Results 11 to 20 of about 863 (135)
Assessment of the feed additive consisting of <i>Lactiplantibacillus plantarum</i>NCIMB 30238 and <i>Pediococcus pentosaceus</i>NCIMB 30237 (1k21008) for all animal species for the renewal of its authorisation (Volac International Ltd). [PDF]
Abstract Following a request from the European Commission, EFSA was asked to deliver a scientific opinion on the assessment of the application for renewal of authorisation of a preparation of Lactiplantibacillus plantarum NCIMB 30238 and Pediococcus pentosaceus NCIMB 30237 (1k21008) as a technological additive to improve ensiling of fresh material for ...
EFSA Panel on Additives and Products or Substances used in Animal Feed (FEEDAP) +21 more
europepmc +2 more sources
What England Is and What It Claims to Be: Orwell on National Identity
Abstract This article suggests that George Orwell's body of work offers a rather unique and insightful two‐part conception of national identity in the context of England, made up of a moral inheritance—the values of liberty, fairness and decency—and a lived sensibility—the fluid, experiential quality of collective life expressed in shared customs ...
Sam Taylor Hill
wiley +1 more source
Different BYDV‐PAV isolates exert contrasting effects on aphid fitness, including reproduction and winged production. Different BYDV‐PAV isolates have contrasting effects on aphid dispersal patterns. Aphid feeding behaviour is modulated by the presence of endosymbionts and plant viruses.
Daniel J. Leybourne +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Radical dystopia: The comic modernism of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty‐Four
Abstract The present essay turns the received view of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty‐Four on its head, arguing that Orwell's dystopian classic mobilizes the modernist techniques of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land to lampoon the ideological fatalism of Eliot and other cultural conservatives.
Magnus Ullén
wiley +1 more source
Bullshitters, Liars and Bad Teachers: The Scope of Epistemic Malevolence
ABSTRACT The aim of this paper is two‐fold. We argue against the received conception of epistemic malevolence and give a broader characterisation that, we argue, captures its real scope. We tackle the current notion of epistemic malevolence (EM) on three fronts. We claim that this notion fails to capture cases of EM that are (i) not knowledge directed (
Sam Dickson +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Contemporary epistemologists analysing knowledge take (true) propositions to be the object of knowledge. In this paper, I provide an argument for the claim that the object of knowledge is, in fact, the world. The propositions in propositional knowledge ascriptions merely describe the part of the world of which the subject is aware. Kent Bach's
Tess Dewhurst
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This article is an extended review of Jeffrey Ian Ross's student textbook, ‘Introduction to Convict Criminology’. The review tackles critical issues emerging in convict criminology and the wider lived experience movement. The review engages with various approaches taken by Ross, in particular the book's focus on his own contributions to ...
Rod Earle
wiley +1 more source
Temporal Passage in a Fragmented World
ABSTRACT Fragmentalism is a relatively recent and striking addition to the debate between tensed and tenseless theories of time. First introduced by Fine in “Tense and Reality,” it presents a rare instance of both a theoretically intriguing and novel theory of time.
Kyley Ewing
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This paper examines regional and chronological variations in Acheulean handaxe morphology during Marine Isotope Stage 11 (c. 425–365 ka BP) in Britain. Using a data set of 737 handaxes from 13 securely dated sites in East Anglia and the Thames Valley, we apply three‐dimensional geometric morphometric analysis to examine morphological ...
Mark White +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Barley yellow dwarf virus transmission assays show that virus diversity, not vector diversity, is the main driver of competency in the rose‐grain aphid. ABSTRACT Yellow dwarf viruses (YDVs) are a group of aphid‐vectored viruses that affect cereal crops and cause yellow dwarf disease.
Daniel J. Leybourne +6 more
wiley +1 more source

