Results for 'Rhonda Claire Siu'

982 found
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  1.  53
    Rethinking the Body and Space in Alfred Schutz’s Phenomenology of Music.Rhonda Claire Siu - 2016 - Human Studies 39 (4):533-546.
    What is initially striking about Alfred Schutz’s phenomenological account of the musical experience, which encompasses both the performance and reception of music, is his apparent dismissal of the corporeal and spatial aspects of that experience. The paper argues that this is largely a product of his wider understanding of temporality wherein the mind and time are privileged over the body and space, respectively. While acknowledging that Schutz’s explicit or stated view is that the body and space are relatively insignificant to (...)
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  2.  20
    Actuel et le virtuel.Gilles Deleuze & Claire Parnet - 1996
    Il faudrait que le dialogue se fasse, non pas entre des personnes, mais entre les lignes, entre des chapitres ou des parties de chapitre. Ce seraient les vrais personnages. Perdre la mémoire : il faudrait plutôt dresser des " blocs ", les faire flotter. Un bloc d'enfance n'est pas un souvenir d'enfant. Un bloc nous accompagne, est toujours anonyme et contemporain, et fonctionne dans le présent - Oublier l'histoire : la question des devenirs, et de leur géographie. Un devenir-révolutionnaire est (...)
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  3. Supererogation, optionality and cost.Claire Benn - 2018 - Philosophical Studies 175 (10):2399-2417.
    A familiar part of debates about supererogatory actions concerns the role that cost should play. Two camps have emerged: one claiming that extreme cost is a necessary condition for when an action is supererogatory, while the other denies that it should be part of our definition of supererogation. In this paper, I propose an alternative position. I argue that it is comparative cost that is central to the supererogatory and that it is needed to explain a feature that all accounts (...)
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  4.  68
    A gap in Nisbett and Wilson’s findings? A first-person access to our cognitive processes.Claire Petitmengin, Anne Remillieux, Béatrice Cahour & Shirley Carter-Thomas - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (2):654-669.
    The well-known experiments of Nisbett and Wilson lead to the conclusion that we have no introspective access to our decision-making processes. Johansson et al. have recently developed an original protocol consisting in manipulating covertly the relationship between the subjects’ intended choice and the outcome they were presented with: in 79.6% of cases, they do not detect the manipulation and provide an explanation of the choice they did not make, confirming the findings of Nisbett and Wilson. We have reproduced this protocol, (...)
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  5. What is Wrong with Promising to Supererogate.Claire Benn - 2014 - Philosophia 42 (1):55-61.
    There has been some debate as to whether or not it is possible to keep a promise, and thus fulfil a duty, to supererogate. In this paper, I argue, in agreement with Jason Kawall, that such promises cannot be kept. However, I disagree with Kawall’s diagnosis of the problem and provide an alternative account. In the first section, I examine the debate between Kawall and David Heyd, who rejects Kawall’s claim that promises to supererogate cannot be kept. I disagree with (...)
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  6. Recklessness and Uncertainty: Jackson Cases and Merely Apparent Asymmetry.Claire Https://Orcidorg Field - 2019 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 16 (4):391-413.
    Is normative uncertainty like factual uncertainty? Should it have the same effects on our actions? Some have thought not. Those who defend an asymmetry between normative and factual uncertainty typically do so as part of the claim that our moral beliefs in general are irrelevant to both the moral value and the moral worth of our actions. Here I use the consideration of Jackson cases to challenge this view, arguing that we can explain away the apparent asymmetries between normative and (...)
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  7. Supererogatory Spandrels.Claire Benn - 2017 - Etica and Politica / Ethics and Politics 19 (1):269-290.
    Standing in San Marco Cathedral in Venice, you immediately notice the exquisitely decorated spandrels: the triangular spaces bounded on either side by adjoining arches and by the dome above. You would be forgiven for seeing them as the starting point from which to understand the surrounding architecture. To do so would, however, be a mistake. It is a similar mistaken inference that evolutionary biologists have been accused of making in assuming a special adaptive purpose for such biological features as fingerprints (...)
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  8. Tyranny and tyrannicide in mid-seventeenth century England: A woman's perspective?Claire Gheeraert-Graffeuille - 2009 - Études Épistémè 15:585-86.
  9.  15
    Drucilla Cornell., Transformations: Recollective Imagination and Sexual Difference.Norma Claire Moruzzi - 1996 - International Studies in Philosophy 28 (2):120-121.
  10.  9
    Invitation au voyage: kunst als voertuig voor mentale reizen.Claire van Damme - 2010 - Gent: Academia Press. Edited by Marijke van Eeckhaut & Björn Scherlippens.
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  11. The Enemy of the Good: Supererogation and Requiring Perfection.Claire Benn - 2018 - Utilitas 30 (3):333-354.
    Moral theories that demand that we do what is morally best leave no room for the supererogatory. One argument against such theories is that they fail to realize the value of autonomy: supererogatory acts allow for the exercise of autonomy because their omissions are not accompanied by any threats of sanctions, unlike obligatory ones. While this argument fails, I use the distinction it draws – between omissions of obligatory and supererogatory acts in terms of appropriate sanctions – to draw a (...)
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  12. Intentions, Motives and Supererogation.Claire Benn - 2019 - Journal of Value Inquiry 53 (1):107-123.
    Amy saves a man from drowning despite the risk to herself, because she is moved by his plight. This is a quintessentially supererogatory act: an act that goes above and beyond the call of duty. Beth, on the other hand, saves a man from drowning because she wants to get her name in the paper. On this second example, opinions differ. One view of supererogation holds that, despite being optional and good, Beth’s act is not supererogatory because she is not (...)
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  13. Rich ontologies for tense and aspect.Patrick Blackburn, Claire Gardent & Maarten De Rijke - 1996 - In Jerry Seligman & Dag Westerstahl (eds.), Logic, Language and Computation. Center for the Study of Language and Inf.
    In this paper back-and-forth structures are applied to the semantics of natural language. Back-and-forth structures consist of an event structure and an interval structure communicating via a relational link; transitions in the one structure correspond to transitions in the other. Such entities enable us to view temporal constructions (such as tense, aspect, and temporal connectives) as methods of moving systematically between information sources. We illustrate this with a treatment of the English present perfect, and progressive aspect, that draws on ideas (...)
     
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  14.  14
    Les trois temps des migrants.Claire Lobet-Maris - 2021 - Temporalités 33.
    Based on a sociological survey carried out in a camp for asylum seekers in Belgium, the article questions the modes of existence in this “out of place” and “out of time” that is the camp. Behind the apparent emptiness of waiting in a decelerated present, the investigation highlights three temporalities that together shape the breathing of the camp and the living conditions of asylum seekers: the rhythm of the framework that holds together daily life, the cycle and the passage that (...)
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  15.  34
    Sex and the (Anthropocene) City.Claire Mary Colebrook - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (2-3):39-60.
    In this essay I explore three concepts: sex, the city, and the Anthropocene. I argue that the condition for the possibility of the city is the assemblage of sexual drives for the sake of relative stability, but that those same drives also exceed the city's self-preservative function. Further, I argue that the very conditions that further the city and that enable philosophical and scientific concepts to be formed (and that allow for the Anthropocene to be discerned as an epoch) rely (...)
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  16.  51
    Describing the Experience of Describing? The blindspot of introspection.Claire Petitmengin - 2011 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 18 (1):44-62.
    My comments on this pioneering book by Russ Hurlburt and Eric Schwitzgebel do not focus on the descriptions of experiences that it includes, but on the very process of description, which seems to me insufficiently highlighted, described and called into question. First I will rely on a few indications given by Melanie herself, the subject interviewed by the authors, to highlight an essential difficulty which the authors only touch upon: the not immediately recognized charac-ter of lived experience. Then I will (...)
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  17.  35
    Beyond the Birth: middle and late Nietzsche on the value of tragedy.Claire Kirwin - 2023 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 66 (7):1283-1306.
    Nietzsche’s interest in tragedy continues throughout his work. And yet scholarship on Nietzsche’s account of tragedy has focused almost exclusively on his first book, The Birth of Tragedy – a work which is in many ways discontinuous with his more mature philosophical views. In this paper, I aim to illuminate Nietzsche’s post-Birth of Tragedy views on tragedy by setting them in the context of a particular historical conversation. Ever since Plato banished the tragic poets from the kallipolis, various philosophers have (...)
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  18.  47
    (1 other version)The AART of Ethnography: A Critical Realist Explanatory Research Model.Claire Laurier Decoteau - 2016 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 46 (4).
    Critical realism is a philosophy of science, which has made significant contributions to epistemic debates within sociology. And yet, its contributions to ethnographic explanation have yet to be fully elaborated. Drawing on ethnographic data on the health-seeking behavior of HIV-infected South Africans, the paper compares and contrasts critical realism with grounded theory, extended case method and the pragmatist method of abduction. In so doing, it argues that critical realism makes a significant contribution to causal explanation in ethnographic research in three (...)
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  19.  18
    Does Economic Theory Matter in Shaping Banking Regulation? A Case-study of Italy (1861-1936).Alfredo Gigliobianco & Claire Giordano - 2012 - Accounting, Economics, and Law: A Convivium 2 (1):5.
  20.  2
    Metagames 2023.Shantanu Tilak, Claire Audia, Issaga Bah, Kate Barta, Marina Bulazo, Brennan Colvard, Noah Dzierwa, Sam Ferretti, Braxton Fries, Christopher Gehrke, Lillia Gipson, Colleen Greve, Julia Guo, Sarah Hammill, Christopher Jaenke, Anna Jahn, Kavya Jayanthi, Megan Lencke, Lily Marsco, Paige Moonshower, Parker Picha, Robek Bridgette, Leigha Schumaker, Kiersten Souders, Charlotte Stefani, Avery Tenerowicz, Ayla Wachowski, Landon Ward, Anna Woods, Nevin Woods & Laura Zalewski (eds.) - 2023 - Columbus, Ohio: The Ohio State University.
    This paper, co-authored by undergraduate students and their instructor part of an educational psychology seminar, describes a participatory curriculum design approach for preservice teacher education that focuses on the use of the principles of second-order cybernetics to teach about teaching and learning. Using elements of an Open Source Educational Processes framework, our Spring ESEPSY2309 section created project-based collective hive minds of preservice teachers, relying on a cybernetic approach at the crossroads of Gregory Bateson and Gordon Pask's theories. The classroom community (...)
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  21.  88
    Freedom and oppression.Claire Grant - 2013 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 12 (4):413-425.
    Oppression is commonly deemed a problem of freedom. How though should we conceptualise the freedom-restricting nature of oppression? This paper aims to show that the unfreedom in oppression may be understood in terms of individual negative liberty. The controversial concept of collective unfreedom is not needed. Non-cooperation among the oppressed generates constraints on individual freedom. This non-cooperation is ultimately attributable to the exercise of social power by oppressors. It is in this sense that the resultant states of individual unfreedom are (...)
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  22.  71
    Disease, Suffering, and Sin: One Anglican's Perspective.Claire Foster - 2006 - Christian Bioethics 12 (2):157-163.
    This article explores some of the implications of understanding sin as failure of perception. The theological underpinning of the argument is the choice made in the Garden of Eden to eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge rather than the fruit of the tree of life, or wisdom. This has led to distorted perception, in which all things are seen as having separate, independent existences rather than joined together by their common divine source and their deep interrelatedness in the (...)
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  23.  39
    Visualising the Interdisciplinary Research Field: The Life Cycle of Economic History in Australia.Claire Wright & Simon Ville - 2017 - Minerva 55 (3):321-340.
    Interdisciplinary research is frequently viewed as an important component of the research landscape through its innovative ability to integrate knowledge from different areas. However, support for interdisciplinary research is often strategic rhetoric, with policy-makers and universities frequently adopting practices that favour disciplinary performance. We argue that disciplinary and interdisciplinary research are complementary, and we develop a simple framework that demonstrates this for a semi-permanent interdisciplinary research field. We argue that the presence of communicating infrastructures fosters communication and integration between disciplines (...)
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  24.  21
    Lets Trust the (skilled) Subject! A Reply to Froese, Gould and Seth.Claire Petitmengin & Michel Bitbol - 2011 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 18 (2):90-97.
    The article by Froese, Gould and Seth is a survey rather than a commentary, dealing with the intertwined issues of the validity of first- person reports and of their interest for a science of consciousness. While acknowledging that experiential research has already produced promising results, the authors find that it has not yet produced 'killer experiments' providing a definitively positive answer to these two questions, and wonder what kind of experiment would allow it. Our response will address these two questions (...)
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  25.  9
    Le soi: nouvelles perspectives humiennes.Alexandre Charrier & Claire Etchegaray (eds.) - 2020 - Paris: Hermann.
    "L'usage substantivé du mot 'soi' est intriguant. Le pronom tonique 'soi' ne pose pas de problème particulier dans les expressions comme 'prendre soin de soi', 'compter sur soi' ou 'être hors de soi'. Mais parler d'un 'soi', c'est aller au-delà de la réalité grammaticale et supposer une identité personnelle à travers la diversité des expériences. Or, l'idée de soi et la croyance en l'identité personnelle ont été mises en question par David Hume, dont les arguments résonnent toujours dans la philosophie (...)
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  26.  41
    (1 other version)'Heart Robot', a public engagement project.Claire Rocks, Sarah Jenkins, Matthew Studley & David McGoran - 2009 - Interaction Studies 10 (3):427-452.
  27.  35
    Humanist Posthumanism, Becoming-Woman and the Powers of the ‘Faux’.Claire Colebrook - 2022 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 16 (3):379-401.
    Feminist and post-colonial theorists have embraced Deleuze and Guattari’s terminology of becoming-woman and nomadism, and have done so despite criticisms that these terms appropriate the struggles of real women and stateless persons. The force of the real has become especially acute in the twenty-first century in the wake of neoliberal mobilisations of feminism as yet one more marketing tool. Rather than repeat the criticism that identity politics deflects attention from real political struggles, we can see terms such as ‘becoming-woman’ as (...)
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  28.  27
    Vagueza: a metáfora de frege e o paradoxo sorites.Linda Claire Burns - forthcoming - Critica.
  29. V As In Voyages.Gilles Deleuze & Claire Parnet - 1998 - Pli 7:3-6.
     
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  30. Le rythme musical: À la jointure de l'intérieur et de l'extérieur.Anne-Claire Desesquelles - 2003 - Kairos (Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail. Faculté de philosophie) 21:171-192.
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  31. The ethics of medical research on humans.Claire Foster-Gilbert - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  32.  49
    The present and future of doing Philosophy with Children: Practical philosophy and addressing children and young people’s status in a complex world.Claire Cassidy - 2023 - Childhood and Philosophy 19:01-18.
    This article considers children’s status in society and how this may be elevated with a view to imagining a possible future. Children’s status is such that the structures and systems under which they live diminish their agency. In so doing, their opportunity to contribute to the shaping of what appears to be an uncertain future is limited. The article proposes that looking towards children as saviours of our tomorrows is misguided and that a healthier view is to recognise the networked (...)
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  33. Sivisa Titan: Sketch Grammar, Texts, Vocabulary Based on Material Collected by P. Josef Meier and Po Minis.Claire Bowern - 2013 - Philosophy East and West 63 (2).
     
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  34.  53
    The Physiology of Phantasmata in Aristotle: between Sensation and Digestion.Claire Bubb - 2019 - Apeiron 52 (3):273-315.
    In this article, I foreground the physiology of phantasia in Aristotle, which has been comparatively understudied. In the first section, I offer a new interpretation of the relationship between aisthēmata and phantasmata, based on passages in the De Anima and the Parva Naturalia, and for a nuanced understanding of their respective substrates in the body, which I argue to be connate pneuma and blood. In the second section, I draw out the ramifications of this physiological presence of phantasmata in the (...)
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  35.  15
    Completing Distinctions:CompUtmg Distinctions.Claire M. Cassidy - 1993 - Anthropology of Consciousness 4 (1):13-14.
    CompUtmg Distinctions. Douglas G. Flemons. Boston and London: Shambhala, 1991. 164 p. $15 (cloth).
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  36.  28
    Shamanic Practices in Modern Chinese Medicine in the United States.Claire M. Cassidy - 1998 - Anthropology of Consciousness 9 (4):83-83.
  37. Online medians via online bribery.Marek Chrobak, Claire Kenyon, John Noga & Neal E. Young - 2006 - In O. Stock & M. Schaerf (eds.), Lecture Notes In Computer Science. Springer Verlag. pp. 311-322.
     
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  38.  39
    Time Travels: Feminism, Nature Power, by Elizabeth Grosz.Claire Colebrook - 2008 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 39 (3):331-333.
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  39.  24
    Citizenship education and global migration: implications for theory, research, and teaching.Claire E. Crawford - 2018 - British Journal of Educational Studies 66 (4):560-563.
  40.  25
    Les fonctions du paradigme mélancolique dans la Préface de l’Anatomie de la Mélancolie de Robert Burton.Claire Crignon - 2003 - Astérion 1 (1).
    Au moment où paraît l’Anatomie de la Mélancolie de Robert Burton (1e édition en 1621), l’humorisme se trouve sérieusement remis en cause par les découvertes du contemporain de Burton, William Harvey, concernant la circulation du sang. Comment expliquer alors la parution de cet ouvrage qui se présente comme une somme de toutes les connaissances médicales, philosophiques ou historiques accumulées au sujet de la mélancolie depuis l’Antiquité jusqu’à la fin de la Renaissance ? L’article se donne pour objectif de comprendre quel (...)
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  41.  16
    History, Philosophy, and the Canons of the Arts.Claire Detels - 1998 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 32 (3):33.
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  42.  37
    Yosano Akiko (1878-1942).Claire Dodane - 2008 - Clio 28:194-203.
    Texte 1. Cela fait un mois déjà que j’ai rejoint mon mari à Paris. […] C’est uniquement la tension née du désir de le voir qui m’a poussée jusqu’ici. Et c’est ainsi qu’en satisfaisant mon désir de femme, j’ai dû dans le même temps connaître le chagrin maternel. Il m’est en effet impossible d’oublier les sept enfants que j’ai laissés au Japon. Les quitter pour suivre les traces de mon époux n’a pas été chose aisée. Nous avons dû faire venir (...)
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  43.  20
    Lawfare: Law as a Weapon of War, Orde F. Kittrie , 504 pp., $29.95 cloth.Claire Finkelstein - 2017 - Ethics and International Affairs 31 (3):383-385.
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  44.  30
    Toward an Imageless Political Education.Claire Fontaine, António de Ridder-Vignone & Cory Browning - 2009 - Diacritics 39 (3):7-19.
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  45. Ideas of elementary students about reducing the “greenhouse effect”.Claire Francis, Edward Boyes, Anne Qualter & Martin Stanisstreet - 1993 - Science Education 77 (4):375-392.
  46.  28
    Jane Austen's Vehicular Means of Motion, Exchange and Transmission.Claire Grogan - 2004 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 23:189.
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  47. Effect of Joint Crisis Plans on use of Compulsory Treatment in Psychiatry.Claire Henderson, Chris Flood, Morven Leese, Graham Thornicroft, Kim Sutherby & George Szmukler - 2006 - In Stephen A. Green & Sidney Bloch (eds.), An anthology of psychiatric ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  48.  12
    Une interprétation oblique du Prince : le procès de Machiavel dans les Ragguagli di Parnaso de Traiano Boccalini.Claire Henry - 2006 - Astérion 4 (4).
    Traiano Boccalini (1556-1613) auteur des Ragguagli di Parnaso (1612 et 1613) prend position dans le débat sur l’interprétation républicaine de Machiavel : l’auteur du Prince a-t-il écrit pour aider la monarchie ou bien contre elle ? Boccalini semble prendre une position nuancée, affirmant que si l’on condamne Machiavel c’est justement parce qu’il pourrait trop bien servir aux républicains. Lui-même utilise la métaphore du berger, traditionnellement liée à l’idée religieuse, pour montrer que le monarque n’est pas le berger désintéressé du troupeau (...)
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  49. Culture in language teaching.Claire Kramsch - 2005 - In Keith Brown (ed.), Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Elsevier. pp. 322--329.
     
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  50. L'ecriture du désastre, espace d'autogenése.Claire Lejeune - 2003 - Cahiers Internationaux de Symbolisme 104:83-114.
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