Results 251 to 260 of about 1,078,394 (297)
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Witnessed Suicides

Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1994
Suicides that take place in the presence of others have not been the topic of systematic scientific inquiry. The so‐called witnessed suicides account for a small percentage of all suicides but offer a unique view into the dynamics of self‐destructive behavior.
C P, McDowell   +2 more
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Witnessing

Nursing Science Quarterly, 2014
The author in this article explores thinking on witnessing or bearing witness from the theoretical perspectives of nursing, philosophy, Christian theology, and journalism. Although there are nuances in the meanings of witnessing and the actions involved in witnessing, all of the identified disciplines discussed the responsibility they have for bearing
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Ear witness

The Journal of Laryngology & Otology, 2000
A description is given of some aspects of the normal human auricle. The physiognomy of the auricle is different for every individual which leads to the possibility of identifying people based on their auricles. Indeed this has even led to the reading of earprints similar to fingerprints, a fact not generally known amongst ENT-specialists.
L, Feenstra, C, van der Lugt
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Witnessing Dickinson's Witnesses

Literary and Linguistic Computing, 2003
Emily Dickinson's experimental poetic compositions present exceptional challenges to the textual editor using TEI to mark up Dickinson's manuscript writings, particularly in the realm of tagging variants and versions. Focusing in particular on her use of intratextual and subtextual variant words, phrases, lines, and line groups, this paper examines ...
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Witnessing Terrorism

Journal of Sociology, 2012
Witnessing is never merely watching or seeing. Witnessing is never a passive practice. Witnessing is active, a performance, an embodied experience. Given the hypermediated nature of the contemporary social world witnessing is particularly common when practised large distances from events.
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Introduction: Witnesses to Witnessing

2011
What happens when the invisible is made visible, when knowledge relegated to society’s margins or swept under its carpet is suddenly inserted into the public domain? The iconic images of German civilians forced to view the newly liberated Nazi camps, standing at the edges of hastily dug trenches full of emaciated bodies are emblematic of an era in ...
Erica Lehrer, Cynthia E. Milton
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Jehovah’s witnesses

Emergency Nurse, 2005
Jehovah's Witnesses are known widely for believing in the absolute prohibition of accepting blood transfusions because they consider blood to be a nutrient. In emergency care settings, this can create ethical and legal dilemmas.
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Witness

Palliative and Supportive Care, 2022
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The inner witness *

The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2012
The inner witness is a mechanism that develops in response to a reasonable experience of infantile helplessness, the resulting maternal impingement and the presence of a sufficient experience of a third. Being crucial to the subject's capacity to shift between the first person and the third person of experience, it also has an essential role in coping ...
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Witness Hiding

2006
No abstract.
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