Results for 'Letters in literature. '

965 found
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  1.  15
    Ancient Epistolary Fictions: The Letter in Greek Literature.Patricia A. Rosenmeyer - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    A comprehensive look at fictive letters in Greek literature from Homer to Philostratus, first published in 2001. It includes both embedded epistolary narratives in a variety of genres, and works consisting solely of letters, such as the pseudonymous letter collections and the invented letters of the Second Sophistic. The book challenges the notion that Ovid 'invented' the fictional letter form in his Heroides and considers a wealth of Greek antecedents for the later European epistolary novel tradition. Epistolary (...)
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  2.  16
    Like letters in running water: a mythopoetics of curriculum.Mary Aswell Doll - 2000 - Mahwah, N.J.: L. Erlbaum Associates.
    Like Letters in Running Water explores ways in which fiction (prose, drama, poetry, myth, fairytale) yields transformative insights for educational theory and practice. Through a series of intensely original, powerful essays drawing on curriculum theory, literary analysis, psychology, and feminist theory and practice, Doll seeks to confront a commonly held bias that reading literary fictions is "mere" entertainment (not a learning experience). She suggests that fiction has immense teaching power because it connects readers with their alliances within themselves and (...)
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  3.  10
    Kaaf Letter in Ottoman Turkish: Classification and Articulation Issues.Reyhan Keleş - 2021 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 25 (1):195-216.
    Ottoman Turkish or Ottoman –as a mumpsimus – is basically Turkish language, over time it has been substantially influenced by Arabic and Persian. Its alphabet is based on Arabic letters. It has borrowed letters from Persian as well. Its vocabulary is essentially Turkish; however, it has borrowed words from Arabic and Persian at a substantial level. Arabic language attracted attention in mosques because it was the language of the religion, and in madrasahs because it was the language of (...)
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  4.  24
    The Humanities in Dispute: A Dialogue in Letters.Ronald W. Sousa, Professor of Portuguese Spanish and Comparative Literature Ronald W. Sousa & Joel Weinsheimer - 1998
    Disturbed by these acrimonious arguments, the authors - former colleagues and university-press board members - embarked on an ambitious project to reexamine a number of major literary and philosophical works dealing with the liberal arts and education. With their discussions ranging from Plato to Rousseau, from Cicero to Vico, from Erasmus to Matthew Arnold, Sousa and Weinsheimer offer not a history of education philosophy but an examination of the present.
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  5. The reading subject in literature for children.Anna Lukianovicz - 2005 - Annali Della Facoltà di Lettere E Filosofia. Università di Macerata 38:363-376.
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  6.  8
    Errant letters: Jacques Rancière and the philosophy of literature.Jerzy Franczak - 2023 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Jerzy Franczak comprehensively presents Jacques Rancière's thought by emphasizing the relations between politics and literature. The detailed analysis considers the context of modern aesthetics and political philosophy, which is why the book introduces further protagonists, such as Louis Althusser, Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu, or Jean-François Lyotard. Franczak first reconstructs Rancière's original philosophy of literature so as to then immediately apply it in readings of select world literature masterpieces by Gustav Flaubert, Max Jacob, Bertold Brecht, Vladimir Nabokov, and Philip Roth.
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  7.  36
    Epistolary fictions P. A. Rosenmeyer: Ancient epistolary fictions: The letter in greek literature . Pp. X + 370. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2001. Cased, £45. Isbn: 0-521-80004-. [REVIEW]Silvia Barbantani - 2002 - The Classical Review 52 (01):32-.
  8.  18
    The Catholic Revival of Letters in Holland and Belgium.A. Vanduinkerke - 1949 - Renascence 1 (2):41-48.
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  9.  12
    This side of philosophy: literature and thinking in twentieth-century Spanish letters.Stephen Gingerich - 2023 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Assesses a distinct style of thinking in twentieth-century Spanish writing, one in which literature plays a central role in reaching behind philosophy to essential sources of life and meaning.
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  10.  7
    Letter: Gaps in the literature in London medical libraries.R. B. Baker - 1975 - Journal of Medical Ethics 1 (4):196-196.
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  11.  11
    Morals and Villas in Seneca's Letters: Places to Dwell.John Henderson - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    John Henderson focuses on three key Letters visiting three Roman villas, and reveals their meaning as designs for contrasting lives. Seneca brings the philosophical epistle to Latin literature, creating models for moralizing which feature self-criticism, parody, and animated revision of myth. The Stoic moralist wrests writing away from Greek gurus and texts, and recasts it into critical thinking in Latin terms, within a Roman context. The Letters embody critical thinking on metaphor and translation, self-transformation and cultural tradition.
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  12.  19
    Newman in Twentieth-Century American Literature: Fitzgerald, Lewis, and O’Connor.James M. Pribek - 2009 - Newman Studies Journal 6 (1):5-19.
    This essay traces Newman’s rich legacy in modern American literature in the writings of three prominent American writers of the last century: F. Scott Fitzgerald, who plays off of Newman’s definition of a gentleman in his The Beautiful and Damned ; Sinclair Lewis, who connects the figure of Carlyle Vesper to Newman in Gideon Planish ; and Flannery O’Connor, who mentioned Newman in four published letters, and whose artistic vision was shaped appreciably by Newman’s Apologia and his Grammar of (...)
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  13.  33
    CEO letters: Social license to operate and community involvement in the mining industry.Blanca de‐Miguel‐Molina, Vicente Chirivella‐González & Beatriz García‐Ortega - 2018 - Business Ethics: A European Review 28 (1):36-55.
    This paper aims to analyse how the discourse of CEO letters and other factors influence community involvement and Social Licence to Operate (SLO) in the mining industry. The analysis is based on qualitative information disclosed in sustainability reports and CEO letters from 32 mining firms. Content analysis was undertaken to obtain data for the study, and then a regression analysis and a multiple correspondence analysis were used to test the hypotheses defined in the study. The results indicate that (...)
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  14.  34
    "Our place in al-Andalus": Kabbalah, philosophy, literature in Arab Jewish letters.Gil Anidjar - 2002 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    The year 1492 is only the last in a series of “ends” that inform the representation of medieval Spain in modern Jewish historical and literary discourses. These ends simultaneously mirror the traumas of history and shed light on the discursive process by which hermetic boundaries are set between periods, communities, and texts. This book addresses the representation of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries as the end of al-Andalus (Islamic Spain). Here, the end works to locate and separate Muslim from Christian (...)
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  15.  12
    Wm & H'ry: Literature, Love, and the Letters Between William and Henry James.J. C. Hallman - 2013 - University of Iowa Press.
    Readers generally know only one of the two famous James brothers. Literary types know Henry James; psychologists, philosophers, and religion scholars know William James. In reality, the brothers’ minds were inseparable, as the more than eight hundred letters they wrote to each other reveal. In this book, J. C. Hallman mines the letters for mutual affection and influence, painting a moving portrait of a relationship between two extraordinary men. Deeply intimate, sometimes antagonistic, rife with wit, and on the (...)
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  16.  5
    Love, Language and Literature in Simone de Beauvoir's A Transatlantic Love Affair. Letters to Nelson Algren.Adrian van den Hoven - 2001 - Simone de Beauvoir Studies 17 (1):118-128.
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  17.  39
    CEO letters: Social license to operate and community involvement in the mining industry.Blanca de-Miguel-Molina, Vicente Chirivella-González & Beatriz García-Ortega - 2018 - Business Ethics 28 (1):36-55.
    This paper aims to analyse how the discourse of CEO letters and other factors influence community involvement and Social Licence to Operate (SLO) in the mining industry. The analysis is based on qualitative information disclosed in sustainability reports and CEO letters from 32 mining firms. Content analysis was undertaken to obtain data for the study, and then a regression analysis and a multiple correspondence analysis were used to test the hypotheses defined in the study. The results indicate that (...)
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  18.  30
    Letters and writing in ancient Rome - (s.A.) Frampton empire of letters. Writing in Roman literature and thought from lucretius to ovid. Pp. XIV + 206, ills. New York: Oxford university press, 2019. Cased, £47.99, us$74. Isbn: 978-0-19-091540-7. [REVIEW]T. E. Franklinos - 2020 - The Classical Review 70 (2):392-394.
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  19.  74
    Structure and Functions of the Title in Literature.Gérard Genette & Bernard Crampé - 1988 - Critical Inquiry 14 (4):692-720.
    Wishing to contribute to the brief history of title science, I would argue that the difference in terminology between “secondary title” and “subtitle” is too weak for the mind to grasp; and since, as Duchet has noted, the principal feature of his “subtitle” is to contain a more or less explicit generic indication, it would be simpler and more vocative to rebaptize it as such, thereby freeing the term “subtitle” to resume its usual present meaning. Hence these three terms: “title” (...)
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  20. Imago sui in Seneca's Letters to Lucilius.Elena Urbancova - 2010 - Filozofia 65 (3):249-256.
    The aim of the paper is to examine Seneca’s self-portrait as depicted in his Letters to Lucilius. The first part deals with the place this collection of letters occupies in the context of ancient epistolary literature. It shows how it contributed to the introspective character of ancient philosophical prose. Introspection as a method of self-knowledge and self-creation is analyzed in the second part. The resulting vision of the identity of the author of Letters is neither unified, nor (...)
     
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  21.  23
    The puritan and the cynic: moralists and theorists in French and American letters.Jefferson Humphries - 1987 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Why do Americans, and so often, American writers, profess moral sentiments and yet write so little in the traditionally "moralistic" genres of maxim and fable? What is the relation between "moral" concerns and literary theory? Can any sort of morality survive the supposed nihilism of deconstruction? Jefferson Humphries undertakes a discussion of questions like these through a comparative reading of the ways in which moral issues surface in French and American literature. Humphries takes issue with the "amoral" view of deconstruction (...)
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  22.  23
    Phenomenology to the Letter: Husserl and Literature.Philippe P. Haensler, Kristina Mendicino & Rochelle Tobias (eds.) - 2020 - Boston: De Gruyter.
    Regarding philosophical importance, Edmund Husserl is arguably "the" German export of the early twentieth century. In the wake of the linguistic turn of the humanities, however, his claim to return to the "Sachen selbst" became metonymic for the neglect of language in Western philosophy. This view has been particularly influential in post-structural literary theory, which has never ceased to attack the supposed "logophobie" of phenomenology. "Phenomenology to the Letter. Husserl and Literature" challenges this verdict regarding the poetological and logical implications (...)
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  23.  10
    Writing letters and chronography in parallel: the case of Michael Glykas’ letter collection and Biblos Chronike in the 12th century.Eirini-Sophia Kiapidou - 2020 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 113 (3):837-852.
    This paper focuses on the 12th-century Byzantine scholar Michael Glykas and the two main pillars of his multifarious literary production, Biblos Chronike and Letters, thoroughly exploring for the first time the nature of their interconnection. In addition to the primary goal, i. e. clarifying as far as possible the conditions in which these two works were written, taking into account their intertextuality, it extends the discussion to the mixture of features in texts of different literary genre, written in parallel, (...)
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  24. The Letter Killeth: The «Pli» of Death in Jean-Paul Marat's Epistolary Novel.To Beebee - 1992 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 21 (3):217-241.
     
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  25.  14
    Moral education for women in the pastoral and Pythagorean letters: philosophers of the household.Annette Bourland Huizenga - 2013 - Boston: Brill.
    "Huizenga examines the Greco-Roman moral-philosophical 'curriculum' for women by comparing these two epistolary collections. The analysis is organized around four elements: textual resources, teachers and learners, instructional strategies, and subject matter. Huizenga shows that the author of the Pastorals has adopted nearly all of the 'pagan' aspects of this curriculum, but has supplemented these with theological justifications drawn from Pauline literature and traditions"--Publisher description.
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  26.  50
    Dialogues, notes, essays, letters and diaries. An analytical proposal regarding the contribution of literature to the society of knowledge.Emanuele Coco - 2009 - Axiomathes 19 (4):401-415.
    The need for European citizens to be more involved in scientific research has emerged from the conclusions of the studies commissioned by the EC and by independent bodies. In the first part of this contribution, I will discuss the question of whether a dialogue between society and science is desirable. I will attempt to claim that at least one of the reasons why the dialogue between science and society should be defended has been underestimated in the course of most of (...)
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  27.  12
    Love Itself: In the Letter Box.H.?L.?ne Cixous - 2008 - Polity.
    Love's memories, love recalling itself in letters lost and found over an interval of forty years: Cixous's writer-narrator advances here far into a labyrinth of passions long ago delivered and yet still arriving through the mail, through letters and literature, in other words, the poetry of the post. As for the lovers' returning scenes, they have their addresses in Paris and in New York, but also in a lost oasis of the Egyptian desert during the Napoleonic wars, in (...)
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  28. Letter of relationship of parties in the reformulation of a canon.Luis Antonio Bedoya Morera - 2024 - ÍSTMICA Revista de la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras 1 (35).
    Se exponen rasgos particulares de la Relación de la fiesta de proclamación de Luis I en la ciudad de Cartago, Costa Rica (1725) que la separan del aparato prescriptivo aplicado a este tipo de documentos. Además, el comentario ha querido leer en estas irregularidades elementos de literariedad interesantes al análisis. Paralelamente, se reflexiona sobre las cuestiones de géneros literarios y de la admisión en el canon tradicional de obras de la cultura letrada, escritas durante la Colonia centroamericana. Estos rasgos particulares (...)
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  29. Letter from the Editor-in-Chief of Polis.Thornton Lockwood - 2020 - Polis 37 (1):1-2.
    It gives me great pleasure and honor to introduce myself as the incoming Editor-in-Chief of Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek and Roman Political Thought. For the last decade I have served as an Associate Editor and the Book Review Editor of the journal. I am very excited about charting new paths for the journal, while continuing to publish first-rate scholarship in our area strengths. Although ‘polis’ is a Greek word that identifies a specific Greek historical political institution, in many (...)
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  30.  36
    Science and Literature The Lay of the Land. Metaphor as Experience and History in American Life and Letters. By Annette Kolodny. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1975. Pp. xiv + 186. No price stated. [REVIEW]Roy Porter - 1978 - British Journal for the History of Science 11 (2):178-179.
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  31.  38
    The Substitutional Paradox in Russell's 1907 Letter to Hawtrey [see corrected reprint in next issue].Bernard Linsky - 2002 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 22 (1):47-55.
    This note presents a transcription of Russell's letter to Hawtrey of 22 January 1907 accompanied by some proposed emendations. In that letter Russell describes the paradox that he says "pilled" the "substitutional theory" developed just before he turned to the theory of types. A close paraphrase of the derivation of the paradox in a contemporary Lemmon-style natural deduction system shows which axioms the theory must assume to govern its characteristic notion of substituting individuals and propositions for each other in other (...)
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  32. EARLY MODERN GREEK LITERATURE - (T.) Korhonen To the Glory that was Greece. Ideas, Ideals and Practices in Composing Humanist Greek during the Seventeenth Century. (Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum 143.) Pp. vi + 411, ill. Helsinki: The Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters, 2022. Paper, €30. ISBN: 978-951-653-488-9. [REVIEW]Raf Van Rooy - forthcoming - The Classical Review:1-3.
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  33.  37
    The Substitutional Paradox in Russell's 1907 Letter to Hawtrey [corrected reprint].Bernard Linsky - 2002 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 22 (2).
    This note presents a transcription of Russell's letter to Hawtrey of 22 January 1907 accompanied by some proposed emendations. In that letter Russell describes the paradox that he says "pilled" the "substitutional theory" developed just before he turned to the theory of types. A close paraphrase of the derivation of the paradox in a contemporary Lemmon-style natural deduction system shows which axioms the theory must assume to govern its characteristic notion of substituting individuals and propositions for each other in other (...)
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  34. Academic Illusions in the Field of Letters and the Arts a Survey, a Criticism, a New Approach, and a Comprehensive Plan for Reorganizing the Study of Letters and Arts.Martin Schütze - 1933 - University of Chicago Press.
  35. (1 other version)Academic illusions in the field of letters and the arts.Martin Schütze - 1933 - Chicago, Ill.,: The University of Chicago press.
    pt. I. Metaphysical theories.--pt. II. Factualism.--pt. III. A new approach.
     
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  36.  25
    Österreichische Literatur in der Zeitschrift Wiadomości Literackie in der Zwischenkriegszeit.Elżbieta Hurnikowa - 2016 - International Studies. Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal 18 (1):9-32.
    The article is devoted to reception of Austrian literature before the Second World War in Wiadomości Literackie. It was the most popular letter, whose aim was to educate society, and popularize foreign literature and culture. The literature that was most often promoted was French literature, but also German-speaking authors were discussed. Austrian literature was not treated as distinct from German literature during that time but nontheless, the articles presents artists, of Austrian origin: Joseph Roth, Stefan Zweig, Rainer Maria Rilke, Hugo (...)
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  37.  23
    The Gift of Death, Second Edition & Literature in Secret.Jacques Derrida - 2008 - University of Chicago Press.
    The Gift of Death, Jacques Derrida’s most sustained consideration of religion, explores questions first introduced in his book Given Time about the limits of the rational and responsible that one reaches in granting or accepting death, whether by sacrifice, murder, execution, or suicide. Derrida analyzes Czech philosopher Jan Patocka’s Heretical Essays in the Philosophy of History and develops and compares his ideas to the works of Heidegger, Lévinas, and Kierkegaard. One of Derrida’s major works, The Gift of Death resonates with (...)
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  38.  51
    The Letter and the “Thing” in Femininity.Lucie Cantin - 1990 - American Journal of Semiotics 7 (3):35-41.
  39. Janglican: National literatures in the age of globalization.Ihab Hassan - 2010 - Philosophy and Literature 34 (2):271-280.
    In Finnegans Wake, the uncouth portmanteau word "Janglish" suggests a jangled kind of English. Joyce, of course, lived and died before that other uncouth word, "globalization," rode the waves of cyberspace. By resorting to a dubious conceit, I use "Janglican" to invoke American letters on the tongue of writers like Junot Diaz, Amy Tan, Aleksander Hemon, Ha Jin, Jhumpa Lahiri, Chang-rae Lee, among many others (including this writer, who speaks every language with an accent, a literary feat of sorts.)There's (...)
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  40.  11
    From Illiteracy to Literature: Psychoanalysis and Reading.Anne-Marie Picard - 2016 - Routledge.
    _From Illiteracy to Literature_ presents innovative material based on research with ‘non-reading’ children and re-examines the complex relationship between psychoanalysis and literature, through the lens of the psychical significance of reading: the forgotten adventure of our coming to reading. Anne-Marie Picard draws on two specific fields of interest: firstly the wish to understand the nature of literariness or the "literary effect", i.e. the pleasures we derive from reading; secondly research on reading pathologies carried out at St Anne’s Hospital, Paris. The (...)
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  41.  14
    Kierkegaard and the Challenges of Infinitude: Philosophy and Literature in Dialogue.José M. Justo (ed.) - 2012 - Lisboa: Centro de Filosoaia da Universidade de Lisboa.
    Kierkegaard and the Challenges of Infinitude brings together a number of essays culminating the scientific events held during the duration of a project devoted to the translation and study of works by Søren Kierkegaard, which has been sponsored by the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (PTDC/FIL/FIL/100.281/2008). The essays reunited here had their first versions delivered at an International Conference held in October 25-26th, 2012, under the auspices of the Centro de Filosofia da Universidade de Lisboa (Philosophy Centre of (...)
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  42.  36
    Laclos' Purloined Letters.Françoise Meltzer - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (3):515-529.
    The role of the reader is central to the epistolary genre because the letters anticipate a reader within the novel's framework. There is the letter's intended recipient , the occasional interceptor, the invented publisher and/or editor who organize the collected correspondence, and the extrafictional reader who reads the collection in its entirety, including the disclaiming or condemning prefaces which precede it. The epistolary form, however, with so many layers of readers, considerably complicates the issue of reader response. If we (...)
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  43.  32
    Erotic Liberalism: Women and Revolution in Montesquieu's Persian Letters.Diana J. Schaub - 1995 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    A treatment of Montesquieu's Persian Letters, which argues that the novel is a philosophic critique of despotism in all its forms: domestic, political and religious. It shows that Montesquieu believed that the Enlightenment failed as a philosophy by not recognising man as an erotic being.
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  44.  14
    From Beast-machine to Man-machine: Animal Soul in French Letters from Descartes to La Mettrie.Leonora Cohen Rosenfield - 1968 - Oxford University Press.
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  45.  13
    Outflying Philosophy: A Literary Study of the Religious Element in the Poems and Letters of John Donne and in the Works of Sir Thomas Browne and of Henry Vaughan the Silurist, Together with an Account of the Interest of These Writers in Scholastic Philosophy, in Platonism and in Hermetic Physics, with Also Some Notes on Witchcraft.Robert Sencourt - 1925 - New York: Haskell House.
    A study of the effect of mysticism & theology on the philosophy & the works of three noteworthy 17th century poets: Donne, Browne & Vaughan.
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  46.  17
    Letters to His Wife.Martin Heidegger - 2010 - Polity.
    'There is something absolute about the letters between you & me; … The letter is a form of communion of the soul-spirit – … one that is faded & yet unimpeded, complete’, wrote Martin Heidegger to his fiancée Elfride Petri shortly before their wedding. In the course of a marriage that lasted almost sixty years Martin and Elfride were often apart, and the letter thus remained a vital means of communication right through to the final years. The letters (...)
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  47. Duplicate publication and 'paper inflation' in the fractals literature.Ronald N. Kostoff, Dustin Johnson, J. Antonio Ridelo, Louis A. Bloomfield, Michael F. Shlesinger, Guido Malpohl & Hector D. Cortes - 2006 - Science and Engineering Ethics 12 (3).
    The similarity of documents in a large database of published Fractals articles was examined for redundancy. Three different text matching techniques were used on published Abstracts to identify redundancy candidates, and predictions were verified by reading full text versions of the redundancy candidate articles. A small fraction of the total articles in the database was judged to be redundant. This was viewed as a lower limit, because it excluded cases where the concepts remained the same, but the text was altered (...)
     
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  48.  16
    The influence of Marsilio Ficino (1433-1494) on Elizabethan literature: Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare.Thomas O. Jones - 2013 - Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press.
    These two volumes are the first extensive study of the influence of Marsilio Ficino on major English poets. Ficino lived in Florence, Italy from 1433 to 1499. He introduced Plato to the Renaissance by his translations of the philosopher's complete works with detailed commentary. He wrote important works on astrology, a multi-volume work on Platonic Theology, and hundreds of brilliant public letters on a variety of subjects.
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  49.  36
    Christian Apologetic Literature as Source from Antiquity in Grotius’s De Veritate Religionis Christianae.Silke-Petra Bergjan - 2007 - Grotiana 35 (1):32-52.
    _ Source: _Volume 35, Issue 1, pp 32 - 52 In the 1630s, Grotius was engaged in extensive reading of patristic texts. From his involvement with these texts come the numerous and sometimes extensive quotations from patristic texts in the Annotata of De veritate religionis Christianae, which accompanied the work starting in 1640. Grotius was particularly interested in the apologetic literature of the ancient Church, which can also be seen in his correspondence. Strikingly, Grotius cites individual passages from texts that (...)
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  50.  11
    Complete Letters.Pliny the Younger - 2009 - Oxford University Press UK.
    'Gaius Pliny sends greetings to his friend Septicius Clarus...' In these letters to his friends and relations, Pliny provides a fascinating insight into Roman life in the period 97 to 112 AD. Part autobiography, part social history, they document the career and interests of a senator and leading imperial official whose friends include the historians Tacitus and Suetonius. Pliny's letters cover a wide range of topics, from the contemporary political scene to domestic affairs, the educational system, the rituals (...)
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