Handling Everyday Life: An Analysis of Ordinary Acting
ABSTRACT What does it mean to shape one's own everyday life and to be the author of one's ordinary acting with all its repetitions, anchored habits and well‐known practices? In this paper, I argue that moral philosophy should pay more attention to human agency in quotidian contexts.
Johannes Müller‐Salo
wiley +1 more source
The development of a low-cost photometric-stereo-based material scanner. [PDF]
Wu L, Morosi F, Caruso G.
europepmc +1 more source
Diffuse reflection and reciprocity-protected transmission via a random-flip metasurface. [PDF]
Chu H +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
Finding Stars: Mapping the Geography of the World's Scientific Elites
Short Abstract Scientific excellence is clustering ever more tightly in a few ‘superstar’ cities. Four—New York, Boston, London and the San Francisco Bay Area—now host 12% of the world's top scientists. In contrast, the Global South remains largely absent, with the notable exception of Beijing's dramatic rise.
Andrés Rodríguez‐Pose +2 more
wiley +1 more source
A novel standardized test system to evaluate dynamic visual acuity post trifocal or monofocal intraocular lens implantation: a multicenter study. [PDF]
Ren X +9 more
europepmc +1 more source
Fossil Hegemony and Capitalist Realism in Tropic of Orange
ABSTRACT This article examines Karen Tei Yamashita's Tropic of Orange (1997) through the lens of Mark Fisher's influential concept ‘capitalist realism’. Scholars of petrofiction have pointed to a political ambivalence in the representation of fossil fuels, where a better understanding of fossil capital can overwhelm as much as galvanize.
Claire Ravenscroft
wiley +1 more source
Universal and economical experimental platform for colloidal mixing lab-on-chip in parabolic flight. [PDF]
Seehanam S +10 more
europepmc +1 more source
'The other is the neighbour':The limits of dignity in Caryl Philips’s A Distant Shore [PDF]
Farrier, David
core
Contested heritage landscapes for Arabic language learning in a postcolonial France
Abstract This article analyzes the contested and multiple meanings of “heritage” that emerge for advanced Arabic language learners in a postcolonial France. A linguistic life histories approach reveals a fraught duality of privileged access and exclusionary adversity for heritage students of Arabic.
Chantal Tetreault +2 more
wiley +1 more source

