temple and drink to the dregs what is in the sacrificial pitchers; this is repeated over and over again; finally it can be calculated in advance, and it becomes part of the ceremony.–Franz KaflaFor more than two decades, significant controversies have been brewing over the efficacy and safety of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors and other treatments for depression, and also over the expansion of their use for the treatment of a variety of other conditions. These controversies (...)
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  22.  7
    Discourses Delivered to the St.Joshua Reynolds & Roger Eliot Fry - 2016 - Wentworth Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  23.  82
    New Work on Speech Acts. [REVIEW]Eliot Michaelson & Elsa Brisinger - 2019 - Analysis 79 (4):783-790.
    New Work on Speech Acts provides exactly what it purports to: a collection of essays on a wide array of topics falling under the general aegis of speech act theory. Just as there is little agreement on what exactly speech act theory is, one finds in this volume a wide variety of topics being addressed, and a wide variety of approaches to these topics. What is constant throughout is the sense that, after several decades in near stasis, speech act (...)
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  24.  35
    Generalization gradients obtained from individual subjects following classical conditioning.Shepard Siegel, Eliot Hearst & Nancy George - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 78 (1):171.
  25.  66
    The “ Faculty “ of Imagination: an Enquiry Concerning the Existence of a General “ Faculty,” or Group Factor of Imagination. By H. L. Hargreaves. British Journal of Psychology. Monograph Supplements, X””. [REVIEW]Eliot D. Hutchinson - 1927 - Philosophy 2 (8):574.
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  26. Rebuilding reality: A phenomenology of aspects of chronic schizophrenia. [REVIEW]Michael A. Schwartz, Osborne P. Wiggins, Jean Naudin & Manfred Spitzer - 2005 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (1):91-115.
    Schizophrenia, like other pathological conditions of mental life, has not been systematically included in the general study of consciousness. By focusing on aspects of chronic schizophrenia, we attempt to remedy this omission. Basic components of Husserl’s phenomenology (intentionality, synthesis, constitution, epoche, and unbuilding) are explicated and then employed in an account of chronic schizophrenia. In schizophrenic experience, basic constituents of reality are lost and the subject must try to explicitly re-constitute them. “Automatic mental life” is weakened such that much (...)
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  27.  34
    Some are more equal than others.Marlena R. Fraune, Selma Šabanović & Eliot R. Smith - 2020 - Interaction Studies 21 (3):303-328.
    How do people treat robot teammates compared to human opponents? Past research indicates that people favor, and behave more morally toward, ingroup than outgroup members. People also perceive that they have more moral responsibilities toward humans than nonhumans. This paper presents a 2×2×3 experimental study that placed participants (N = 102) into competing teams of humans and robots. We examined how people morally behave toward and perceive players depending on players’ Group Membership (ingroup, outgroup), Agent Type (human, robot), and participant (...)
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  28.  21
    Some are more equal than others : Ingroup robots gain some but not all benefits of team membership.Marlena R. Fraune, Selma Šabanović & Eliot R. Smith - 2020 - Interaction Studies 21 (3):303-328.
    How do people treat robot teammates compared to human opponents? Past research indicates that people favor, and behave more morally toward, ingroup than outgroup members. People also perceive that they have more moral responsibilities toward humans than nonhumans. This paper presents a 2×2×3 experimental study that placed participants (N = 102) into competing teams of humans and robots. We examined how people morally behave toward and perceive players depending on players’ Group Membership (ingroup, outgroup), Agent Type (human, robot), and participant (...)
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  29. Should moral intuitionism go social?Marvin Backes, Matti Eklund & Eliot Michaelson - 2022 - Noûs 57 (4):973-985.
    In recent work, Bengson, Cuneo, and Shafer‐Landau (2020) develop a new social version of moral intuitionism that promises to explain why our moral intuitions are trustworthy. In this paper, we raise several worries for their account and present some general challenges for the broader class of views we call Social Moral Intuitionism. We close by reflecting on Bengson, Cuneo, and Shafer‐Landau's comparison between what they call the “perceptual practice” and the “moral intuition practice”, which we take to raise some (...)
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  30.  31
    Attorney General forces Infectious Diseases Society of America to redo Lyme guidelines due to flawed development process.L. Johnson & R. B. Stricker - 2009 - Journal of Medical Ethics 35 (5):283-288.
    Lyme disease is one of the most controversial illnesses in the history of medicine. In 2006 the Connecticut Attorney General launched an antitrust investigation into the Lyme guidelines development process of the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA). In a recent settlement with IDSA, the Attorney General noted important commercial conflicts of interest and suppression of scientific evidence that had tainted the guidelines process. This paper explores two broad ethical themes that influenced the IDSA investigation. The (...)
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  31.  10
    Why Death Need Not Be “Reasonably Foreseeable”—The Proposed Legislative Response to Truchon and Gladu v Attorney General (Canada) and Attorney General (Quebec) [2019] QCCS 3792.Michaela Estelle Okninski - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 18 (1):5-8.
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  32.  17
    The Prime Minister v the Chief Justice of Canada: the Attorney General's failure of responsibility.Brent Cotter - 2015 - Legal Ethics 18 (1):73-77.
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  33.  17
    Eliot, Wordsworth, and the Scenes of the Sisters' Instruction.Margaret Homans - 1981 - Critical Inquiry 8 (2):223-241.
    Despite criticism's collusion with Eliot, there are a number of incongruities between Wordsworth's ideas and Eliot's texts that do not seem to be simply differences, scenes and passages that Eliot invites her readers to find Wordsworthian while she indicates a significant pattern of divergence from Wordsworthian prototypes. The brotherly instructions that Eliot is most generally concerned at once to follow and to deny are contained in Wordsworth's wish, in the verse "Prospectus" to The Recluse, to see (...)
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  34.  59
    Role Morality in the Accounting Profession – How do we Compare to Physicians and Attorneys?Robin R. Radtke - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 79 (3):279-297.
    Role morality can be defined as “claim(ing) a moral permission to harm others in ways that, if not for the role, would be wrong” (A. Applbaum: 1999, Ethics for Adversaries: The Morality of Roles in Public and Professional Life (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ) p. 3). Adversarial situations resulting in role morality occur most frequently in the fields of law, business, and government. Within the realm of accounting, professional obligations may place the accountant in a situation where he/she is susceptible (...)
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  35.  3
    A Brief Tribute to Eliot Deutsch.Graham Parkes - 2020 - Journal of World Philosophies 5 (2):209-210.
    A brief celebration of the contributions of the late Eliot Deutsch to Asian, comparative, and world philosophy, and to the academic community more generally.
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  36. Comments on Damasio, Eliot & Hauser.Tim Crane - unknown
    A distinctive feature of recent popular science writing is the parade of books by distinguished scientists – from Roger Penrose to Francis Crick and Gerald Edelman – which attempt solutions to the traditional problems of mind and consciousness. The Feeling of What Happens by neuroscientist Antonio Damasio lies squarely in this tradition, as did his earlier Descartes’ Error. These books, like those of Penrose, Crick and others, attempt a difficult double task: to explain scientific results to the general reader (...)
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  37.  16
    Moral Theory and Medical Practice.Manfred Spitzer - 1993 - Noûs 27 (3):401-403.
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  38.  9
    T. S. Eliot on Reading: Pleasure, Games, and Wisdom.Richard Shusterman - 1987 - Philosophy and Literature 11 (1):1-20.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Richard Shusterman T. S. ELIOT ON READING: PLEASURE, GAMES, AND WISDOM Eliot frequently speaks of poetry as essentially a game or amusement whose first and foremost function is to give pleasure. "The poet," says Eliot, "would like to be something of a popular entertainer... would like to convey die pleasures ofpoetry.... As things are, and as fundamentally they must always be, poetry is not a career (...)
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  39.  7
    Philosophy and the Idea of Communism: Alain Badiou in Conversation with Peter Engelmann.Susan Spitzer (ed.) - 2015 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    In a well-known text called ‘The Communist Hypothesis’, first published in 2007, the renowned philosopher Alain Badiou breathed fresh life into the idea of communism as an intellectual representation that provides a critical perspective on existing politics and offers a systemic alternative to capitalism. Now, in the course of this wide-ranging conversation with Peter Engelmann, Alain Badiou explains why he continues to value the idea of communism against the background of current social crises and despite negative historical experiences. From the (...)
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  40.  7
    Guardians of the Humanist Legacy: The Classicism of T.S. Eliot's criterion Network and its Relevance to Our Postmodern World.Jeroen Vanheste - 2007 - Brill.
    The T.S. Eliot of the 1920s was a European humanist who was part of an international network of like-minded intellectuals. Their ideas about literature, education and European culture in general remain highly relevant to the cultural debates of our day.
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  41.  24
    "Prufrock" between Acquaintance and Description: Bertrand Russell and T. S. Eliot.Maya Kronfeld - 2023 - Philosophy and Literature 47 (1):167-183.
    Abstract:This article recovers a submerged philosophical debate between Bertrand Russell's theory of descriptions and T. S. Eliot's "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock." Russell's concern with immediate experience ("acquaintance") underscores a dilemma troubling literary modernism generally and modernist abstraction in particular. In "Prufrock," acquaintance with reality marks an epistemic failure whose social form is the "etherization" gripping the city and everything in it. The conversation between Russell's philosophy and Eliot's poetry is grounded in but exceeds the men's real-life (...)
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  42.  15
    T. S. Eliot[REVIEW]G. L. C. - 1963 - Review of Metaphysics 17 (1):144-145.
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  43.  24
    Glitches, bugs, and hisses : The degeneration of musical recordings and the contemporary musical work.Eliot Bates - 2004 - In Christopher Washburne & Maiken Derno (eds.), Bad music: the music we love to hate. New York: Routledge. pp. 212-225.
    Glitch composition is a meta-discursive practice: rather than writing new music inspired by older recordings, it constructs new music inspired by the technological conditions and limitations in which those recordings emerged. For those listeners who aren’t particularly interested in technology theories, such music is particularly alienating—an in-joke that one doesn’t get. When glitch becomes pop, it loses its theoretical savvy, replacing the “synth pad” in a contemporary pop song. Glitch’s subversion of the bad value judgment placed on damaged media is (...)
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  44. I na local music store, I recently picked up a copy of In Memoriam.Eliot Bates - 2004 - In Christopher Washburne & Maiken Derno (eds.), Bad music: the music we love to hate. New York: Routledge. pp. 275.
     
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  45.  9
    Constitución Fenomenológica de la Tierra Baldía de T. S. Eliot Como Objeto Estético.Emilio Morales de la Barrera - 2018 - Síntesis Revista de Filosofía 7 (2):61.
    En este estudio intentamos aportar una clarificación sobre la constitución del objeto estético a partir de un análisis de dicho objeto en general (basado en las investigaciones fenomenológicas de R. Ingarden). Luego, indagamos cómo ocurre esta constitución en el caso concreto de La Tierra Baldía con toda su riqueza poética y sus valores estéticos. Particularmente, investigamos cómo es dado concretamente a nuestra conciencia el fenómeno estético de esta obra de arte literaria.
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  46.  48
    Metaphor and musical thought.Michael Spitzer - 2004 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    "The scholarship of Michael Spitzer's new book is impressive and thorough. The writing is impeccable and the coverage extensive. The book treats the history of the use of metaphor in the field of classical music. It also covers a substantial part of the philosophical literature. The book treats the topic of metaphor in a new and extremely convincing manner."-Lydia Goehr, Columbia University The experience of music is an abstract and elusive one, enough so that we're often forced to describe (...)
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  47. The consistency of sense-related items in dictionaries: Current status, proposals for modelling and applications in lexicographic practice.Carolin Müller-Spitzer - 2010 - In Petra Storjohann (ed.), Lexical-Semantic Relations: Theoretical and Practical Perspectives. John Benjamins Pub. Company.
     
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  48. Vernetzungsstrukturen lexikografischer Daten und ihre XML-basierte Modellierung.Carolin Müller-Spitzer - 2007 - Hermes 38 (2007):137-171.
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  49.  8
    The consistency of sense-related items in dictionaries Current status, proposals for modelling and applications in lexicographic practice.Carolin Miiller-Spitzer - 2010 - In Petra Storjohann (ed.), Lexical-Semantic Relations: Theoretical and Practical Perspectives. John Benjamins Pub. Company. pp. 28--145.
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  50.  8
    The consistency of sense-related items in dictionaries.Carolin Miiller-Spitzer - 2010 - In Petra Storjohann (ed.), Lexical-Semantic Relations: Theoretical and Practical Perspectives. John Benjamins Pub. Company. pp. 28--145.
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