Results for ' mexicans'

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  1.  20
    Mexican philosophy for the 21st Century: relajo, zozobra, and other frameworks for understanding our world.Carlos Alberto Sánchez - 2023 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Introduction: Mexican Philosophy: What Is It and Why It Matters -- Relajo -- Nepantla -- Zozobra -- Corazonada -- Tik -- Figure of the World -- Mexistentialism.
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  2.  2
    How “Mexican Pathologies” Were Transformed into Objects of Exhibition: Museums of Pathological Anatomy in 19th-Century Mexico.Laura Cházaro-García - 2023 - Centaurus 65 (3):553-575.
    This article analyses how samples of pathological anatomies were transformed into collectible objects in 19th-century Mexico, revealing a process that involved multiple locations and the mixture of the practices of physicians, anthropologists, and amateur collectors. Historiography has focused on the Museo de Anatomía Patológica (Museum of Pathological Anatomy), an institution devoted to the training of medical students created in 1853 at the Escuela Nacional de Medicina (National School of Medicine) in Mexico City. Archival evidence shows that medical collections existed far (...)
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  3.  14
    Mexican philosophy in the 20th century: essential readings.Carlos Alberto Sánchez & Robert Eli Sanchez (eds.) - 2017 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Sanchez and Sanchez have selected, edited, translated, and introduced some of the most influential texts in Mexican philosophy, which constitute a unique and robust tradition that will challenge and complicate traditional conceptions of philosophy. The texts collected here are organized chronologically and represent a period of Mexican thought and culture that emerged from the Mexican Revolution of 1910 and which culminated in la filosofia de lo mexicano (the philosophy of Mexicanness). Though the selections reflect on a variety of philosophical questions, (...)
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  4.  6
    The Polarity of Mexican Thought.Michael A. Weinstein - 1976 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Mexican thinkers in recent generations have sought a philosophy emphasizing the ends of human activity as contrasted with one stressing means or techniques. According to Professor Weinstein's interpretation, an integrated perspective toward all aspects of the human condition characterizes Mexican philosophy and social thought, incorporating close attention to the aesthetic dimension of human experience and the tensions of human existence. The distinctive Mexican world-view provides a needed supplement to the analytical approach of North American philosophy and Marxist determinism.
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  5. Mexican Immigration Scenarios based on the South African Experience of ending Apartheid.Kim Diaz & Edward Murguia - 2008 - Societies Without Borders 3 (2):209-227.
    How can we ameliorate the current immigration policies toward Mexican people immigrating to the United States? This study re-examines how the development of scenarios assisted South Africa to dismantle apartheid without engaging in a bloody civil war. Following the scenario approach, we articulate positions taken by different interest groups involved in the debate concerning immigration from Mexico. Next, we formulate a set of scenarios which are evaluated as to how well each contributes to the well-being of the populace both of (...)
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  6.  29
    Blooming in the ruins: how Mexican philosophy can guide us toward the good life.Carlos Alberto Sánchez - 2024 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    This book introduces readers to central concepts and ideas in Mexican philosophy. Couched in stories and anecdotes from the author's life, the book offers these concepts and ideas as orientations, recommendations, or exhortation for navigating today's world. The structure and the style of the book aims at making these accessible to both specialists and non-specialist or anyone who may have had some experience with contemporary forms of marginalization, alienation, objectification, or any of the various forms of dread and accidentality familiar (...)
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  7.  2
    Accidentality? Thinking Alongside Mexican Existentialists.Carlos Alberto Sánchez, I. I. I. Roberto A. Carleo, Gregory E. Doukas & Imogen M. Sullivan - 2025 - Journal of World Philosophies 9 (2).
    _In this symposium, Roberto A. Carleo III, Gregory Doukas and Imogen M. Sullivan think alongside Carlos Alberto Sánchez about the contingency of human existence as it is understood in Mexican existentialism. They ask: Should the notion of a metaphysical substance be discarded altogether due to its misuse in the history of European philosophy? Or are there philosophical reasons to avoid ontological uncertainty by, for example, postulating the notion of a non-discrete substance? And if attempts to define human substantiality merely seek (...)
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  8. Mexican Freedom: The Ideal Of The Indigenous State.F. L. Jackson - 1997 - Animus 2:189-206.
    There is a Mexican, as well as a Canadian version of the American Dream. What drives political idealism in Mexico is less the idea of individual right, or respect for the rights of communities, than it is the 'indigenous' right of an historically oppressed people to a political culture and life wholly their own.
     
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  9.  19
    Mexican heroism.M. P. Tomassi - 2008 - Journal of Medical Ethics 34 (5):324-324.
    After two weeks in La Barca, a small dirt-lined Mexican town known for its delicious tacos and endemic salmonellosis, it seemed I was serving a prison sentence rather than my sixth-semester surgery rotation. It was almost 11:00 on another insufferably humid day and I was in the operating room. I struggled to maintain my steady contorted position as I held the patient’s abdominal cavity open with surgical retractors for the chief surgeon and the resident. I had been plagued with a (...)
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  10.  25
    The Features of the Mexican Constitution.Elena Vaitiekienė - 2009 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 115 (1):89-121.
    In Latin America there are two models of constitutions - the liberal and the most stable Constitution of the Argentine Nation, drafted in 1853, (which was discussed in our previous article) and one of the most radical, comprehensive and unstable – the Constitution of the United Mexican States of 1917. Although both of them were constructed under the model of the US constitution with the influence of Spanish and French constitutionalism and local national traditions, the Argentine constitutionalism has developed on (...)
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  11.  7
    Mexican Women's Pelves and Obstetrical Procedures: Interventions with Forceps in Late 19th-Century Medicine.Paul Kersey & Laura Cházaro - 2005 - Feminist Review 79 (1):100-115.
    This essay is an inquiry into the socio-cultural history of the use of forceps in 19th-century Mexico. It argues that the knowledge and practices that the use of such instruments implied were related to complex and controversial issues of the time regarding gender, race and national identity. In my study of operations involving forceps, I found that the adoption of medical instruments depended not only upon their supposedly greater operative efficiency but also upon the political and medical meanings attributed to (...)
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  12. The Mexican marketplace then and now.David E. Kaplan - 1965 - In Karl W. Linsenmann (ed.), Proceedings. St. Louis, Lutheran Academy for Scholarship. pp. 80--94.
  13. Beware Mexican Ruins!'One Way Street'and the Colonial Unconscious.John Kraniauskas - 2000 - In Andrew E. Benjamin & Peter Osborne (eds.), Walter Benjamin's philosophy: destruction and experience. Manchester [England]: Clinamen Press.
  14.  6
    Mexican Social Policy: Affordability, Conflict and Progress.Bruce Nord - 1993 - Upa.
    This is a largely historical study of Mexican social policy and its 20th century course to social development in such areas as income, education, health, nutrition, social safety, social security, with an emphasis on the motive forces. The overall pattern is examined in terms of affordability, rhetoric generated, and comparisons with other countries in the same stage of enhancement.
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  15. Mexican Deaths in the Arizona Desert: The Culpability of Migrants, Humanitarian Workers, Governments, and Businesses.Julie Whitaker - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 88 (S2):365 - 376.
    Since the mid-1990s, there has been a rise in the number of deaths of undocumented Mexican migrants crossing the U.S./Mexican border. Who is responsible for these deaths? This article examines the culpability of (1) migrants, (2) humanitarian volunteers, (3) the Mexican government, (4) the U.S. government, and (5) U.S. businesses. A significant portion of the blame is assigned to U.S. free trade policies and U.S. businesses employing undocumented immigrants.
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  16. The Mexican Eugenics Society: Racial Selection and Improvement.L. S. Y. Lopez-Guazo - 2001 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 221:143-152.
     
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  17.  36
    The gift of Mexican historicism.Carlos Alberto Sánchez - 2017 - Continental Philosophy Review 51 (3):439-457.
    The focus of this paper is Mexican historicism. It has three objectives: first, to introduce English-speaking readers to the nature and history of Mexican historicism; second, to defend Mexican historicism against the charges of relativism usually raised against historicism in general and “Mexican” philosophy in particular; and third, to argue for what I call the transcendental, or alternatively, “liberatory,” nature of Mexican historicism—a nature with philosophical and political consequences. The hope is that by making the clarifications and determinations made here, (...)
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  18. The Foundations of a Mexican Humanism in Emilio Uranga's Análisis del ser del Mexicano.Sergio A. Gallegos-Ordorica - 2020 - APA Newsletter on Hispanic/Latino Issues in Philosophy 20 (1):13-18.
    In this paper, I examine the humanism articulated by Jean-Paul Sartre in Existentialism is a humanism and I show that his proposal is underpinned by some problematic assumptions and biases that shape its deployment. I also argue that the Mexican philosopher Emilio Uranga offers us in his most important work, Analísis del Ser del Mexicano, some conceptual resources that allow us to articulate a humanism that does not fall prey to the problems faced by that of Sartre.
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  19. Mexican Women and the Other Side of Immigration: Engendering Transnational Ties.[author unknown] - 2010
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  20.  31
    Mexican Village: Josefina Niggli’s Border Crossing Narrative.Jadwiga Maszewska - 2018 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 8 (8):352-364.
    The paper presents Josefina Niggli, an American mid-twentieth-century writer who was born and grew up in Mexico, and her novel Mexican Village. A connoisseur of Mexican culture and tradition, and at the same time conscious of the stereotypical perceptions of Mexico in the United States, Niggli saw it as her literary goal to “reveal” the “true” Mexico as she remembered it to her American readers. Somewhat forgotten for several decades, Niggli, preoccupied with issues of marginalization, hybridization, and ambiguity, is now (...)
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  21.  20
    Mexican Regulation of Biobanks.Lourdes Motta-Murguia & Garbiñe Saruwatari-Zavala - 2016 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 44 (1):58-67.
    Biobank-based research in Mexico is mostly governed by research and data protection laws. There is no direct mention of biobanks in either statutory or regulatory law besides a requirement that the Federal Ministry of Health and a Mexican institution devoted to scientific research approve the transfer of biological materials outside of Mexico for population genetics research purposes. Such requirements are the basis of Genomic Sovereignty in Mexico, but such requirements have not prevented international collaboration. In addition, Mexican law singles out (...)
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  22. Mexican anthropology's ongoing search for identity.Esteban Krotz - 2006 - In Gustavo Lins Ribeiro & Arturo Escobar (eds.), World anthropologies: disciplinary transformations within systems of power. New York: Berg.
     
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  23.  44
    Mexican philosophy: The aesthetics of Antonio Caso.Arthur Berndtson - 1951 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 9 (4):323-329.
  24. Mexican Anarchism after the Revolution.Donald C. Hodges - 1997 - Science and Society 61 (3):432-434.
     
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  25.  48
    The Mexican Constitutions of 1824 and 1857.Marie Regina Madden - 1926 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 1 (2):311-334.
  26.  18
    Electroencephalographic Correlate of Mexican Spanish Emotional Speech Processing in Autism Spectrum Disorder: To a Social Story and Robot-Based Intervention.Mathilde Marie Duville, Luz Maria Alonso-Valerdi & David I. Ibarra-Zarate - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    Socio-emotional impairments are key symptoms of Autism Spectrum Disorders. This work proposes to analyze the neuronal activity related to the discrimination of emotional prosodies in autistic children as follows. Firstly, a database for single words uttered in Mexican Spanish by males, females, and children will be created. Then, optimal acoustic features for emotion characterization will be extracted, followed of a cubic kernel function Support Vector Machine in order to validate the speech corpus. As a result, human-specific acoustic properties of emotional (...)
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  27.  19
    The Thought and Social Engagement in the Mexican-American Philosophy of John H. Haddox: A Collection of Critical Appreciations.Carlos Alberto Sánchez & Jules Simon (eds.) - 2010 - Edwin Mellen Press.
    Thought and Social Engagement in the Mexican-American Philosophy of John H. Haddox : A Collection of Critical Appreciations.
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  28. Gloria Anzaldúa’s Mexican Genealogy: From Pelados and Pachucos to New Mestizas.Alexander Stehn & Mariana Alessandri - 2020 - Genealogy 4 (1).
    This essay examines Gloria Anzaldúa’s critical appropriation of two Mexican philosophers in the writing of Borderlands/La Frontera: Samuel Ramos and Octavio Paz. We argue that although neither of these authors is cited in her seminal work, Anzaldúa had them both in mind through the writing process and that their ideas are present in the text itself. Through a genealogical reading of Borderlands/La Frontera, and aided by archival research, we demonstrate how Anzaldúa’s philosophical vision of the “new mestiza” is a critical (...)
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  29.  55
    Mexican Martyrdom.Walter M. Langford - 1937 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 12 (1):138-140.
  30. Major trends in Mexican philosophy.Miguel León Portilla & A. Robert Caponigri (eds.) - 1966 - Notre Dame,: University of Notre Dame Press.
  31.  54
    From the mexican chiapas crisis: A different perspective for environmental ethics.Teresa Kwiatkowska-Szatzscheider - 1997 - Environmental Ethics 19 (3):267-278.
    The social unrest in Chiapas, a southern Mexican state, revealed the complexity of cultural and natural issues behind the idealized Western version of indigenous ecological ethics and its apparently universal perspective. In accordance with the conventional interpretation of traditional native beliefs, they are often pictured as alternative perspectives arising from challenges to the scientific worldview. Inthis paper, I point toward a more comprehensive account of human-environmental relation rooted in the particular type of social and natural conditions. I also discuss changes (...)
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  32.  26
    The Mexican Revolt Against Positivism.Elizabeth Flower - 1949 - Journal of the History of Ideas 10 (1):115.
  33.  7
    Subjunctive aesthetics: Mexican cultural production in the era of climate change.Carolyn Fornoff - 2024 - Nashville, Tennessee: Vanderbilt University Press.
    Subjunctive Aesthetics argues for the importance of ecocritical approaches within Mexican Studies. This monograph engages with established and up-and-coming Latin American ecocritical scholars who argue that Latin America offers an important corrective to Anglocentric approaches to the Anthropocene by foregrounding colonialism and empire.
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  34.  14
    Methodology for Setting a Mexican User Satisfaction Index for Social Programs.Odette Lobato-Calleros, Humberto Rivera, Hugo Serrato, María Elena Gómez & Ignacio Méndez Ramírez - 2015 - International Journal of Social Quality 5 (1):84-111.
    This article reports on the methodology for setting the Mexican User Satisfaction Index for Social Programs as tested in seven national social programs. The evaluation is based on Structural Equation Modeling. How satisfaction takes the central place of the SEM, which postulates its causes and effects, contributes to the increased validity and reliability of satisfaction indicators that allow benchmarking between social programs. The MUSI model is an adaptation of the American Customer Satisfaction Index model. The MUSI methodology includes qualitative and (...)
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  35.  22
    Octavio Ocampo, Mexican painter: a metamorphic look at the discourse between the local and the global.Juan Manuel Rodríguez Caso & Erica Torrens Rojas - 2022 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 44 (4):1-18.
    Art and science is an area of research that has strengthened recently, mainly due to the impact of interdisciplinary work. At the same time, approaches between the humanities and the sciences have succeeded in re-signifying traditional views towards critical positions such as postcolonialism, especially in the colonially so-called “Global South”. In this paper, we want to review the case of the work of the Mexican artist Octavio Ocampo through works that present the case of biological and cultural evolution. From this, (...)
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  36. The Mexican Contribution to the Mediterranean World.Janet Long - 1992 - Diogenes 40 (159):37-49.
    A great quantity of American plants traveled with the precious metals that arrived in Europe from New Spain after ‘1492. Some were brought over intentionally, perhaps in the hands of some Spanish Indian (Spaniards who had travelled to the New World to make their fortunes and had returned were called “Indians”) who had become accustomed to new tastes in America. Others arrived by neither will nor invitation, hidden in the nooks and crannies of the ships or mixed in with the (...)
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  37. The Mexican eugenics society.Laura Suarez Y. Lopez-Guazo - 2001 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 221:143-151.
     
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  38.  25
    A Study in Recent Mexican Thought.Risieri Frondizi - 1955 - Review of Metaphysics 9 (1):112 - 116.
    A worthy product of the growing interest on the part of North Americans in Ibero-American philosophy is Patrick Romanell's Making of the Mexican Mind: A Study in Recent Mexican Thought. This is the first book published in English, or, for that matter, in any language, on twentieth-century Mexican philosophy. The fact that Romanell's book was translated into Spanish and published in Mexico soon after the appearance of the American edition is clear proof that it is not a mere expository work (...)
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  39.  15
    Mexican Hat Modulation of Visual Acuity Following an Exogenous Cue.Orit Baruch & Liat Goldfarb - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  40.  30
    Mexican Americans and the Environment.Darren J. Ranco - 2007 - Environmental Ethics 29 (1):111-112.
  41.  21
    Contingency and commitment: Mexican existentialism and the place of philosophy.Carlos Alberto Sánchez - 2015 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Offers the first comprehensive survey of Mexican existentialism to appear in English. This book examines the emergence of existentialism in Mexico in the 1940s and the quest for a genuine Mexican philosophy that followed it. It focuses on the pivotal moments and key figures of the Hyperion group, including Emilio Uranga, Luis Villoro, Leopoldo Zea, and Jorge Portilla, who explored questions of interpretation, marginality, identity, and the role of philosophy. Carlos Alberto Sánchez was the first to introduce and emphasize the (...)
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  42. Mexican science during the cold war: An agenda for physics and the life sciences.Gisela Mateos & Edna Suárez Díaz - 2012 - Ludus Vitalis 20 (37):47-69.
  43.  22
    Honor and Virtue: Mexican Parenting in the Transnational Context.Joanna Dreby - 2006 - Gender and Society 20 (1):32-59.
    Recently, scholars have described the emotional consequences of transnational motherhood on families. Research, however, has neglected to address the lives of migrant fathers and how they compare to those of migrant mothers. This article fills the gap by analyzing the experiences of Mexican transnational mothers and fathers residing in New Jersey. Ethnographic data and interviews show that parents behave in similar ways when internationally separated from children. However, their migration patterns and emotional responses to separation differ. I show that these (...)
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  44.  17
    (1 other version)Making of the Mexican mind.Patrick Romanell - 1969 - Freeport, N.Y.,: Books for Libraries Press.
  45.  19
    The Mexican library revolution: taking books to the people.Ana María Magaloni - 1993 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 4 (2):81-83.
  46.  11
    The Mexican-American Border: Nafta and Global Linkages.Leslie J. Rockenbach - 2001 - Routledge.
    Through extensive interviewing, the author collects a vivid array of oral histories that examine the impact of NAFTA and attest to how neo-liberal reform has relentlessly impoverished Mexico's peasants and working class while decimating a fragile ecosystem.
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  47.  74
    Traditional Mexican Agricultural Systems and the Potential Impacts of Transgenic Varieties on Maize Diversity.Mauricio R. Bellon & Julien Berthaud - 2006 - Agriculture and Human Values 23 (1):3-14.
    The discovery of transgenes in maize landraces in Mexico, a center of diversity for this crop, raises questions about the potential impact of transgene diffusion on maize diversity. The concept of diversity and farmers’ role in maintaining diversity is quite complex. Farmers’ behavior is expected to have a significant influence on causing transgenes to diffuse, to be expressed differently, and to accumulate within landraces. Farmers’ or consumers’ perceptions that transgenes are “contaminants” and that landraces containing transgenes are “contaminated” could cause (...)
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  48.  7
    Key Characteristics of Mexican Spirituality.Dinorah B. Méndez - 2011 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 28 (3):206-223.
    Mexico’s religious context is diverse and complex because of its mestizo origin. The popular religiosity predominant in the country is considered a religious syncretism characterised by some salient and frequent aspects: Sense of ritual, mysticism, sacrifice, festivity and community. These elements are confirmed as outstanding traits of Mexican religiosity because they give cohesion to a very broad and plural religiosity and interact in many religious expressions. This brief analysis also reveals that there exist potential possibilities to study the process of (...)
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  49.  91
    Uncommon trajectories: steroid hormones, Mexican peasants, and the search for a wild yam.Gabriela Soto Laveaga - 2005 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 36 (4):743-760.
    This article analyzes how evolving pharmaceutical technology, chemical advances, and world politics created the need for an abundant and cheap supply of steroids, and how decisions made in faraway laboratories ultimately determined that a Mexican yam, barbasco, was the best possible raw material. Following this discovery, this article explores how barbasco’s exploitation impacted on the Mexican countryside and specifically the men and women hired to gather wild yams. In analyzing, for example, the peasant organizations that emerged, the use of chemical (...)
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  50. Mexican Philosophers of the Twentieth Century.Fernando Salmerón - 1966 - In Miguel León Portilla & A. Robert Caponigri (eds.), Major trends in Mexican philosophy. Notre Dame,: University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 247--257.
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