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A Rose is a Rose...

The American Mathematical Monthly, 1987
PETER M. MAURER received his B.A. in mathematics in 1969 from St. Benedict's College in Atchison, Kansas. After three years of writing computer programs for the U.S. Army and five more years writing programs for the state government of Iowa, he returned to school at Iowa State University. He received his M.S. in 1979 and his Ph.D.
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Rose Is a Rose Is a Rose

Science, 2011
![Figure][1] CREDIT: THINKSTOCK A rose by any other name may smell as sweet, but duplicate scientific names—and for the rose genus, there are at least 191—are pitfalls for botanists. Now there's a solution. On 29 December 2010, a team from the Missouri Botanical Garden in St.
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‘A Rose Is a Rose Is a Rose’, but At-Risk Criteria Differ

Psychopathology, 2012
<b><i>Background:</i></b> Over the last 15 years, efforts to detect psychoses early in their prodromal states have greatly progressed; meanwhile, ultra-high risk (UHR) criteria have been the subject of such consensus that parts of them have been proposed for inclusion in DSM-5 in terms of an attenuated psychosis syndrome ...
Schultze-Lutter F   +3 more
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‘A rose is a rose is a rose’

2017
Over a century ago in 1913, the poet Gertrude Stein wrote these famous words: sometimes things are just what they are. There has been a recent debate centred around the question whether or not schizophrenia exists. Is there a brain disease that can be called schizophrenia? What difference does it make to patients how we define schizophrenia?
Vinkers, C H   +2 more
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“Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose” – what about code and law?

Computer Law & Security Review, 2018
Abstract Law and information technology are interlinked. Since Lessig's “code is law” the discussions address the viability of law in technology markets. But recently, the direction of view has changed by way of conversion; in the context of smart contracts, the notion “law is code” became prevalent.
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A rose is a rose is a rose?*

Critical Care Medicine, 2012
Jonathan E, Sevransky   +2 more
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[A rose is a rose is a rose].

Nederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde, 2018
Over a century ago in 1913, the poet Gertrude Stein wrote these famous words: sometimes things are just what they are. There has been a recent debate centred around the question whether or not schizophrenia exists. Is there a brain disease that can be called schizophrenia? What difference does it make to patients how we define schizophrenia?
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“A Rose is a Rose”

Gender & Society, 2010
Gender is perhaps the most pervasive, fundamental, and universally accepted way we separate and categorize human beings. Yet in recent years, U.S. courts and administrative state agencies have confronted a growing challenge from individuals demanding to have their gender reclassified.
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