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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

A history of the Dallas Little Theatre, 1920-1943

January 1967 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
102

History of El Paso Theatre: 1881 to 1905

January 1965 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
103

A history of the international theatre institute

January 1967 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
104

A history of professional stage theatricals in Peoria, Illinois before the Civil War

January 1972 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
105

A history of the Tulane University Theatre, 1937-1967

January 1968 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
106

Hierarchic man: philosophy and the individual in the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty

January 1971 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
107

Illusion in modern american drama: a study of selected plays by Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, and Eugene O'Neill

January 1964 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
108

Houston's Alley Theatre

January 1967 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
109

Husserl's theory of intentionality: the ideality thesis, evidence, and the open experience

January 1982 (has links)
In the Logical Investigations, Husserl proposed intentionality as the basic mode of objective reference. When the mind's intention is satisfied by the limiting self-givenness of the object, then the subject has evidence for his assertion. The evidence Husserl means is self-evidence, and since self-evidence provides the ideal form of knowledge, it is in self-evidence that the judging subject can experience the certitude which alone constitutes the rational foundation of knowledge. For Husserl, philosophic certainty is a kind of insight Husserl's theory of the ideal nature of meaning is the foundation of the notion of intentionality. The ideality thesis should establish that meanings are objective, that they are internally related to the mental life of persons, and that they serve as media of reference. The ideality thesis is meant to preclude the notion of mental privacy and to situate the thinking subject in the communicative world. For this, Husserl needed a criterion of identity that only the ideality thesis can provide But the argument of this essay reveals that Husserl's notion of self-evidence is not credible since he cannot relieve the experiential aspect of the having-of-evidence from its contingent character. The argument further shows that the alleged relationship between ideal objects and evidence is circular: he refers to evidence to establish the thesis that there are ideal objects, which he can do only if evidence guarantees truth; but the assertion that evidence guarantees truth is itself established by the proposition that evidence consists in perception of ideal objects Accordingly, the essay concludes that the intentional relation does not imply the self-evidence thesis. Husserl's argument for the possibility of indubitable knowledge depends on the complete convergence of the mean and the given. But since we are always given more than we mean, and we always mean more than we are given, the concept of the intentional relation implies, instead, the dialectic, not the coincidence, of the meant and the given. Husserl's theory of the intentional relation and his notion of philosophic certainty are contrary lines of thought. Intentionality implies the openness of experience / acase@tulane.edu
110

Ideal c*-algebras

January 1967 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu

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