282,272 research outputs found

    Chaim Bloch Collection 1916-1969

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    Correspondence, including letters from Leo Baeck, Salo Baron, Julie Braun-Vogelstein, Martin Buber, Werner Cahnmann, Max Dienemann, Ismar Elbogen, Erich Fromm, Hermann Fürnberg, Nahum Glatzer, Nahum Goldmann, Max Gruenewald, Max Grunwald, Siegfried Guggenheim, Ernest Jones, Hermann Kesten, Guido Kisch, Adolf Kober, Franz Kobler, Joachim Prinz, Lessing Rosenwald, Ingrid Warburg, Alma Mahler-Werfel, and Franz Werfel.Clippings and manuscripts on Judaism, Hasidism, Zionism, Nazi Germany, and on Bloch's life and work.Born in Nagybocskó, Austria-Hungary (now in the Ukraine) on June 27, 1881, Chaim Bloch was ordained as a rabbi and emigrated to Vienna in 1915. He served as a chaplain in the Austro-Hungarian army during World War I, and afterwards worked as an author in Vienna. Most prominently, he wrote a book about the Golem of Prague. In 1939, Bloch emigrated to Great Britain and then moved on to the United States, where he continued his literary work. Chaim Bloch died in New York City on January 23, 1973.digitize

    Bloch lettore di Spinoza: ontologia ed emancipazione

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    Nel Ernst Bloch prese il posto di Gadamer presso la cattedra di filosofia all’Università di Lipsia nel 1949: a partire da questa data tenne lezioni di storia della filosofia, semestre dopo semestre, finché non fu costretto a dimettersi nel 1956. Ogni ciclo è durato diversi semestri. La scelta stessa dell’argomento, la storia della filosofia, è stata una questione politica. Bloch ha così sfidato l’angusto percorso che gli studi filosofici di base hanno iniziato a seguire nella DDR. Inoltre, laddove possibile, ha cercato nel discorso sulla storia della filosofia riferimenti a situazioni e costellazioni attuali nella DDR . L'obiettivo era quello di mettere in crisi le analisi, le valutazioni e le accentuazioni tradizionali della storia della filosofia, rivalutandole. I numerosi strati intermedi tra i toni principali dello sviluppo filosofico dovevano essere esaminati per vedere se non potessero almeno accennare ai toni principali ascoltati. Gli ampi affreschi sulla filosofia dell’antichità e dei tempi moderni sono presentati in una forma ancora molto vicina alla versione del discorso. Inoltre, Bloch ha chiarito nelle lezioni, per quanto dedicate all’argomento della storia della filosofia, i punti di applicazione della propria teoria. Le conferenze offrono quindi non solo l’ampia e profonda esperienza storico-filosofica di Bloch (tra i 64 e i 71 anni), ma anche un’introduzione indiretta e quindi particolarmente accessibile al filosofare di Bloch. È proprio la presentazione della storia della filosofia, che spesso si snoda in viaggi secondari e deviazioni, che serve a questo scopo. La relazione esamina in particolare le conferenze dedicate a Spinoza

    Jean de Bloch: selected articles.

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    The essays reprinted here are shorter statements of Bloch's basic beliefs. Bloch was not entirely right in his views on war. He failed to note the heavy influence that indirect fire would have on World War I battlefields. Obviously, he could not anticipate new technologies such as the airplane and tank. Bloch was more correct in addressing the inability of major combatants to find a war ending strategy -a military solution to their political conflicts -before they bankrupted themselves in the process of conducting a major war

    Bloch automàtic de Senyals Ferroviàries i Central Telefónica Automàtica

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    Bloch automàtic de Senyals Ferroviàries i Central Telefónica Automàtica de l'Escola de Pèrits Industrials de Barcelona

    Ernst Bloch Collection 1934-1980

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    Clippings; photos; obituaries; article by Bloch: "Heimat und Friede" on patriotism.Correspondence between Ernst Bloch and Max and Helene Hirschler (Hirshler).See inventory.Ernst Bloch was born in Ludwigshafen in 1885. His parents were Max Bloch, a railroad official, and his wife, Berta (nee Feitel). He studied philosophy in Munich and Wuerzburg, and worked as a private tutor and journalist in Berlin and Heidelberg. In 1913, he married Else von Stritzky. He lost his German citizenship in 1933 and immigrated to Switzerland, where he had also stayed during World War I. Between 1934 and 1938, he lived in Prague. In 1938, he immigrated to New York. In 1948, he returned to Germany and accepted a teaching position at the University of Leipzig. He left Leipzig shortly before the wall was built between East and West Berlin and accepted a professorship in Tuebingen. He died in Tuebingen in 1977.Max Hirschler was born in Frankenthal in 1886. He studied medicine in Graz, Vienna, and Munich. During his residence at the Breslau University Hospital he met his future wife, Helene Riess, who was an intern there. They got married in 1915, while Max served as a medical doctor in World War I. The couple settled in Ludwigshafen, where his parents lived. Max opened a medical practice in 1919/1920, specializing in general surgery; Helene opened her own practice, specializing in pediatrics, in 1920. Their son Ernst Erich was born in 1924.In 1935, Max and Helene Hirschler immigrated to the US. Once they had obtained a re-entry permit, they came back to Germany. They returned to the US in November 1938 with their son Ernst Erich. In 1945, when they became American citizens, the family changed its name to Hirshler. Ernst Erich name's was changed to Eric E.Max openend a practice in Lewiston, Maine. Helene worked in his office as a nurse, but never took the required internship or examinations to resume her medical career. Instead, she taught languages (German, Latin, French, and Italian) at Bates College and privately.Max Hirshler died in 1963, his wife Helene in 1977.Eric E. Hirshler became an art historian. He taught at several universities and also served as the executive assistant of the URO and as assistant director Leo Baeck Institute in the 1950s.Max Hirshler was a close friend of Ernst Bloch’s. They had been classmates in Ludwigshafen. Bloch was a year older, but had to repeat a class and, therefore, ended up being in the same class as Max Hirshler. They remained life-long friends. After Hirshler had opened his practice in Lewiston, he contributed to Bloch's living expenses while Bloch was in the U.S.Helene Hirshler was an old and life-long friend of the conductor Otto Klemperer. The Klemperer correspondence with the Hirshler family is on deposit at the Music Division of the Library of Congress.3 Catalog Cards (lists the content of folder 1);Synospsis of Correspondence (Addenda 1) in file .Photographs removed to Photograph Collectiondigitize

    Bloch automàtic de Senyals Ferroviàries i Central Telefónica Automàtica

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    Bloch automàtic de Senyals Ferroviàries i Central Telefónica Automàtica de l'Escola de Pèrits Industrials de Barcelona

    Holomorphic Bloch spaces on the unit ball in CnC^n

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    summary:This work is an introduction to anisotropic spaces of holomorphic functions, which have ω\omega-weight and are generalizations of Bloch spaces on a unit ball. We describe the holomorphic Bloch space in terms of the corresponding LωL_\omega ^\infty space. We establish a description of (Ap(ω))(A^p(\omega ))^* via the Bloch classes for all 0<p10<p\leq 1

    Blutwurstia Smith & Bhullar & Bloch 2022, new genus

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    Blutwurstia, new genus This nomenclatural act has been registered in ZooBank, urn:lsid:zoobank. org:act: B9B42807-73AE-4743-9C21-9CBF6E79F717. TYPE SPECIES: Blutwurstia oliviae, sp. nov. DIAGNOSIS: As for type and only known species. ETYMOLOGY: Blutwurst, German for (f.) “blood sausage,” in reference to the coloration, tendency to gather or “link up” in groups, and habitus of its close modern relative, Xenosaurus.Published as part of Smith, Krister T., Bhullar, Bhart-Anjan S. & Bloch, Jonathan I., 2022, New diminutive Eocene lizard reveals high K-Pg survivorship and taxonomic diversity of stem xenosaurs in North America, pp. 1-36 in American Museum Novitates 2022 (3986) on page 23, DOI: 10.1206/3986.1, http://zenodo.org/record/716104

    E. Wrangel, Ett blad ur historien оm Sveriges litterära förbindelser med Frankrige. — Danske оg Norske Studenter, der ere indskrevne i « Natio Germanica » ved Universitet i Orleans.

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    Bloch Camille. E. Wrangel, Ett blad ur historien оm Sveriges litterära förbindelser med Frankrige. — Danske оg Norske Studenter, der ere indskrevne i « Natio Germanica » ved Universitet i Orleans.. In: Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes. 1900, tome 61. pp. 351-352

    I. Psychophysiologie

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    Bloch Vincent, Piéron Henri. I. Psychophysiologie. In: L'année psychologique. 1957 vol. 57, n°2. pp. 441-444
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