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Academic Journals
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 117, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAnyone who has held a handmade book knows about the loss of the material connection to the creator--the sense that a book was made by and belonged to others. We barely feel this loss anymore because the printed text has...
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From:Humanist in Canada (Vol. 37, Issue 148) Peer-ReviewedIn the New York Review of Books (March 15, 2003), Freeman Dyson wrote: CENSUS MANIPULATION from The Ulster Humanist NO 79: ECOHUMANISM from the journal Humanism Today of the Humanist Institute, VOL 15:...
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From:Renaissance Quarterly (Vol. 57, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedErasmus's writings on marriage, such as the Praise of Marriage, the Institution of Christian Marriage, and several of the Colloquies, have long been studied from a social-intellectual perspective that focuses on their...
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From:Humanist in Canada (Issue 138) Peer-ReviewedAt the outset, I think it might be helpful if I attempt to define a couple of key words in the title, namely, what is meant by `Humanism' and `relevant.' The word `relevant' means `pertinent' or `apposite.' Pertinent or...
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From:Humanist in Canada (Issue 138) Peer-ReviewedTransforming Ourselves/ Transforming the World: An Open Conspiracy for Social Change by Brian K Murphy Fernwood Publishing, Halifax NS 1999 159pp(index) $19.95(US)sc Textbooks, for those studying social work of the...
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From:Stanford Law Review (Vol. 55, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION Lewis Carroll's Alice spied the Cheshire Cat and asked, "Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?" The Cat replied, "That depends a good deal on where you want to get to." Alice...
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From:The Midwest Quarterly (Vol. 36, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedPostmodernistcritics characterize the modernist aesthetic as an extension of the humanist philosophy in the way it attempts to represent supposedly universal human concerns. This criticism has been likened to the attack...
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From:Humanist in Canada (Vol. 29, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe term "Service" has many meanings. Here, of course, it is not used in the liturgical sense, where it generally refers to a set form of public worship. But if worship is the reverence, homage or honour paid to God,...
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From:Humanist in Canada (Vol. 30, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedErnie Schreiber holds a masters degree in English literature and is presently engaged in studies in philosophy, working toward a Ph.D. Ernie lives in Ottawa and is Past President of the Humanist Association of Canada....
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From:Forum Italicum (Vol. 51, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAbstract Il presente articolo offre una lettura analitica del De interpretatione recto di Bruni, soffermandosi su quegli aspetti peculiari del testo che lo rendono il primo manuale di traduzione apparso in Occidente...
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From:Intertexts (Vol. 23, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedIn 2017, Guadeloupean writer Maryse Conde published a peculiar novel--even a monstrous novel, we might say--that takes up one of the predominant paradigms of inhumanity today, the phenomenon of global terrorism: Le...
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From:College Literature (Vol. 42, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedFor the past generation, academic disciplines have been under attack as bastions of conservatism, the enemies of progress, and barriers to original thinking. An interdisciplinary "consilience" has been advanced as the...
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From:Journal of Thought (Vol. 47, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI wonder how long Harvard will continue its present policy of giving me first rate responsibility with second rate recognition. --Babbitt, letter to Paul Elmer More, October 9, 1910 (1) His [Charles W. Eliot's]...
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From:Biography (Vol. 35, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed... pain is a present-tense business. --Hilary Mantel, "Diary" HUMANISM IN PAIN/MEMOIRS Beginning with the premise that life narrative is less a genre than an ongoing and often contentious engagement with...
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From:Journal of Philosophy: A Cross Disciplinary Inquiry (Vol. 5, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedMy work concentrates on the literary and cultural history of Great Britain and America from 1750 to the present, which I treat as a coherent, if also dynamic and volatile, socio-historical field. In the mathematical...
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From:Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development (Vol. 45, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedA multicultural transformational pedagogy based on existential and humanistic principles is applied to counselor education. C. E. Vontress's (1979, 1985, 1988) and J. A. Banks's (1981, 1993, 1998) cross-cultural...
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From:symploke (Vol. 13, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedBut if man is to find his way once again into the nearness of Being he must first learn to exist in the nameless. In the same way he must recognize the seductions of the public realm as well as the importance of the...
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From:The Review of Metaphysics (Vol. 60, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedBlack and White and the Inverted Spectrum, JUSTIN BROACKES To the familiar idea of an undetectable spectrum inversion some have added the idea of inverted earth. This new combination of ideas is even harder to make...
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From:Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development (Vol. 43, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article compares traditional science and the "new science of possibilities" for counseling based on humanistic principles. The information age impels counselors to shift to the new paradigm because the exponential...
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From:Journal of Modern Literature (Vol. 36, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis article contextualizes Samuel Beckett's art criticism within post-war French critical debate about what constitutes "the human" Beckett announces the question as central to the period. The post-war debate traversed...