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Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the AmericansLiebeskind, Jane Louise 22 September 2014 (has links)
The philosophy of Francis Bacon has an important and often overlooked place in the development of American political thought. John Dewey cites Bacon as the forefather of his own highly influential philosophical school, American pragmatism. I argue that, though Dewey is in many ways correct to look to Bacon as his predecessor, he overlooks or collapses certain crucial tensions in Bacon’s philosophical project. This causes Dewey to misinterpret the political implications of the philosophic project to which he himself is an heir. By exploring the tensions that Bacon maintains, and Dewey collapses, between human knowledge and human power, science and democracy, and progress in the sciences and progress within states, I hope to shed light on the true implications of Bacon’s philosophical project for American political thought. / text
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El ídolo del fútbol: el caso de Alexis SánchezEspinoza Peña, Víctor Manuel, Vega Barrera, Viviana Aurora January 2013 (has links)
Memoria para optar al título de Periodista / El autor no autoriza el acceso a texto completo de su documento / El trabajo de memoria de título “El ídolo en el fútbol: el caso de Alexis
Sánchez” posee una serie de opiniones de entrevistados y contenido extraído de
materiales bibliográficos, provenientes del periodismo deportivo, de la sociología y
de futbolistas. A través de ellos busca explicar la construcción del ídolo futbolístico
y dar a conocer los elementos que se entrelazan para configurar su imagen como
tal. Además, utiliza la figura del jugador chileno Alexis Sánchez para ejemplificar a
través de un caso real las variables que confluyen en este proceso.
Su estructura está ordenada a través de capítulos. El primero hace un
recorrido desde el origen del deporte, pasando por el fútbol y la aparición del ídolo;
el segundo se adentra en la configuración del ídolo y sus características a partir de
las opiniones de los entrevistados; el tercero aborda la identificación como una
variable existente en la formación del ídolo del fútbol; el cuarto trata los medios de
comunicación y su influencia en esta construcción; y el quinto desarrolla el caso de
Alexis Sánchez, tomando los elementos desarrollados en los capítulos que lo anteceden.
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Reading Saints’ Lives and Striving to Live as Saints : Reading and Rewriting Medieval HagiographySchenck, William Casper January 2008 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Matilda Tomaryn Bruckner / This study demonstrates the essential connection between literature and history by examining the way selected saints’ lives were read and rewritten in Latin and Old French from the eleventh to thirteenth centuries. Building on the concept of the horizon of expectations developed by Hans Robert Jauss, it argues against both the model of literature as a series of timeless classics whose meaning is apparent to the intelligent reader of any age and the tendency to reduce literature to the more or less successful imitation of historical realities. Not only does the interpretation of a saint’s life change over time as the text is read in different religious and cultural contexts, but the narrative is in turn capable of influencing the way its readers understand themselves and the world in which they live. By comparing different versions of each saint’s life, I am able to isolate variations in form, tone, characterization, and action, and relate them to the experiences of specific historical figures whose lives illustrate the important religious and cultural issues of their time. In order to do this, I examine three saints’ lives in light of the sometimes troubled relationship between the clerical order of the church and the laity. Two Latin and two Old French versions of the Life of Saint Alexis are read along with the life of Christina of Markyate, an English woman who fled from her husband to become a recluse. Alexis’s and Christina’s refusal of marriage illustrates the tension between the monastic model of fleeing from the world to save one’s self and the pastoral ideal of working for the salvation of others. I compare the figure of the mother in two very similar Old French versions of the Life of Pope Saint Gregory, a story of incest, penance, and redemption, to Ermengarde of Anjou, a countess who could never commit herself to life in a convent. Like Ermengarde and countless other lay men and women, Gregory’s mother faces the question of whether she can live a sufficiently holy life as a lay person or needs to enter a convent to expiate her sins. Finally, I read Latin and Old French verse and prose versions of the Life of Saint Mary the Egyptian in light of the similar yet opposing experiences of Valdes of Lyon and Francis of Assisi in relation to the question of heresy and orthodoxy. My understanding of the medieval religious historical context, particularly the history of the laity in the Church, builds on the foundational work of Raoul Manselli, Etienne Delaruelle, and André Vauchez, as well as more recent work by Michel Grandjean, who compares the different visions of the laity held by Peter Damien, Anselm of Canterbury, and Yves of Chartres. My dissertation shows that the different versions of saints’ lives not only reflect the evolution of attitudes about human relationships, salvation, and orthodoxy that characterize the time and place in which they were written, but also question the practices of later readers and offer solutions to new problems in new contexts. As my study demonstrates, ideals like the monastic identification of holiness with asceticism shape the way people understand and direct their lives, and the source for these ideals can often be found in literary texts like saints’ lives. These texts do not communicate these ideals transparently. The juxtapositions, tensions, and conflicts they depict can lead the reader to come to a more nuanced understanding or even a total reconsideration of his or her beliefs. The study of rewriting and medieval saints’ lives can help us better understand this interplay between narrative, ideal, and lived experience. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Romance Languages and Literatures.
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Recording Review of Alexis Zoumbas: A Lament for Epirus, 1926-1928 and Five Days Married & Other Laments: Song and Dance from Northern Greece, 1928-1958Olson, Ted 01 April 2015 (has links)
Review of Alexis Zoumbas: A Lament for Epirus, 1926-1928 and Five Days Married & Other Laments: Song and Dance from Northern Greece, 1928-1958
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A comparative study of male germ cell production in two Australian conilurine rodents, the plains rat, Pseudomys australis and hopping mouse, Notomys alexisPeirce, Eleanor J. January 2000 (has links) (PDF)
Copies of author's previously published articles inserted. Bibliography: p. 199-254. In eutherian mammals, the size of the testes and number of spermatozoa produced and stored in the excurrent ducts vary widely between species, with the hydromyine rodents of Australia exhibiting a greater range of interspecific variation than any other closely related group of species. This study compared the efficiency of germ cell production and sperm storage capacity in the extra-testicular ducts of two arid zone species, the plains rat, Pseudomys australis, and the spinifex hopping mouse, Notomys alexis, that have vast differences in testes size and number of stored spermatozoa. Results are discussed.
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Institutional Republicanism:Alexis de Tocqueville beyond LiberalismChen, Chien-Kang 19 July 2005 (has links)
Abstract
The eighteenth century is doubtlessly an astonishing chapter in human history. Following America¡¦s independence that brought the first new democratic country to the world, the French Revolution further aroused tremendous political effects all over Europe, shocked the foundation of feudalism, and announced the advent of democratic era. Confronted with all these historical impacts, Tocqueville has achieved profound understanding and retrospection on the inevitable prevalence of democracy. The concept of liberty plays a very important role in Tocqueville¡¦s theory. As the wave of democracy crashed outmoded institution of feudalism, it also caused people to grow assimilated, or even philistine. In light of this, Tocqueville proposed that, in order to preclude domination and slavery, people should more actively grasp their liberty and develop the habitude and spirit of participating public affairs. Therefore, township and jury system in American tradition, as well as individual activities of organizing secondary civil groups through gilds, are highly regarded by Tocqueville with democratic connotation. From this viewpoint, Tocqueville¡¦s great expectation on liberty is essentially different from ¡§human¡¦s liberty from interference¡¨ of contractarian liberalism but is in harmony with the conventional idea of people¡¦s ¡§agency¡¨ in republicanism. This connotation of liberty, however, doesn¡¦t imply clashes without limit but suggests reasonable and restrained political participation within the schema of stable political institution. Thus, the concept echoes the conventional appreciation upon institution in roman republicanism. The researcher regards the integration of the aforementioned two aspects as ¡§liberty of institutional republicanism¡¨. This research intends to embody the republicanism value in Tocqueville¡¦s theory with an expectation to broaden the definition of his thought.
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Alexis de Chateauneuf und William Lindley : ihre gemeinsam errichteten Bauwerke /Spallek, Johannes. January 1978 (has links)
Universiẗat, Diss.--Hamburg, 1978.
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The conversion of imagination : from Pascal through Rousseau to Tocqueville /Maguire, Matthew W. January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Thesis Ph. D--Harvard university, 1999. Titre de soutenance : The conversion of Enlightenment. / Notes bibliogr.
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A comparative study of male germ cell production in two Australian conilurine rodents, the plains rat, Pseudomys australis and hopping mouse, Notomys alexis / Eleanor J. Peirce.Peirce, Eleanor January 2000 (has links)
Copies of author's previously published articles inserted. / Bibliography: p. 199-254. / xii, 254 p., [34] leaves, [30] leaves of plates : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / In eutherian mammals, the size of the testes and number of spermatozoa produced and stored in the excurrent ducts vary widely between species, with the hydromyine rodents of Australia exhibiting a greater range of interspecific variation than any other closely related group of species. This study compared the efficiency of germ cell production and sperm storage capacity in the extra-testicular ducts of two arid zone species, the plains rat, Pseudomys australis, and the spinifex hopping mouse, Notomys alexis, that have vast differences in testes size and number of stored spermatozoa. Results are discussed. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Anatomical Science, 2000
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Aristocratic liberalism : the social and political thought of Jacob Burckhardt, John Stuart Mill, and Alexis de Tocqueville /Kahan, Alan S. January 1992 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Th. Ph. D.--University of Chicago. / Bibliogr. p. 167-214. Index.
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