Results for 'Elissa S. Itzkin'

982 found
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  1.  10
    Bentham's Chrestomathia: Utilitarian Legacy to English Education.Elissa S. Itzkin - 1978 - Journal of the History of Ideas 39 (2):303.
  2.  18
    Women's Health Research: Policy and Practice.Jeannette R. Ickovics & Elissa S. Epel - 1993 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 15 (4):1.
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  3.  7
    Deep rest: An integrative model of how contemplative practices combat stress and enhance the body’s restorative capacity.Alexandra D. Crosswell, Stefanie E. Mayer, Lauren N. Whitehurst, Martin Picard, Sheyda Zebarjadian & Elissa S. Epel - 2024 - Psychological Review 131 (1):247-270.
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  4. Improving Assessment of the Spectrum of Reward-Related Eating: The RED-13.E. Mason Ashley, Vainik Uku, Acree Michael, Tomiyama A. Janet, Dagher Alain, S. Epel Elissa & M. Hecht Frederick - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  5.  97
    Critical period effects on universal properties of language: The status of subjacency in the acquisition of a second language.Jacqueline S. Johnson & Elissa L. Newport - 1991 - Cognition 39 (3):215-258.
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  6.  18
    Derrida's Matrix: The Births of Deconstruction.Elissa Marder - 2018 - Oxford Literary Review 40 (1):1-19.
    Many of Derrida's formative texts from 1967 about writing, the trace, supplementarity, death, and différance feature striking liminal references to the figure of the mother and are implicitly haunted by the question of birth. In a pivotal passage of De la grammatologie, Derrida links the very futurity of deconstruction to the emergence of ‘a reading discipline to be born’. In this essay, I show that through his readings of the ‘birth of language’ in Lévi-Strauss and Rousseau, Derrida implicitly invites us (...)
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  7.  23
    Freud's Fictions: Fixation, Femininity, Photography.Elissa Marder - 2017 - Paragraph 40 (3):349-367.
    This article takes off from Freud's literary use of the term ‘fixation’ to explore how female sexuality both establishes the universal foundations of Freud's metapsychology and is excluded from it via a reading of one Freud's strangest and most provocative case presentations. Like a primal word, fixation operates in contradictory fashion: it is associated both with regression and futurity, petrified immobility and contingency. Fixation is Freud's name both for the primal origin of sexuality and the very word for what shuts (...)
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  8.  14
    Pandora's Fireworks; or, Questions Concerning Femininity, Technology, and the Limits of the Human.Elissa Marder - 2014 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 47 (4):386-399.
    In Hesiod’s legendary account of how humans came to be, two extrahuman characters, Prometheus and Pandora, play decisive roles. Both figures intercede and intervene in man’s world and indeed inaugurate the series of events that culminates in the becoming human of man.1 Although neither Prometheus nor Pandora is human, they both participate actively in human life, and through their respective actions the race of men becomes not only alienated from the realm of gods and animals but also from its own (...)
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  9.  23
    Ewa Ziarek’s Virtually Impossible Ethics.Elissa Marder - 2010 - Philosophy Today 54 (Supplement):51-58.
  10.  6
    The challenges of gendering genocide: Reflections on a feminist politics of complexity.Elissa Helms - 2015 - European Journal of Women's Studies 22 (4):463-469.
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  11.  3
    Inclusivism in the Fiction of C. S. Lewis.Elissa McCormack - 2008 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 11 (4):57-73.
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  12.  12
    Morphological Tagging and Lemmatization in the Albanian Language.Elissa Mollakuqe, Mentor Hamiti & Diellza Nagavci Mati - 2021 - Seeu Review 16 (2):3-16.
    An important element of Natural Language Processing is parts of speech tagging. With fine-grained word-class annotations, the word forms in a text can be enhanced and can also be used in downstream processes, such as dependency parsing. The improved search options that tagged data offers also greatly benefit linguists and lexicographers. Natural language processing research is becoming increasingly popular and important as unsupervised learning methods are developed. There are some aspects of the Albanian language that make the creation of a (...)
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  13.  48
    Force and Translation; Or, The Polymorphous Body of Language.Elissa Marder - 2013 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 3 (1):1-18.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Force and Translation; Or, The Polymorphous Body of LanguageElissa MarderOr un corps verbal ne se laisse pas traduire ou transporter dans une autre langue. Il est cela même que la traduction laisse tomber. Laisser tomber le corps, telle est même l’énergie essentielle de la traduction. Quand elle réinstitue un corps, elle est poésie.—Jacques Derrida, “Freud et la scène de l’écriture”The materiality of a word cannot be translated or carried (...)
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  14.  53
    Trauma, Addiction, and Temporal Bulimia in Madame Bovary.Elissa Marder - 1997 - Diacritics 27 (3):49-64.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Trauma, Addiction, and Temporal Bulimia in Madame BovaryElissa Marder (bio)Lisez, et ne rêvez pas. Plongez-vous dans de longues études. Il n’y a de continuellement bon que l’habitude d’un travail entêté. Il s’en dégage un opium qui engourdit l’âme [Read and do not dream. The only thing that is continually good is the habit of stubborn work. It emits an opium that numbs the soul].—Gustave Flaubert to Louise ColetMadame Bovary (...)
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  15.  11
    The elephant and the scaffold: Response to Kelly Oliver.Elissa Marder - 2012 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 50 (s1):95-106.
    This paper responds to Kelly Oliver's “See Topsy ‘Ride the Lightning’: The Scopic Machinery of Death” by questioning the presuppositions and implications of her discussion of the spectacle of elephant executions and their relation to Derrida's writings about animals and the death penalty. This paper proposes to reframe the approach to Derrida's reflections on the death penalty and its problematic relation to the category of the human by focusing on the double function of the concept of the scaffold in his (...)
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  16.  10
    Mindset matters: how mindset affects the ability of staff to anticipate and adapt to Artificial Intelligence (AI) future scenarios in organisational settings.Elissa Farrow - 2021 - AI and Society 36 (3):895-909.
    Any first step in organisational adaptation starts with individuals’ responses and willingness (or otherwise) to change an aspect of themselves given the transcontextual settings in which they are operating (Bateson in Small arcs of larger circles: framing through other patterns, Triarchy Press, Axminster, 2018). This research explores the implications for organisational adaptation strategies when Artificial Intelligence (AI) is being embedded into the ecology of the organisation, and when employees have a dominant fixed or growth mindset (Dweck in Mindset: changing the (...)
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  17.  66
    Time for a unified approach to medical ethics.Shaheen E. Lakhan, Elissa Hamlat, Turi McNamee & Cyndi Laird - 2009 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 4:13.
    A code of ethics is used by individuals to justify their actions within an environment. Medical professionals require a keen understanding of specific ethical codes due to the potential consequences of their actions. Over the past thirty years there has been an increase in the scope and depth of ethics instruction in the medical profession; however the teaching of these codes is still highly variable. This inconsistency in implementation is problematic both for the medical practitioner and for the patient; without (...)
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  18.  7
    Masters of Sex? Nazism, Bigamy, and a University Professor's Fight with Society and the State.Elissa Mailänder - 2021 - Journal of the History of Ideas 82 (1):109-131.
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  19.  7
    Still (Un)Born: Derrida, Heidegger, Trakl.Elissa Marder - 2020 - Philosophy Today 64 (2):343-360.
    This essay traces the pivotal—although largely unspoken—relation between the mother and language in Derrida’s reading of Heidegger’s reading of Trakl in Geschlecht III. Derrida’s gloss of the “idiom” in Heidegger’s text leads to a reflection on the language of gestation through the family of words linking “tragen” to “austragen”. Following Derrida, the essay proposes that Heidegger’s conception of the time of the “unborn” in his essay “Language in the Poem” is the time of the promise and the promise of a (...)
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  20.  54
    The distributional structure of grammatical categories in speech to young children.Toben H. Mintz, Elissa L. Newport & Thomas G. Bever - 2002 - Cognitive Science 26 (4):393-424.
    We present a series of three analyses of young children's linguistic input to determine the distributional information it could plausibly offer to the process of grammatical category learning. Each analysis was conducted on four separate corpora from the CHILDES database (MacWhinney, 2000) of speech directed to children under 2;5. We showthat, in accord with other findings, a distributional analysis which categorizeswords based on their co‐occurrence patterns with surroundingwords successfully categorizes the majority of nouns and verbs. In Analyses 2 and 3, (...)
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  21.  24
    Another Time.Elissa Marder - 2015 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 23 (2):28-34.
    This paper celebrates the work of Pleshette DeArmitt. In this essay, I show how Pleshette DeArmitt's book, The Right to Narcissism, is haunted by Freud's essay "On Narcissism.".
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  22.  21
    Imagination in Confinement: Women's Writings from French Prisons.Michele H. Richman & Elissa Gelfand - 1986 - Substance 15 (2):119.
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  23.  62
    Critical periods after stroke study: translating animal stroke recovery experiments into a clinical trial.Alexander W. Dromerick, Matthew A. Edwardson, Dorothy F. Edwards, Margot L. Giannetti, Jessica Barth, Kathaleen P. Brady, Evan Chan, Ming T. Tan, Irfan Tamboli, Ruth Chia, Michael Orquiza, Robert M. Padilla, Amrita K. Cheema, Mark E. Mapstone, Massimo S. Fiandaca, Howard J. Federoff & Elissa L. Newport - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  24.  17
    The shadow of the eco: Denial and climate change.Elissa Marder - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (2):139-150.
    This article argues that climate change puts excessive demands on the psyche. The omnipresent specter of climate change and global warming cannot be processed by individual psyches because there is little – if anything – that individual people can do to stop the devastation that hovers on the horizon. Unlike other disasters and calamities that have affected humans (war, genocide, nuclear destruction, pandemics, despotism) climate change presents unique challenges to the human psyche as it engages traumatic temporality on a global (...)
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  25.  49
    Real Dreams.Elissa Marder - 2013 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 51 (S1):196-213.
    This paper suggests that The Interpretation of Dreams contains some of Freud's most provocative, far-reaching, and powerful psychoanalytic insights regarding futurity, intersubjective communication, and the relationship between the dream, the dreamer, and the world. By focusing on the specific status and function of the dream (as opposed to all other psychic actions), this paper explores how and why the singular language of dreams—and the very possibility of dream interpretation—provide a specifically psychoanalytic model of translation. The essay examines the specific status (...)
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  26.  10
    Regina Mühlhäuser, Eroberungen. Sexuelle Gewalttaten und intime Beziehungen deutsche Soldaten in der Sowjetunion, 1941-1945.Elissa Mailänder - 2014 - Clio 39:301-304.
    Que les violences sexuelles fassent partie intégrante de la guerre est un constat aujourd’hui largement accepté. Pourtant, lorsqu’il s’agit de la Wehrmacht, cela reste une question controversée et un domaine de recherche récent. Pendant trop longtemps la Guerre froide, rendant difficile voire impossible l’accès aux archives soviétiques, avait favorisé le mythe d’une Wehrmacht “propre” (saubere Wehrmacht). Parce que c’est bien le front de l’Est qui était le théâtre des violences les plus extrê...
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  27.  67
    Disarticulated Voices: Feminism and Philomela.Elissa Marder - 1992 - Hypatia 7 (2):148 - 166.
    By juxtaposing readings of selected feminist critics with a reading of Ovid's account of Philomela's rape and silencing, this essay interrogates the rhetorical, political, and epistemological implications of the feminist "we." As a political intervention that comes into being as a response to women's oppression, feminism must posit a collective "we." But this feminist "we" is best understood as an impersonal, performative pronoun whose political force is not derived from a knowable referent.
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  28.  8
    Still (Un)Born.Elissa Marder - 2020 - Philosophy Today 64 (2):343-360.
    This essay traces the pivotal—although largely unspoken—relation between the mother and language in Derrida’s reading of Heidegger’s reading of Trakl in Geschlecht III. Derrida’s gloss of the “idiom” in Heidegger’s text leads to a reflection on the language of gestation through the family of words linking “tragen” (carrying) to “austragen” (carrying to term). Following Derrida, the essay proposes that Heidegger’s conception of the time of the “unborn” in his essay “Language in the Poem” is the time of the promise and (...)
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  29.  3
    chapter 9. Figures of Interest.Elissa Marder - 2018 - In Kelly Oliver & Stephanie M. Straub (eds.), Deconstructing the Death Penalty: Derrida's Seminars and the New Abolitionism. Fordham University Press. pp. 175-185.
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  30.  11
    Book Review: Mothering through Precarity: Women’s Work and Digital Media by Julie A. Wilson and Emily Chivers Yochim. [REVIEW]Allison J. Pugh & Elissa Zeno - 2018 - Gender and Society 32 (2):278-280.
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  31.  9
    Psychoanalysis and/as Philosophy? The Anthropological Significance of Pathology in Freud’s Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexualityand in the Psychoanalytic Tradition.Elizabeth Rottenberg, Philippe van Haute & Elissa Marder - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (Supplement):90-97.
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  32.  17
    A Note in Response to Itzkin's "Bentham's Chrestomathia: Utilitarian Legacy to English Education".Brian Taylor - 1982 - Journal of the History of Ideas 43 (2):309.
  33.  14
    MÈRE MÉTAPHORE : the maternal materiality of water in astrida neimanis’s bodies of water.Eszter Timár - 2023 - Angelaki 28 (1):128-138.
    Bridging feminist new materialism and feminist phenomenology, Astrida Neimanis’s volume, Bodies of Water, discusses water in terms of nurturing maternality based on a figural reservoir of what she terms “amniotics” and “planetary breastmilk” in order to posit this maternality as the material condition of the embodiment of life. In this article I show that this imagery is a construction consistently haunted by figures of anxiety and loss. I do this by first revisiting earlier interventions in deconstruction concerning materiality and feminist (...)
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  34.  25
    Aeneas as hospes_ in Vergil, _Aeneid 1 and 4.Roy K. Gibson - 1999 - Classical Quarterly 49 (01):184-202.
    In the opening section of Ovid's Ars Amatoria 3 the poet, in an attempt to gain favour with his female addressees, lists a number of legends where it is men who are the deceivers. In this list he includes Aeneas, et famam pietatis habet, tamen hospes et ensem I praebuit et causam mortis, Elissa, tuae . The terms in which Aeneas' guilt is cast are striking. Aeneas is criticized not for his lover's faithlessness, but for his shattering of the (...)
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  35. Amanaskayoga. Gorakhanātha & Rāmalāla Śrīvāstava (eds.) - 1980 - Gorakhapura: Gorakhanātha-Mandira.
    Verse treatise on Yoga according to the Nāṭha sect in Hinduism.
     
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  36.  4
    Manhaj Ibn ʻArabī fī fahm al-khiṭāb al-Ilāhī.Asmāʼ Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn Ḥusayn - 2022 - al-Qāhirah: Maktabat Wahbah.
  37.  2
    Blood, sweat and tears: Kinning otherwise through art.Nora S. Vaage & Merete Lie - 2024 - Technoetic Arts 22 (1):39-55.
    The article discusses two bioart projects that bring the symbolically core human substances of blood, sweat and tears into technologically mediated relationships with plants and fungi to explore human kinship with other species: Tarah Rhoda’s BS&T (short for ‘blood, sweat and tears’) and OurGlass, and Saša Spačal’s MycoMythologies: Patterning. The article analyses the art projects through the lens of the molecular gaze and different perspectives on kinning, bringing anthropological conceptualizations of kinship together with Haraway’s pathways to connect with other species. (...)
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  38.  27
    The contours of evolution: In defence of Darwin's tree of life paradigm.Peter T. S. van der Gulik, Wouter D. Hoff & Dave Speijer - 2024 - Bioessays 46 (5):2400012.
    Both the concept of a Darwinian tree of life (TOL) and the possibility of its accurate reconstruction have been much criticized. Criticisms mostly revolve around the extensive occurrence of lateral gene transfer (LGT), instances of uptake of complete organisms to become organelles (with the associated subsequent gene transfer to the nucleus), as well as the implications of more subtle aspects of the biological species concept. Here we argue that none of these criticisms are sufficient to abandon the valuable TOL concept (...)
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  39.  5
    Epilogue.S. J. Robert J. Daly - 2002 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 9 (1):193-196.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:EPILOGUE Robert J. Daly, SJ. Boston College April 2002 Iwill arrange my comments under four headings: (1) what we had hoped to accomplish; (2) what we actually did accomplish; (3) what we may have learned from this; (4) what this might now enable us to do in thefuture. This epilogueisbeingwritten in April, 2002,twenty-twomonths after the conference. To draw what good we can from this delay, writing at this distance (...)
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  40.  5
    The Givenness of Desire: Concrete Subjectivity and the Natural Desire to See God.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2017 - University of Toronto Press.
    "In The Givenness of Desire, Randall S. Rosenberg examines the human desire for God through the lens of Lonergan's "concrete subjectivity." Rosenberg engages and integrates two major scholarly developments: the tension between Neo-Thomists and scholars of Henri de Lubac over our natural desire to see God and the theological appropriation of the mimetic theory of René Girard, with an emphasis on the saints as models of desire. With Lonergan as an integrating thread, the author engages a variety of thinkers, including (...)
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  41.  38
    Maturational Constraints on Language Learning.Elissa L. Newport - 1990 - Cognitive Science 14 (1):11-28.
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  42. The messiah of the Machiavellian moment : the reluctant tyranny of the good man in the corrupt republic.Murray S. Y. Bessette - 2024 - In Michael Anton, Glenn Ellmers & Charles R. Kesler (eds.), Leisure with dignity: essays in celebration of Charles R. Kesler. New York: Encounter Books.
     
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  43.  8
    Prosperity theology versus theology of sharing approach.Daniel S. Lephoko - 2024 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (1):7.
    Theologians are split into two groups: those who embrace prosperity theology and those who oppose it; both sides on scriptural grounds. Those criticising it embrace cessationism in its diversity, while its supporters are mainly found among Pentecostals and Charismatics, who are continuationists. Continuationists believe and teach that all gifts of the Spirit are still available to the church today, therefore should be practised by the church just as they were operative during the apostolic era. Therefore, it is clear that prosperity (...)
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  44.  8
    Editors’ Introduction.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe & Mark G. Spencer - 2024 - Hume Studies 49 (1):7-8.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Editors’ IntroductionElizabeth S. Radcliffe and Mark G. SpencerThis issue opens with the winning essay in the Third Annual Hume Studies Essay Prize competition: “Hume beyond Theism and Atheism” by Dr. Ariel Peckel. Dr. Peckel’s essay was chosen as the winner from among papers submitted by emerging scholars from August 2022 through July 2023. Please see the full prize announcement with information about this talented Hume scholar elsewhere in this (...)
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  45. Responsible research with crowds: pay crowdworkers at least minimum wage.M. S. Silberman, B. Tomlinson, R. LaPlante, J. Ross, L. Irani & A. Zaldivar - 2018 - Communications of the Acm 61 (3):39-41.
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  46.  17
    Digital Humans to Combat Loneliness and Social Isolation: Ethics Concerns and Policy Recommendations.Nancy S. Jecker, Robert Sparrow, Zohar Lederman & Anita Ho - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (1):7-12.
    Social isolation and loneliness are growing concerns around the globe that put people at increased risk of disease and early death. One much‐touted approach to addressing them is deploying artificially intelligent agents to serve as companions for socially isolated and lonely people. Focusing on digital humans, we consider evidence and ethical arguments for and against this approach. We set forth and defend public health policies that respond to concerns about replacing humans, establishing inferior relationships, algorithmic bias, distributive justice, and data (...)
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  47.  4
    Anarchiving the Anthropocene: Waste and relationality.Allie E. S. Wist - 2023 - Technoetic Arts 21 (2):265-283.
    The archive produces a linear time that reaches towards ‘what could be’ by asserting ‘what has been’, providing us reassurance of our existence through the assertion of a reliably past past. But the Anthropocene is an era of uncontained material ramifications, where the past juts into the future and temporality warps as change accelerates unexpectedly. As an ecological and geologic epoch, documentation of the Anthropocene inherently has a relationship to natural history museums and archives. These institutions, however, troublingly rest on (...)
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  48.  3
    A Response to My Readers.Michael S. Hogue - 2024 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 44 (3):80-96.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A Response to My ReadersMichael S. Hogue (bio)I. IntroductionI often begin writing for personal reasons: to slow my thinking, clarify and organize my thoughts, trace ideas, and sort concepts. Generally, a concern for something I consider wrong about the world motivates me to write. Provoked by such a concern, I write to understand why and how what is wrong came to be that way and why and how I (...)
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  49.  22
    A Justice-Based Defense of a Litmus Test.Stephen S. Hanson - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (4):58-60.
    Jecker, et al., argue against rejecting a location for an international bioethics conference based on a “litmus test” for several reasons, ranging from the practical to the theoretical. However, th...
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  50.  1
    Focalisation and its performative nature in John 3:1–21.Risimati S. Hobyane - 2024 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (1):7.
    Without seeking to diminish its authority as the Word of God, this article acknowledges the Fourth Gospel as a brilliant piece of literary artistry by the implied author. The aim of this article is to substantiate this assertion by conducting a study on focalisation and illustrating how it invites the implied reader’s participation in the narrative. This contribution acknowledges the existence of insightful contributions on the topic, particularly in relation to the Fourth Gospel. However, it asserts that the study of (...)
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