7,028 research outputs found
From proteomics to prescription - the search for COPD biomarkers
Biomarkers that describe the severity and progression of COPD and the responses of patients to treatment are a desirable addition to clinical measures of disease. In this review, we describe the current state of knowledge of biomarkers used for the diagnosis, staging and therapeutic response of COPD patients. The nature of these biomarkers is considered in relation to their intended use, and the desirable qualities of such entities are examined. Examples of biased and unbiased discovery platforms for COPD biomarker discovery are given, and the major findings of these studies are discussed. Cutting edge technology used for biomarker discovery, quantitation in biofluids and imaging biomarkers in whole body systems is reviewed
Cinq années de voyage en Orient 1846-1851 par Israel-Joseph Benjamin II, voyageur et auteur, demeurant à Faltischan (Moldavie). Paris en vente chez Michel Levy Frères, rue Vivienne, 2 bis 1856 L' auteur se réserve le droit de traduction et de reproduction
Preface: by Benjamin, J.Dedication: by the author to M.J. Altaras aîné de Marseille et M. Albert Cohn.Content description: Detailed contentsPagination: PP28+240PVolumes: 1Text Genre:Pros
The cult of St Nicholas in medieval Italy
St Nicholas was one of the most popular saints in medieval Italy. His cult attracted the attention
of popes, kings and emperors, and his shrine at Bari became an important international pilgrimage
destination. This thesis asks how the cult of St Nicholas came to be so widespread and popular in
Italy, and why the saint attracted the attention of diverse groups and individuals.
This thesis is structured around four chapters. The first demonstrates that through a
process of Latinisation the cult of St Nicholas became integrated within Italian literary traditions
and within a new spiritual era. Chapter Two reveals that this Latinisation also occurred within the
saint’s iconography. Chapters Three and Four are case studies of the cult in Puglia and Venice,
locations which claimed possession of the saint’s relics. These case studies show that the general
developments that the cult of St Nicholas underwent in Italy, identified in Chapters One and Two,
did not apply universally. Instead, the presence of the saint’s relics resulted in a different profile
of the saint in Bari and Venice. Through the process of Latinisation, the cult of St Nicholas
became updated and remained relevant for its new Italian audience; Chapters Three and Four
show alternative ways that the cult of St Nicholas gained widespread popularity.
This thesis presents for the first time an iconographical study of St Nicholas in Italian art,
which develops existing research of the saint’s Byzantine iconography. Chapter Four presents a
profile of the cult of St Nicholas in Venice in the Middle Ages, which is a significant oversight in
the literature. The thesis uses a variety of visual and textual sources, in particular fresco and
altarpiece representations, archival documents from Venice and Rome (including the Apostolic
Visitations), and under-exploited contemporary and antiquarian Venetian sources
Public worship and practical theology in the work of Benjamin Keach (1640-1704)
The late seventeenth century was a critical and fruitful period
for the Particular Baptists of England. Severely persecuted following
the Restoration, toleration in 1689 brought its own perils.
Particular Baptists were fortunate in having several strong leaders,
especially the London trio of Hanserd Knollys, William Kiffin, and
Benjamin Keach. Such a small and severely persecuted group as the
Baptists could afford little time for academic pursuits, thus of
necessity most of their theology was practical in nature.
Benjamin Keach (1640-1704) was the most outstanding practical
theologian among the English Particular Baptists of the late
seventeenth century. This dissertation is a study of Keach, in
particular his writings on public worship and practical theology.
Although Keach was a prolific author, he has been almost completely
neglected by scholars.
After a biographical sketch of Keach, this study considers his
writings on public worship and practical theology. In the area of
worship, Keach made two outstanding contributions: First, he was the
most vocal apologist for Baptist views on Baptism of his period.
Secondly, and more importantly, his hymn writing and defense of hymn
singing broke new ground, not just for Baptists, but for English
Protestantism, in general. In addition to his contributions in these
areas, he also dealt with the laying on of hands and the sabbath day
worship controversy.
Keach's contributions to practical theology fall into two main
groups: his writings that concern religious education and those that
deal with polity. In addition to these, Keach's vigorous advocacy of
a high Calvinist soteriology are also considered under the rubric of
practical theology. Keach's most important (although not his most
positive) contribution in this area were his soteriological writings.
Although well within the bounds of orthodoxy, some of the tendencies
in Keach's soteriology were taken up by the following generation of
Baptist leaders and developed into a stultifying hyper-Calvinism that
handicapped Baptist evangelism and missions.
In the conclusion, Keach's contributions to a theory of practical
theology are considered
The concept of remembrance in Walter Benjamin
This thesis argues that the role played by the concept of remembrance (Eingedenken)
in Walter Benjamin's 'theory of the knowledge of history' and in his engagement with
Enlightenment universal history, is a crucial one. The implications of Benjamin's
contention that history's 'original vocation' is 'remembrance' have hitherto gone
largely unnoticed. The following thesis explores the meaning of the concept of
remembrance and assesses the significance of this proposed link between history and
memory, looking at both the mnemonic aspect of history and the historical facets of
memory. It argues that by mobilising the simultaneously destructive and constructive
capacities of remembrance, Benjamin sought to develop a critical historiography
which would enable a radical encounter with a previously suppressed past. In so doing
he takes up a stance (explicit and implicit) towards existing philosophical conceptions
of history, in particular the idea of universal history found in German Idealism.
Benjamin reveals an intention to retain the epistemological aspirations of universal
history whilst ridding that approach of its apologetic moment. He criticises existing
conceptions of history on the basis that each assumes homogeneous time to be the
framework in which historical events occur. Insight into the distinctive temporality of
remembrance proves to be the touchstone for this critique, and provides a paradigm
for a very different conception of time. The thesis goes on to determine what is valid
and what is problematic both in this concept of remembrance and in the theory of
historical knowledge which it informs, by subjecting both to the most cogent
criticisms which can be levelled at them. What emerges is not only the importance of
this concept for an understanding of Benjamin's philosophy but the pertinence of this
concept for any philosophical account of memory
Biomarker Magazine Winter 2015, vol. 9
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Previous issue date: 2015-01Vasi, Nicholas (Managing Editor); Faith, Kathryn (Design); Ahlberg, Liz (Writer); Benjamin, Claire (Writing); Chakalian, Paul (Writing); Kreig, Alex (Writing); Jongeneel, Susan (Writing); Lutz, Claudia (Writing); McKenna, Susan (Writing); O’Neil, Kathleen (Writing); Schwink, Siv (Writing); Vasi, Nicholas (Writing); Yates, Diana (Writing); Ahlers, Haley (Imagery); Bouwmeester, Jessica (Imagery); Faith, Kathryn (Imagery); Fouke, Bruce (Imagery); Gabriel, Horton (Imagery); Lee, Mirhee (Imagery); Lindsay, Jason (Imagery); Metcalf, Kathryne (Imagery); O’Neil, Kathleen (Imagery); Petzelt, Barbara (Imagery); Stauffer, L. Brian (Imagery
Biomarker Magazine Winter 2016, vol. 10
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Previous issue date: 2016-01Vasi, Nicholas (Managing Editor); Faith, Kathryn (Design); Lutz, Claudia (Writing); Metcalf, Kathryne (Writing); Barnes, Anna (Writing); Benjamin, Claire (Writing); Buller, Rachel (Writing); Harris, Olivia (Writing); Kalsotra, Auinash (Writing); Keating, Austin (Writing); Quinn, Lauren (Writing); Schiess, August (Writing); Schwink, Siv (Writing); Touchstone, Liz Ahlberg (Writing); Yates, Diana (Writing); Faith, Kathryn (Imagery); Afanador, Yashira (Imagery); Ahlers, Haley (Imagery); Benjamin, Claire (Imagery); Jost, John (Imagery); McMahon, Julie (Imagery); Nasir, Arshan (Imagery); Oleksyk, Taras (Imagery); Sears, Karen (Imagery); Stauffer, L. Brian (Imagery); Tiwari, Saumya (Imagery
Letter to Benjamin Clark Cutler from Benjamin Stevens
Letter dated April 14, 1863 to Assistant Adjutant General, Captain Benjamin Clark Cutler, Santa Fe, from First Lieutenant Benjamin Stevens, Fort Wingate, New Mexico, recommending John Murphy and Martin Quintana, in the First New Mexico Volunteers, for military promotion to Second Lieutenant. Letter also signed by First Lieutenant J. L. Barbey, joint author. Civil War. HL introduction page overlaid by document. Letter in English, handwritten, 1pp/fr
sj-docx-1-aop-10.1177_10600280211073370 – Supplemental material for Determinants of Vancomycin Trough Concentration in Patients Receiving Continuous Veno-Venous Hemodialysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-aop-10.1177_10600280211073370 for Determinants of Vancomycin Trough Concentration in Patients Receiving Continuous Veno-Venous Hemodialysis by Nicholas J. Quinn, Gretchen L. Sacha, Matthew R. Wanek, Jason Yerke, Pavithra Srinivas and Benjamin Hohlfelder in Annals of Pharmacotherapy</p
The Democratic State
Roger Benjamin was president of the Council for Aid to Education (CAE) from 2005 to 2019 and was formerly provost of the University of Minnesota and the University of Pittsburgh. He has authored, coauthored, or co-edited nine books, including The Democratic Purposes of Education and The New Limits of Education Policy: Avoiding a Tragedy of the Commons.
Stephen L. Elkin is professor emeritus of government and politics at the University of Maryland and founding editor of the journal The Good Society. He is the author or editor of seven books, including Reconstructing the Commercial Republic: Constitutional Design after Madison.This Kansas Open Books title is funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program.Edited by Roger Benjamin and Stephen L. Elkin. Contributors include Peter H. Aranson, Roger Benjamin, David Braybrooke, Stephen L. Elkin, Norman Furniss, and Peter C. Ordeshook.One outcome of the declining economic growth and rising political conflict of the 1980s has been a renewed interest in political theory and increased questioning about the durability of the capitalist state. More and more political scientists are critically assessing the prevailing pluralist vision of the relationships between the state and the economy. Is the capitalist state able to adjust to crises and contradictions? What is the role of the state in changing—deteriorating—economic circumstances? How should we understand competing interpretations on the relative autonomy of the state, the nature of property rights, the legitimation crisis?
This collection of five original essays by seven of the best-known political-economy theorists addresses the interconnections between the economy and the polity and embodies the leading theoretical approaches to the political economy of the state
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