888 research outputs found

    [News Clip: Gary Dewayne Bray]

    No full text
    Video footage from the WBAP-TV station in Fort Worth, Texas to accompany a news story about a two-year search for Gary DeWayne Bray who went missing from his Dallas County home

    Letter re: Elizabeth S. Bray

    No full text
    Letter from Amon Carter, Jr. to Allan Shivers, Governor of Texas, regarding Elizabeth S. Bray

    No Pasaran! An Interview on the History and Politics of Anti-fascism with Mark Bray

    No full text
    Mark Bray is a historian of human rights, terrorism, and political radicalism in Modern Europe as well as a political organizer. This interview outlines what fascism is, the history of anti-fascist resistance, the debate surrounding free-speech, anti-imperialism, World War II, and the Trump Era. Mark Bray is a political organizer and historian of human rights, terrorism, and political radical-ism in Modern Europe. He earned his BA in Philosophy from Wesleyan University in 2005 and his PhD in History from Rutgers University in 2016. He is the author of Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook (Melville House 2017), Translating Anarchy: The Anarchism of Occupy Wall Street (Zero 2013), The Anarchist Inquisition: Terrorism and Human Rights in Spain and France, 1890-1910 (forthcoming), and the co-editor of Anarchist Education and the Modern School: A Francisco Ferrer Reader (PM Press 2018). His work has appeared in Foreign Policy, The Washington Post, Boston Review, and numerous edited volumes. He was a lecturer at Dartmouth College

    LA RICEZIONE DI ANASSAGORA NEL MEDIOEVO. IL CASO DI ALBERTO MAGNO

    No full text
    This article aims to demonstrate that the appeal of Anaxagoras in the Middle Ages is linked with that of later philosophical traditions such as Stoicism (in Albert), Hermeticism (in Eckhart) and Stoicism and Hermeticism together (in Thomas of York). At the same time, it highlights that Anaxagoras is, for Al- bert, not only the philosopher that Aristotle criticized, but also the author of doctrines that are the basis of doctrinal, philosophical and theological errors. Albert is concerned to correct them by accrediting the Aristotelian doctrine

    Eckhart's stoic doctrine of freedom and its metaphysical foundation

    No full text
    In the present study it has been proposed an interpretation of the Eckhartian doctrine of freedom, based on three levels of analysis: 1. From an ethical perspective, the Eckhartian doctrine of freedom, both in its negative formulation (i. ed. Freedom as detachment from determination) and in its positive formulation (i.e. freedom as expression of the intellectual nature of the soul), has been analysed in the light of the Stoic sources, explicitly quoted by Eckhart; 2. From a metaphysical perspective, it will be demonstrated that the Eckhartian doctrine of freedom is a necessary corollary of a natural law which Eckhart defends employing the doctrine of Avicebron’s Fons vitae; 3.applied to the noetic, the sources employed by Eckhart are not only coherent with the philosophical assumption of the platonic doctrine of the reminiscence, explicitly quoted by the author, because the same, having been discussed in the works of Albert the Great, are criticized as anti-Aristotelic

    Effects of Vitamin E and Aspirin on Disease in Cattle

    No full text
    Author Institution (Bray): Department of Human Nutrition and Food Management, The Ohio State University; Author Institution (Wittum): Department of Veterinary Preventative Medicine, The Ohio State Universit

    Bernard Bray, Épistoliers de l’âge classique, l’art de la correspondance chez Mme de Sévigné et quelques prédécesseurs, contemporains et héritiers, Tübingen, Gunter Narr, 2007, coll. « Études littéraires françaises »

    No full text
    Pascal Jean-Noël. Bernard Bray, Épistoliers de l’âge classique, l’art de la correspondance chez Mme de Sévigné et quelques prédécesseurs, contemporains et héritiers, Tübingen, Gunter Narr, 2007, coll. « Études littéraires françaises ». In: Littératures 56,2007. Romain Gary, l'ombre de l'histoire. pp. 241-243

    The role of collective motion in examples of coarsening and self-assembly

    No full text
    The simplest prescription for building a patterned structure from its constituents is to add particles, one at a time, to an appropriate template. However, self-organizing molecular and colloidal systems in nature can evolve in much more hierarchical ways. Specifically, constituents (or clusters of constituents) may aggregate to form clusters (or clusters of clusters) that serve as building blocks for later stages of assembly. Here we evaluate the character and consequences of such collective motion in a set of prototypical assembly processes. We do so using computer simulations in which a system's capacity for hierarchical dynamics can be controlled systematically. By explicitly allowing or suppressing collective motion, we quantify its effects. We find that coarsening within a two dimensional attractive lattice gas (and an analogous off-lattice model in three dimensions) is naturally dominated by collective motion over a broad range of temperatures and densities. Under such circumstances, cluster mobility inhibits the development of uniform coexisting phases, especially when macroscopic segregation is strongly favored by thermodynamics. By contrast, the assembly of model viral capsids is not frustrated but is instead facilitated by collective moves, which promote the orderly binding of intermediates consisting of several monomers
    corecore