62,672 research outputs found

    Lettre de W. H. Gregory à G. H. Ryland sur une discussion, concernant la revendication de G. H. Ryland, entre Gregory, Deane W. D. Ryland(?), le duc de Newcastle et C.S. Fortescue

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    2 pages, originalLettre de W. H. Gregory à [G. H.] Ryland sur: une discussion, concernant la revendication de [G. H.] Ryland, entre Gregory, Deane [W. D. Ryland?], le duc de Newcastle et [C. S.] Fortescue; les lettres et les affirmations de [T. W. C.] Murdoch; le refus de Newcastle et de Fortescue de changer d'opinion; l'obligation de Gregory d'en parler à la Chambre des Communes; l'impossibilité de faire créer un comité parlementaire pour cette question

    Herbert E. Gregory Book 9: Utah, California, 1924-1928

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    Herbert E. Gregory Book 9: Utah, California, 1924-1928: Album containing photographs from several of Herbert Gregory\u27s U.S.G.S. expeditions: 1924 in southern Utah; 1925 in Death Valley and Panamint Valley, California; 1925 in San Juan County, southern Utah; 1927 in San Juan County, southern Utah; 1928 in San Juan County, southern Utah; and . Also includes photos of Natural Bridges National Monument area by W. H. Hopkins and Laurence M. Gould (1924); photos from San Juan County by Hugh D. Miser; an 1870s photo by William Henry Jackson; 1907 photos of Natural Bridges National Monument area by Charles H. Goodman; photos of Elk Ridge-Bears Ears and Natural Bridges region by Frank B. Oastler; 1925 photos from southwestern Colorado and southern Utah by Lee; and 1927 photos of Bears Ears by Arthur Alan Baker

    Language and theology in St Gregory of Nyssa

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    This MA thesis focuses on the work of one of the most influential and authoritative theologians of the early Church: St Gregory of Nyssa (†396). My topic of research consists in the relationship between language and theology, as it shaped in Gregory’s polemical works against the radical Arians, in particular against Eunomius of Cyzicus (†395).The first chapter tackles the historical side of the controversy and provides the chronology of the dogmatic disputes on the dogma of Trinity following the Council of Nicaea (325). The second chapters illustrate the conflict being at stake between two theological methodologies: Gregory's grammar of thought is scriptural, whereas Eunomius' theology is much more philosophical and inflexible in its terms. Eunomius claimed that one can know God by his essence in the concept of 'ingenerate'. On the contrary, for Gregory of Nyssa, God 'is above all names'. For him, language and sexuality are realitites of the post-lapsarian world, which made human mind opaque and the exercise of interpretation indispensable. Gregory included also the episode of Babel in the genealogy of our linguistic finitude. The third and the fourth chapters focus on the relationship between language and theological knowledge in St Gregory's third book Contra Eunomium. All words used in human language - including Eunomius' concept of agennetos – have complementary meanings, since no one can describe the essence of an object or of any part of reality. On this basis, Gregory develops his 'theory of relativity' of names, which can never befit God's majesty and glory. In the last chapter, under the heading 'Pragmatics of Language', I investigate the immediate consequences of Gregory's 'theory of relativity'. Speech is treated as a sphere, which resembles the creative power of the hypostatic Word. Therefore, rhetoric becomes the perfect tool for his pastoral concern in doing theology. By choosing rhetoric, Gregory is free to start his theological argument from anywhere, since theology is a discourse about God's redemptive economy. In conclusion, I try to emphasise the actuality of Gregory's theory of names and its importance for the contemporary debates in the Church on thorny issues as Trinitarian theology or gender. I also evaluate Gregory of Nyssa's self-consistency in positive terms

    D. H. Lawrence

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    This set comprises 40 volumes covering 19th and 20th century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes. This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995.Cover -- D. H. LAWRENCE: THE CRITICAL HERITAGE -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- NOTE ON THE TEXT -- ABBREVIATIONS -- INTRODUCTION -- 1 HENRY YOXALL on four poems, 1909 -- The White Peacock (1911) -- 2 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1911 -- 3 ALLAN MONKHOUSE in Manchester Guardian 1911 -- 4 Review in Morning Post 1911 -- 5 VIOLET HUNT in Daily Chronicle 1911 -- 6 Review in Daily News 1911 -- 7 HENRY SAVAGE in Academy 1911 -- The Trespasser (1912) -- 8 Review in Athenaeum 1912 -- 9 BASIL DE SELINCOURT in Manchester Guardian 1912 -- 10 Review in Morning Post 1912 -- 11 Review in New York Times Book Review 1912 -- Love Poems and Others (1913) -- 12 EDWARD THOMAS in Bookman 1913 -- 13 EZRA POUND in New Freewoman 1913 -- 14 Review in Nation 1914 -- Sons and Lovers (1913) -- 15 Review in Standard 1913 -- 16 Review in Westminster Gazette 1913 -- 17 HAROLD MASSINGHAM in Daily Chronicle 1913 -- 18 Review in Saturday Review 1913 -- 19 LASCELLES ABERCROMBIE in Manchester Guardian 1913 -- 20 Review in Nation 1913 -- 21 LOUISE MAUNSELL FIELD in New York Times Book Review 1913 -- 22 ALFRED KUTTNER in New Republic 1915 -- The Prussian Officer (1914) -- 23 Review in Outlook 1914 -- The Rainbow (1915) -- 24 Extracts from LAWRENCE'S Letters 1913-17 -- 25 Review in Standard 1915 -- 26 ROBERT LYND in Daily News 1915 -- 27 JAMES DOUGLAS in Star 1915 -- 28 CLEMENT SHORTER, comment in Sphere 1915 -- 29 H. M. SWANWICK in Manchester Guardian 1915 -- 30 CATHERINE CARSWELL in Glasgow Herald 1915 -- 31 Prosecution of The Rainbow, The Times 1915 -- 32 J. C. SQUIRE, discussion of suppression of The Rainbow in New Statesman 1915 -- 33 GALSWORTHY, letter to J. B. Pinker 1915 -- Amores (1916) -- 34 FRANCIS BICKLEY in Bookman 1916 -- 35 EDWARD GARNETT, 'Art and the Moralists: Mr. D. H. Lawrence's Work', Dial 1916Look! We Have Come Through! (1917) -- 36 JOHN GOULD FLETCHER in Poetry (Chicago) 1918 -- 37 CONRAD AIKEN in Dial 1919 -- 38 LOUIS UNTERMEYER, 'D. H. Lawrence' 1920 -- 39 DOUGLAS GOLDRING, from 'The Later Work of D. H. Lawrence', Reputations 1920 -- The Lost Girl (1920) -- 40 VIRGINIA WOOLF in Times Literary Supplement 1920 -- 41 KATHERINE MANSFIELD on The Lost Girl 1920 -- 42 EDWARD GARNETT in Manchester Guardian 1920 -- 43 J. M. MURRY in Athenaeum 1920 -- 44 FRANCIS HACKETT in New Republic 1921 -- 45 Translation by BEN RAY REDMAN of ABEL CHEVALLEY, from Le Roman Anglais de Notre Temps (1921), 1925 -- Women in Love (1920) -- 46 JOHN MACY in New York Evening Post Literary Review 1921 -- 47 EVELYN SCOTT in Dial 1921 -- 48 Review in Saturday Westminster Gazette 1921 -- 49 J. M. MURRY in Nation and Athenaeum 1921 -- Sea and Sardinia (1921) -- 50 FRANCIS HACKETT in New Republic 1922 -- Aaron's Rod (1922) -- 51 J. M. MURRY in Nation and Athenaeum 1922 -- 52 EDWARD SHANKS in London Mercury 1922 -- Fantasia of the Unconscious (1922) -- 53 J. M. MURRY in Algemeen Handelsblad 1923 -- England, My England (1922) -- 54 Review in New York Times Book Review 1922 -- The Ladybird (1923) -- 55 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1923 -- 56 CHARLES MARRIOTT in Manchester Guardian 1923 -- 57 Review in Spectator 1923 -- 58 EDWARD SHANKS, 'Mr. D. H. Lawrence: Some Characteristics', London Mercury 1923 -- Studies in Classic American Literature (1923) -- 59 STUART P. SHERMAN in New York Evening Post Literary Review 1923 -- Kangaroo (1923) -- 60 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1923 -- 61 ALYSE GREGORY in Dial 1924 -- Birds, Beasts and Flowers (1923) -- 62 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1923 -- 63 EDWIN MUIR in Freeman 1924 -- The Boy in the Bush (1924) -- 64 L. P. HARTLEY in Spectator 1924 -- 65 JOHN FRANKLIN in New Statesman 192466 LLOYD MORRIS in New York Times Book Review 1924 -- 67 EDWIN MUIR, 'D. H. Lawrence', Nation 1925 -- St. Mawr (1925) -- 68 STUART P. SHERMAN in New York Herald Tribune Books 1925 -- Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine (1925) -- 69 EDWARD SACKVILLE WEST in New Statesman 1926 -- The Plumed Serpent (1926) -- 70 CHARLES MARRIOTT in Manchester Guardian 1926 -- 71 L. P. HARTLEY in Saturday Review 1926 -- 72 KATHERINE ANNE PORTER in New York Herald Tribune Books 1926 -- 73 RICHARD ALDINGTON, 'D. H. Lawrence as Poet', Saturday Review of Literature 1926 -- 74 T. S. ELIOT, from 'The Contemporary Novel' (original English text of 'Le Roman Anglais Contemporain', La Nouvelle Revue FranCaise, 1927) -- Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928) -- 75 Comment in John Bull 1928 -- 76 J. M. MURRY in Adelphi 1929 -- 77 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1932 -- 78 V. S. PRITCHETT in Fortnightly Review 1932 -- 79 HENRY HAZLITT in Nation 1932 -- 80 ANDRÉ MALRAUX, Preface to L'Amant de Lady Chatterley 1932 (translation) -- 81 W. B. YEATS on Lady Chatterley's Lover 1933 -- Collected Poems (1928) -- 82 J. C. SQUIRE in Observer 1928 -- 83 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1928 -- The Paintings of D. H. Lawrence (1929) -- 84 T. W. EARP in New Statesman 1929 -- Pansies (1929) -- 85 Review in Times Literary Supplement 1929 -- 86 MARK VAN DOREN in New York Herald Tribune Books 1929 -- Pornography and Obscenity (1929) -- 87 Review in New Statesman 1929 -- 88 E. M. FORSTER in Nation and Athenaeum 1930 -- Obituaries, 1930 -- 89 The theme of decline, The Times obituary, 1930 -- 90 'A genius pain-obsessed', Manchester Guardian obituary, 1930 -- 91 The theme of decline again, Glasgow Herald obituary, 1930 -- 92 J. C. SQUIRE, the 'precious residuum', Observer 1930 -- 93 PAUL ROSENFELD, an assessment of Lawrence's work, New Republic 193094 ARNOLD BENNETT, a tribute of admiration, Evening Standard 1930 -- 95 E. M. FORSTER on Lawrence's art and ideas, The Listener 1930 -- 96 A plain man's view, ALAN REYNOLDS THOMPSON on Lawrence, Bookman (N.Y.) 1931 -- 97 'The victim and the sacrificial knife', T. S. ELIOT'S review of MURRY'S Son of Woman, Criterion 1931 -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEXThis set comprises 40 volumes covering 19th and 20th century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes. This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries

    The 'Prehistory' of Gregory of Tours: An Analysis of Books I-IV of Gregory's Histories

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    This thesis is concerned with the structure and agenda of the first four books of Gregory of Tours� Histories. Building on the idea that it was the death of Gregory�s patron, king Sigibert, at the end of Book IV, that stimulated the writing of the Histories, I argue that the agenda of the first four books, the �Prehistory�, relates directly to the events that brought about the Civil War that resulted in Sigibert�s death. This focus has previously gone unrecognised. I suggest that there is a strong structural framework to this section of the Histories, designed to promote the author�s agenda. This confirms that Books I-IV were conceived as one unit, and also heightens the level at which modern scholarship should view Gregory�s literary achievement. This in turn should illuminate the state of Merovingian education and society as a whole. The message behind Gregory�s carefully structured �Prehistory� is an expansion of the Preface to Book V, in which Gregory pleads with his audience, his contemporary kings, to follow the path of God, like their ancestor, Clovis. This will bring peace and an end to greed and Civil War. This path, continually espoused by the agents of the Lord, His bishops, would lead to a successful reign and a healthy kingdom. Failure to listen to Gregory and his colleagues, would lead only to ruin, a message reiterated throughout the Prehistory, and highlighted in the death of king Sigibert

    A 2 h periodic variation in the low-mass X-ray binary Ser X-1

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    Spectroscopy of the low-mass X-ray binary Ser X-1 using the Gran Telescopio Canarias have revealed a ?2 h periodic variability that is present in the three strongest emission lines. We tentatively interpret this variability as due to orbital motion, making it the first indication of the orbital period of Ser X-1. Together with the fact that the emission lines are remarkably narrow, but still resolved, we show that a main-sequence K dwarf together with a canonical 1.4 M? neutron star gives a good description of the system. In this scenario, the most likely place for the emission lines to arise is the accretion disc, instead of a localized region in the binary (such as the irradiated surface or the stream-impact point), and their narrowness is due instead to the low inclination (?10°) of Ser X-1

    Spaces of the Past, Histories of the Present: An Interview with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory

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    The ontologies of space and territory, our experience of them and the techniques we use to govern them, the very conception of the socio-spatial formations that we inhabit, are all historically specific: they depend on a genealogy of practices, knowledges, discourses, regulations, performances and representations articulated in a way that is extremely complex yet nevertheless legible over time. In this interview we look at the logic and the patterns that intertwine space and time — both as objects and tools of inquiry — though a cross-disciplinary dialogue. The discussion with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory covers the place of history in socio-spatial theory and in their own work, old and new ways of thinking about the intersection between history and territory, space and time, the implications of geography and history for thinking about contemporary politics, and the challenges now faced by critical thought and academic work in the current neo-liberal attack on public universities and the welfare stat

    MeSH term explosion and author rank improve expert recommendations

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    Information overload is an often-cited phenomenon that reduces the productivity, efficiency and efficacy of scientists. One challenge for scientists is to find appropriate collaborators in their research. The literature describes various solutions to the problem of expertise location, but most current approaches do not appear to be very suitable for expert recommendations in biomedical research. In this study, we present the development and initial evaluation of a vector space model-based algorithm to calculate researcher similarity using four inputs: 1) MeSH terms of publications; 2) MeSH terms and author rank; 3) exploded MeSH terms; and 4) exploded MeSH terms and author rank. We developed and evaluated the algorithm using a data set of 17,525 authors and their 22,542 papers. On average, our algorithms correctly predicted 2.5 of the top 5/10 coauthors of individual scientists. Exploded MeSH and author rank outperformed all other algorithms in accuracy, followed closely by MeSH and author rank. Our results show that the accuracy of MeSH term-based matching can be enhanced with other metadata such as author rank
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