Results for 'Duncan Scott'

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  1.  31
    Nutrition, fertility and steady-state population dynamics in a pre-industrial community in penrith, northern England.Susan Scott & C. J. Duncan - 1999 - Journal of Biosocial Science 31 (4):505-523.
    The effect of nutrition on fertility and its contribution thereby to population dynamics are assessed in three social groups (elite, tradesmen and subsistence) in a marginal, pre-industrial population in northern England. This community was particularly susceptible to fluctuations in the price of grains, which formed their basic foodstuff. The subsistence class, who formed the largest part of the population, had low levels of fertility and small family sizes, but women from all social groups had a characteristic and marked subfecundity in (...)
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  2.  35
    Reproductive strategies and sex-biased investment.Susan Scott & C. J. Duncan - 1999 - Human Nature 10 (1):85-108.
    Sex-biased investment in children has been explored in a historic population in northern England, 1600 to 1800, following a family reconstitution study. An examination of the wills and other available data identified three social groups: the elite, tradesmen, and subsistence farmers. The community lived under marginal conditions with poor and fluctuating levels of nutrition; infant and child mortalities were high. Clear differences were found between the social groups, and it is suggested that the elite wetnursed their daughters whereas the elite (...)
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  3.  34
    The interacting effects of prices and weather on population cycles in a preindustrial community.Susan Scott, S. R. Duncan & C. J. Duncan - 1998 - Journal of Biosocial Science 30 (1):15-32.
    The exogenous cycles and population dynamics of the community at Penrith, Cumbria, England, have been studied (1557-1812) using aggregative analysis, family reconstitution and time series analysis. This community was living under marginal conditions for the first 200 years and the evidence presented is of a homeostatic regime where famine, malnutrition and epidemic disease acted to regulate the balance between resources and population size. This provides an ideal historic population for an investigation of the direct and indirect effects of malnutrition. Throughout (...)
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  4.  47
    Interacting factors affecting illegitimacy in preindustrial northern England.Susan Scott & C. J. Duncan - 1997 - Journal of Biosocial Science 29 (2):151-169.
    Illegitimacy in a historic, single community at Penrith, Cumbria (1557–1812), has been studied using aggregative analysis, family reconstitution and time series analysis. This population was living under extreme conditions of hardship. Long, medium and short wavelength cycles in the rate of illegitimacy have been identified by time series analysis; each represents a different response to social and economic pressures. In a complex interaction of events, the peaks of the cycles in wheat prices were associated with rises in adult mortality which (...)
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  5.  40
    Town-Gown Partnerships: Experiential Exercises for Education in Social Innovation.Aimee Dars Ellis, Duncan Duke, G. Scott Erickson, Marian Brown & Katherine Oertel - 2013 - Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 24:278-283.
    Experiential education produces numerous benefits to students in terms of higher order thinking skills such as the ability to evaluate, analyze, and synthesizeinformation , engagement , and work-readiness . Partnering with community organizations provides a means to create experiential education opportunities for students. In this symposium, we discussed three examples of experiential education to promote learning around themes of sustainability, providing a brief outline of the activities, the intended outcomes, and the lessons learned from our experiences. We concluded with a (...)
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  6. We acknowledge with thanks receipt of the following titles. Inclusion in this list neither implies nor precludes subsequent.Don S. Browning, T. A. Cavanaugh, Celia Deane-Drummond, Peter Manley Scott, Malcolm Duncan, Julia A. Fleming & Stephen J. Grabill - 2007 - Studies in Christian Ethics 20:318-319.
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  7.  19
    The hero of the Waverley Novels: With new essays on Scott.Ian Duncan - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (3):460-461.
  8.  83
    Epistemic Angst: Radical Skepticism and the Groundlessness of Our Believing, by Pritchard, Duncan: Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016, pp. xv + 239, US$35. [REVIEW]Scott Aikin - 2017 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 95 (4):819-822.
  9.  22
    Rehearsing Better Worlds: Poetry as A Way of Happening in the Works of Tomlinson and MacDiarmid.Duncan Gullick Lien - 2018 - Philosophy and Literature 42 (1):185-200.
    W. H. Auden's dictum "poetry makes nothing happen" has an enduring currency in poetic criticism, quoted ad nauseam to support the view that poetic discourse must never fall subservient to political ends.1 Conventional wisdom would hold that Hugh MacDiarmid, a poet more often noted for his obstinate commitment to communism, patently failed to heed this dictum. Indeed, as Scott Lyall notes, MacDiarmid's political poems are almost never anthologized, suggesting that the poems in which MacDiarmid's political views are made explicit (...)
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  10.  35
    Dana Scott and Patrick Suppes. Foundational aspects of theories of measurement. The Journal of symbolic logic, vol. 23 no. 2 , pp. 113–128. Reprinted in Readings in mathematical psychology, Volume I, edited by R. Duncan Luce, Robert R. Bush, and Eugene Galanter, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York and London 1963, pp. 212–227. [REVIEW]Robert L. Causey - 1968 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 33 (2):287-288.
  11.  16
    Pursuing justice in Africa: competing imaginaries and contested practices.Jessica Johnson & George Hamandishe Karekwaivanane (eds.) - 2018 - Athens: Ohio University Press.
    Pursuing Justice in Africa focuses on the many actors pursuing many visions of justice across the African continent--their aspirations, divergent practices, and articulations of international and vernacular idioms of justice. The essays selected by editors Jessica Johnson and George H. Karekwaivanane engage with topics at the cutting edge of contemporary scholarship across a wide range of disciplines. These include activism, land tenure, international legal institutions, and post-conflict reconciliation. Building on recent work in sociolegal studies that foregrounds justice over and above (...)
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  12. The Question of Ethics: Nietzsche, Foucault, Heidegger.Charles E. SCOTT - 1990 - Indiana University Press.
    "... stimulating and insightful... a thoroughly researched and timely contribution to the secondary literature of ethics... " —Library Journal "His important new work establishes Scott... as one of the foremost interpreters of the Continental philosophical tradition of the US.... Necessary for anyone working in ethics or the Continental tradition." —Choice "... a provocative discourse on the consequences of the ethical in the thought of Nietzsche, Foucault, and Heidegger." —The Journal of Religion Charles E. Scott's challenging book advances the (...)
  13. Coercion.Scott Anderson - 2011 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  14.  20
    Why be good?: a historical introduction to ethics.Duncan Richter - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Plato -- Aristotle -- Christianity -- Aquinas -- Hobbes -- Hume -- Kant -- Mill -- Nietzsche -- Virtue after Nietzsche.
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  15.  64
    Folkbiology doesn't Come from Folkpsychology: Evidence from Yukatek Maya in Cross-Cultural Perspective.Scott Atran, Edilberto Ucan Ek', Paulo Sousa, Douglas Medin, Elizabeth Lynch & Valentina Vapnarsky - 2001 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 1 (1):3-42.
    Nearly all psychological research on basic cognitive processes of category formation and reasoning uses sample populations associated with large research institutions in technologically-advanced societies. Lopsided attention to a select participant pool risks biasing interpretation, no matter how large the sample or how statistically reliable the results. The experiments in this article address this limitation. Earlier research with urban-USA children suggests that biological concepts are thoroughly enmeshed with their notions of naive psychology, and strikingly human-centered. Thus, if children are to develop (...)
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  16. On not being modern: exploring historical ontology with Bruno Latour.Duncan F. Kennedy - 2020 - In Aaron Turner (ed.), Reconciling ancient and modern philosophies of history. Boston: De Gruyter.
     
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  17. What Vagueness and Inconsistency tell us about Interpretation.Scott Soames - 2011 - In Andrei Marmor & Scott Soames (eds.), Philosophical foundations of language in the law. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 31--57.
    Two Kinds of Vagueness When signing up for insurance benefits at my job, I was asked, “Do you have children, and if so are they young enough to be included on your policy?” I replied that I had two children, both of whom were over 21. The benefits officer responded, “That’s too vague. In some circumstances children of covered employees are eligible for benefits up to their 26th birthday. I need their ages to determine whether they can be included on (...)
     
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  18. (1 other version)Philosophical Analysis in the Twentieth Century.Scott Soames - 2005 - Filosoficky Casopis 53:794-798.
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  19. How Presuppositions are Inherited: A Solution to the Projection Problem.Scott Soames - 1982 - Linguistic Inquiry 13:483-545.
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  20. Aristotle’s Economic Thought.Scott Meikle - 1999 - Philosophical Quarterly 49 (195):279-281.
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  21.  35
    Aristotle on false reasoning: language and the world in the Sophistical refutations.Scott Gregory Schreiber - 2003 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Presenting the first book-length study in English of Aristotle's Sophistical Refutations, this work takes a fresh look at this seminal text on false reasoning.
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  22. (1 other version)Disjunctivism about visual experience.Scott Sturgeon - 2008 - In Adrian Haddock & Fiona Macpherson (eds.), Disjunctivism: perception, action, knowledge. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 112--143.
     
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  23.  6
    Pour un Québec vert et bleu: le virage vert, l'économie et la gouvernance.Scott McKay - 2013 - [Québec, Québec]: Presses de l'Université Laval.
    Nos societes ont evolue au cours du XXe siecle selon un mode de developpement qui n'est tout simplement pas viable a long terme et qui provoquera de graves crises environnementales. Nous faisons presentement face au defi crucial de la survie de l'humanite, nous en sommes de plus en plus conscients. Aussi, mon propos ne consistera pas a enumerer toutes les catastrophes ecologiques qui nous menacent si nous persistons dans la voie du developpement non durable. Je veux plutot soulever une serie (...)
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  24.  10
    Rome as a Guide to the Good Life: A Philosophical Grand Tour.Scott Samuelson - 2023
    "The Eternal City, Rome offers endless insights through its millennia of history, its centrality to European art and religion, and the generations of travelers that have sought it out. This book from philosopher Scott Samuelson offers readers a thinker's tour of Rome. Samuelson shows how people have made sense of Rome as a scene of human nature and then envisioned the good life-philosophers such as Lucretius and Seneca, but also poets and artists such as Horace and Caravaggio, filmmakers like (...)
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  25.  10
    Art of Not Being Governed vol. 1.James C. Scott - 2009 - Yale University Press.
    From the acclaimed author and scholar James C. Scott, the compelling tale of Asian peoples who until recently have stemmed the vast tide of state-making to live at arm’s length from any organized state society For two thousand years the disparate groups that now reside in Zomia (a mountainous region the size of Europe that consists of portions of seven Asian countries) have fled the projects of the organized state societies that surround them—slavery, conscription, taxes, corvée labor, epidemics, and (...)
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  26. Genesis of Suicide terrorism.Scott Atran - unknown
    Contemporary suicide terrorists from the Middle East are publicly deemed crazed cowards bent on senseless destruction who thrive in poverty and ignorance. Recent research indicates they have no appreciable psychopathology and are as educated and economically well-off as surrounding populations. A first line of defense is to get the communities from which suicide attackers stem to stop the attacks by learning how to minimize the receptivity of mostly ordinary people to recruiting organizations.
     
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  27. Hypothetical and Inductive Heuristics.Scott A. Kleiner - 1990 - Philosophica 45 (1):77-113.
  28. Jonathan Littell's The kindly ones : evil and the ethical limits of the post-modern narrative.Scott M. Powers - 2011 - In Evil in contemporary French and francophone literature. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
     
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  29. the Moral Logic and Growth of Suicide Terrorism.Scott Atran - unknown
    Suicide attack is the most virulent and horrifying form of terrorism in the world today. The mere rumor of an impending suicide attack can throw thousands of people into panic. This occurred during a Shi‘a procession in Iraq in late August 2005, causing hundreds of deaths. Although suicide attacks account for a minority of all terrorist acts, they are responsible for a majority of all terrorism-related casualties, and the rate of attacks is rising rapidly across the globe. During 2000–2004, there (...)
     
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  30. Dispositional Robust Virtue Epistemology versus Anti-luck Virtue Epistemology.Jesper Kallestrup & Duncan Pritchard - 2016 - In Miguel Ángel Fernández Vargas (ed.), Performance Epistemology: Foundations and Applications. New York, NY: Oxford University Press UK.
    The previous chapter offers a distinctive virtue-theoretic account of knowledge, which the chapter describes as dispositional robust virtue epistemology. It is argued that this view is ultimately untenable because it cannot accommodate what we refer to as the epistemic dependence of knowledge. This point is motivated by employing what we call an epistemic Twin Earth argument, and also by appealing to some familiar claims in the epistemology of testimony. In addition, it is claimed that there is an alternative proposal available, (...)
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  31.  46
    Measuring Global Poverty: Toward a Pro-Poor Approach.Scott Wisor - 2011 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Global poverty measurement is important. It is used to allocate scarce resources, evaluate progress, and assess existing projects, policies, and institutional designs. But given the diversity of ways in which poverty is conceived, how can we settle on a conception and measure that can be used for interpersonal and inter-temporal global comparison? -/- This book lays out the key contemporary debates in poverty measurement, and provides a new analytical framework for thinking about poverty conception and measurement. Rather than trying to (...)
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  32. A cheater-detection module? Dubious interpretations of the Wason selection task and logic.Scott Atran - unknown
    People usually fail the Wason selection task, choosing P and Q cases, when attempting to validate descriptive rules having the form “If P, then Q.” Yet they solve it, selecting P and not-Q cases, when validating deontic rules of the form “If P, then must Q.” The field of evolutionary psychology has overwhelmingly interpreted deontic versions of the selection task in terms of a naturally-selected, domain-specific social-contract or cheating algorithm. This work has done much to promote evolutionary psychology as an (...)
     
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  33. Direct reference and propositional attitudes.Scott Soames - 1989 - In Joseph Almog, John Perry & Howard Wettstein (eds.), Themes From Kaplan. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 393--419.
     
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  34. T-sentences.Scott Soames - 1995 - In Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Diana Raffman & Nicholas Asher (eds.), Modality, morality, and belief: essays in honor of Ruth Barcan Marcus. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 250--70.
     
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  35. Contextualism, Skepticism and Warranted Assertibility Manoeuvres.Duncan Pritchard - 2010 - In Joseph Campbell (ed.), Knowledge and Skepticism. MIT Press. pp. 85-104.
    Attributer contextualists maintain that the verb 'knows' is context-sensitive in the sense that the truth conditions of a sentence of the form "S knows that p" can be dependent upon the ascriber's context. One natural objection against attributer contextualism is that it confuses the impropriety of certain assertions which ascribe knowledge to agents with the falsity of those assertions. In an influential article, Keith DeRose has defended attributer contextualism against this charge by proposing constraints on what he calls "warranted assertibility (...)
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  36. Computational architecture and the creation of consciousness.Scott Brockmeier - 1997 - The Dualist 4.
     
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  37. "all Our Puzzles Will Disappear": Royce And The Possibility Of Error: "Todos os Nossos Problemas Desaparecerão": Royce e a Possibilidade de Erro.Scott Pratt - 2010 - Cognitio 11 (2).
     
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  38.  46
    (1 other version)Logic: Inquiry, Argument, and Order.Scott L. Pratt - 2009 - Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley.
    _An enlightening introduction to the study of logic: its history, philosophical foundations, and formal structures_ _Logic: Inquiry, Argument, and Order_ is the first book of its kind to frame the study of introductory logic in terms of problems connected to wider issues of knowledge and judgment that arise in the context of racial, cultural, and religious diversity. With its accessible style and integration of philosophical inquiry and real-life concerns, this book offers a novel approach to the theory of logic and (...)
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  39. Naturalizing the Bible: the shifting role of the biblical account of nature.Scott Gerard Prinster - 2019 - In Peter Harrison & Jon H. Roberts (eds.), Science Without God?: Rethinking the History of Scientific Naturalism. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
     
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  40.  22
    Michael Sohn , The Good of Recognition: Phenomenology, Ethics, and Religion in the Thought of Levinas and Ricoeur . Reviewed by.Scott Davidson - 2015 - Philosophy in Review 35 (1):44-46.
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  41.  13
    [Letters, notes, and comments].Scott Hill - 2010 - Journal of Religious Ethics 38 (1):189 - 196.
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  42.  18
    Timing, resources, and interference: Attentional modulation of time perception.Scott W. Brown - 2010 - In Anna C. Nobre & Jennifer T. Coull (eds.), Attention and Time. Oxford University Press. pp. 107--121.
  43.  36
    From Perception to Action.Blake D. Scott - 2020 - Sartre Studies International 26 (2):51-62.
    This paper re-examines the well-known problem of how it is possible to have an “intuition of absences” in Sartre’s example of Pierre. I argue that this problem is symptomatic of an overly theoretical interpretation of Sartre’s use of intentionality. First, I review Husserl’s notion of evidence within his phenomenology. Next, I introduce Sartre’s Pierre example and highlight some difficulties with interpreting it as a problem of perception. By focusing on Sartre’s notion of the project, I argue instead that the problem (...)
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  44.  18
    William Pitt, the Bank of England, and the 1797 Suspension of Specie Payments: Central Bank War Finance During the Napoleonic Wars.Scott N. Duryea - 2010 - Libertarian Papers 2:15.
    Modern military engagements are made possible by a state’s ability to easily acquire revenue. By either taking the money from its citizens via taxation, borrowing funds through bonds or loans from private financiers or other governments, or inflating the currency by issuing bank notes without the backing of specie or another commodity, Western governments wield enough power over money and banking to fund any venture. British involvement in the Napoleonic Wars was no exception to the rule. This paper examines the (...)
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  45. Authority.Scott Shapiro - 2002 - In Jules Coleman & Scott J. Shapiro (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law. New York: Oxford University Press UK.
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  46.  24
    Solid-organ transplantation in HIV-infected patients.Scott D. Halpern, Peter A. Ubel & Arthur L. Caplan - forthcoming - Center for Bioethics Papers.
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  47.  71
    Who is the God at the Heart of Suffering? An Explanation of Suffering as Caused by Natural and Moral Evil.Scott D. G. Ventureyra - 2016 - American Journal of Biblical Theology 17 (19):1-14.
    This paper will examine the problem of suffering as it arises from both moral and natural evil through a Christian philosophical and theological perspective. Suffering throughout our planet is pervasive. We all experience it in one form or another. In western culture, we are bombarded, through the media with the terrible tragedies that occur in our home country and abroad. Inevitably we ask ourselves, the following question, as Professor Ramon Martinez, probes into his book, Sin and Evil, “Why does God (...)
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  48. Preference's Progress: Rational Self-Alteration and the Rationality of Morality.Duncan Macintosh - 1991 - Dialogue 30 (1-2):3-32.
    I argue that Gauthier's constrained-maximizer rationality is problematic. But standard Maximizing Rationality means one's preferences are only rational if it would not maximize on them to adopt new ones. In the Prisoner's Dilemma, it maximizes to adopt conditionally cooperative preferences. (These are detailed, with a view to avoiding problems of circularity of definition.) Morality then maximizes. I distinguish the roles played in rational choices and their bases by preferences, dispositions, moral and rational principles, the aim of rational action, and rational (...)
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  49. What is this thing called science? a very brief philosophical overview.Michela Massimi & Duncan Pritchard - 2014 - In Philosophy and the Sciences for Everyone. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  50.  27
    Echoes of Pragmatism in India: Bhimrao Ambedkar and Reconstructive Rhetoric.Scott R. Stroud - 2019 - In Robert Danisch (ed.), Recovering Overlooked Pragmatists in Communication: Extending the Living Conversation About Pragmatism and Rhetoric. Springer Verlag. pp. 79-103.
    This study explores the pragmatist thought of the Indian politician and “untouchable” rights activity, Bhimrao Ambedkar. Ambedkar’s connection to the pragmatist tradition through John Dewey is discussed, as well as the various lines of influence that Dewey had upon his work once back in India. Beyond this general appraisal, this chapter exhaustively charts the echoes of Dewey’s words, phrases, and ideas in Ambedkar’s vital “Annihilation of Caste” text, showing that pragmatism influence his as both a source of ideas as well (...)
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