Results 11 to 20 of about 168,943 (310)
The Passions of Christ in the Moral Theology of Thomas Aquinas: An Integrative Account [PDF]
In recent scholarship, moral theologians and readers of Thomas Aquinas have shown increasing sensitivity to the role of the passions in the moral life.
Clem, Stewart
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Desiring and critiquing humanity/ability/personhood : disrupting the ability/disability binary [PDF]
The authors take up the challenge of Goodley and Runswick-Cole’s call to dismantle the ability/disability binary such that those now called ‘disabled’ can unproblematically join the ranks of those who will be counted as human.
Daelman, Silke +5 more
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Marvell’s Re-imagining of Anthropocentric Architecture in “Upon Appleton House”
Marvell initiates the dynastic mythology that he fashions around Sir Thomas Fairfax in Upon Appleton House by re-imagining the concept widely known to early modern readers from Vitruvius’s De Architectura.
Derek Hirst
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Fallen comrades? Anthropological analysis of human remains from the siege of Turin, 1706 [PDF]
The construction of an underground car park beneath the main square of Turin, Italy in 2004 led to the unearthing of the skeletonised remains of twenty-two individuals attributable to the early eighteenth century. At this time the city was besieged during the War of the Spanish Succession in a
Martina Mercinelli, Martin J. Smith
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Herbert McCabe wrote extensively about the classical topics of Christology, although his writings are scattered in many short texts. As for Incarnation, he holds both Bultmann’s demythologisation and De Lubac’s supernatural.
F. Manni
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The effect of decreasing human activity from
AbstractIn 2020, a lockdown was implemented in many cities around the world to contain the COVID‐19 pandemic, resulting in a significant cessation of human activity which have had a variety of impacts on wildlife. But in many cases, due to limited pre‐lockdown information, and there are limited studies of how lockdowns have specifically affected ...
Shigeru Osugi +5 more
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The paper takes its title from a lecture given by T.S. Eliot in 1950, in which he pointed out the lessons Dante had taught him. In fact Dante remains Eliot’s chief model and point of reference throughout his work.
Massimo Bacigalupo
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Abstract The presence of scattered prehistoric human bones in caves and sinkholes is common in many regions of Iberia. These are usually interpreted as erratic elements coming from burial contexts, usually collective associations. These burial contexts are very frequent in karst areas of the Iberian Peninsula since the Early Neolithic ...
Rafael M. Martinez-Sanchez +12 more
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Ibsen’s Evangelical Detective: Evidence and Proof in The Wild Duck
: The forensic language in The Wild Duck—its emphasis on the search for “proof” and “evidence” in uncovering a number of putative crimes and misdemeanours—relates the play to the Detective Fiction genre of the late nineteenth-century ...
Errol Durbach
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Optimisme yang Tidak Menjanjikan: Kajian terhadap Transhumanisme dari Perspektif Antropologi Kristen
An Unpromising Optimism: Examining Transhumanism from a Christian Anthropological Perspective. Transhumanism is a cultural and philosophical movement that sees humans as having the right and morphological freedom to evolve towards a posthuman state by
Wendy Wendy, David Alinurdin
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