Results for 'Redding S. Sugg'

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  1.  41
    Hume's search for the key with the leathern thong.Redding S. Sugg - 1957 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 16 (1):96-102.
  2.  19
    Fit to Perform: A Profile of Higher Education Music Students’ Physical Fitness.Liliana S. Araújo, David Wasley, Emma Redding, Louise Atkins, Rosie Perkins, Jane Ginsborg & Aaron Williamon - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  3.  27
    The observation of vacancy sources in metals.R. S. Barnes, G. B. Redding & A. H. Cottrbll - 1958 - Philosophical Magazine 3 (25):97-99.
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  4.  79
    Hegel's Hermeneutics.Paul Redding - 1996 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    An advance on recent revisionist thinking about Hegelian philosophy, this book interprets Hegel's achievement as part of a revolutionary modernization of ...
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  5.  43
    Fit to Perform: An Investigation of Higher Education Music Students’ Perceptions, Attitudes, and Behaviors toward Health.Liliana S. Araújo, David Wasley, Rosie Perkins, Louise Atkins, Emma Redding, Jane Ginsborg & Aaron Williamon - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8:285375.
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  6. Ācārya Nāgārjunuḍu.Annapareḍḍi Veṅkaṭēśvara Reḍḍi - 2007 - Haidarābādu: Misimi Pablikēṣans.
    On life and philosophy of Nāgārjuna, 2nd century Buddhist philosopher; includes a portion on Buddhism.
     
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  7. Wisdom, Christology, and Law in Matthew's Gospel.M. Jack Suggs - 1970
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  8.  40
    (1 other version)Fichte’s Role in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit, Chapter 4.Paul Redding - 2023 - Journal of Philosophical Investigations 17 (45):11-28.
    In this paper I return to the familiar territory of the Lord-Bondsman "dialectic" in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit in order to raise the question of the relation of Hegel's use of the theme of recognition there to Fichte's. Fichte had introduced the notion of recognition in his Foundations of Natural Right, to "deduce" the social existence of humans within relations of mutual recognition as a necessary condition of their very self-consciousness. However, there it also functioned as part of a solution (...)
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  9.  34
    Conceptual harmonies: the origins and relevance of Hegel's logic.Paul Redding - 2023 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Supporters of G.W.F. Hegel's philosophy have largely shied away from relating his logic to modern symbolic or mathematical approaches. While it has predominantly been the non-Greek discipline of algebra that has informed modern mathematical logic, philosopher Paul Redding argues that the approaches of Plato and Aristotle to logic were deeply shaped by the arithmetic and geometry of classical Greek culture. And by ignoring the fact that Hegel's logic also has this deep mathematical dimension, conventional Hegelians have missed some of (...)
  10.  43
    Intuitionist and Classical Dimensions of Hegel’s Hybrid Logic.Paul Redding - 2023 - History and Philosophy of Logic 44 (2):209-224.
    1. Does Hegel’s The Science of Logic (Hegel 2010) have any relation to or relevance for what is now known as ‘the science of logic’? Here a negative answer is as likely to be endorsed by many conte...
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  11. Hegel’s Anticipation of the Early History of Analytic Philosophy.Paul Redding - 2010 - The Owl of Minerva 42 (1/2):18–40.
    Putting it very crudely, it might be said that in the much discussed opening three chapters that make up the section “Consciousness” of his Phenomenology of Spirit Hegel sketches and “test-drives” various models for a consciousness able to experience and know the world.1 Kant had thought of objects of experience as necessarily having conceptual (as well as spatio-temporal) form, but non-conceptual (“intuitional”) content. But for Hegel, that objects show themselves to have a conceptual form emerges as one the first lessons (...)
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  12. The Role of Logic "Commonly So Called" in Hegel's Science of Logic.Paul Redding - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (2):281-301.
    This paper examines Hegel’s accounts of the nature of judgements and inferences in the ‘subjective logic’ of the Science of Logic, and does so in light of the history of the tradition of formal logic to his time. It is argued that, contrary to the attitude often displayed by interpreters of Hegel’s logic, it is important to understand the positive role played by formal logic, ‘logic commonly so called’, in Hegel’s own conception of logic. It is argued that Hegel’s own (...)
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  13.  17
    Hegel’s (Anticipated) Answer to Peirce’s Stalled Critique of Cantor’s Analytic Continuum.Paul Redding - 2024 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 14 (2):479-507.
    Although Hegel is generally not known as a philosopher of mathematics, he maintained a deep interest in the history of mathematics, especially in its transformations between antiquity and the modern age. Charles S. Peirce, who was the son of a distinguished mathematician and was involved in developments in mathematics in the second half of the nineteenth century, was critical of what he perceived as Hegel’s lack of mathematical acumen. Nevertheless, he recognized in Hegel’s Science of Logic structural features of his (...)
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  14.  22
    Robert Pippin’s Hegel as an Analytically Approachable Philosopher.Paul Redding - 2018 - Australasian Philosophical Review 2 (4):355-364.
    Volume 2, Issue 4, December 2018, Page 355-364.
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  15. (1 other version)Some Metaphysical Implications of Hegel's Theology.Paul Redding - 2012 - European Journal for the Philosophy of Religion 4 (1):139–150.
    Hegel makes claims about the relation of philosophy to religion that might raise concerns for those who want to locate his philosophy generally within the modern enlightenment tradition. For example, at the outset of his Lectures on Aesthetics he claims that philosophy “has no other object but God and so is essentially rational theology”.1 What might seem to placate worries here is that Hegel of course differentiates between the forms of religious and philosophical cognition in which such a content is (...)
     
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  16.  29
    Hegel’s Metaphysical Alternative to the Choice between an Unrealistic Platonic Realism and an Opposing Skeptical Anti-realism.Paul Redding - 2022 - In Jure Simoniti & Gregor Kroupa (eds.), Ideas and Idealism in Philosophy. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 151-170.
  17. Analytic Philosophy and the Return of Hegelian Thought.Paul Redding - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This 2007 book examines the possibilities for the rehabilitation of Hegelian thought within analytic philosophy. From its inception, the analytic tradition has in general accepted Bertrand Russell's hostile dismissal of the idealists, based on the claim that their metaphysical views were irretrievably corrupted by the faulty logic that informed them. These assumptions are challenged by the work of such analytic philosophers as John McDowell and Robert Brandom, who, while contributing to core areas of the analytic movement, nevertheless have found in (...)
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  18. The Independence and Dependence of Self-Consciousness: The Dialectic of Lord and Bondsman in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit.Paul Redding - 2008 - In Frederick C. Beiser (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Hegel and Nineteenth-Century Philosophy. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  19.  35
    The mind's affective life: A psychoanalytic and philosophical inquiry.Paul Redding - 2004 - European Journal of Philosophy 12 (1):135–138.
  20. Hegel's philosophy of religion.Paul Redding - 2009 - In Graham Oppy & Nick Trakakis (eds.), Nineteenth-Century Philosophy of Religion: The History of Western Philosophy of Religion, Volume 4. Routledge.
     
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  21. Freud's theory of consciousness.Paul Redding - 1999 - In Michael Philip Levine (ed.), Analytic Freud: Philosophy and Psychoanalysis. New York: Routledge. pp. 119--131.
  22. Time and modality in Hegel's account of judgment.Paul Redding - 2019 - In Brian Andrew Ball & Christoph Schuringa (eds.), The Act and Object of Judgment: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives. New York: Routledge.
  23. Mithyātvaṃ tathā Akhaṇḍārthaśca: Advaitavedāntavibhāgīyarāṣṭriyasaṅgoṣṭhayāḥ itivr̥tam.Vi Purandara Reḍḍī (ed.) - 2012 - Tirupati: Rāṣṭriyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham.
    Contributed papers on concept of False and Indivisibles (Philosophy) in Hindu philosophy presented at Seminar organized by Department of Advaita Vedanta, Rāṣṭrīyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham, Tirupati from December 31, 2005 to January 01, 2006).
     
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  24.  55
    Hegel’s Treatment of Predication Considered in the Light of a Logic for the Actual World.Paul Redding - 2019 - Hegel Bulletin 40 (1):51-73.
    For many recent readers of Hegel, Wilfrid Sellars’s 1956 London lectures on the “Myth of the Given” have signaled an important rapprochement between Hegelian and analytic traditions in philosophy. Here I want to explore the ideas of another philosopher, also active in London in the 1950s, who consciously pursued such a goal: John N. Findlay. The ideas that Findlay brought to Hegel—sometimes converging with, sometimes diverging from those of Sellars—had been informed by his earlier study of the Austrian philosopher Alexius (...)
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  25. The Relevance of Hegel’s “Absolute Spirit” to Social Normativity.Paul Redding - 2011 - In Heikki Ikaheimo & Arto Laitinen (eds.), Recognition and Social Ontology. Leiden: Brill. pp. 212--238.
    Around the turn of the twentieth century, Wilhelm Dilthey, in his reflections on the nature of history as a “Geisteswissenschaft”—a science of “spirit” as opposed to “nature”—appealed “to Hegel’s notion of “spirit” (Geist). Attempting to extract Hegel’s concept from what he considered the unsupportable metaphysical system within which it had been developed, Dilthey, a neo-Kantian, gave it a broadly epistemological significance by correlating it with a distinct type of “understanding” (Verstehen) that was foreign to the Naturwissenschaften, concerned as they were (...)
     
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  26.  50
    Habermas's theory of argumentation.Paul Redding - 1989 - Journal of Value Inquiry 23 (1):15-32.
  27. Making Hegel's inferentialism explicit.Paul Redding - unknown
    In Making It Explicit, Robert Brandom has suggested an "inferentialist" alternative to the dominant "representationalist" paradigm within modern philosophy, an alternative based upon a form of pragmatism that he describes as both rationalist and linguistic.1 Representationalists typically think of awareness in terms of mental contents which somehow represent or picture worldly things, events, or states of affairs. Linguistic, rationalist pragmatists, in contrast, shift the focus from conscious experience to human linguistic practices, and specifically to the norms of rationality implicit within (...)
     
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  28. Śrī Vēmayogīyam.Kaḍivēṭi Narasāreḍḍi - 1969 - Podduṭūru: Kaḍivēṭi Narasāreḍḍi.
    Verse treatise, with Sanskrit commentary and Telugu paraphrase, by Kānḍūru Nr̥iṃhadāsa, on Acalapūrṇa yoga, a combination of Yoga philosophy and Advaita Vedanta.
     
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  29. The logic of Hegel's encyclopaedia philosophy of spirit.Paul Redding - 2019 - In Marina F. Bykova (ed.), Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit: A Critical Guide. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  30.  65
    Hegel’s Logic of Being and the Polarities of Presocratic Thought.Paul Redding - 1991 - The Monist 74 (3):438-456.
    Recently a view of Hegel’s “idealism” which hitherto had seemed unquestionable—the view that it is fundamentally a metaphysical doctrine—has been seriously challenged. Thus yesterday’s metaphysical Hegel, complete with his cosmic megasubject hidden behind the events of nature and history, has been joined by today’s “nonmetaphysical Hegel,” the postkantian categorial “genealogist.” According to the nonmetaphysical Hegelians, a century and a half of misunderstanding has been based on the confusion of two distinct philosophical projects: on the one hand, that originating in the (...)
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  31.  55
    Continental Idealism: Leibniz to Nietzsche.Paul Redding - 2009 - New York: Routledge.
    Standard accounts of nineteenth-century German philosophy often begin with Kant and assess philosophers after him in light of their responses to Kantian idealism. In _Continental Idealism_, Paul Redding argues that the story of German idealism begins with Leibniz. Redding begins by examining Leibniz's dispute with Newton over the nature of space, time and God, and stresses the way in which Leibniz incorporated Platonic and Aristotelian elements in his distinctive brand of idealism. Redding shows how Kant's interpretation of (...)
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  32. Kiernan S.Beans Poem Red - 2001 - Feminist Studies 27 (3):640.
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  33. Avidyā tathā mokṣaśca: Advaitavedāntavibhāgīyarāṣṭriyasaṅgoṣṭhyāḥ itivr̥tam.Vi Purandara Reḍḍī (ed.) - 2012 - Tirupati: Rāṣṭriyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham.
    Contributed papers on concept of Avidyā and Mokṣa in Hindu philosophy presented at Seminar organized by Department of Advaita Vedanta, Rāṣṭrīyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham, Tirupati from December 31, 2005 to January 01, 2006).
     
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  34. McDowell's Radicalization of Kant's Account of Concepts and Intuitions: a Sellarsian (and Hegelian) Critique.Paul Redding - 2012 - Verifiche: Rivista Trimestrale di Scienze Umane 41 (1–3):9–37.
    McDowell’s attempts to find a way out of the grip of some seemingly intractable problems besetting analytic philosophy has led him back to Kant and Hegel. Understanding, with Kant, the role played by concepts in experience will point the way forward, but Kant’s thinking must be released from its own problems which threaten to reduce the contents of experience and knowledge to “facts about us”. Kant’s “subjectivism” must be subjected to an “Hegelian” critique. However, McDowell’s solution to that problem, which (...)
     
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  35. Absorbed in the Spectacle of the World: Hegel's Criticism of Romantic Historiography.Paul Redding - 1987 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 16 (4):297-315.
     
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  36.  19
    Sociopolitical insularity is psychology's Achilles heel.Richard E. Redding - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38:e155.
    Academic psychology has become increasingly non-diverse politically, which skews and impedes social psychological science (as Duarte et al. argue). We should embrace viewpoint diversity, especially since the arguments favoring sociopolitical diversity are identical to those for demographic and cultural diversity. Doing so will produce a more robust, open, and creative psychological science that is informed and tested by a multiplicity of sociopolitical paradigms.
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  37. Hermeneutic or Metaphysical Hegelianism? Kojève’s Dilemma.Paul Redding - 1991 - The Owl of Minerva 22 (2):175-189.
    Between 1933 and 1939 Alexandre Kojève gave his series of celebrated lectures on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. Importantly, Kojève claimed to be reading Hegel in the wake of a philosopher whom he considered to be, along with Marx, the only important philosopher since Hegel - Martin Heidegger, whose Being and Time had appeared in 1927. Indeed, Kojève went so far as to claim that Hegel’s Phenomenology “would probably never have been understood (...)
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  38. Self-Surpassing Beauty: Plato's Ambiguous Legacy.Paul Redding - 1997 - Literature & Aesthetics 7:94-108.
     
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  39.  73
    Findlay’s Hegel: Idealism as Modal Actualism.Paul Redding - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (4):359-377.
    Here, I suggest a hitherto relatively unexplored way beyond the opposed Aristotelian realist and Kantian idealist approaches that divide recent interpretations of the categories or “thought determinations” of Hegel’s Logic, by locating his idealism within the terrain of recent debates in modal metaphysics. In particular, I return to the outlook of the first philosopher to attempt to bring Hegel into the analytic conversation, John Niemeyer Findlay, and consider Hegel’s idealism as instantiating the metaphysical position that, following the work of Findlay’s (...)
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  40.  42
    Action, language and text: Dilthey's conception of the understanding.Paul Redding - 1982 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 9 (2):228-244.
  41. The Role of Work within the Processes of Recognition in Hegel’s Idealism.Paul Redding - 2011 - In Nicholas Smith & Jean-Philippe Dr Deranty (eds.), New Philosophies of Labour: Work and the Social Bond. Brill.
     
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  42.  78
    Anthropology as ritual: Wittgenstein's reading of Frazer's the golden bough.Paul Redding - 1987 - Metaphilosophy 18 (3-4):253-269.
  43.  47
    Hegel’s Subjective Logic as a Logic for (Hegel’s) Philosophy of Mind.Paul Redding - 2018 - Hegel Bulletin 39 (1):1-22.
    In the 1930s, C. I. Lewis, who was responsible for the revival of modal logic in the era of modern symbolic logic, characterized ‘intensional’ approaches to logic as typical of post-Leibnizian ‘continental philosophy’, in contrast to the ‘extensionalist’ approaches dominant in the British tradition. Indeed Lewis’s own work in this area had been inspired by the logic of his teacher, the American ‘Absolute Idealist’, Josiah Royce. Hegel’s ‘Subjective Logic’ in Book III of hisScience of Logic, can, I suggest, be considered (...)
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  44.  66
    Actualist versus Naturalist and Conceptual Realist Interpretations of Hegel's Metaphysics.Paul Redding - 2021 - Hegel Bulletin 42 (1):19-38.
    The understanding of Hegel's metaphysics that is here argued for—that it is a metaphysics of the actual world—may sound trivial or empty. To counter this, in part one the actualist reading of Hegel's idealism is opposed to two other currently popular interpretations, those of the naturalist and the conceptual realist respectively. While actualism shares motivations with each of these positions, it is argued that it is better equipped to capture what both aim to bring out in Hegel's metaphysics, but also (...)
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  45.  21
    Hegel’s Keplerian Revolution in Philosophy.Paul Redding - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (4):111.
    In this paper, I approach Hegel’s philosophy under the banner of a “Keplerian Revolution”, the implicit reference being, of course, to Kant’s supposed Copernican philosophical revolution. Kepler had been an early supporter of the Copernican paradigm in astronomy, but went well beyond his predecessor, and so is invoked here in an attempt to capture some of the important ways in which Hegel attempted to go beyond the philosophy of Kant. To make these issues more determinate, however, Hegel’s Keplerian orientation will (...)
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  46. An Hegelian Solution to a Tangle of Problems Facing Brandom'S Analytic Pragmatism.Paul Redding - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (4):657-680.
    In his program of analytic pragmatism, Robert Brandom has presented a thoroughgoing reinterpretation of the place of analytic philosophy in the history of philosophy by linking his own non-representational ‘inferentialist’ approach to semantics to the rationalist – idealist tradition, and in particular, to Hegel. Brandom, however, has not been without his critics in regard to both his approach to semantics and his interpretation of Hegel. Here I single out four interlinked problematic areas facing Brandom's inferentialist semantics – his approach of (...)
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  47. Replies to Bob Brandom and Jim Kreines.Paul Redding - unknown
    (Author’s reply at “Author-Meets-Critics” session (on Paul Redding, Analytic Philosophy and the Return of Hegelian Thought) at the Annual Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, Vancouver, April 10, 2009. Robert Brandom’s “critic’s” contribution is available as “Hegel and Analytic Philosophy” from his website http://www.pitt.edu/~brandom/.).
     
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  48. Thom Brook's project of a systematic reading of Hegel's Philosophy of Right.Paul Redding - 2012 - Hegel Bulletin 33 (2):1–9.
    Thom Brooks'sHegel's Political Philosophy: A Systematic Reading of the Philosophy of Rightpresents a very clear and methodologically self-conscious series of discussions of key topics within Hegel's classic text. As one might expect for a ‘systematic’ reading, the main body of Brooks's text commences with an opening chapter on Hegel's system. Then follow seven chapters, the topics of which are encountered sequentially as one reads through thePhilosophy of Right. Brooks's central claim is that too often Hegel's theories or views on any (...)
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  49.  10
    Thoughts, deeds, words, and world: Hegel's idealist response to the linguistic "metacritical invasion".Paul Redding - 2016 - Aurora, Colorado: Davies Group, Publishers.
  50. Mind of God, Point of View of Man or Something Not Quite Either?Paul Redding - 2019 - In Paolo Diego Bubbio, Maurizio Pagano, Hager Weslati & Alessandro De Cesaris (eds.), in Paolo Diego Bubbio, Maurizio Pagano, Hager Weslati and Alessandro De Cesaris (eds), Hegel, Logic and Speculation, London: Bloomsbury, ISBN-13: 978-1350056367. DOI: 10.5040/9781350056381.ch-011. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 147-170.
    In his account of Plato’s ideas in the first book of the “Transcendental Dialectic”, “On the concepts of pure reason”, Kant, in describing how for Plato ideas were “archetypes of things themselves”, adds that these ideas “flowed from the highest reason, through which human reason partakes in them”.1 Later, in the section of the Transcendental Dialectic treating the “ideals of pure reason”, he again attributes to Plato the notion of a “divine mind” within which the “ideas” exist. An “ideal”, Kant (...)
     
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