7,461 research outputs found
K. W. V. "Wilmot" Smith
A cross street near the Stuart Arms hotel.Donated by Rosemary Wilmot Kennedy 07/11/01. [A family album of mixed work and relaxation photos taken by Wilmot Smith in N.T. 1948-April 1950.]Date:1948-1
John Stuart Mill and the Employment of Married Women: Reconciling Utility and Justice
This paper explores the link between utilitarianism and feminism through the positions of John Stuart Mill. We try to reconcile Mill's conviction about the necessity of establishing equality between sexes with his position concerning the employment of married women. This reconciliation has already been attempted by other researchers. Our perspective is slightly different in that we seek to establish a globally coherent position by examining Mill's various writings in order to evaluate his feminism in terms of his utilitarian philosophy.John Stuart Mill ; Utilitarisme ; Feminisme ;
Ira J. Smith Collection
Photograph of the "First Washita Officers. Washita County, OK" L to R: top row: Charles Carlisle, Deputy Sheriff; David Smith, County Commissioner; Stuart Humbarger, Commissioner; Unidentified; J. Vale (Dale?), Commissioner; George W. Wheeler, County Clerk; Joe Haws, Deputy Sheriff. Bottom row: Webb, Deputy Sheriff; Jess Morris, First Deputy; Neal Morrison, County Sheriff; Harve Dean, County Treasurer; G. W. Hunt, County Superintendent. Copy print by Ira J. Smith, Cordell, OK
John Stuart Mill’s projected science of society: 1827-1848
The purpose of the thesis is to examine John Stuart Mill’s political thought from
about 1827 to 1848 as an exercise in intellectual history. It focuses, first, on Mill’s view,
formulated by the late 1830s, that contemporary society was ‘civilized’, and second, on
his project of a science of society, which he aspired to develop in the late 1830s and
early 1840s.
By the late 1830s, Mill came to the view that his contemporary society was a
‘commercial society or civilization’, dominated by the middle, commercial class. The
first part of my thesis, constituted by Chapters 2-4, discusses the way in which Mill
formed his notion of civilization, and what he meant by the term ‘civilization’. Mill paid
attention to the implications of the rise of the middle class, and regarded such
phenomena of contemporary society as the corruption of the commercial spirit and
excessive social conformity as an inevitable consequence of the rise of the middle class.
The second part of the thesis, constituted by Chapters 5-9, examines Mill’s
projected science of society. In the late 1830s and early 1840s, Mill attempted to
develop a new science of society whose subject-matter was the nature and prospects of
commercial, civilized society. This aspiration culminated in A System of Logic,
published in 1843. In examining Mill’s projected science, I pay particular attention to
the fact that he conceived new sciences of history and of the formation of character,
both of which were indispensable in his project, although he failed to give a complete
account of these sciences. My thesis shows that the implications of his interest both in
history and in the formation of character are more significant than Mill scholars have
assumed
Ross and Keith Smith Memorial
Memorial to Ross Smith Pt Darwin 1st Aerial Flight England to Aust Memorial to Ross and Keith Smith and crew members Jim Bennett and Wally Shiers, commemorating their 29 day flight from England arriving on 10 December 1919 to Darwin in their Vickers Vimy biplane on the runway now Ross Smith Avenue, Fannie Bay. The monument still stands at the end of Ross Smith Avenue.Sporn, Stuart W
Rhadinella Smith 1941
Rhadinella Smith, 1941 TYPE SPECIES: Rhadinella schistosa Smith (1941), by original designation and monotypy. DEFINITION AND DIAGNOSIS: See group definition in Myers (1974: 119). Separated from Rhadinaea and most other dipsadines by the straight-line arrangement of several enlarged posterior maxillary teeth (ultimate fang not offset). The maxillary dentition is similar in Trimetopon, a variable genus of diminutive snakes in lower Central America that differs from Rhadinella in lacking a basal nude pocket on the hemipenis (Myers, unpublished). CONTENT: Fifteen species: Rhadinella anachoreta (Smith and Campbell), new combination; Rhadinella godmani (Günther), new comb.; Rhadinella hannsteini (Stuart), new comb.; Rhadinella hempsteadae (Stuart and Bailey), new comb.; Rhadinella kanalchutchan (Mendelson III and Kirzirian), new comb.; Rhadinella kinkelini (Boettger), new comb.; 19 Rhadinella lachrymans (Cope), new comb.; Rhadinella montecristi (Mertens), new comb.; Rhadinella pegosalyta (McCranie), new comb.; Rhadinella pilonaorum (Stuart), new comb.; Rhadinella posadasi (Slevin), new comb.; Rhadinella rogerromani (Köhler and McCranie), new comb.; Rhadinella schistosa Smith; Rhadinella serperaster (Cope), new comb.; Rhadinella tolpanorum (Holm and Cruz D.), new comb.Published as part of Myers, Charles W., 2011, A New Genus and New Tribe for Enicognathus melanauchen Jan, 1863, a Neglected South American Snake (Colubridae: Xenodontinae), with Taxonomic Notes on Some Dipsadinae, pp. 1-36 in American Museum Novitates 2011 (3715) on page 28, DOI: 10.1206/3715.2, http://zenodo.org/record/535940
A new and improved chart of the Cape of Good Hope, the Mozambique Passage & c.
Chart.
At foot, bottom left: Drawn by J. Norie, Teacher of Navigation, No. 157, Leadenhall Street.
Insets: 5, and below them "A View of the Cape of Good Hope"; 1, A New Chart of Delagoa Bay, by Mr. James Stuart. - 2,... St. Augustines Bay, by Captain J. Smith. - 3, False Bay by Captain S. Kruger. - 4... Saldanha Bay by Captain Dampierre. 5,... Table Bay by Captain Douglas. Line scales given
Marshall Pres. Stewart Smith, ca. 1960
Marshall College Pres. Stewart Smith, ca. 1960, b&w. Back reads: Stuart Smith, Marshall President.https://mds.marshall.edu/doris_miller_papers/1163/thumbnail.jp
Andrea Stuart Store
Andrea Stuart Storehttps://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_wdsmithphotography/4360/thumbnail.jp
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