Results for 'Lisa Scheitzer'

949 found
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  1.  43
    Road Ecology. [REVIEW]Lisa Scheitzer - 2005 - Environmental Ethics 27 (1):109-112.
  2.  59
    The Hippocratic Oath as Epideictic Rhetoric: Reanimating Medicine's Past for Its Future.Lisa Keränen - 2001 - Journal of Medical Humanities 22 (1):55-68.
    As an example of Aristotle's genre of epideictic, or ceremonial rhetoric, the Hippocratic Oath has the capacity to persuade its self-addressing audience to appreciate the value of the medical profession by lending an element of stability to the shifting ethos of health care. However, the values it celebrates do not accurately capture communally shared norms about contemporary medical practice. Its multiple and sometimes conflicting versions, anachronistic references, and injunctions that resist translation into specific conduct diminish its longer-term persuasive force. Only (...)
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  3.  41
    Truth is the Daughter of Time: The Real Story of the Nestle Case.Lisa H. Newton - 1999 - Business and Society Review 104 (4):367-395.
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  4.  42
    Limits of remote working: the ethical challenges in conducting Mental Health Act assessments during COVID-19.Lisa Schölin, Moira Connolly, Graham Morgan, Laura Dunlop, Mayura Deshpande & Arun Chopra - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (9):603-607.
    COVID-19 has created additional challenges in mental health services, including the impact of social distancing measures on care and treatment. For situations where a detention under mental health legislation is required to keep an individual safe, psychiatrists may consider whether to conduct an assessment in person or using video technology. The Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003 does not stipulate that an assessment has to be conducted in person. Yet, the Code of Practice envisions that detention assessments would (...)
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  5.  46
    Scobie Reconsidered.Lisa Crumley Bierman - 2002 - Renascence 55 (1):65-77.
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  6.  12
    Why an Alien Invasion is No Argument for Animal Rights.Lisa Kretz - 2015 - Philosophy Now 106:22-23.
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  7.  75
    The Chainsaws of Greed.Lisa H. Newton - 1989 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 8 (3):29-61.
  8.  24
    The Mark of Cain and the Jews.Lisa A. Unterseher - 2002 - Augustinian Studies 33 (1):99-121.
  9.  10
    Movement Matters! Understanding the Developmental Trajectory of Embodied Planning.Lisa Musculus, Azzurra Ruggeri & Markus Raab - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Human motor skills are exceptional compared to other species, no less than their cognitive skills. In this perspective paper, we suggest that “movement matters!,” implying that motor development is a crucial driving force of cognitive development, much more impactful than previously acknowledged. Thus, we argue that to fully understand and explain developmental changes, it is necessary to consider the interaction of motor and cognitive skills. We exemplify this argument by introducing the concept of “embodied planning,” which takes an embodied cognition (...)
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  10.  53
    Open questions and a proposal: A critical review of the evidence on infant numerical abilities.Lisa Cantrell & Linda B. Smith - 2013 - Cognition 128 (3):331-352.
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  11.  23
    The New Biologies: Epigenetics, the Microbiome and Immunities.Lisa Blackman - 2016 - Body and Society 22 (4):3-18.
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  12.  59
    Domain-specific and domain-general processes underlying metacognitive judgments.Lisa M. Fitzgerald, Mahnaz Arvaneh & Paul M. Dockree - 2017 - Consciousness and Cognition 49:264-277.
  13. Rebuttal analogy and need for cognition individual differences and rebuttal analogy in persuasive messages: Effect of need for cognition.Bryan B. Whaley, Lisa Smith Wagner, Kathleen E. Cook & Natalie Jeha - 2002 - Communication and Cognition. Monographies 35 (3-4):193-209.
     
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  14.  87
    Genetics, commodification, and social justice in the globalization era.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2001 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 11 (3):221-238.
    : he commercialization of biotechnology, especially research and development by transnational pharmaceutical companies, is already excessive and is increasingly dangerous to distributive justice, human rights, and access of marginal populations to basic human goods. Focusing on gene patenting, this article employs the work of Margaret Jane Radin and others to argue that gene patenting ought to be more highly regulated and that it ought to be regulated with international participation and in view of concerns about solidarity and the common good. (...)
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  15.  8
    Familial Coercion to Participate in Genetic Family Studies: Is There Cause for IRB Intervention?Lisa S. Parker & Charles W. Lidz - 1994 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 16 (1/2):6.
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  16.  16
    Under duress: Community and individual as solace and escape in the Middle East.Lisa Anderson - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (4):512-521.
    Examination of the fluidity of communal and individual identity in the Middle East and North Africa suggests that such identities are not stable, singular or mutually exclusive but shaped by circumstances, particularly political and economic duress. An approach that adopts the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics may be more productive in understanding identity politics in the region and in general.
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  17.  56
    The DSM, big pharma, and clinical practice guidelines: Protecting patient autonomy and informed consent.Lisa Cosgrove - 2011 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 4 (1):11-25.
    The author of this paper discusses why the issue of financial conflicts of interest in psychiatry has important public health implications for women and why FCOI complicate the informed consent process. For example, when psychiatric diagnostic and treatment guidelines are unduly influenced by industry, informed consent becomes a critical issue, because women may be assigned diagnostic labels that are not valid and may also be receiving imbalanced or even inaccurate information about their mental health treatment options. However, mere disclosure of (...)
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  18.  9
    The History of Robert Grosseteste’s Translations within the Context of 'Aristoteles Latinus'.Lisa Devriese - 2023 - Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 30 (1).
    Among his many accomplishments, Grosseteste is known for translating Greek philosophical, theological, and glossarial treatises into Latin, making them available for Latin readers. Three of these translations are nowadays studied for the Aristoteles Latinus project, which aims at making critical editions of all Greek-Latin medieval translations of Aristotle’s oeuvre. The goal of this contribution is to give an overview of the history of Robert Grosseteste’s translations of Aristotelian texts within the context of Aristoteles Latinus. The first part is devoted to (...)
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  19.  60
    Lorenzo valla and the intellectual origins of humanist dialectic.Lisa Jardine - 1977 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 15 (2):143-164.
  20. Judith Butler and the Politics of the Performative.Lisa Disch - 1999 - Political Theory 27 (4):545-559.
  21.  13
    On the potentials of interaction breakdowns for HRI.Britta Wrede, Anna-Lisa Vollmer & Sören Krach - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e49.
    How do we switch between “playing along” and treating robots as technical agents? We propose interaction breakdowns to help solve this “social artifact puzzle”: Breaks cause changes from fluid interaction to explicit reasoning and interaction with the raw artifact. These changes are closely linked to understanding the technical architecture and could be used to design better human–robot interaction (HRI).
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  22.  53
    Renegotiating Aquinas.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2015 - Journal of Religious Ethics 43 (2):193-217.
    While Roman Catholic feminist ethicists typically endorse moral realism and crosscultural standards of justice, they also have been influenced by the postmodern interrogation of abstract reason and moral universalism. As theologians writing after the Second Vatican Council, they are increasingly sensitive to the communal and ecclesial dimensions of morality and of Christian ethics, and to the integral relation of Christian faith and ethics. This essay will consider two approaches to Catholic feminist ethics that differ in the relative weight they give (...)
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  23.  51
    Contribution of transcranial oscillatory stimulation to research on neural networks: an emphasis on hippocampo-neocortical rhythms.Lisa Marshall & Sonja Binder - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  24. Building Better Societies: Promoting Social Justice in a World Falling Apart.Rowland Atkinson, Lisa Mckenzie & Simon Winlow - 2017
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  25. Critical Indigenous Philosophy: Disciplinary Challenges Posed by African and Native American Epistemologies.Jennifer Lisa Vest - 2000 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
    In this thesis, I examine recent proposals for the creation of African and Native American forms of Indigenous philosophy and show how the discussions and debates in these fields challenge the disciplinary boundaries of modern Academic Western philosophy. With regard to African philosophy, I critique the debates in the Anglophone literature, teasing out those aspects of the debates which pose substantial epistemological challenges to mainstream [Western] philosophy, focusing, in particular, on assumptions about the intersections between philosophy, culture, science, and universality (...)
     
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  26.  66
    Higher-Order Beliefs and the Undermining Problem for Bayesianism.Lisa Cassell - 2019 - Acta Analytica 34 (2):197-213.
    Jonathan Weisberg has argued that Bayesianism’s rigid updating rules make Bayesian updating incompatible with undermining defeat. In this paper, I argue that when we attend to the higher-order beliefs we must ascribe to agents in the kinds of cases Weisberg considers, the problem he raises disappears. Once we acknowledge the importance of higher-order beliefs to the undermining story, we are led to a different understanding of how these cases arise. And on this different understanding of things, the rigid nature of (...)
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  27.  30
    Biotech and Justice: Catching up with the Real World Order.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (5):34-44.
    Social policy questions in the U.S. are often framed in terms of individual rights, valorizing individual freedom and self‐determination. But this focus obscures the social and economic bases of health and disease. U.S. bioethics, as its counterparts in Africa and Asia have done, needs to restructure its philosophical framework and expand its moral criteria to consider how to define a global ethics.
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  28.  60
    The Declaration of Helsinki through a feminist lens.Lisa Eckenwiler, Dafna Feinholz, Carolyn Ells & Toby Schonfeld - 2008 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 1 (1):161-177.
    This commentary was submitted to the World Medical Association on behalf of the International Network on Feminist Approaches to Bioethics. Our submission included a description of feminist research ethics, suggestions for specific revisions to the Declaration, and elements found in other international research ethics codes that are important from a feminist perspective. Our goals were to encourage the WMA to craft a declaration that: conceptualizes issues of vulnerability in richer and more nuanced ways, resists the influence of profit motives, and (...)
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  29.  17
    Feminist Academics and the Stimulus Package: A Report from the Field.Eileen Boris & Lisa Levenstein - 2009 - Feminist Studies 35 (1):204-209.
  30.  91
    Personal epistemology in the classroom: theory, research, and implications for practice.Lisa D. Bendixen & Florian C. Feucht (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Machine generated contents note: Part I. Introduction: 1. Personal epistemology in the classroom: a welcome and guide for the reader Florian C. Feucht and Lisa D. Bendixen; Part II. Frameworks and Conceptual Issues: 2. Manifestations of an epistemological belief system in pre-k to 12 classrooms Marlene Schommer-Aikins, Mary Bird, and Linda Bakken; 3. Epistemic climates in elementary classrooms Florian C. Feucht; 4. The integrative model of personal epistemology development: theoretical underpinnings and implications for education Deanna C. Rule and (...) D. Bendixen; 5. An epistemic framework for scientific reasoning in informal contexts Fang-Ying Yang and Chin-Chung Tsai; Appendices; 6. Who knows what and who can we believe? Epistemological beliefs are beliefs about knowledge (mostly) to be attained from others Rainer Bromme, Dorothe Kienhues, and Torsten Porsch; Part III. Students' Personal Epistemology, its Development, and Relation to Learning: 7. Stalking young persons' changing beliefs about belief Michael J. Chandler and Travis Proulx; 8. Epistemological development in very young knowers Leah K. Wildenger, Barbara K. Hofer, and Jean E. Burr; 9. Beliefs about knowledge and revision of knowledge: on the importance of epistemic beliefs for intentional conceptual change in elementary and middle school students Lucia Mason; 10. The reflexive relation between students' mathematics-related beliefs and the mathematics classroom culture Erik De Corte, Peter Op 't Eynde, Fien Depaepe, and Lieven Verschaffel; 11. Examining the influence of epistemic beliefs and goal orientations on the academic performance of adolescent students enrolled in high-poverty, high-minority schools P. Karen Murphy, Michelle M. Buehl, Jill A. Zeruth, Maeghan N. Edwards, Joyce F. Long, and Shinichi Monoi; 12. Using cognitive interviewing to explore elementary and secondary school students' epistemic and ontological cognition Jeffrey A. Greene, Judith Torney-Purta, Roger Azevedo, and Jane Robertson; Part IV. Teachers' Personal Epistemology and its Impact on Classroom Teaching: 13. Epistemological resources and framing: a cognitive framework for helping teachers interpret and respond to their students' epistemologies Andrew Elby and David Hammer; 14. The effects of teachers' beliefs on elementary students' beliefs, motivation, and achievement in mathematics Krista R. Muis and Michael J. Foy; Appendices; 15. Teachers' articulation of beliefs about teaching knowledge: conceptualizing a belief framework Helenrose Fives and Michelle M. Buehl; Appendices; 16. Beyond epistemology: assessing teachers' epistemological and ontological world views Lori Olafson and Gregory Schraw; Part V. Conclusion: 17. Personal epistemology in the classroom: what does research and theory tell us and where do we need to go next? Lisa D. Bendixen and Florian C. Feucht. (shrink)
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  31.  17
    Francis Bacon: The New Organon.Lisa Jardine & Michael Silverthorne (eds.) - 2000 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    When the New Organon appeared in 1620, part of a six-part programme of scientific inquiry entitled 'The Great Renewal of Learning', Francis Bacon was at the high point of his political career, and his ambitious work was groundbreaking in its attempt to give formal philosophical shape to a new and rapidly emerging experimentally-based science. Bacon combines theoretical scientific epistemology with examples from applied science, examining phenomena as various as magnetism, gravity, and the ebb and flow of the tides, and anticipating (...)
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  32. "Playing God": Religious symbols in public places.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1995 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 20 (4):341-346.
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  33.  91
    Theology and bioethics: Should religious traditions have a public voice?Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1992 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 17 (3):263-272.
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  34.  18
    Social Media and the Politics of Small Data: Post Publication Peer Review and Academic Value.Lisa Blackman - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (4):3-26.
    Academics across the sciences and humanities are increasingly being encouraged to use social media as a post-publication strategy to enhance and extend the impact of their articles and books. As well as various measures of social media impact, the turn towards publication outlets which are open access and free to use is contributing to anxieties over where, what and how to publish. This is all the more pernicious given the increasing measures of academic value that govern the academy, and the (...)
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  35.  39
    Eigentumsrechte im Finanzsystem.Lisa Herzog - 2014 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 62 (3).
    This paper asks how property rights in the financial system can be nor- matively justified. It argues that in the current financial system, we find property rights with very different normative bases, some of which are stronger than others. In fact, there is a systematic gap between the normative priorities (which property rights deserve protection?) and the de facto priorities (which property rights are in fact protected?). I draw on the three traditional approaches for justifying property rights, along Hegelian, Lockean (...)
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  36.  23
    Bioethics, the Gospel, and Political Engagement.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2015 - Christian Bioethics 21 (3):247-261.
    The substantive center of Christian ethics is Jesus’s ministry of the kingdom or reign of God, and its preferential inclusion of the poor, the outcast, and the sinner. What defines a gospel-based bioethics is a hopeful, practical commitment to improve the health of those who are most vulnerable to illness and early death because they lack basic needs. This commitment is distinctive of Christian bioethics, if not “unique” in the sense that no other bioethical approaches or traditions share it. To (...)
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  37.  51
    Information(al) matters: Bioethics and the boundaries of the public and the private.Lisa Parker - 2002 - Social Philosophy and Policy 19 (2):83-112.
    In this essay, I argue that the way American bioethics has traditionally conceived of the distinction between public and private has given rise to some ethically problematic blind spots in its analyses to date. Furthermore, I argue that bioethics's view of the public and private spheres has reinforced a shortsighted view of bioethics's analytical sphere of influence. In particular, it has led bioethics to conceptualize issues largely from the perspective of health professionals, eschewing analyses of the problems of health and (...)
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  38.  36
    Unconscious processing of arabic numerals in unilateral neglect.Marinella Cappelletti & Lisa Cipolotti - 2006 - Neuropsychologia 44 (10):1999-2006.
  39.  26
    The future of cognitive science is pluralistic, but what does that mean?Lisa Osbeck & Saulo de Freitas Araujo - 2023 - Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia 14:11-26.
    _Abstract_: We imagine the future of cognitive science by first considering its past, which shows remarkable transformation from a field that, although interdisciplinary, was initially marked by a narrow set of assumptions concerning its subject matter. In the last decades, multiple alternative frameworks with radically different ontological and epistemic commitments (e.g., situated cognition, embodied cognition, extended mind) found broad support. We address the question of how to understand these changes, noting as logical alternatives that (1) newer approaches are not properly (...)
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  40.  39
    Set size, individuation, and attention to shape.Lisa Cantrell & Linda B. Smith - 2013 - Cognition 126 (2):258-267.
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  41.  25
    'Abortion Pill' RU 486: Ethics, Rhetoric, and Social Practice.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1987 - Hastings Center Report 17 (5):5-8.
    RU 486, an experimental drug to terminate early pregnancy, raises again the fundamental questions about the status of the early embryo: What are the morally relevant similarities and differences among contraception, early abortion and late abortion? And how does language affect both our social practices and attitudes concerning those social practices?
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  42.  55
    Catholics and Health Care.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2010 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 7 (1):29-49.
  43.  40
    Holland, Suzanne, Karen Lebacqz, and Laurie Zoloth, eds. The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2002 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 2 (3):559-562.
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  44.  32
    Myth of Religious Violence: Secular Ideology and the Roots of Modern Conflict – By William T. Cavanaugh.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2012 - Modern Theology 28 (3):561-563.
  45. On Richard McCormick.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1993 - In Allen Verhey & Stephen E. Lammers (eds.), Theological voices in medical ethics. Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co..
     
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  46.  82
    Sex, Marriage, and Community in Christian Ethics.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1983 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 58 (1):72-81.
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  47.  29
    The New Testament and Ethics: Communities of Social Change.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1990 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 44 (4):383-395.
    There is a broad recognition that moral norms are most usefully justified not as mere transcriptions of biblical rules, or even as sophisticated references to key narrative themes, but rather as coherent social embodiments of a community formed by Scripture.
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  48.  85
    Appealing to Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom.Lisa Cassidy - 2007 - Teaching Philosophy 30 (3):293-308.
    This article urges teachers of philosophy to “remember Meno’s slave boy.” In Plato’s Meno, Socrates famously uses a stick to draw figures in the dust, andMeno’s uneducated slave boy (with some prompting by Socrates) grasps geometry. Plato uses this interaction to show that all learning is, in fact, recollection. Regardless of the merits of that position, Socrates’ conversation with the slave boy is an excellent demonstration that understanding is aided by appealing to the different talents or “intelligences” of students. Similarly, (...)
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  49.  23
    Grief at Work: The Death of a Beloved Colleague Is a Loss Publicly and Privately Felt.Lisa Cassidy - 2022 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 15 (1):150-151.
    My best friend Bernard died a few weeks ago after a long illness. We worked in adjacent offices teaching philosophy at our public state college for eighteen years. Bernard could simultaneously discuss Descartes's Third Meditation and cook you the perfect souffle while tossing scraps to his miniature poodle. He was a man of deep understanding, empathy, and humor. All who knew him were blessed.But the fact that I was Bernard's colleague, and nominally his chair, means my private grief is public.One (...)
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  50.  31
    Nine Ideas for Including a Civic Engagement Theme in an Informal Logic Course.Lisa Cassidy - 2018 - American Association of Philosophy Teachers Studies in Pedagogy 4:100-115.
    A class in informal logic can be an opportunity to do more than just cover the basic material of the subject. Critical Thinking can also foster civic engagement as experiential learning—in the course’s readings, assignments, in-class activities and discussions, and tests. I favor an inclusive understanding of civic engagement: the course theme is engaging with the concerns of the civis. The argument made throughout here is that the civic engagement theme is a way of doing experiential learning in informal logic. (...)
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