Results for 'extinction performance'

988 found
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  1.  19
    Extinction performance following discrimination training.David Birch, James K. Allison & Robert F. House - 1963 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 65 (2):148.
  2.  10
    Extinction performance as a function of reward-nonreward transitions.Ed Eckert & Roger L. Mellgren - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 97 (2):230.
  3.  12
    Terminal extinction performance of a running response following consistent and partial reinforcement and nonreinforcement.Roger W. Black, Joseph Schumpert & Charles Woodard - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (2):104-106.
  4.  20
    Differential extinction performance to two stimuli following within-subject acquisition.Karen Galbraith - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 89 (2):343.
  5.  15
    Extinction and reacquisition performance alternations of the conditioned nictitating membrane response.Michael J. Scavio & Richard F. Thompson - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (2):57-60.
  6.  24
    A "partial reinforcement extinction effect" in perceptual-motor performance: Coerced versus volunteer subject populations.Roger W. Black, Joseph Schumpert & Frances Welch - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 92 (1):143.
  7.  7
    Decrements in human instrumental performance due to response competition and fear extinction.J. K. Dua - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 81 (3):547.
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  8.  21
    The effects of a pre-extinction procedure on the extinction of place and response performance in a T-maze.Donald P. Scharlock - 1954 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 48 (1):31.
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  9.  23
    The effect of reinforcement on closely following S-R connections: II. Effect of food reward immediately preceding performance of an instrumental conditioned response on extinction of that response.Mohamed O. Nagaty - 1951 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 42 (5):333.
  10.  12
    After Extinction ed. by Richard Grusin, and: Anthropocene Poetics: Deep Time, Sacrifice Zones and Extinction by David Farrier (review).Chris Crews - 2022 - Substance 51 (3):156-164.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:After Extinction ed. by Richard Grusin, and: Anthropocene Poetics: Deep Time, Sacrifice Zones and Extinction by David FarrierChris CrewsRichard Grusin, editor. After Extinction. University of Minnesota Press, 2018. 272pp.David Farrier. Anthropocene Poetics: Deep Time, Sacrifice Zones and Extinction. University of Minnesota Press, 2019. 176pp.Thinking Critically and Poetically with the AnthropocenePublished within a year of each other, Richard Grusin’s edited collection, After Extinction, and (...)
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  11.  26
    Extinction of instrumental behavior as a function of frustration at various distances from the goal.Harvey M. Adelman & Gerald Rosenbaum - 1954 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 47 (6):429.
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  12.  31
    Corporate Accountability Towards Species Extinction Protection: Insights from Ecologically Forward-Thinking Companies.Lee Roberts, Monomita Nandy, Abeer Hassan, Suman Lodh & Ahmed A. Elamer - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 178 (3):571-595.
    This paper contributes to biodiversity and species extinction literature by examining the relationship between corporate accountability in terms of species protection and factors affecting such accountability from forward-thinking companies. We use triangulation of theories, namely deep ecology, legitimacy, and we introduce a new perspective to the stakeholder theory that considers species as a ‘stakeholder’. Using Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood regression, we examine a sample of 200 Fortune Global companies over 3 years. Our results indicate significant positive relations between ecologically conscious (...)
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  13.  25
    Ethics of Extinction: Humean Sentimentalism and the Value of the Human Species.Maurizio Balistreri - 2024 - Topoi 43 (1):55-63.
    The idea that the phenomenon of morality and, consequently, our ability to distinguish between vice and virtue can be explained by sympathy has been challenged as a highly controversial hypothesis, since sympathy appears to be easily influenced by proximity and selective, and would therefore seem incompatible with the possibility of taking an impartial, objective point of view. We intend to show that even a sentimentalist moral perspective such as the ‘Humean’ one, which places empathy (or ‘sympathy’, as Hume calls it) (...)
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  14.  17
    Relative resistance to extinction of escape training and avoidance training.Fred D. Sheffield & Helena Wellisz Temmer - 1950 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 40 (3):287.
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  15.  24
    A Theatre of Subtractive Extinction: Bene Without Deleuze.Lorenzo Chiesa - 2009 - In Laura Cull (ed.), Deleuze and performance. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 71.
    This chapter examines the relevance of Gilles Deleuze's work for the works of Italian director Carmelo Bene. It argues that Deleuze's One Less Manifesto conceived the theatre of continuous variation, particularly Bene's theatre, as one that is initiated and sustained by subtraction. It also questions the compatibility of Deleuze's vitalist concept of subtraction with Bene's own concept of the subtractive.
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  16.  9
    A Frightful Leap into Darkness: Auto-Destructive Art and Extinction.Jack Halberstam - 2018 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 26 (2):6-14.
    In a new book titled Wild Things: Queer Theory After Nature, I develop a new critical vocabulary to access different, transdisciplinary ways of thinking about race, sexuality, alternative political imaginaries and queer futurity and extinction. Wildness in no way signals the untamed frontier, or the absence of modernity, the barbarian, the animalistic or the opposite of civilization. Rather, in a post-colonial and even de-colonizing vein, it has emerged in the last few years as a marker of a desire to (...)
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  17.  23
    Endling, the Power of the Last in an Extinction-Prone World.Dolly Jørgensen - 2017 - Environmental Philosophy 14 (1):119-138.
    In April 1996, two men working at a convalescent center wrote a letter to the journal Nature proposing that a new word be adopted to designate a person who is the last in the lineage: endling. This had come up because of patients who were dying and thought of themselves as the last of their family line. The word was not picked up in medical circles. But, in 2001, when the National Museum of Australia (NMA) opened its doors, it featured (...)
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  18.  22
    Endling, the Power of the Last in an Extinction-Prone World.Dolly Jørgensen - 2017 - Environmental Philosophy 14 (1):119-138.
    In April 1996, two men working at a convalescent center wrote a letter to the journal Nature proposing that a new word be adopted to designate a person who is the last in the lineage: endling. This had come up because of patients who were dying and thought of themselves as the last of their family line. The word was not picked up in medical circles. But, in 2001, when the National Museum of Australia (NMA) opened its doors, it featured (...)
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  19. Act I Deleuze on theatre : Artaud, Beckett and Carmelo Bene. I Artaud BwO : the uses of Artaud's To have done with the judgement of god / Edward Scheer ; Expression and affect in Kleist, Beckett and Deleuze / Anthony Uhlmann ; A theatre of subtractive extinction : Bene without Deleuze.Lorenzo Chiesa - 2009 - In Laura Cull (ed.), Deleuze and performance. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
     
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  20.  6
    The Posthuman and Irish Antigones: Rights, Revolt, Extinction.Natasha Remoundou - 2022 - Clotho 4 (2):211-247.
    Antigone’s afterlives in Ireland have always enacted critical gestures of social protest and mourning that expose the fundamental fragility of human rights caught up in the symbolic conflict between oppressors and oppressed. This paper seeks to explore the scope of rereading certain Irish figurations of Antigone – the exemplary text of European humanism – through a posthumanist lens that unveils new and radical understandings of modern injustices, legal fissures, and capitalist insinuations of an “inhuman politics” against proletarian minorities in twentieth-century (...)
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  21.  15
    Rotary pursuit performance under alternate conditions of distributed and massed practice.M. Ray Denny, Norman Frisbey & John Weaver Jr - 1955 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 49 (1):48.
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  22.  16
    Exploratory drive and secondary reinforcement in the acquisition and extinction of a simple running response.F. A. Mote & F. W. Finger - 1942 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 31 (1):57.
  23.  12
    Effects on performance of placing a visual cue at different temporal locations within a constant delay interval.J. W. Tombaugh & T. N. Tombaugh - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 87 (2):220.
  24.  24
    Effects of variations in volume of sucrose and water on persistence of nonreinforced performance in the white rat.T. N. Tombaugh & J. L. McCloskey - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 92 (2):155.
  25.  36
    Behavioral momentum in Pavlovian conditioning and the learning/performance distinction.Hernán I. Savastano & Ralph R. Miller - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (5):694-695.
    Behavioral momentum theory has evolved within the realm of operant conditioning. The thought-provoking momentum metaphor equates the strength of an operant response with its resistance to change and preference (i.e., choice) for that response over other available responses. Whereas baseline response rate (velocity in the metaphor) is assumed to be largely influenced by the response-reinforcer contingency, resistance to change and preference are assumed to reflect an intervening variable called behavioral mass, which is determined primarily by the stimulus-reinforcer relationship. This invites (...)
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  26. An Interview with Judith Butler».Gender A. Performance - 1994 - Radical Philosophy 67.
     
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  27. M raw.An Invisible Performative Argument, Geoffrey Leech, Robert T. Harms, Richard E. Palmer, Arnolds Grava, Tadeusz Batog, J. Kurylowicz, Dan I. Slobin, David McNeill & R. A. Close - 1973 - Foundations of Language 9:294.
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  28. Psychology, Fredrik Sundqvist. Acta Philosophica Gothoburgensia 16. Göteborg: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis, 2003, xi+ 248 pp., pb. no price given. Legitimizing Scientific Knowledge: An Introduction to Steve Fuller's Social Epistemology, Francis Remedios. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2003, xii+ 143 pp., $55.00. Gadamer's Repercussions: Reconsidering Philosophical Hermeneutics. Edited by Bruce. [REVIEW]Art as Performance - 2004 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 47:315-317.
     
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  29. J. L Austin.Performative Utterances - 2008 - In Aloysius Martinich (ed.), The Philosophy of Language. Oxford University Press. pp. 136.
     
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  30. their Relative Non-Arbitrariness: Representing Women in Iranian Traditional Theater.Performative Symbols - 2003 - Semiotica 144 (2003):1-19.
     
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  31. Twenty-Five Years of Incomparable Research.Financial Performance Debate - forthcoming - Business and Society.
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  32. Volume 45, No. 1–August 1998 MC Sánchez/Rational Choice on Non-finite Sets by Means of Expansion-contraction Axioms 1–17 L. Sapir/The Optimality of the Expert and Majority Rules under Exponentially Distributed Competence 19–35. [REVIEW]P. D. Thistle & Economic Performance Social Structure - 1998 - Theory and Decision 45 (2):303-304.
     
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  33.  41
    The defense motivation system: A theory of avoidance behavior.Fred A. Masterson & Mary Crawford - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (4):661-675.
    A motivational system approach to avoidance behavior is presented. According to this approach, a motivational state increases the probability of relevant response patterns and establishes the appropriate or “ideal” consummatory stimuli as positive reinforcers. In the case of feeding motivation, for example, hungry rats are likely to explore and gnaw, and to learn to persist in activities correlated with the reception of consummatory stimuli produced by ingestion of palatable substances. In the case of defense motivation, fearful rats are likely to (...)
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  34.  39
    A Duty to Cognitively Enhance Animals.Yasha Rohwer - 2018 - Environmental Values 27 (2):137-158.
    In this article I argue that humans have a pro tanto duty to cognitively enhance some animals threatened with extinction. I will use as a case study a particular set of animals: smaller Australian marsupials. Many of these animals are on the brink of extinction thanks to the introduction of the fox and the domestic cat to the continent of Australia. Ecologists conjecture that these marsupials do not have the behavioural flexibility to cope with these introduced predators. By (...)
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  35.  8
    A Study on the Learning and Practice of Songdang Park Yeong and the Criticism of Junior Scholars. 朴暲原 - 2023 - THE JOURNAL OF ASIAN PHILOSOPHY IN KOREA 59:35-85.
    This paper investigates the philosophical characteristics of Songdang Park Yeong, who was an early Dohak scholar in the Joseon Dynasty and played a huge role in making the school of Neo-Confucianism in the regions along the Nakdong River. Park Yeong and his Neo-Confucianism has not been paid much attention to until recently. Significant studies on the school in Neo-Confucianism in the regions along the Nakdong River have been published lately, but research on Park Yeong remains as rare as before. He (...)
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  36. Fatally Confused: Telling the time in the midst of ecological crises.Michelle Bastian - 2012 - Journal of Environmental Philosophy 9 (1):23-48.
    Focusing particularly on the role of the clock in social life, this article explores the conventions we use to “tell the time.” I argue that although clock time generally appears to be an all-encompassing tool for social coordination, it is actually failing to coordinate us with some of the most pressing ecological changes currently taking place. Utilizing philosophical approaches to performativity to explore what might be going wrong, I then draw on Derrida’s and Haraway’s understandings of social change in order (...)
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  37.  15
    Fatally Confused.Michelle Bastian - 2012 - Environmental Philosophy 9 (1):23-48.
    Focusing particularly on the role of the clock in social life, this article explores the conventions we use to “tell the time.” I argue that although clock time generally appears to be an all-encompassing tool for social coordination, it is actually failing to coordinate us with some of the most pressing ecological changes currently taking place. Utilizing philosophical approaches to performativity to explore what might be going wrong, I then draw on Derrida’s and Haraway’s understandings of social change in order (...)
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  38.  7
    The Material Turn in the Study of Form: From Bio-Inspired Robots to Robotics-Inspired Morphology.Marco Tamborini - 2021 - Perspectives on Science 29 (5):643-665.
    . This paper investigates the mechanisms of knowledge production of twenty-first century robotics-inspired morphology. How robotics influences investigations into the structure, development, and change of organic forms? Which definition of form is presupposed by this new approach to the study of form? I answer these questions by investigating how robots are used to understand and generate new questions about the locomotion of extinct animals in the first case study and in high-performance fishes in the second case study. After having (...)
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  39.  51
    Reconciling the role of central serotonin neurons in human and animal behavior.Philippe Soubrié - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (2):319-335.
    Animal research suggests that central serotonergic neurons are involved in behavioral suppression, particularly anxiety-related inhibition. The hypothesis linking decreased serotonin transmission to reduced anxiety as the mechanism in the anxiolytic activity of benzodiazepines conflicts with most clinical observations. Serotonin antagonists show no marked capacity to alleviate anxiety. On the other hand, clinical signs of reduced serotonergic transmission (low 5-HIAA levels in the cerebrospinal fluid) are frequently associated with aggressiveness, suicide attempts, and increased anxiety. The target article attempts to reconcile such (...)
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  40.  15
    Queer Love, Gender Bending Bacteria, and Life after the Anthropocene.Eben Kirksey - 2019 - Theory, Culture and Society 36 (6):197-219.
    The timeline of the Anthropocene – a geological epoch that Paul Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer say began in the late 18th century with the invention of the steam engine – seems like a brief and inconsequential blip, against the time scales embodied by the microbial communities. Wolbachia bacteria predate Anthropos by some 150 million years, and will likely outlast us. Wolbachia bacteria are worthy of their own geological epoch because they offer a fresh vantage point on one of the most (...)
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  41.  40
    The posthuman abstract: AI, DRONOLOGY & “BECOMING ALIEN”.Louis Armand - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2571-2576.
    This paper is addressed to recent theoretical discussions of the Anthropocene, in particular Bernard Stiegler’s Neganthropocene (Open Universities Press, 2018), which argues: “As we drift past tipping points that put future biota at risk, while a post-truth regime institutes the denial of ‘climate change’ (as fake news), and as Silicon Valley assistants snatch decision and memory, and as gene-editing and a financially-engineered bifurcation advances over the rising hum of extinction events and the innumerable toxins and conceptual opiates that Anthropocene (...)
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  42.  10
    An Ethical Overview of the CRISPR-Based Elimination of Anopheles gambiae to Combat Malaria.India Jane Wise & Pascal Borry - 2022 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 19 (3):371-380.
    Approximately a quarter of a billion people around the world suffer from malaria each year. Most cases are located in sub-Saharan Africa where Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes are the principal vectors of this public health problem. With the use of CRISPR-based gene drives, the population of mosquitoes can be modified, eventually causing their extinction. First, we discuss the moral status of the organism and argue that using genetically modified mosquitoes to combat malaria should not be abandoned based on some moral (...)
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  43.  5
    An elemental ethics for artificial intelligence: water as resistance within AI’s value chain.Sebastián Lehuedé - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-14.
    Research and activism have increasingly denounced the problematic environmental record of the infrastructure and value chain underpinning artificial intelligence (AI). Water-intensive data centres, polluting mineral extraction and e-waste dumping are incontrovertibly part of AI’s footprint. In this article, I turn to areas affected by AI-fuelled environmental harm and identify an ethics of resistance emerging from local activists, which I term ‘elemental ethics’. Elemental ethics interrogates the AI value chain’s problematic relationship with the elements that make up the world, critiques the (...)
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  44.  25
    Authentic Crows: Identity, Captivity and Emergent Forms of Life.Thom van Dooren - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (2):29-52.
    For over a decade the Hawaiian crow, or ‘alalā, has been extinct in the wild, the only remaining birds living their lives in captivity. As the time for possible release approaches, questions of species identity – in particular focused on how birds have been changed by captivity – have become increasingly pressing. This article explores how identity is imagined and managed in this programme to produce ‘authentic’ crows. In particular, it asks what possibilities might be opened up by a move (...)
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  45.  24
    The workplace on the verge of the 21st century.Richard S. Rosenberg - 1999 - Journal of Business Ethics 22 (1):3 - 14.
    Almost exactly ten years ago, the now extinct U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) released a major report -- The Electronic Supervisor: New Technology, New Tensions. This report describes a number of new technologies available to management in its ongoing search to ensure that labour performs its required job to management's rigid specifications. Social issues raised with respect to electronic monitoring included privacy, fairness, quality of working life, and stress-related illnesses. The study was also concerned with drug testing, genetic (...)
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  46.  21
    Enriching the Lives of Wild Horses: Designing Opportunities for Them to Flourish.Christine M. Reed - 2012 - Environmental Values 21 (3):317 - 329.
    Wild horses are becoming dependent on transitional environments between domesticity and wildness. In Dutch new nature areas they are learning to perform roles as ecological surrogates for their extinct ancestors. In the U.S. wild horses are 'feral' and exist in numbers deemed to be in excess of the carrying capacity of semi-arid public range lands. The federal government is removing and relocating thousands to long-term holding pastures. The capabilities approach of Nussbaum (2006) allows us to evaluate this transitional environment against (...)
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  47.  99
    The Moral Case for Experimentation on Animals.H. J. McCloskey - 1987 - The Monist 70 (1):64-82.
    The moral case for experimentation on animals rests both on the goods to be realized, the evils to be avoided thereby, and on the duty to respect persons and to secure them in the enjoyment of their natural moral rights. Some experimentation on animals presents no problems of justification as it involves no harm at all to the animals which are the subject of experiments and is such as to seek to achieve an advance in knowledge. Experiments on non-sentient animals, (...)
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  48.  56
    New directions, new collaborations.Ann Pederson - 2010 - Zygon 45 (2):499-505.
    In a world where all of life is on the edge of extinction and destruction by humankind, those who practice religion-and-science within a mutual dialogue bear the responsibility of doing so with this edge of life in mind. To speak of religion-and-science as a field of inquiry is to acknowledge the ethical responsibilities it entails. If one task of Zygon is to reformulate religion in light of the future dialogue of religion-and-science, we need to think about what kind of (...)
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  49. Do We Owe the Past a Future: Reply to Finneron-Burns.Patrick Kaczmarek & Simon Beard - manuscript
    According to the Unfinished Business Account, if actor p reasonably judges performing a supererogatory act ϕ at great sacrifice to herself will enable beneficiary q to achieve a greater good, then failure to promote the good made possible by ϕ wrongs p. Elizabeth Finneron-Burns questions whether it follows that we have a duty to render the sacrifices of past (and present) people more worthwhile by preventing human extinction. This note responds to her criticisms.
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  50.  11
    The Atlas of Death.Olle Essvik - 2023 - Philosophy of Photography 14 (2):217-228.
    In a number of works of art, I have taken an interest in insects, bookworms that eat books, electronics as anatomy and clever robots whose actions in a way resemble the apparently primitive abilities of insects. This text has its starting point in two works of art, Eaten Books and Atlas of AInsects. In the artworks, I am interested in insect anatomy and insects as symbols of decay, survival, extinction, death and post humanity. The text is originally from an (...)
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