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  1.  52
    A Distorting Mirror: Educational Trajectory After College Sexual Assault.ClaireRaymond &Sarah Corse -2018 -Feminist Studies 44 (2):464.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:464 Feminist Studies 44, no. 2. © 2018 by Feminist Studies, Inc.ClaireRaymond and Sarah Corse A Distorting Mirror: Educational Trajectory After College Sexual Assault This article focuses on the broad and specific impacts of college sexual assault on student-survivors’ academic performance, academic trajectory, and their sense of self in relation to the university community. We frame this study with, and relate our findings to, the (...) historic and theoretical literatures that provide the context for this essay, including the large and burgeoning literature on the sexual assault of women college students and recent studies analyzing the role of fraternities in sexual assault, students’ fears and perceptions about college assault, bystander intervention training, and survivors’ grade-point averages after assault.1 Our study also builds on the history of feminist resistance to rape, feminist writings about rape, and campus activism against rape, with the 1. Cortney Franklin, Leana Allen Bouffard, and Travis C. Pratt, “Sexual Assault on the College Campus: Fraternity Affiliation, Male Peer Support, and Low Self-Control,” Criminal Justice and Behavior 39, no. 11 (2012): 1457– 80; Christine A. Gidycz, John R. McNamara, and Katie M. Edwards, “Women ’s Risk Perception and Sexual Victimization: A Review of the Literature,” Aggression and Violent Behavior 11, no. 5 (2006): 441–56; Jennifer Katz and Jessica Moore, “Bystander Education Training for Campus Sexual Assault Prevention: An Initial Meta-Analysis,” Violence and Victims 28, no. 6 (2013): 1054–67; Douglas W. Pryor and Marion R. Hughes, “Fear of Rape among College Women: A Social Psychological Analysis,” Violence and Victims 28, no. 3 (2013): 443–65; Carol E. Jordan, Jessica L. Combs, and Gregory T. Smith, “An Exploration of Sexual Victimization and Academic Performance among College Women,” Trauma, Violence, & Abuse 15, no. 3 (2014): 191–200.ClaireRaymond and Sarah Corse 465 goal of shedding light on one aspect of the problem. Groundbreaking (and in some cases controversial) works analyzing the cultures of rape, such as Susan Brownmiller’s Against Our Will and Peggy Sanday’s “The Socio-Cultural Context of Rape” (in which Sanday creates the concept of the rape-producing culture—a concept that is central to our argument in this essay), found immediate reception with feminist activists of the 1970s and early 1980s.2 Mary Koss’s work regarding the scope of rape in college settings is also foundational to our study of campus rape.3 Susan Estrich, Catharine MacKinnon, and other feminist theorists in the mid-1980s developed critical apparatuses to shift the understanding of rape, providing a feminist framework wherein rape is interpreted as violence committed against a woman—in opposition to the patriarchal argument that rape is caused by a woman’s actions or is the product of her distortion of events after the fact.4 Angela Davis and bell hooks were deeply influential in framing understandings of the racial and racist aspects of feminist discussions of rape, while legal scholar Sarah Deer has more recently broadened understandings of the racialized discourse of rape, and Lisa Wade has written on twenty-first century hookup culture and the ways that this social landscape promulgates rates of maleon -female rape that are significantly higher on college campuses than in the general population.5 2. Peggy Reeves Sanday, “The Socio-Cultural Context of Rape: A Cross-Cultural Study,” Journal of Social Issues 37, no. 4 (1981): 5–27; Susan Brownmiller, Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape (New York: Penguin Books, 1976). 3. Mary P. Koss, Christine A. Gidycz, and Nadine Wisniewski, “The Scope of Rape: Incidence and Prevalence of Sexual Aggression and Victimization in a National Sample of Higher Education Students,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 55, no. 2 (1987): 162–70. 4. Susan Estrich, Real Rape: How the Legal System Victimizes Women Who Say No (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988); Duncan Chappell, Robley Geis, and Gilbert Geis, eds., Forcible Rape: The Crime, the Victim and the Offender (New York: Columbia University Press, 1977). 5. Angela Davis, “Rape, Racism, and the Myth of the Black Rapist,” in her Women, Race, and Class (New York: Vintage Books, 1983), 172–201; bell hooks, Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End Press, 1984); Sarah Deer, The Beginning and End... (shrink)
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  2. Claire, l'amie de toujours.Raymond Renard &JacquelineRaymond -2008 -Cahiers Internationaux de Symbolisme 119:177-178.
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  3.  19
    Joseph Clair, On Education, Formation, Citizenship, and the Lost Purpose of Learning.Raymond Hain -2019 -Augustinian Studies 50 (2):225-229.
  4. Raymond Aron: Kantian Critique of 20th Century.Marie-Claire Foblets -1990 -Dialectics and Humanism 17 (1):154-165.
     
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  5.  19
    The Lyric of Ibycus: Introduction, Text and Commentary byClaire Louise Wilkinson.Raymond L. Capra -2014 -American Journal of Philology 135 (1):149-152.
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  6.  15
    L'embryogenèse du monde et le Dieu silencieux.Raymond Ruyer -2013 - Paris: Klincksieck. Edited by Fabrice Colonna.
    Malgré un titre qui peut paraître imposant et intimider, le lecteur trouvera dans ce livre le condensé, particulièrement clair et élégant, queRaymond Ruyer voulut donner de sa pensée au soir de sa vie, en un ultime effort de présentation et d'actualisation. L'ouvrage, entièrement achevé, était jusqu'à ce jour inédit, ce qui fait de sa publication un événement. La pensée de Ruyer a retenu l'attention de nombre des penseurs les plus importants de la seconde moitié du XXe siècle (comme (...) Merleau-Ponty, Canguilhem, Deleuze ou Lacan), qui n'hésitaient pas à la placer au plus haut. La publication du dernier manuscrit philosophique de Ruyer représente l'occasion de se familiariser avec sa pensée et de lui accorder enfin la place qu'elle mérite. L'objectif du philosophe de Nancy a consisté à construire un système métaphysique ajusté aux découvertes de la science contemporaine. S'il est bien question ici de "Dieu", ce n'est pas dans la perspective d'une révélation : le Dieu de Ruyer est un Dieu spéculatif, comme celui d'Aristote ou de Whitehead, et nous sommes loin des considérations sur "le savant et la foi". D'autre part, "l'embryogenèse du monde" n'est pas une rêverie incontrôlée sur quelque Oeuf primordial, mais une tentative argumentée de constituer un panpsychisme à la manière de Leibniz, selon ce que Ruyer appelle lui-même une "monadologie corrigée". (shrink)
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  7.  42
    RaymondClaire Archibald.William Stahlman -1956 -Isis 47 (3):244-246.
  8. Réflexions sur la médecine d'hier et de demain..Raymond Villey -1966 - [Paris]: Plon.
     
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  9.  44
    The iconography of silence and Chapman's Hercules.Raymond B. Waddington -1970 -Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 33 (1):248-263.
  10.  41
    Yosano Akiko (1878-1942).Claire Dodane -2008 -Clio 28:194-203.
    Texte 1. Cela fait un mois déjà que j’ai rejoint mon mari à Paris. […] C’est uniquement la tension née du désir de le voir qui m’a poussée jusqu’ici. Et c’est ainsi qu’en satisfaisant mon désir de femme, j’ai dû dans le même temps connaître le chagrin maternel. Il m’est en effet impossible d’oublier les sept enfants que j’ai laissés au Japon. Les quitter pour suivre les traces de mon époux n’a pas été chose aisée. Nous avons dû faire venir (...) chez nous la jeune sœur de celui-ci, que l’on a charg... (shrink)
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  11.  44
    Cold Neutrality? A Comparison of the Standards of the House of Lords with those of the German Federal Constitutional Court.Raymond Youngs -2000 -Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 20 (3):391-406.
    Allegations of bias against senior judges have not been common in English courts, so the House of Lords had little material to draw on when the Pinochet case was decided. It is therefore worthwhile to compare their Lordships» approach with that of the Federal Constitutional Court in Germany. This court has been selected because: (a) it has a comparable number of judges to the House of Lords and its decisions are unappealable, and (b) its cases have a constitutional and (often) (...) political content—as did the Pinochet case. The Federal Constitutional Court case law is comparatively prolific, so this study has been limited to the last 15 years. The case law covers a wide variety of issues, for example provision of legal opinions or representation, membership of associations, holding of public offices, public statements of opinion. If the standards set in this case law were applied to Lord Hoffmann's position in the Pinochet case, there are grounds for saying that he might not have been excluded. (shrink)
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  12. Michael Haneke: "Funny Games".Raymond Aaron Younis -1998 -Cinema Papers 138:38-40.
  13.  53
    On Thinking (and measurement).Raymond Aaron Younis -2014 - In R. Scott Webster Steven A. Stolz,Measuring up in education. PESA. pp. 255-267.
    We do indeed “live and work in a time when the issues facing education, many of which have been with us for a considerable period, are being approached primarilythrough measurement – classroom assessment, research methods, standardized testing, international comparisons”. It is also true that “we do not often stop to consider what counts – and alternatively, what doesn’t count – in a climate where measuring up to a standard is the name of the game. At a deeper level, we rarely (...) raise questions about measurement itself.” Heidegger argued that what is “most thought provoking [in this ‘thought provoking age’] is that we are still not thinking,” in What is called thinking? . This somewhat startling assertion deserves careful attention especially in relation to the quote above . Heidegger’s assertion is pertinent for a number of reasons: he associated this “not thinking” with a “critical moment in history”, with a “call”, and with a “miscalculation”. I will argue that it is important to reflect on a number of questions: what is thinking, especially in relation to measurement? Was Heidegger correct in arguing that we have “miscalculated” in so far as we have sought “the safety of the mere drive for calculation” ? And how does the desire for a higher form of “representational thinking” in these contexts serve and promote a number of aims in higher education, such as learning and even “flourishing”? I will attempt to provide answers to a number of these questions by reflecting on the broad but fundamentally important question of measurement and its limits. (shrink)
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  14. Religion Literature and the Arts.Raymond Aaron Younis,Michael Griffith,James Tulip,Ross Keating &Elaine Lindsay (eds.) -1996 - Sydney: RLA.
  15.  15
    Robert Sommer, Das KZ-Bordell. Sexuelle Zwangsarbeit in nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslagern [Le bordel du camp de concentration. Travail sexuel forcé dans les camps de concentration nationaux-soc.Claire Auzias -2010 -Clio 32.
    Cet ouvrage est issu de la thèse soutenue par Robert Sommer à l’Université Humboldt de Berlin en 2006. Il s’agit d’un travail entièrement original sur un sujet absent de la recherche, à l’exception de l’enquête pionnière de Christa Paul en 1994. Mais avant la somme de Robert Sommer on ne disposait d’aucune étude systématique de cette ampleur. C’est chose faite avec la minutie et la rigueur adéquates au genre. Par un décret du 9 septembre 1939, Reinhard Heydrich, chef de l’Office (...) central de l... (shrink)
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  16.  34
    Philosophy and History.Raymond Klibansky &H. J. Paton -1938 -Philosophical Review 47 (6):644-647.
  17.  9
    VIII. Celan’s Meridian.Raymond Geuss -2009 - InPolitics and the Imagination. Princeton University Press. pp. 117-141.
  18. Human Obsolescence.Raymond Kolcaba -2001 - In Laura Duhan Kaplan,Philosophy and everyday life. New York: Seven Bridges Press. pp. 152.
     
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  19.  28
    Réponses au commentaire de Claude Panaccio sur « Comment parler de la littérature? ».Raymond Montpetit -1978 -Philosophiques 5 (1):173-177.
  20.  35
    (2 other versions)The loss of God.Claire Creffield -2013 -Philosophers' Magazine 60 (-1):32 - 37.
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  21. Conjunctures and assemblages : approaches to multicausal explanation in the human sciences.Claire Laurier Decoteau -2018 - In Timothy Rutzou & George Steinmetz,Critical realism, history, and philosophy in the social sciences. Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing.
     
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  22. The pursuit of purpose.Raymond English -1947 - London,: Falcon Press.
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  23.  18
    Response strength as a function of changed intertrial interval.Claire B. Ernhart -1960 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 60 (4):208.
  24. Nature humaine et scepticisme: D. Hume, th. Reid et th. jouffroy.Claire Etchegaray -2009 -Corpus: Revue de philosophie 57:125-147.
  25. (1 other version)al-ʻUlūm al-siyāsīyah.Raymond Garfield Gettell -1960 - Baghdad: Maktabat al-Nahḍah. Edited by Fadhil Zaky Mohamad & Aḥmad Nājī Qaysī.
     
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  26.  5
    Four: Augustine.Raymond Geuss -2017 - InChanging the Subject: Philosophy From Socrates to Adorno. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 93-114.
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  27.  35
    Historicizing, enlightenment, genealogy.Raymond Geuss -2016 -Filozofija I Društvo 27 (1):189-201.
    Historicising thinking has three properties: a) it takes the past to be different from the present, b) it takes the past to have been contingent, c) it holds that the past is relevant to the present. Genealogy, as practiced by Nietzsche and Foucault, shows itself to be a useful tool for mounting a historicising critique of certain aspects of our contemporary world. As such it can contribute to a non-dogmatic form of Enlightenment. nema.
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  28. Poems and Adaptations.Raymond Geuss -forthcoming -Arion 7 (2).
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  29.  37
    Claude Ollier at Times Square.Raymond Jean &Katherine Passias -1976 -Substance 5 (13):52.
  30.  64
    Jean Tortel: Voix/Corps/Ecriture.Raymond Jean -1972 -Substance 2 (5/6):101.
  31.  39
    Perirhinal cortex and hippocampus mediate parallel processing of object and spatial location information.Raymond P. Kesner -1999 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (3):455-455.
    An alternative to Aggleton & Brown's interpretation is presented suggesting that the perirhinal cortex and hippocampus mediate different attribute information, but use the same processes, supporting the idea of parallel processing based on attribute (visual object and spatial location) rather than process characteristics (item recognition and familiarity).
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  32.  34
    Shamanic Practices in Modern Chinese Medicine in the United States.Claire M. Cassidy -1998 -Anthropology of Consciousness 9 (4):83-83.
  33.  13
    Chapter 11 The Space of Man: On the Specificity of Affect in Deleuze and Guattari.Claire Colebrook -2005 - In Ian Buchanan & Gregg Lambert,Deleuze and Space. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 189-206.
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  34.  14
    Chapter 1 The War on Terror versus the War Machine.Claire Colebrook -2022 - In Anindya Purakayastha,Deleuze and Guattari and Terror. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 30-43.
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  35.  24
    Difference and Repetition in the Age of #MeToo and the Trumpocene.Claire Colebrook -2020 -Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (1):31-33.
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  36.  17
    Jacques Derrida: Key Concepts.Claire Colebrook (ed.) -2014 - Routledge.
    Jacques Derrida: Key Concepts presents a broad overview and engagement with the full range of Derrida's work - from the early phenomenological thinking to his preoccupations with key themes, such as technology, psychoanalysis, friendship, Marxism, racism and sexism, to his ethico-political writings and his deconstruction of democracy. Presenting both an examination of the key concepts central to his thinking and a broader study of how that thinking shifted over a lifetime, the book offers the reader a clear, systematic and fresh (...) examination of the astounding breadth of Derrida's philosophy. (shrink)
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  37. L'instrument de musique considéré comme objet d'art: conservation et restauration du décor.Claire Combe -2002 -Techne: La Science au Service de l'Histoire de l'Art Et des Civilisations 16:76-85.
     
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  38.  10
    Loyalist Resolve: Patient Fortitude in the English Civil War.Raymond A. Anselment -1988 - University of Delaware Press.
    This study analyzes a series of complex, ambivalent literary responses to the decades of civil turmoil in seventeenth-century England that simultaneously demanded public commitment and prompted private withdrawal. From their various perspectives the Royalist writers raised in the humanist tradition are shown to appreciate anew the value of patient fortitude.
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  39.  49
    Babylonian Mathematics.Raymond Archibald -1936 -Isis 26 (1):63-81.
  40.  33
    Florian Cajori 1859-1930.Raymond Archibald -1932 -Isis 17 (2):384-407.
  41.  29
    Filia Magistri.Raymond M. Martin -1915 -Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 2 (4):370-379.
  42.  30
    Historical counterexamples and sufficient cause.Raymond Martin -1979 -Mind 88 (349):59-73.
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  43.  32
    Let many flowers Bloom.Raymond Martin -2010 -History and Theory 49 (3):426-434.
    In this rich and sensible assessment of historians' practice and prospects, Allan Megill focuses on the obligation that historians have to support their accounts with evidence. He does this, first, by illustrating the difference between real and merely claimed evidence and, then, by giving an analysis of the underlying nature of evidence in historical accounts. Turning later to the question of how historians and their public should feel about diminishing unity in historiography and the practices that generate it, Megill explains (...) the sources of fragmentation and then argues that it doesn't matter whether historians are doing the same thing and/or doing it in the same way. What matters, rather, is whether they are doing interesting things and doing them well. (shrink)
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  44.  25
    Discrimination in the squirrel monkey as a function of deprivation and problem difficulty.Raymond C. Miles -1959 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 57 (1):15.
  45.  26
    Strauss's Capriccio and the terror of time.Raymond Monelle -2011 -Semiotica 2011 (183):309-317.
    Strauss's opera Capriccio of 1942 may be viewed as pure escapism, a fantasy about the question of the primacy of words or music in opera, set in eighteenth-century France. It is, however, in several ways a denial of time: dramatic time, in that it has no plot or denouement; historic time, in that it ignores the crisis of war and violence contemporary with its performance; cultural time, in that its musical style is self-consciously reactionary and takes no account of twentieth-century (...) developments. It is more than mere escapism, however. It represents an extreme form of the flight from the terror of time that marks idealist philosophy, Enlightenment rationalism, and Romantic aesthetics. On a trivial level, this flight may be connected with the “aesthetic politics” of 1930s Germany; but modern thought — for example, that of Habermas — has not broken free from the rationalist flight from time, and we must finally concede that Capriccio is supported by Romantic aesthetics, no less than the masterpieces of the Western tradition. If we are resolute it condemning it, we must also reject the whole conception of the masterpiece. (shrink)
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  46.  47
    A Bibliography of Studies and Translations of Modern Chinese Literature, 1918-1942.Raymond Murray,Donald A. Gibbs &Yun-Chen Li -1976 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 (3):455.
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  47.  48
    Murray F. J.. Mechanisms, and robots. Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery, vol. 2 , pp. 61–82.Raymond J. Nelson -1956 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 21 (3):334-335.
  48.  38
    Set size, assertion form, thematic content and sampling in the selection task.Raymond S. Nickerson,Susan F. Butler &Daniel H. Barch -2017 -Thinking and Reasoning 23 (2):134-157.
    Participants attempted to solve a modified version of Wason's selection task. Variables were: sizes of the sets referenced by a specified assertion, form of the assertion, thematic content of the assertion, and the need for sampling or not. In Experiment 1, participants were given enough information to determine the truth or falsity of the specified assertion with certainty; in Experiment 2, they had to rely on sampling and could not determine the assertion's truth or falsity with certainty. Performance was better (...) in Experiment 1 than in Experiment 2, but in both cases much better than what is typically obtained with the conventional selection task. The results support the hypothesis that performance of the selection task is sensitive to the sizes of the sets involved, add credence to the conclusion that framing the task in a thematically meaningful way can facilitate performance, and demonstrate that facilitation does not require deontic reasoning or a well-known convention being involved. The relationship between expressed confidence and level of performance is consistent with other studies showing the former to be a good predictor of the latter. (shrink)
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  49.  36
    The "crisis" of mādhyamika and indian philosophy today.Raymond Panikkar -1966 -Philosophy East and West 16 (3/4):117-131.
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  50.  11
    The Īśvara of Vedanta and the Christ of the Trinity as a Philosophical Problem.Raymond Panikkar -1960 -Atti Del XII Congresso Internazionale di Filosofia 10:153-160.
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