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Results for 'T. P. Samsonova'

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  1.  5
    Fenomen cheloveka v muzykalʹnoĭ kulʹture: monografii︠a︡.T. P.Samsonova -2007 - Sankt-Peterburg: Leningradskiĭ gos. universitet imeni A.S. Pushkina.
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  2.  47
    T. Cloelius of Tarracina.T. P. Wiseman -1967 -The Classical Review 17 (03):263-264.
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  3.  6
    Kosmicheskai︠a︡ filosofii︠a︡ Batraza Aldatova: izbrannoe.T. P. Lolaev (ed.) -2011 - Moskva: Zebra E.
    Artist Leonid Filatov. Kakimi raznorodnymi talantami on odaren! YArkij kinorezhisser. Blistatel'nyj parodist. Skazochnik. I vse, chto on delal - pechal'noe i mudroe - na radost' nam. Ego poeziya sozdaet obrazy dushevnoj zhizni lyudej, nepohozhih drug na druga, dazhe protivostoyaschih drug drugu. Eto svojstvo istinnogo iskusstva. Komedijnaya p'esa po motivam bessmertnogo romana Dyuma otkryla nam esche odnu storonu ego darovanij.
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  4.  31
    Philodemus 26. 3 G–P.T. P. Wiseman -1982 -Classical Quarterly 32 (02):475-.
  5.  15
    Dvaita Vedānta.T. P. Ramachandran -1975 - New Delhi: Arnold-Heinemann Publishers (India).
    Exegesis of the philosophy of Madhva, 13th century founder of the Dvaita (dualistic) school of Vedanta.
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  6.  41
    (Ti)Tisienus Gallus.T. P. Wiseman -1965 -The Classical Review 15 (01):19-20.
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  7.  53
    The Idea of History in Antiquity.T. P. Wiseman -1985 -The Classical Review 35 (01):109-.
  8.  26
    Two More Senators.T. P. Wiseman -1965 -Classical Quarterly 15 (01):158-.
    I Should like to draw attention to two little-known inscriptions of republican senators; both men deserve notice in that each of them may illustrate the early stages of the recruitment of provincial senators, from Transpadane and Narbonese Gaul respectively.
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  9.  58
    Formation and stability of icosahedral phase in Al65Ga5Pd17Mn13alloy.T. P. Yadav,M. A. Shaz,R. S. Tiwari &O. N. Srivastava -2008 -Philosophical Magazine 88 (13-15):1995-2002.
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  10.  43
    Formation of quasicrystalline phase in Al70−xGaxPd17Mn13alloys.T. P. Yadav,Devinder Singh,Rohit R. Shahi,M. A. Shaz,R. S. Tiwari &O. N. Srivastava -2011 -Philosophical Magazine 91 (19-21):2474-2481.
  11.  28
    Low-temperature synthesis of nanocrystalline spinel by mechanical milling and annealing of Al–Ni–Fe decagonal quasicrystals.T. P. Yadav,N. K. Mukhopadhyay,R. S. Tiwari &O. N. Srivastava -2008 -Philosophical Magazine 88 (13-15):2227-2236.
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  12.  6
    Prostranstvenno-vremennai︠a︡ struktura Vselennoĭ i zakon ee funkt︠s︡ionirovanii︠a︡.T. P. Lolaev -1999 - Vladikavkaz: Rukhs.
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  13. Nietzsche nell'interpretazione di Gianni Volturno.T. P. P. M. -1974 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana:600.
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  14. The Economics of Collective Choice, by Joe B. Stevens.T. P. Abeles -1994 -Agriculture and Human Values 11:57-57.
     
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  15. (1 other version)Imagination and Reflection: Intersubjectivity: Fichte’s “Grundlage” of 1974.T. P. Hohler -1982.
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  16. Matthew Beovich: A Biography [Book Review].T. P. Boland -2009 -The Australasian Catholic Record 86 (2):245.
     
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  17.  19
    Apollo, Augustus, and the Poets (review).T. P. Wiseman -2011 -Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 104 (4):511-512.
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  18.  48
    Lucius Memmius And His Family.T. P. Wiseman -1967 -Classical Quarterly 17 (01):164-.
    Sisenna Historiarum lib. iii: Lucium Memmium, socerum Gai Scriboni, tribunum plebis, quern Marci Livi consiliarium fuisse callebant et tune Gurionis oratorem … . Erat Hortensius in bello primo anno miles, altero tribunus militum, Sulpicius legatus; aberat etiam M. Antonius; exercebatur una lege iudicium Varia, ceteris propter bellum intermissis; cui frequens aderam, quamquam pro se ipsi dicebant oratores non illi quidem principes, L. Memmius et Q. Pompeius, sed oratores tamen, teste diserto utique [Jahn: MSS. uterque] Philippo, cuius in testimonio contentio et (...) vim accusatoris habebat et copiam. Reliqui qui turn principes numerabantur in magistratibus erant cotidieque fere a nobis in contionibus audiebantur …. (shrink)
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  19.  40
    Mallius.T. P. Wiseman -1965 -The Classical Review 15 (03):263-.
  20.  47
    Some Republican Senators and their Tribes.T. P. Wiseman -1964 -Classical Quarterly 14 (1):122-133.
    The study of the republican Roman Senate was revolutionized by Professor Broughton's Magistrates, and to a lesser extent more recently by Professor Lily Ross Taylor's Voting Districts of the Roman Republic. Naturally, neither of these two great works rounded up all the available evidence without exception, and a considerable amount of mopping-up has been carried out. More remains to be done, however, and this article aims at providing some further information on republican senators, their tribes, and their origins, as an (...) addendum to M.R.R. and its Supplement, and the prosopogra- phical chapter of Professor Taylor's book. (shrink)
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  21.  42
    The Wife and Children of Romulus.T. P. Wiseman -1983 -Classical Quarterly 33 (02):445-.
    Some say that only 30 were seized, and that the Curiae were named after them, but Valerius Antias [fr. 3P] says there were 527, Juba [FGrH275F23] that there were 683. They were virgins, which was Romulus' main justification: no married women were taken – except one, Hersilia, by mistake - since it was not in wanton violence or injustice that they resorted to rape, but with the intention of bringing the two peoples together and uniting them with the strongest ties. (...) As for Hersilia, some say she was married to Hostilius, a very distinguished Roman, others that she was married to Romulus himself and even bore him children: one daughter, Prima, so called from the order of birth, and a single son, whom Romulus named Aollios after the crowd of citizens under his rule, though he was subsequently called Abillios [i.e. Avillius]. Many authors, however, contradict this account, which is given by Zenodotus of Troezen [FGrH 821F2]. (shrink)
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  22.  31
    The Extravagantes in the Summa of Simon of Bisignano.T. P. McLaughlin -1958 -Mediaeval Studies 20 (1):167-176.
  23. Priming, Theories of Memory, and Theories of Retrieval.T. P. McNamara -1990 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 28 (6):524-524.
  24.  15
    An Epistemological Peregrination.T. P. Flint -1982 -Philosophy 57 (222):542 - 547.
  25.  41
    The Art of John Webster.T. P. Dolan -1972 -Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 21:270-272.
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  26.  26
    The Structure of Literary Understanding.T. P. Dolan -1980 -Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 27:390-391.
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  27.  42
    Correspondence.T. P. Wiseman -1992 -The Classical Review 42 (01):257-.
  28.  46
    Thomas More and Erasmus.T. P. Dunning -1966 -Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 15:290-291.
  29.  23
    Utopia.T. P. Dunning -1966 -Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 15:291-293.
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  30. Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 84: 1993 Lectures and Memoirs.T. P. Wiseman -1994
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  31.  37
    Tacitus,Ann. xv. 53. 2.T. P. Wiseman -1967 -The Classical Review 17 (03):264-265.
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  32.  13
    The Setting of Grattius’Cynegetica.T. P. Wiseman -2022 -Classical Quarterly 72 (2):669-682.
    Nothing is known of the poet Grattius except that he was a contemporary of Ovid. However, certain peculiarities in the text of hisCynegeticasuggest that he wrote for public performance, that the poem was presented atludi scaeniciwhere dancers and singers were performing too, that the Palatine temple of Apollo was probably where the event took place, and that the most likely occasion for it was one of the ‘quinquennial’ games celebrating the defeat of Cleopatra.
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  33.  29
    The Life of Roman Republicanism by Joy Connolly (review).T. P. Wiseman -2015 -American Journal of Philology 136 (2):372-375.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Life of Roman Republicanism by Joy ConnollyT. P. WisemanJoy Connolly. The Life of Roman Republicanism. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2014. xix + 228 pp. Cloth. $39.95.This book was written for the best of reasons. Joy Connolly explains in her preface that she began to study the republican tradition in 2001, when “the Bush administration’s imprudence, paranoia, and disregard of democratic values stoked in me an anger equalled (...) only by the disgust I felt at my own and my fellow citizens’ inability or unwillingness to stand up to it” (xiv). The failure of the Left caused her “to ask questions that might help us to respond more intelligently and humanly to the situation in which we find ourselves” (xv). In particular, in this book her aim has been to exploit texts from the late Roman republic, to which students of political science have not paid enough attention, and thus recover “the suppressed history of republican political thought” (204). As she says in [End Page 372] conclusion, “I have sought to offer practical tools for civic education by articulating learnable practices of knowing the world that characterize late republican texts” (208, author’s emphasis). How well has this admirable ambition been achieved?According to the introduction, “[t]his book seeks to place Cicero’s Verrines, Caesarian orations, Republic, and Laws; Sallust’s Catiline and Jugurtha; and Horace’s Satires at the center of the republican tradition” (1); however, the Verrines and De legibus get only a couple of paragraphs each, and only one of the “Caesarian” orations is discussed at all. The actual contents are: chapter 1 on De republica (“Where Politics Begins”), which “presents Cicero as a thinker concerned with a collective of antagonists and competing interests, against conventional portrayals of his ideal republic as a homogeneous, unified, harmonious community” (20); chapter 2 on Sallust (“Justice in the World”), which argues that “Sallust’s withholding of judgment at the end of Jugurtha signifies the ways in which agents in the decaying republic withhold justice on a larger scale” (20); chapter 3 on Horace Satires I (“Non-Sovereign Freedom”), in which the obvious question (asked only at the end), “what might political and social progressives find worthy of consideration in Horace today?”, is answered with “Horatian satire undoes the claim to sovereignty that usually partners claims to moral judgment” (154); chapter 4 on Cicero’s view of oratory (“Dividual Advocacy”), which “reflects on the Roman preoccupation with faces, situations, the mutability of selfhood, and the degree to which the divided self mirrors the division of the polity” (21); and chapter 5 on Pro Marcello (“Imagination, Finitude, Responsibility, Irony”), which argues that “[b]y adopting hyperbole as the governing figure of this new style of senatorial speech, Cicero holds out the promise not of a morally legible universe, but of a recognition that every Roman now lives in conditions virtually ‘impossible to believe’, the emergence of one ruler, under whom the chains of traditional obligations do not consistently hold” (183). The short conclusion (“The Republic Remastered”) attacks “the tendency, dominant since the nineteenth-century emergence of sociology and economics, to treat human beings primarily as rational calculators or creatures of practical wisdom” (203) and expresses the hope that “close attention to these texts has the capacity to reshape the way we think about civic wisdom—the way schools teach history, literature, civics, and philosophy—about public discourse, especially public commentary on political oratory, and about the conversations we citizens hold among ourselves” (207).I have deliberately used the author’s own words to indicate what the book attempts to do, because I would find it impossible to summarise its argument any other way. Even with these formulae to help, Connolly’s selective and apparently random approach imposes a heavy burden on the reader to construct a coherent framework for her ideas. I think there are two main reasons for this. The first is a direct result of Connolly’s impressive mastery of the political-sciences literature. It is an excellent thing to be so thoroughly familiar with the works of Hannah Arendt, Simon Critchley, John Dewey, Michel Foucault, Dean Hammer, Bonnie Honig, Andreas Kalyvas, George Kareb... (shrink)
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  34. La filosofia francese contemporanea.P. P. T. -1971 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana:642.
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  35.  74
    Critical notices.T. P. Nunn -1918 -Mind 27 (1):108-112.
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  36.  46
    Celer and Nepos.T. P. Wiseman -1971 -Classical Quarterly 21 (01):180-.
    Asconius 63 , commenting on the pro Cornelio: Fuerunt enim plures Quinti Metelli, ex quibus duo consulares, Pius et Creticus, de quibus apparet eum non dicere, duo autem adulescentes, Nepos et Celer, ex quibus nunc Nepotem significat. Eius enim patrem Q.Metellum Nepotem, Baliarici filium, Macedonici nepotem qui consul fuit cum T. Didio, Curio is de quo loquitur accusavit … Cicero and his scholiast refer to ‘duo Metelli, Celer et Nepos’ but like Asconius do not specify their relationship. Celer himself, followed (...) by Cicero in correspondence with him, calls Nepos his frater, but since both bore the praenomen Q., this cannot be the whole story. Celer's career shows that he was the elder, yet Nepos senior, according to Asconius, entrusted his feud with Curio not to him but to Nepos iunior. (shrink)
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  37.  36
    The Formation of the Marriage Bond According to the Summa Parisiensis.T. P. McLaughlin -1953 -Mediaeval Studies 15 (1):208-212.
  38. (1 other version)Hume's Argument from Evil.T. P. M. Solon -1969 -Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 50 (3):383.
  39.  45
    The logic of Aquinas' tertia via.T. P. M. Solon -1973 -Mind 82 (328):598-599.
  40.  12
    Humor: The Triumph of Reason.T. P. Millar -1986 -Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 29 (4):545-559.
  41.  47
    Catullus 68. 157.T. P. Wiseman -1974 -The Classical Review 24 (01):6-7.
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  42.  33
    Two Friends of Clodius in Cicero's Letters.T. P. Wiseman -1968 -Classical Quarterly 18 (02):297-.
    It is the almost unanimous opinion of modern scholars' that this man is M. Licinius Crassus. Manutius's explanation, that ex Nanneianis is a reference to Crassus' profiteering in the proscriptions and in particular to the property of one Nanneius, to be identified with the Nannius named as a proscription victim in Comm. Pet. 9, is accepted without hesitation.
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  43.  45
    Valorizing the Barbarians: Enemy Speeches in Roman Historiography. by Eric Adler (review).T. P. Wiseman -2013 -Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 106 (4):702-704.
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  44.  40
    On The Problem of form and Content in Art.T. P. Znamerovskaia -1962 -Russian Studies in Philosophy 1 (1):37-45.
    The question of form and content is one of the fundamental questions of esthetics and the theory of art. However, it remains unresolved in many respects. Certain of its aspects still have not been investigated, and others have been treated only very sketchily.
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  45. Il lessico intellettuale.P. P. T. -1971 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana:638.
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  46. Livio Sichirollo.P. P. T. -1971 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana:643.
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  47. (1 other version)The concept of the vyāvahārika in Advaita Vedānta.T. P. Ramachandran -1969 - [Madras]: Centre of Advanced Study in Philosophy, University of Madras.
     
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  48. In onore di Felice Battaglia.T. P. P. M. -1974 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana:602.
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  49.  18
    Diamagnetic shielding of nuclei in metals.T. P. Das &E. H. Sondheimer -1960 -Philosophical Magazine 5 (53):529-531.
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  50.  14
    O Jogo da Obra de Arte: Uma Compreensão Fenomenológica.T. P. Cruz -2012 -Páginas de Filosofía 4 (2):3-16.
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