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Music Therapy in the Age of Enlightenment

Journal of Music Therapy, 2001
As music therapists continue to discover more about the therapeutic powers of music, it is interesting now and then to look to the past in order to seek the roots of our contemporary practices. In this regard, the writings of eighteenth-century physicians are pivotal in the development of music therapy, for it was these individuals who first began to ...
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A New Age of Enlightenment?

Monthly Review, 1967
It is an accident of history and geography that China has been culturally isolated from most of the rest of the world during the greater part of her long and distinguished career as one of the most brilliant civilizations ever created by the human species—a civilization noted for both its brilliance and its individuality for three or possibly four ...
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The “Enlightened” View of Aging:

The Hastings Center Report, 1983
Ojver the last decade, America has witnessed a formidable effort to eliminate negative stereotypes of and prejudice toward older people. Academic gerontologists, humanists, health professionals, social workers, organized elders, and others have attempted to debunk "myths" of old age and to substitute positive images of aging for negative ones.
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The Age of Enlightenment 1740–1801

2002
Abstract After Peter’s death in 1725 and another fifteen years of troubled and ill-defined rule, the next six decades witnessed a self- conscious reassertion of the Petrine legacy. For the remainder of the century, indeed of the old regime, legitimacy was linked to the name and achievements of Peter, officially canonized both as the ...
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Integrative oncology: Addressing the global challenges of cancer prevention and treatment

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022
Jun J Mao,, Msce   +2 more
exaly  

Catastrophe in an Age of Enlightenment

2019
The greatest European calamity of the eighteenth century, the 1755 Lisbon earthquake is often called the “first modern disaster” in part because of the vigorously rational inquiry into its causes, which informed a self-consciously scientific post-disaster rebuilding effort. Examining responses to the Lisbon earthquake (and to the seemingly related Cape
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