17,521 research outputs found
Mrs. J. W. Mitchell and her daughter, Mrs. Thomas M. Ryan looking at portrait of the late, Mrs. John G. Waples
Mrs. J. W . Mitchell, right and her daughter, Mrs. Thomas M. Ryan, are pictured with portrait of their mother and grandmother, respectively , the late Mrs. John G. Waples, painted by Murray P. Bewley of Nice, France, former Fort Worth artist.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/19553/thumbnail.jp
Letter from John G. Dawes to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/0ecec077-df3b-4f67-8aa3-729ed74046a3/thumb/128.jpgThe author is possibly related to Thomas Eliot via his great grandfather, Thomas Dawes
A la recherche du thème narratif
Ryan Marie-Laure. A la recherche du thème narratif. In: Communications, 47, 1988. Variations sur le thème. Pour une thématique, sous la direction de Claude Bremond et Thomas G. Pavel. pp. 23-39
The Thomas G. Everett Collection: A Compendium of Selected Materials Donated by Bass Trombonist Thomas G. Everett
abstract: This document is a compendium of the materials that are housed within the special collections donated by Thomas Everett. In August 2016, the Arizona State University School of Music, through the efforts of retired Professor of Trombone Douglas Yeo, received a donation of materials from Thomas Everett, founder of the International Trombone Association and retired director of bands at Harvard University.
This donation contains published and unpublished music, numerous letters, and various drafts of his book, An Annotated Guide to Bass Trombone Literature. Over the course of two-and-a-half years, the donation was catalogued for the university by the author. Materials from the donation were sent into public circulation or sent into special collections within the ASU School of Music Library.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Music 201
Interview with former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Giles Kavanagh
Part 1: Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh relates his family history and discusses his father's work with newspapers and the Democratic Party, his own early schooling, and his first jobs in law firms. He also discusses his judicial career, starting with the newly created Court of Appeals in 1964 and then running for the Michigan Supreme Court in 1968. He provides an insiders view of the Court during his tenure and discusses the various political and personal differences that arose among the justices. Part 2: Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh talks about the Justice John Swainson bribery case, his own involvement in the investigation and his view that Swainson was "framed". Kavanagh also discusses the turmoil on the Court in the mid-1970s and talks candidly about his colleagues, including Justices Mary Coleman, Charles Levin, John Fitzgerald, Thomas Brennan, Thomas M. Kavanagh, James Ryan, and Dorothy Comstock Riley. After 1976, Kavanagh says, the Court stabilzed and a new spirit of good will and collegiality was embraced by all of the justices. Kavanagh covers a wide range of general topics, including legislative apportionment, mandatory arbitration, the difficulty of campaigning for election, judicial conferences, the Michigan Supreme Court's involvement with the State Bar of Michigan and its disciplinary procedures, term limits for Chief Justices, and the selection process for Supreme Court Justices. He finishes by describing his speech to the Kalamazoo County Bar Association, which was titled, "Pot, Pornography, and Prostitution," by the program organizers.See the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society website for more information on the life of Thomas Giles Kavanagh.Image courtesy of the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society.Interviewed by Roger F. Lane at Justice Kavanagh's residence in Troy, MI, Nov. 19-20, 1990.Digital remastering of analog cassettes originally recorded for "Interviews with Michigan Supreme Court Justices," sponsored by the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society
Christiformitas in Nicholas of Cusa’s Roman Sermons (1459)
Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464) served as vicar of Rome in the absence of Pope Pius II at the Congress of Mantua (1459). Cusanus held a synod and did visitations of major churches. His sermons for these events emphasized conformity with Christ as the means of knowing God.This is the Version of Record (VoR) of the article that was originally published in Perspectives in the Arts and Humanities Asia, Volume 1, Number 1 (2011
A ética como ciência em Thomas Hobbes
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Filosofia, Florianópolis, 2015.Thomas Hobbes apresenta em seu Leviatã a ética como um ramo da Filosofia Natural. Ela é concebida com uma investigação das ?consequências das paixões?. A classificação da investigação moral como uma ciência que é parte da física foi tomada por alguns comentadores como um sinal do caráter descritivo da teoria moral hobbesiana. Algumas interpretações que propuseram uma teoria moral com conteúdo prescritivo viram a necessidade de tomarem a moralidade como uma investigação independente da filosofia natural. Alguns intérpretes tentaram tomar a sério a ideia de que a ética está vinculada às ciências naturais e defenderam a teoria moral hobbesiana como sendo uma vertente do naturalismo moral. A presente tese parte da possibilidade de se afirmar a ética como uma investigação que segue um padrão científico na perspectiva hobbesiana, e ao mesmo tempo tenta mostrar que ela é uma teoria prescritiva com uma normatividade moral em sentido forte. A ética é tomada neste trabalho não como uma descrição das paixões e suas consequências como podem ser vistas na realidade e nas condutas particulares, mas como a construção de um modelo racional de ação que toma a natureza humana de um ponto de vista universal. Ciência é o trabalho da razão. A razão articula nomes e proposições em teorias. Nomes e proposições assim articulados podem causar em nossa mente um arranjo diferente de nossas ideias. A razão é capaz de corrigir nossas concepções de várias maneiras. Estas correções são feitas através da linguagem, concebida como ?signos? ou ?marcas sensíveis? de nossos pensamentos. Nomes e proposições articulados em uma teoria ética compõem o que podemos tomar como a forma racional de conceber a ação humana. Todas as ações ou paixões que aparecem sem uma organização racional ou não são racionalmente justificáveis não podem ser aceitas como ?boas? e nem ?corretas?. Assim, a ética não apenas uma tentativa de compreender quais são as paixões e quais são as ações que os homens empreendem normalmente, mas quais são as conexões necessárias de nossas crenças. O modelo racional da natureza humana e da ação humana não pode engendrar contradições. A investigação das consequências das paixões humanas é a investigação do modelo coerente da natureza humana, das paixões não contraditórias e das contradições que devem ser evitadas. Uma teoria coerentista daverdade é apresentada como a melhor interpretação do conceito de ciência verdadeira na teoria hobbesiana.Abstract : Thomas Hobbes presents, in his Leviathan, Ethics as a branch of Natural Philosophy. It is conceived as an investigation of the ?consequences of the passions?. The classification of the moral investigation as a science that is part of physics was taken by some commentators as a sign of the descriptive character of Hobbes?s moral theory. Some interpretations that tried to defend a prescriptive content in Hobbes?s ethics saw the necessity of taking the morality as an independent investigation. There are others that tried to make sense of the relation between natural science and ethics and defended Hobbes?s moral theory as a kind of naturalism. The present thesis investigates the possibility of affirming ethics as an investigation that has a scientific pattern in Hobbes?s view, and at the same time tries to show that it is a prescriptive theory with a very strong sense of moral normativity. Ethics is taken in this work not as a description of the passions and the consequences as they are seen in reality, but as the construction of a rational model of action that takes human nature in a universal sense. Science is the work of reason. Reason articulates names and propositions in theories. Names and propositions so articulated are able to cause in our mind a different composition of ideas. Reason is able to correct our senses in many ways. These corrections are made through language, conceived as the ?signs? or ?sensible marks? of our thoughts. Names and propositions articulated in an ethical theory compound what we could take as the rational way of conceiving human action. All the actions or passions that arise without a rational organization or is not rational justifiable cannot be accepted as good or right. So, ethics is not just the attempt to understand what are the passions and what are the actions human beings currently perform, but what are the necessary rational connections of our believes. The rational model of human nature and of human action cannot bear contradictions. The investigation of the consequences of the human passions is the investigation of the coherent model of human nature, of the non contradictory passions and the contradictions that need to beavoided. A coherence theory of truth is presented as the best interpretation of the concept of true science in Hobbes?s theory
Utah Law Review 2011 Number 4
TABLE OF CONTENTS ARTICLES The Rule of Law at the Crossroads: Consequences of Targeted Killing of Citizens Ryan Patrick Alford; "V" Is for Vegetarian: FDA-Mandated Vegetarian Food Labeling Carrie Griffin Basas; Regulating Mandatory Arbitration Thomas V. Burch; Protecting Taxpayers and Crime Victims: The Case for Restricting Utah\u27s Preliminary Paul G. Cassell & Hearings to Felony Offenses Thomas E. Goodwin; Punishing Without Free Will Luis E. Chiesa; Confronting the Certainty Imperative in Corporate Finance Jurisprudence Diane Lourdes Dick; Removing the Umpire\u27s Mask: The Propriety and Impact of Judicial Apologies Maxine D. Goodman; Professional Responsibility Compliance and National Security Attorneys: Adopting the Normative Framework of Internalized Legal Ethics Keith A. Petty; Reconceiving Corporate Personhood Elizabeth Pollman; The Impossibility of Agnostic Discrimination Law Deborah M. Weis
sj-pdf-1-tor-10.1177_23978473211052700 – Supplemental Material for Retrospective analysis of adverse effects associated with pyrethrins-containing products
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-tor-10.1177_23978473211052700 for Retrospective analysis of adverse effects associated with pyrethrins-containing products by Thomas G Osimitz, Kelly Sioris, John Gualtieri, Dean Filandrinos, Ryan Seaverson, Angeline M Carlson, Wiebke Droege and Rick Kingston in Toxicology Research and Application</p
Fall 2021 Week of Welcome Table
A week of welcome table outside of the Thomas G. Carpenter Libraryhttps://digitalcommons.unf.edu/covid19_images/1075/thumbnail.jp
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