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Results for 'D. I. Warren'

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  1.  10
    (1 other version)White Americans as a Minority.D. I.Warren -1995 -Télos 1995 (104):127-134.
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  2.  18
    Self-repair in the Workplace: A Qualitative Investigation.Kenneth D. Butterfield,Warren Cook,Natalie Liberman &Jerry Goodstein -2021 -Journal of Business Ethics 182 (2):321-340.
    Despite widespread interest in the topic of moral repair in the business ethics literature and in the workplace, little is currently known about moral repair with regard to the self—i.e., how and why individuals repair themselves in the aftermath of harming others within workplace contexts and what factors may influence the success of self-repair. We conducted a qualitative study in the context of health care organizations to develop an inductive model of self-repair in the workplace. Our findings reveal a set (...) of factors, including reactions to the harm incident, motivating factors, and methods of self-repair that involve intrapersonal (e.g., self-compassion) and interpersonal (e.g., seeking feedback and support from co-workers and managers) actions. We discovered that self-repair, or what we characterize as “moral self-repair” is a complex process characterized by important ethical, emotional, and social dimensions and that the effectiveness of self-repair actions is moderated by the actions of those within the organization (e.g., co-workers, managers) and outside the organization (e.g., families, friends, counselors). These social actors can promote self-repair by offering encouragement and support, or undermine self-repair by communicating a lack of trust and respect that reinforces self-blame. This model of self-repair is intended to guide future ethics research on the topic of moral self-repair and offers insight to practicing managers. (shrink)
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  3.  293
    International Consensus Based Review and Recommendations for Minimum Reporting Standards in Research on Transcutaneous Vagus Nerve Stimulation.Adam D. Farmer,Adam Strzelczyk,Alessandra Finisguerra,Alexander V. Gourine,Alireza Gharabaghi,Alkomiet Hasan,Andreas M. Burger,Andrés M. Jaramillo,Ann Mertens,Arshad Majid,Bart Verkuil,Bashar W. Badran,Carlos Ventura-Bort,Charly Gaul,Christian Beste,Christopher M.Warren,Daniel S. Quintana,Dorothea Hämmerer,Elena Freri,Eleni Frangos,Eleonora Tobaldini,Eugenijus Kaniusas,Felix Rosenow,Fioravante Capone,Fivos Panetsos,Gareth L. Ackland,Gaurav Kaithwas,Georgia H. O'Leary,Hannah Genheimer,Heidi I. L. Jacobs,Ilse Van Diest,Jean Schoenen,Jessica Redgrave,Jiliang Fang,Jim Deuchars,Jozsef C. Széles,Julian F. Thayer,Kaushik More,Kristl Vonck,Laura Steenbergen,Lauro C. Vianna,Lisa M. McTeague,Mareike Ludwig,Maria G. Veldhuizen,Marijke De Couck,Marina Casazza,Marius Keute,Marom Bikson,Marta Andreatta,Martina D'Agostini,Mathias Weymar,Matthew Betts,Matthias Prigge,Michael Kaess,Michael Roden,Michelle Thai,Nathaniel M. Schuster &Nico Montano -2021 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Given its non-invasive nature, there is increasing interest in the use of transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation across basic, translational and clinical research. Contemporaneously, tVNS can be achieved by stimulating either the auricular branch or the cervical bundle of the vagus nerve, referred to as transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation and transcutaneous cervical VNS, respectively. In order to advance the field in a systematic manner, studies using these technologies need to adequately report sufficient methodological detail to enable comparison of results between (...) studies, replication of studies, as well as enhancing study participant safety. We systematically reviewed the existing tVNS literature to evaluate current reporting practices. Based on this review, and consensus among participating authors, we propose a set of minimal reporting items to guide future tVNS studies. The suggested items address specific technical aspects of the device and stimulation parameters. We also cover general recommendations including inclusion and exclusion criteria for participants, outcome parameters and the detailed reporting of side effects. Furthermore, we review strategies used to identify the optimal stimulation parameters for a given research setting and summarize ongoing developments in animal research with potential implications for the application of tVNS in humans. Finally, we discuss the potential of tVNS in future research as well as the associated challenges across several disciplines in research and clinical practice. (shrink)
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  4.  309
    I want you to bring me a slab: Remarks on the opening sections of the philosophical investigations.Warren D. Goldfarb -1983 -Synthese 56 (3):265 - 282.
  5.  85
    Externalism and causality: Simulation and the prospects for a reconciliation.DÔna D.Warren -1999 -Mind and Language 14 (1):154-176.
    Externalism in the philosophy of mind has been invoked by some philosophers to argue that content‐bearing mental states can’t serve as the explananda in genuinely causal explanations of behaviour. In this paper, I demonstrate that such arguments presuppose that psychological explanations are theory‐based and that, if this theoretical conception of psychological explanation is replaced by the simulation model, we remove the source of the apparent tension between externalism and caus‐ality and are in a position to understand how appeal to content‐bearing (...) mental states may be causally explanatory. (shrink)
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  6.  53
    Thinking with Whitehead and the American Pragmatists: Experience and Reality eds. by Brian G. Henning, William T. Myers, and Joseph D. John. [REVIEW]Warren G. Frisina -2017 -American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 38 (2):235-238.
    Thinking with Whitehead and the American Pragmatists is a volume whose topic is so obvious and fertile that I was sure someone must have already collected essays illustrating the many ways these two lines of inquiry challenge and reinforce one another. And, indeed, there exists the 1994 collection Process Pragmatism: Essays on a Quiet Philosophical Revolution, which was edited by Guy Debrock and contains essays by Sandra Rosenthal, Carl Hausman, and others. The revolution cited in that title must have been (...) exceedingly quiet, since twenty-one years later the timely and well-executed Thinking with Whitehead and the American Pragmatists finds it necessary, once again, to knock down ill-conceived barriers separating... (shrink)
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  7.  51
    Affiliative reward and the ontogenetic bonding system.Warren B. Miller -2005 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (3):357-358.
    Miller and Rodgers (2001) proposed a central nervous system based Ontogenetic Bonding System that operates across the life course to promote succorant, 1 affiliative, sexual, and nurturant bonds. I discuss features of this theoretical framework that can inform Depue & Morrone-Strupinsky's (D&M-S's) model. Most important, I suggest that the affiliative reward processes D&M-S describe are better conceptualized as subserving the affect/motivation of affection. Footnotes1 “Succorance” is a term coined by Murray (1938) to describe a general tendency to seek the help (...) and protection of others. (shrink)
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  8.  15
    International law in context.CaraWarren -2022 - Durham, North Carolina: Carolina Academic Press.
    International Law in Context is a pedagogy-forward textbook. It reflects the recent paradigm shift in legal education, which focuses more on what students actually learn rather than the material to which they are exposed. The text aims to prepare the next generation of U.S. lawyers to engage with our interconnected world and to critically evaluate the U.S.'s role within the international legal order. The work is divided into three parts that accomplish these goals. Part One lays a foundation. It covers (...) the various actors within the system, the theories that help explain their behavior, and the principles and sources of law they create. Part Two turns to the fora that define and support the international order, the historical and political contexts that impacted their design, and their efficacy. Part Three is a capstone section that asks students to weave together everything they have learned in Parts One and Two. Students will engage in normative development regarding climate change, including the existing international treaty regime and U.S. implementation options, and the law of war in the modern age. The cornerstone of this book is its organization. The text groups material into conceptual frameworks that promote understanding and retention. For example, rather than consider the various dispute resolution fora in isolation, Part Two asks students to consider them in the context of what types of disputes arise and what legal rules can be employed to resolve them in various international and domestic fora. The institutions also are presented in chronology. In this way, students are encouraged to chart the developmental progression and to make connections and comparisons between various institutions. The use of conceptual frameworks continues within each part. For example, Chapter Six covers the sovereign State as a conflict resolution forum. Under this umbrella, the author discusses (a) State Jurisdiction; (b) The Reception of International Law into the Domestic Sphere; (c) The Qualification as a State Forum or State Litigant (i.e., Recognition of States & Governments); and (d) Protections Afforded Within the Forum: Sovereign, Diplomatic, and Consular Immunity. A typical coursebook might locate this material in four different chapters. The conceptual framework approach, however, allows students to see the big picture and the relationship between concepts. In addition to the frameworks, there are several other innovative pedagogical devices that support student learning. There are Foundation Questions that initially direct readers through the material and cumulatively help students confirm whether they have grasped key takeaways from each section. There also are Assessment Sets in each section, which provide students with immediate opportunities to apply material and gauge their understanding, and "Why Is This Important (a/k/a WITI Moment)" prompts designed to delve deeper into the underpinnings and consequences of various rules. Finally, there are directed reading notes before some more complex readings and margin annotations to keep readers oriented. (shrink)
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  9.  25
    The "Wider view": André Hellegers's passionate, integrating intellect and the creation of bioethics.Warren T. Reich -1999 -Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 9 (1):25-51.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The “Wider View”: André Hellegers’s Passionate, Integrating Intellect and the Creation of BioethicsWarren Thomas Reich* (bio)AbstractThis article provides an account of how André Hellegers, founder and first Director of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, laid medicine open to bioethics. Hellegers’s approach to bioethics, as to morality generally and also to medicine and biomedical science, involved taking the “wider view”—a value-filled vision that integrated and gave meaning (...) to what otherwise was disparate, precarious, and conflicting. This article shows how Hellegers’s wider view of bioethics was shaped by events in his own life, his resultant sense of the precariousness of life and health, his commitment to religious inclusiveness, his research in fetal medicine, his clinical experience in obstetrics, his role in the struggle to change the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church on fertility control, and his developing concepts of health and disease. Hellegers was committed to and worked toward bioethics as a self-consciously interdisciplinary field in which the contributing disciplines adapt to each other—rather than sustain themselves as autonomous disciplines—to create a dynamic and complex intellectual, clinical, and social activity.André Hellegers’s personality and life were like that of a meteor: brief appearance on the scene; high-speed, flaming trajectory; quick burn-out; its smallest residue worth examining for ages to come. You had to watch carefully, for otherwise you might miss what he was about—what he was really about. He had an unusually probing and unflagging mind, coupled with the ability to make people think; and in a very real sense, that is what he was always about. André was an extremely effective communicator. He was like Fred Astaire: he had flair and charm, and no matter how crowded the room, you instantly knew when he entered it. Like Astaire, he had a deep intensity and striving for perfection while making his art always look like great fun. He was an engaging [End Page 25] story-teller who also knew how to stun intelligent people with his insightful, often ironic and humorous thinking that got to the bottom of things very quickly, leaving his interlocutors with a huge agenda for further reflection. Yet in spite of all this alluring talent, André never attracted attention to himself in a vain way. Even as raconteur, he was always working, getting people to think and talk.There were three great passions in Hellegers’s life that enabled him to inspire and shape bioethics as he did. He had a passionate intellect that was constantly probing for new clarity at new levels of understanding and values, and he had the ability to infect other people with his intellectual passion. André Hellegers was deeply rooted in a Catholicism scarcely imaginable in the United States—an open, historically-conscious, northern European faith that kept him free of ideology while providing him a foundation on which he built a rich ecumenicity of theological and philosophical bioethics. Finally, and perhaps most decisively for his founding work in bioethics, Hellegers pushed and probed to get a world that was almost totally unaccustomed to communicating over disciplinary lines (incredibly, virtually no interdisciplinary conferences had taken place before his day) to dialogue and collaborate across the barriers of medicine, politics, and religion.IntroductionThe customary way of writing a history of someone’s involvement in the origins of something—say, the origins of a nation or, I suppose, the origins of bioethics—certainly would not customarily start with the foregoing type of vignette. It would have as its purpose to discuss such things as issues, events that raised issues, methods pursued and applied, and outcomes achieved. However, in this modest account of some of the major contributions of the late André E. Hellegers, M.D., to the development of the field of bioethics, I intend to focus on a different level of historical inquiry, one that portrays and explains the person, his world-view, and his motivation, as well as the cultural forces and events that conspired to make Hellegers and the people with whom he came into contact vibrant with a sense of innovative and creative—not to mention urgent—inquiry. I believe that... (shrink)
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  10.  72
    Feminist Archeology: Uncovering Women's Philosophical History.Mary AnneWarren -1989 -Hypatia 4 (1):155-159.
    A History of Women Philosophers, Volume I: Ancient Women Philoophers, 600 B.C. - 500 A.D., edited by Mary Ellen Waithe, is an important but somewhat frustrating book. It is filled with tantalizing glimpses into the lives and thoughts of some of our earliest philosophical foremothers. Yet it lacks a clear unifying theme, and the abrupt transitions from one philosopher and period to the next are sometimes disconcerting. The overall effect is not unlike that of viewing an expansive landscape, illuminated only (...) by a few tiny spotlights. (shrink)
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  11.  22
    Book Reviews. [REVIEW]D. A. Bell -1980 -History and Philosophy of Logic 1 (1-2):235-248.
    K. T. Fann, Ludwig Wittgenstein: the man and his philosophy. New Jersey, Humanities Press; Sussex, Harvester Press: 1967. 415 pp. 10.50.Gerd Brand, The central texts of Ludwig Wittgenstein. Translated and with an introduction by Robert E. Innis. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1979. xxv + 182 pp. £ 10.00 /£3.95.JosephWarren Dauben. Georg Cantor: his mathematics and philosophy of the infinite. Cambridge, Mass., and London: Harvard University Press, 1979. xiii + 404 pp., 4 plts. $25 US.S. Poggi, I sistemi dell'esperienza. Psicologia, (...) logica e teoria della scienza da Kant a Wundt. Bologna: il Mulino, 1977.679 pp., Lit. 12.000.Raymond Bradley and Norman Swartz, Possible Worlds. An introduction to logic and its philosophy. Indianapolis and New York; Hackett Publishing Company: Oxford; Blackwell: 1979. xxi + 391 pp. £15.00 /£4.95.S. Haack, Philosophy of logics. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1978. xiv + 276 pp. £ 13.50.F. J. Pelletier, Mass terms: some philosophicalproblems. Dordrecht, Boston and London: Reidel, 1979. xiii + 303 pp. Dfl. 70/$34.00.Theo A. F. Kuipers, Studies in inductive probability and rational expectation. Dordrecht, Holland and Boston, USA.: D. Reidel Publishing Company, 1978. xii + 145 pp. Dfl. 50/$22.50. (shrink)
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  12.  68
    I experientially remember, therefore I exist? A reply to R. D. Smith.D. I. Lloyd -1983 -Journal of Philosophy of Education 17 (1):97–102.
    D I Lloyd; I Experientially Remember, Therefore I Exist? A reply to R. D. Smith, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 17, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 97–1.
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  13. Sharḥ Manṭiq al-hidāyah: al-qism al-awwal min hidāyat al-ḥikmah al-mansūb ilá al-Mawlá al-Muḥaqqiq Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn Mūsá Shāh ibn Muḥammad al-Ḥanafī al-Maʻrūf bi-Qāḍī Zādah al-Rūmī al-mutawwafá baʻd sanat 840H. Qāḍīʹzādah,Mūsá ibn Muḥammad &‏ ‎ -2019 - Bayrūt: Dār al-Rayāḥīn. Edited by ʻAbd al-Ḥamīd Turkumānī.
  14. Mozg i soznanie: filosofskie i teoreticheskie aspekty problemy.D. I. Dubrovskiĭ &R. I. Kruglikov (eds.) -1990 - Moskva: Filosofskoe ob-vo SSSR.
     
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  15. (1 other version)Izbrannye filosofskie i obshchestvenno-politicheskie statʹi.D. I. Pisarev &V. S. Kruzhkov -1944 - [Leningrad]: Gos. izd-vo polit. lit-ry. Edited by V. S. Kruzhkov & [From Old Catalog].
    Idealizm Platona -- Skholastika XIX veka -- Pchëly -- Russkoepravitelʹstvo pod pokrovitelʹstvom Shedo-Ferroti -- Russkiĭ Don-Kikhot -- Ocherki iz istorii truda -- Progress v mire zhivotnykh i rasteniĭ -- Populi︠a︡rizatory otrit︠s︡atelʹnykh doktrin -- Genrikh Geĭne -- Mysli︠a︡shchiĭ proletariat.
     
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  16. Mishelʹ Fuko i ego vremi︠a︡.A. V. Dʹi︠a︡kov -2010 - Sankt-Peterburg: "Aleteĭi︠a︡".
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  17. Bytie i istina.D. I. Raskin -2002 - Moskva: Izd-vo MNĖPU.
     
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  18.  34
    The role of indigenous tillage systems in sustainable food production.G. Rajaram,D. C. Erbach &D. M.Warren -1991 -Agriculture and Human Values 8 (1-2):149-155.
    Farmers in developed countries have established various tillage practices for crop production. These include plowing, disking, subsoiling, harrowing, field cultivating, rotary hoeing, and row-crop cultivating. But these conventional tillage practices necessitate the use of heavy equipment that often causes soil compaction, impairs soil physical conditions, and creates conditions leading to soil erosion. Many Western countries, studying their conventional tillage systems through the new perspective of sustainable approaches to agriculture, are developing new tillage practices, called conservation tillage, which limit tillage to (...) essential operations and prevent damage to soil. The majority of the small-scale farmers in developing countries use indigenous tillage systems. These are low-cost, locally adapted technologies that reflect considerable knowledge of sustainable agriculture. Ironically, the new conservation tillage systems currently being developed in the West have many characteristics of indigenous tillage systems. This paper compares conventional, conservation, and indigenous tillage practices, using examples from the United States and India, and concludes that, for sustainable food production, indigenous tillage practices in developing countries should continue to be used. (shrink)
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  19. Istoricheskie ėskizy: izbrannye statʹi.D. I. Pisarev -1989 - Moskva: Izd-vo "Pravda". Edited by A. I. Volodin.
     
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  20.  38
    Does CSR make better citizens? The influence of employee CSR programs on employee societal citizenship behavior outside of work.Lisa D. Lewin,Danielle E.Warren &Mohammed AlSuwaidi -2020 -Business and Society Review 125 (3):271-288.
    While corporate social responsibility (CSR) is expected to benefit the firm and attract employees, few have examined the effects of CSR on employees outside of work. Extending the organizational citizenship literature, we conceptualize employee engagement in CSR at work and outside of work as a form of “societal citizenship behavior.” Across two studies of working adults, we examine the relationship between identification with an employer that engages in CSR and different forms of employee societal citizenship behaviors (e.g., donations, volunteering) outside (...) of work. In Study 1 (N = 430 employees), we focus upon CSR donation programs and find that identification with an employer that engages in CSR and participating in employer CSR donation programs affect employee citizenship behavior (donations) outside of work. In Study 2 (N = 285 employees), we examine a broader set of citizenship behaviors inside and outside of work and find the relationships hold. Identification with an employer that engages in CSR relates positively to citizenship behavior at work and outside of work. In total, our study results suggest that employer CSR affects employee citizenship behaviors outside of work. We end with directions for future research. (shrink)
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  21.  35
    Evidence accumulation in cell populations responsive to faces: an account of generalisation of recognition without mental transformations.D. I. Perrett,M. W. Oram &E. Ashbridge -1998 -Cognition 67 (1-2):111-145.
  22. al-Fikr al-tarbawī ʻinda al-mutakallimīn al-Muslimīn wa-dawruhu fī bināʼ al-fard wa-al-mujtamaʻ.Aḥmad ʻArafāt Qāḍī -1996 - [Cairo]: al-Hayʼah al-Miṣrīyah al-ʻĀmmah lil-Kitāb.
    On the pedagogic views of Muslim theologians, and their influence in individual and societal development.
     
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  23. al-Tarbiyah wa-al-siyāsah ʻinda Abī Ḥāmid al-Ghazzālī.Aḥmad ʻArafāt Qāḍī -2000 - al-Qāhirah: Dār Qibāʼ lil-Ṭibāʻah wa-al-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
  24.  26
    Depth distributions of vacancy clusters in ion bombarded gold and nickel.D. I. R. Norris -1969 -Philosophical Magazine 19 (160):653-662.
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  25. Problemy poznanii︠a︡ sot︠s︡ialʹnykh i︠a︡vleniĭ.D. I. Chesnokov (ed.) -1968 - Moskva,: Myslʹ.
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  26.  6
    Dialekticheskiĭ materializm.D. I. Danilenko &[From Old Catalog] (eds.) -1961
  27.  8
    Problema soznanii︠a︡ v filosofii i nauke.D. I. Dubrovskiĭ (ed.) -2009 - Moskva: ROOI "Reabilitat︠s︡ii︠a︡".
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  28. Istoricheskiĭ materializm.D. I. Chesnokov -1965 - Moskva,: Myslʹ.
     
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  29.  33
    Theory and practice.D. I. Lloyd -1976 -Journal of Philosophy of Education 10 (1):98–113.
    D I Lloyd; Theory and Practice1, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 10, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 98–113, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9752.1976.tb0.
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  30. Ahamarthaviveka. Tridaṇḍi -1966 - Prayāya: Rāma Siṃha. Edited by Raṅgācārya.
     
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  31. Dukhovnyĭ mir: Bog v priroda, v dushe cheloveka, vo vsemirnoĭ istorii, v khristianskoĭ t︠s︡erkvi i v otkrovenii︠a︡kh; Chudesa ot svi︠a︡tykh ikon i moshcheĭ; O bytii angelov; O bytii demonov; Dukhovnye sredstva dli︠a︡ borʹby s demonami; Nespokoĭnye doma; Poklonenie satane v masonstve; Spiritizm; Uchastie temnykh sil v spiriticheskikh seansakh; Rasskazy iz zhizni nekotorykh podvizhnikov XIX stoletii︠a︡, svidetelʹstvui︠u︡shchie o bytii dukhovnogo mira; Fakty iz opytnoĭ psikhologii, dokazyvai︠u︡shchie bytie bessmertnoĭ dushi v cheloveke.Grigorīĭ Dʹi︠a︡chenko -2006 - Moskva: Artos-Media.
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  32. L'enigma dell'impuro.D. I. Ugo -2009 -Cultura 6 (2).
     
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  33. Semantika, stilistika, intertekstualʹnostʹ: sbornik stateĭ.I. V. Arnolʹd -1999 - Sankt-Peterburg: Izd-vo Sankt-Peterburgskogo universiteta. Edited by P. E. Bukharkin.
     
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  34.  3
    Pod znakom filosofskoĭ antropologii: spontannostʹ i suverennostʹ v klassicheskoĭ i sovremennoĭ filosofii.D. I︠U︡ Dorofeev -2012 - Sankt-Peterburg: T︠S︡entr gumanitarnykh init︠s︡iativ.
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  35.  4
    Filosofskai︠a︡ antropologii︠a︡ Maksa Shelera: uroki, kritika, perspektivy.D. I︠U︡ Dorofeev (ed.) -2011 - Sankt-Peterburg: Aleteĭi︠a︡.
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  36. Informat︠s︡ii︠a︡, soznanie, mozg.D. I. Dubrovskiĭ -1980 - Moskva: Vysshai︠a︡ shkola.
  37. Metodicheskoe posobie po izuchenii︠u︡ marksistsko-leninskoĭ filosofii.D. I. Danilenko &[From Old Catalog] (eds.) -1900 - Moskva: "Mysl'".
     
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  38. Problema idealʹnogo.D. I. Dubrovskiĭ -1983 - Moskva: "Myslʹ".
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  39.  26
    Нація як історія, пам’ять, мова, культура.D. I. Dzvinchuk &I. D. Ozminska -2018 -Гуманітарний Вісник Запорізької Державної Інженерної Академії 74:13-27.
    The article presents a systematic and detailed account of scholarly developments on the problem of studying the process of nation-building and the role of history, memory, language and culture in reflecting this process. The research reveals that according to the premordialist approach, nations are not formed instantaneously, by the relevant political will or by coincidence of circumstances; the process of creating and consolidating a nation is a long and meaningful one, full of historical events and national cultural tokens. The primordialist (...) concepts are considered unanimous in their recognition of the exceptional significance of psychological factors in the creation of a nation. The creation of a nation involves a sophisticated set of linguistic, religious, ethnic, territorial and myth-household factors that determine the formation of a corresponding type of sociality. The framework of the analytics of the phenomenon of a nation includes not only psychological, but also social, cultural, political, ethical, moral and axiological aspects. The new system-building concepts such as solidarity, habitus, plebiscite were added to the discussion of nation. In view of that, it is impossible to carry out the reduction of the phenomenon of a nation to a particular problem field and to localize it to invariant indicators. The formation and optimization of the capitalistic type of social system generates new factors in the interpretation and consolidation of a nation. The reasons for a political defeat in the development of a nation can be referedr to either conscious manipulative techniques, or spontaneous miscalculations. Elaborating the alternative versions of history is nothing but unjustified politicization, implementation of imperial and colonial ambitions, overcoming which is a necessary prerequisite for successful nation-building. The establishment and offsetting of such manipulative influence facilitate the stabilization of the social situation and the resolution of conflicts, and, consequently, contribute to national development. The key point is to establish a nation within the framework of the international and state policy, especially by distinguishing the consolidating and disintegrating influences of state and international politicies on nation-building. The policy of uniting the nation can become effective when the important reforms do not deepen the fragmentation of the nation, but rather neutralize it. (shrink)
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  40. Population composition as an object of political struggle.D. I. Kertzer &Dominique Arel -2006 - In Robert E. Goodin & Charles Tilly,The Oxford handbook of contextual political analysis. Oxford : New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 664--677.
     
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  41.  14
    al-Taṣawwuf wa-al-Ṣūfīyah: ʻarḍ wa-taḥlīl.Abū al-Qāsim Muṣṭafá Qāḍī -2013 - [Cairo]: Aṭlas lil-Istīrād wa-al-Taṣdīr.
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  42. Sīrat Yaʻqūb ibn Isḥāq al-Kindī wa-falsafutuh.Shaykh Rāḍī &Taqī[From Old Catalog] -1962
  43. Ontologicheskie variat︠s︡ii.D. I. Raskin -1999 - Novgorod: MNĖPU.
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  44. Crónica científico-social de Portugal.I. D. -1911 -Ciencia Tomista 3:101-102.
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  45. (1 other version)Marksistsko-leninskai︠a︡ filosofii︠a︡.D. I. Danilenko &[From Old Catalog] (eds.) -1965
     
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    Marina Sacopoulo, Asinou en 1106 et sa contribution ä l’iconographie.D. I. Pallas -1969 -Byzantinische Zeitschrift 62 (1).
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    Under the Sign of Symbols: Losey and Hartley.D. I. Grossvogel -1974 -Diacritics 4 (3):51.
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    Im Bannkreis des Alten Orients-Studien zur Sprach- und Kulturgeschichte des Alten Orients und seines Ausstrahlungsraumes. Karl Oberhuber zum 70. Geburtstag gewidmet.D. I. Owen,W. Meid &H. Trenkwalder -1986 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 106 (4):875.
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    Hypothesis, Analogy, and Typification as Methodological Techniques for Societal Knowledge.D. I. Chesnokov -1966 -Russian Studies in Philosophy 5 (3):21-32.
    The method of materialist dialectics, as a tool for the acquisition of scientific knowledge, undergoes continuous development and improvement as science develops and society progresses. Among the pressing problems to which Marxist thought is giving increasing attention is the development of the theory and logic of cognition of social processes.
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    Brain and Mind.D. I. Dubrovskii -1969 -Russian Studies in Philosophy 8 (1):67-86.
    Recently there has been noticeable, in the writings of some philosophers , efforts to proclaim the psychophysiological problem to be a vestige of the old Naturphilosophie. Such tendencies are in conflict with those branches of natural science that concentrate their efforts upon investigating the functions of the brain. Therefore one has to subject such trends to detailed critical examination.
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