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1

Dorfman, Elsa. "Photograph of William Alfred." Lonergan Workshop 16 (2000): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/lw2000162.

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WARTZOK, D., and P. L. TYACK. "William Alfred Watkins∙1926–2004." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 119, no. 3 (March 2006): 1295. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2166605.

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Clayton, Donald J. "William Alfred Fowler (1911-1995)." Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 108 (January 1996): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/133686.

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4

Stevens, Megan, and Alun Stevens. "The Wrong Marshall: Notes on the Marshall family in Response to Biographies of the Economist, Alfred Marshall." History of Political Economy 52, no. 2 (April 1, 2020): 239–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182702-8173310.

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Professor Ronald H. Coase included his essays on Alfred Marshall in his book, Essays on Economics and Economists. Because of Coase’s standing as a Nobel laureate and professor of economics at the University of Chicago, these essays have been relied on by scholars, authors, and historians researching Alfred Marshall and the wider Marshall family, including Professor Peter Groenewegen for his seminal biography, A Soaring Eagle: Alfred Marshall 1842–1924. This research shows that the supposed meeting between Charles Henry Marshall, Alfred’s uncle, and Nehemiah Bartley on the Turon goldfields, on which Coase based his claims of a deceitful and self-aggrandizing family, did not take place. Alfred did know where he was born and was happy to say so. Alfred’s grandfather, William, was not a forgotten business failure. Alfred’s father, also William, was neither disliked nor ostracized by his family despite being cantankerous and possibly brutal. He and his wife Rebecca and their children, including Alfred, were embraced and supported by the wider family. Alfred was, in fact, a product of the family much as described by his wife, Mary Paley Marshall, and John Maynard Keynes. This does not diminish his accomplishments.
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5

Hill, Oscar. "Alfred William Beard, Middlesex Hospital, London." Psychiatric Bulletin 16, no. 01 (January 1992): 63–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s0955603600106890.

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6

Hoyle, Fred. "OBITUARY: William Alfred Fowler (1911-95)." Nature 374, no. 6521 (March 1995): 406. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/374406a0.

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7

Crummey, Donald. "In memoriam William Alfred Shack (1923-2000)." Aethiopica 4 (June 30, 2013): 200–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.15460/aethiopica.4.1.502.

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8

PRETTIMAN. "The Many Lives of William Alfred Eddy." Princeton University Library Chronicle 53, no. 2 (1992): 200. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/26410059.

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9

Bottom, Lyle. "William Harold Alfred Dodd, FRCS, 1899–1987." British Homeopathic Journal 76, no. 04 (October 1987): 247. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0007-0785(87)80123-0.

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10

Merriam, Daniel F. "Obituary of William Alfred Read (1928–2004)." Mathematical Geology 37, no. 3 (April 2005): 323–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11004-005-1562-4.

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11

Scheuplein, Christoph. "Soziale Evolution und räumliche Wirtschaftsstruktur bei Herbert Spencer, William Hearn und Alfred Marshall." Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsgeographie 51, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zfw.2007.0001.

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Herbert Spencer, William Hearn and Alfred Marshall on social evolution and spatial patterns of the Economy. In contemporary regional economics and economic geography, Alfred Marshall is appreciated as the first economist who described and theorized economic clusters. However, his work has been one-sidedly reduced to his economic rational explorations of the emergence and success of industrial districts. Delving deeper reveals that Marshall was deeply influenced by evolutionary thinking. For him, districts were an organizational pattern arising out of human evolution. Marshall was also influenced by two other earlier scholars: Spencer and Hearn. The founder of socio-evolutionary theory, Herbert Spencer, had already used the spatial allocation of production activities as a important criteria to characterize societal development. William Hearn had integrated the socio-evolutionary terms of organization into economics in order to describe the macro-economy. Alfred Marshall borrowed their concepts and worked them into the wider framework of social science. Due to this, he gained insights into the contingency and the path dependency of spatial processes.
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12

Hargreaves, A. S., and J. R. Guy. "William Alfred Hunt (1845-1929): local anaesthetic pioneer." British Dental Journal 159, no. 6 (September 1985): 193–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bdj.4805678.

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13

Scadding, Glenis K. "Legends of Allergy/ Immunology: Alfred William (Bill) Frankland." Allergy 74, no. 2 (October 22, 2018): 380–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/all.13612.

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14

Scheide, William H. "Johann Sebastian Bachs Sammlung von Kantaten seines Vetters Johann Ludwig Bach." Bach-Jahrbuch 46 (March 1, 2018): 52–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.13141/bjb.v19591527.

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Darauf bezugnehmend: William H. Scheide: Johann Sebastian Bachs Sammlung von Kantaten seines Vetters Johann Ludwig Bach (II. Teil). BJ 1961, S. 5-24) William H. Scheide: Johann Sebastian Bachs Sammlung von Kantaten seines Vetters Johann Ludwig Bach. Ihre Geschichte und ihr Einfluß auf J. S. Bachs eigene Werke (Schluß). BJ 1962, S. 5-32 Vergleiche auch: Alfred Dürr: Zur Chronologie der Leipziger Vokalwerke J. S. Bachs. BJ 1957, S. 5-162
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15

Griffin, Edward M. "William Alfred's Hogan's Goat: Power and Poetry in Brooklyn." Prospects 19 (October 1994): 451–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0361233300005184.

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William alfred's verse play Hogan's Goat, recounting the four days in April and May, 1890, when Matt Stanton gets his big chance to become mayor of Brooklyn, was New York's surprise hit of 1965–66. Directed by Frederick Rolf and starring Faye Dunaway (before Bonnie and Clyde), Ralph Waite (before The Waltons), and Barnard Hughes (before Da), it opened in November, 1965, at the American Place Theatre and ran during the next eighteen months for 607 performances there and at the East 74th Street Theatre, winning the 1965–66 Theatre Club Gold Medal for best play and gaining Alfred the 1965 Drama Desk – Vernon Rice award. Selected for inclusion in Otis L. Guernsey's Best Plays yearbook (and chosen best play of 1965), it also appears in John Gassner and Clive Barnes's Best American Plays series, Harold Clurman's anthology Famous American Plays of the 1960s, and Francis Griffith and Joseph Mersand's Eight Ethnic American Plays. In 1971, the play was produced on PBS television.
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16

Nyitray, Kristen J. "William Alfred Higinbotham: Scientist, Activist, and Computer Game Pioneer." IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 33, no. 2 (February 2011): 96–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mahc.2011.48.

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17

Turner, I. M. "Forgotten publications by Alfred William Bennett and their effect on the nomenclature of some Asian Simaroubaceae species." Kew Bulletin 76, no. 1 (March 2021): 57–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12225-021-09924-9.

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SummaryAttention is drawn to some forgotten papers published by Alfred William Bennett relevant to the taxonomy of Asian angiosperms. Three binomials in Simaroubaceae, were published by Bennett in a paper in the Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions earlier than in current listings. Lectotypes are designated for Brucea mollis, Eurycoma apiculata, Picrasma javanica and P. andamanica.
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18

Cercignani, Carlo. "Transport Simulation in Microelectronics (Alfred Kersch and William J. Morokoff)." SIAM Review 38, no. 2 (June 1996): 337–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1137/1038059.

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19

Davidson, Michael W. "Pioneers in Optics: Marie Alfred Cornu and John Frederick William Herschel." Microscopy Today 20, no. 3 (May 2012): 50–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1551929512000223.

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Marie Alfred Cornu was born in Orleans, France, on March 6, 1841, and was educated at the École Polytechnique and the École des Mines. He became employed as a physics professor at the École Polytechnique in 1867, a position he maintained for the rest of his life. Cornu made a wide variety of contributions to the fields of optics and spectroscopy but is most noted for significantly increasing the accuracy of contemporary calculations of the speed of light.
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20

Ryan, Edna, and Constance Larmour. "Labor Judge. The Life and Times of Judge Alfred William Foster." Labour History, no. 51 (1986): 100. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27508805.

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21

Anna E., Nikiforova. "Gender Aspect in the Pre-Raphaelite Art." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg State University of Culture, no. 1 (50) (2022): 75–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.30725/2619-0303-2022-1-75-80.

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The Pre-Raphaelite art, intimately associated with the artists’ personal life, reflects the main gender relations of the Victorian era and its transformations. Ideal, vicious and suffering types of women inherent to the Victorian society are interpreted by the Pre-Raphaelite artists Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Milles, William Holman Hunt, William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones, in accordance with their moral and aesthetic views. The personal life of the artists pushes the boundaries of agreed standards and gives freedom in interpretation of archetypical images. Pre-Raphaelites also cultivate ideal female images in everyday life and in art, comparing and incorporating their real models with the characters from The New Life by Dante Alighieri, Le Morte d’Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory, and Alfred Tennyson’s poetry.
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22

Findlay, Michael. "William Henry Dunning: The Quiet Man." Architectural History Aotearoa 1 (December 5, 2004): 7–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v1i0.7889.

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Tasmanian-born architect William Henry Dunning (1872-1933) commenced his New Zealand practice in Timaru in 1907. Initially trained in Hobart, under the notable church designer Alexander North, Dunning's experience as a colonial architect was further extended in Cape Town. His association with fellow Tasmanians Alfred and Sidney Luttrell drew him to Dunedin where he supervised the construction of the New Zealand Express Company Building. Dunning was an ambitious architect. His competition entries included designs for the New Zealand Parliament Buildings (1911) and the Auckland War Memorial Museum (1922). Despite the quality of his work, and efforts towards self-promotion, Dunning's most significant contribution to the city's architecture, the National Bank (1911) has been frequently attributed to another designer. The remainder of his work is also little known. This paper seeks to explore the ways in which architects asserted authorship during the period and will attempt to map the shifting responsibilities between architects and builders that allowed Dunning's contribution to the National Bank project to become obscured.
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23

Chevalier, J. M. C. "Pragmatisme et idées-forces. Alfred Fouillée fut-il une source du pragmatisme américain?" Dialogue 50, no. 4 (December 2011): 633–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0012217312000169.

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RESUME : La théorie des idées-forces d’Alfred Fouillée manifeste une proximité historique et intellectuelle avec la philosophie de la volonté de William James. Mais les critiques de Fouillée envers le pragmatisme le rapprochent aussi d’une interprétation peircienne valorisant la résistance du réel et la clarification des concepts. En revanche, la seule influence explicitement attestée par Peirce, concernant son tychisme, est une mystification.
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24

Nascimento, Ester Fraga Vilas-Bôas. "William Alfred Waddell e as escolas presbiterianas da missão central do Brasil." INTERFACES DA EDUCAÇÃO 10, no. 30 (July 17, 2020): 396–413. http://dx.doi.org/10.26514/inter.v10i30.4128.

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Na perspectiva da História Cultural, este texto analisa a atuação William Alfred Waddell na implantação da Estação Ponte Nova, na Chapada Diamantina vinculada à Missão Central do Brasil. A pesquisa está embasada nos conceitos de associações voluntárias (Weber, 2002), método indiciário (Ginzburg, 2007) e, representação (Chartier, 1990). Instituição vinculada à Igreja Presbiteriana do Norte dos Estados Unidos, a Missão Central do Brasil funcionou na Bahia, Sergipe, Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais e Goiás durante 100 anos (1871 a 1971), organizando centenas escolas – primárias, secundárias, paroquiais, escolas de enfermagem, escolas normais – além de igrejas, hospitais, ambulatórios, seminários e orfanatos. O projeto civilizador presbiteriano para o hinterland brasileiro possui três eixos de ação: religião, educação e saúde. Criando instituições nas três áreas, os mensageiros de Deus, como ficaram conhecidos, propuseram transformá-lo numa região “civilizada”, procurando produzir um novo modus vivendi na sociedade em que se estabeleceram. E a educação serviu de veículo para implementar seu projeto religioso.
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25

Lee, Rick. "Quodlibetal Questions, William of Ockham, trans, by Alfred Freddoso and Francis Kelley." Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 16, no. 1 (1993): 283–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/gfpj199316114.

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26

Haimson, Leopold h. "The Problem of Social Identities in Early Twentieth Century Russia: Observations on the Commentaries by Alfred Rieber and William Rosenberg." Slavic Review 47, no. 3 (1988): 512–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2498396.

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Alfred Rieber and William Rosenberg have greatly contributed by their respective commentaries to broadening the scope of the issues addressed in my discussion of “The Problem of Social Identities in Early Twentieth Century Russia” (see Slavic Review [Spring 1988]: 1-20). They have also helped bring out the complexity of the processes involved, after the outbreak of the Revolution of 1917, in the shaping and reshaping of the representations that individuals and groups entertained of themselves, of one another, and of the body politic as a whole.
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27

Souza, Fabíula Sevilha de. "Capitalismo e Colonização nas matrizes teórico-metodológicas da História Ambiental norte-americana." Revista Territórios e Fronteiras 5, no. 1 (August 2, 2012): 150. http://dx.doi.org/10.22228/rt-f.v5i1.128.

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capitalismo e colonização são dois temas que estão na gênese da História Ambiental, e são recorrentes nos trabalhos de autores norte-americanos que passaram à historiografia como matrizes teórico-metodológicas da área. Este artigo objetiva examinar de que forma tais questões aparecem nos trabalhos de Donald Worster, Alfred Crosby, Warren Dean, William Cronon e John Robert McNeill. Especificamente, interessa-nos analisar os impactos que, segundo esses autores, os processos colonizadores tiveram sobre a natureza, bem como sobre a forma de pensá-la e explorá-la
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Klajman, Charles. "A Gripe sob a ótica da História Ecológica: um estudo comparativo entre as pandemias de 1918 e 2009." História Revista 20, no. 3 (January 14, 2016): 118. http://dx.doi.org/10.5216/hr.v20i3.36909.

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Os autores que escreveram sobre a História Ecológica, relataram o dramático impacto das doenças infecciosas e o papel fundamental no desaparecimento de algumas civilizações dos novos mundos. Através dessa chave, utilizada por William McNeill em Plagues and Peoples (1998), Alfred Crosby em Imperialismo Ecológico (1993) e por Jared Diamond em Armas Germes e Aço (2001), pretendo apresentar um estudo comparativo entre a Gripe Espanhola de 1918 e Gripe Influenza A de 2009, vulgo Suína provocada pelo vírus H1N1, na formatação teórico-metodológica estabelecida por esses autores.
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Gomel, Elana. "“SPIRITS IN THE MATERIAL WORLD”: SPIRITUALISM AND IDENTITY IN THE FIN DE SIÈCLE." Victorian Literature and Culture 35, no. 1 (January 22, 2007): 189–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150307051480.

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BOOKS ARE SOMETIMES published posthumously. In the nineteenth century, books were occasionally written posthumously when spiritualist mediums claimed to receive communications from the spirits of famous writers anxious to keep in touch with their public from beyond the grave. Oscar Wilde wrote his last book twenty-six years after his death, Oscar Wilde from Purgatory: Psychic Messages (1926), edited by Hester Travers Smith, the medium who received the messages while in trance and inscribed them through the process known as “automatic writing.” The book was highly regarded in the spiritualist community, boasting a preface by Sir William Barrett, a famous physicist, a member of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and – along with a number of other illustrious men of science such as physicists Sir William Crookes and Oliver Lodge as well as biologist Alfred Russell Wallace – a convert to spiritualism.
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Quinl, Michael. "Book Reviews : Labor Judge: the Life and Times of Judge Alfred William Foste." Journal of Industrial Relations 28, no. 3 (September 1986): 458–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002218568602800310.

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31

Cervellati, Rinaldo, and Emanuela Greco. "Periodic Reactions: The Early Works of William C. Bray and Alfred J. Lotka." Journal of Chemical Education 94, no. 2 (December 13, 2016): 195–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.6b00342.

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32

Groenewegen, Peter. "Alfred William Flux (1867–1942): A Mathematician successfully ‘caught’ for Economics by Marshall." History of Economics Review 48, no. 1 (January 2008): 63–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/18386318.2008.11682131.

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33

RICO, MONICA. "Sir William Drummond Stewart: Aristocratic Masculinity in the American West." Pacific Historical Review 76, no. 2 (May 1, 2007): 163–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2007.76.2.163.

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Sir William Drummond Stewart is known mostly as the patron of artist Alfred Jacob Miller, but he is worth examining in his own right for the ways in which his travels,collecting, and fiction reveal how western myths could resonate in contexts other than the familiar project of American nationalism. This article explores how the West served as an imaginative and literal site on which Stewart constructed his masculinity. Yet the more that Stewart tried to stabilize his identity through real and textual encounters with the West, the more this ground shifted under him. For instance, Stewart's novels depict the West as a place where gender and ethnicity were unpredictable and malleable. Thus, while discourses of western adventure have often been interpreted as a straightforward narrative of violence, Stewart's romantic tourism,although fraught with contradictions, reveals how western adventure could contain multiple meanings.
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Sommer, Andreas. "Professional Heresy: Edmund Gurney (1847–88) and the Study of Hallucinations and Hypnotism." Medical History 55, no. 3 (July 2011): 383–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025727300005445.

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The English music theorist and philosophical writer Edmund Gurney was the first ‘fulltime’ psychical researcher in history. While he was primarily concerned with empirical evidence for telepathy, Gurney significantly contributed to the late nineteenth-century literature on hallucinations in the sane, and the psychology of hypnotism and dissociation. He conducted the first large-scale survey of hallucinations in the general public and, with Pierre Janet, was the first to publish experimental data suggesting dissociated streams of consciousness in hypnotism. This paper sketches Gurney's contributions to psychology and dynamic psychiatry in the context of his friendship with Frederic W.H. Myers and William James. It is argued that although Gurney's research into hallucinations and hypnotism had been embraced and assimilated by contemporary psychologists such as William James, Alfred Binet and others, his contributions to psychology have subsequently been marginalised because of the discipline's paradigmatic rejection of controversial research questions his findings were entangled with.
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Wood, Alan Muir. "Alfred Maurice Binnie, F. Eng. 6 February 1901—31 December 1986." Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 43 (January 1997): 75–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.1997.0005.

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The Binnie family may be traced back many generations to the Eastern Lowlands of Scotland, early records of the surname being associated in the 13th century with Uphall, West Lothian. The Armorial Bearings granted to a distant ancestor, a ‘horse's head furnished with a wagon proper’, and an ambiguous motto, ‘virtute doloque’ (by courage and policy [or deceit]), recall an incident of history–or myth—of the year 1313 in which a yeoman farmer, William Binny, who supplied hay to Edward II of England's garrison troops of a peel, Linlithgow Castle, adopted the ruse of stalling his wagon on entering the castle so that neither could the drawbridge be raised nor the portcullis lowered. Scottish soldiers emerged from beneath the hay and, with local irregulars, took the castle in the name of Robert the Bruce of Scotland.
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36

Luckhurst, Roger. "The Ghost Club, 1882–1936." Aries 22, no. 1 (November 22, 2021): 64–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700593-02201004.

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Abstract The Ghost Club was founded to discuss matters spiritual, psychic and occult in 1882 by Spiritualist William Stainton Moses and mystic Alfred Alaric Watts. It was intended as a club ruled by a gentleman’s code of honour—with all matters discussed kept strictly confidential. While maintaining secrecy, it also obsessively minuted and documented its discussions, leaving behind thousands of pages of records that have yet to be properly investigated, owing to conditions around their use. This essay is an attempt to examine the importance of the Club, and how it might readjust our understanding of the networks of the London occult in the late-Victorian and Edwardian eras.
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Klyushina, Elena V. "The Belgian Accent of the Finnish Avant-Garde: Alfred William Finch’s Art in Finland." Actual Problems of Theory and History of Art 10 (2020): 158–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.18688/aa200-1-15.

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Csák, Anna, and Erzsébet Mák. "Az IQ skála kialakulása és fejlődése." Kaleidoscope history 11, no. 23 (2021): 167–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.17107/kh.2021.23.167-176.

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Alfred Binet has done an outstanding job in psychology, and among others laying the founding stone of intelligence, measurement can also be attributed to his name. He linked in his research with Theodore Simon the children’s performance closely to their age, creating this way the concept of mental age. Using this information, Based on these outcomes, William Stern created the concept of IQ as it is known today, which was further developed by Lewis Terman. The first IQ test measuring the adults’ IQ was done by David Wechsler, which was revised several times to our day. These gave rise to the concept of deviation IQ, which is measured by the intelligence tests used today.
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Aranda Arribas, Victoria. "El Gordo, el Flaco y Cervantes: The Bohemian Girl (1843/1936)." Archivum 71, no. 1 (December 23, 2021): 43–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.17811/arc.71.1.2021.43-90.

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En 1936 los estudios de Hal Roach estrenaron la comedia The Bohemian Girl. Protagonizada por Stan Laurel y Oliver Hardy –el Gordo y el Flaco–, tomaba como base la ópera homónima (1843) de William Balfe y Alfred Bunn, cuyo libreto se había inspirado a su vez en La gitanilla de Miguel de Cervantes (Novelas ejemplares, 1613). El presente artículo sondea la transformación del relato del complutense desde su publicación hasta su reescritura fílmica gracias a la “Factoría de la Risa”; sin orillar tampoco el drama operístico, la fortuna internacional de la historia de Preciosa y sus copiosas decantaciones, cifra y razón de uno de los mitos más influyentes de las letras españolas.
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des Etangs, Alain Lecavelier, Dante Minniti, Alan Boss, Michel Mayor, Peter Bodenheimer, Andrew Collier-Cameron, Ray Jayawardhana, et al. "DIVISION F COMMISSION 53: EXTRASOLAR PLANETS." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 11, T29A (August 2015): 383–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921316000867.

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The IAU Working Group on Extrasolar Planets (WGESP) was created by the Executive Council as a Working Group of Division III. This decision took place in June 1999, that is only 7 years after the discovery of planets around the pulsar PSR B1257+12 and 4 years after the discovery of 51 Peg b. This working group was renewed for 3 years at the General Assembly in 2003 in Sydney, Australia. It was chaired by Alan Boss from Carnegie Institution of Washington. The WGESP members were Paul Butler, William Hubbard, Philip Ianna, Martin Kürster, Jack Lissauer, Michel Mayor, Karen Meech, Francois Mignard, Alan Penny, Andreas Quirrenbach, Jill Tarter, and Alfred Vidal-Madjar.
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Tarter, Jill C. "Nomenclature Scheme in use by the WGESP and a Current List of Extrasolar Planets." Highlights of Astronomy 13 (2005): 1008–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1539299600017974.

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At the IAU General Assembly in 2000, the Working Group on Extrasolar Planets (WGESP) was established as a working group of Division III. Its terms of reference include acting as a focal point for international research on extra solar planets and organizing IAU activities in the field, such as, organizing comparative reviews of techniques used to detect extra-solar planets and establishing criteria for detections of varying degrees of certainty, as well as maintaining lists of objects satisfying these criteria. The committee is chaired by Alan Boss, and the current members are; Paul Butler, William Hubbard, Philip Ianna, Martin Kiirster, Jack Lissauer, Michel Mayor, Karen Meech, Francois Mignard, Alan Penny, Andreas Quirrenbach, Jill Tarter, and Alfred Vidal-Madjar.
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42

Emmet O’Connor. "William Walker, Irish Labour and ‘Chinese slavery’ in South Africa, 1904–6." Irish Historical Studies 37, no. 145 (May 2010): 48–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400000055.

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In 1903 the governor of South Africa, Lord Alfred Milner, agreed to proposals from the owners of the Transvaal gold mines to alleviate the labour shortage caused by the recent war by recruiting workers from China. The Conservative government of Arthur Balfour gave its approval in May 1904, and had overall responsibility for the scheme until it yielded power to the Liberals in December 1905. The so-called ‘coolies’ were to be indentured on a three-year contract, paid less than the blacks, and quarantined from the local population. Well before the first shipment arrived on the Witwatersrand in June 1904, British trade unionists were alarmed that a precedent was being set for the importation of cheap labour closer to home, and Britain’s ‘Non-conformist conscience’ was disturbed at the spectre of ‘nameless practices’ developing in compounds of young men separated from their families. Events seemed to bear out the apprehensions.
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43

Murashkin, Mykhailo. "The role of the subjective factor in the cases of the subfamily and the mysticism at the hourly stage (the ontological aspect of "Bezsmertya Stan")." Ukrainian Religious Studies, no. 79 (August 30, 2016): 66–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.32420/2016.79.678.

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An important problem is ninі і відзнайдення подібніості у буті містика і митця. Analiz doslenie і publikacіy showing nayavnіst vzhe vikrukuvanyh materіalіv zy chyogo drive. The subject of ours is written down by the term "Stan Bezsmertya", which is introduced after the documentary facts of people who immigrated immortality (Antti Revonsuo), de death appeared to be uninvolve (William James) and the collapse of the vital of the vital (W. James). Here subunit stіnі місти і митця ми bachimo u mіsticizmі (Jiddu Krishnamurti) і in otsіnyuvannі stіiv mіstistizmu yak creativ stіvі mittsya (Mary Latiens). Буття подібності стану містика і митця пов'язане з снунуняням афлексивного в людині (DI Dubrovsky), and takozh "cataleptic" (Мірча Еліаде), де to pass the processes of compensatory character (Alfred Adler).
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44

Creedy, John. "Jevons's Complex Cases in the Theory of Exchange." Journal of the History of Economic Thought 14, no. 1 (1992): 55–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1053837200004399.

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When William Stanley Jevons first presented his theory of exchange, he used the example of two trading bodies (A and B) holding stocks of corn and beef (goods X and Y), but he was eager to show how the basic results could be applied to a variety of situations. After considering the relatively simple introduction of transport costs, Jevons added three subsections (Jevons 1957, pp. 111–19) which demonstrated his confident handling of his approach. There have been many critical comments on Jevons's handling of mathematics, including those of Alfred Marshall in his review of the Theory of Political Economy (Jevons 1872; see Black 1981). However, these examples show that Jevons produced a clear and succinct statement of the mathematical structure of the theory of exchange.
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45

Pérez Fernández, Julián Jesús. "The Bohemian Girl de William Balfe y Alfred Bunn a través de algunos fragmentos significativos." DIGILEC: Revista Internacional de Lenguas y Culturas 3 (December 30, 2016): 33. http://dx.doi.org/10.17979/digilec.2016.3.0.1754.

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46

Peregrin, Jan H., and Michael J. Lee. "A Legacy of Giving: In Memory of William Alfred Cook, Founder of the Cook Group." CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology 34, no. 5 (August 11, 2011): 889. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00270-011-0225-8.

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47

Tidjani, Ridwan Adewale. "Al muqaranah Al Adabiyah Baina Imru Al Qais wa Lord Alfred Tennysson." (الطموحات ) EL-THUMUHAT 2, no. 1 (April 22, 2020): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.25299/elthumuhat.2019.vol2(1).2340.

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Abstract Imru-l-qais remains an idol in the ancient Arabic poem. He had transformed it by introducing some new metaphor and rhetoric, which Arabian poets stayed on for decades after. Also, Imru-l-qais poem has been able to move outside Arabian peninsula into other international literature. This paper focused on one of his greatest poem (Almuhalaqoh) and how influencial this work was received by poets in their different literature - English, French, Dutch, and Russian. Alfred Lord Tennyson's _Locksley_ _Hall_ (1892) was was inspired by Imru-l-qais' poem. He read it, diggest it, and reproduce it in English form. However, this paper uses the comparative method to review the influential aspect between the two works. Therefore, the paper sought to reveal the confluences of the two poems substantively, which the result of the comparision showed that they dealt almost with the same subject within the poem; as well as meeting up on the structure and rhythm level. Historically, the connection between the two poems emerged through the translation of some Arabic Poems and its explanation by William Jones (1794), Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1832) and others.
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48

Glaubrecht, M., and M. Kotrba. "Alfred Russel Wallace's discovery of “curious horned flies” and the aftermath." Archives of Natural History 31, no. 2 (October 2004): 275–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2004.31.2.275.

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This paper describes the discovery, taxonomic history and fate of the original material of so-called antler flies belonging to the genus Phytalmia Gerstaecker, 1860 (Elaphomyia Saunders, 1861). Today, antler flies provide pivotal examples, not only among Diptera, for the phenomenon of sexual selection. They were first collected in 1858 at Dorey (Manokwari) in New Guinea, in a remarkable case of coincidence, by Alfred Russel Wallace, who was also the first to report their curious display behaviour, and by personnel (most likely Hermann von Rosenberg) on the Dutch Etna expedition. These specimens were subsequently distributed to collectors and scientists in Europe by various routes, to be described almost simultaneously by a British and a German entomologist. Our recapitulation of five dispersal routes of the specimens illustrates how new species were quickly and widely distributed among entomologists at that time through sales and exchanges. It reveals how William Wilson Saunders lost priority to his colleague Adolf Gerstaecker, whose types of Phytalmia are extant in the Berlin Museum für Naturkunde. We suggest that the types most probably stem from the Etna expedition and found their way via Amboina in the Moluccas (possibly involving the entomologist Carl Ludwig Doleschall) to Cajetan Felder in Vienna who exchanged them with Gerstaecker in Berlin. They were later mixed with antler flies from Wallace's collection as is evident from comparison of the pins used.
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Alvarado, Carlos S. "Dissociation and the Unconscious Mind: Nineteenth-Century Perspectives on Mediumship." Journal of Scientific Exploration 34, no. 3 (September 15, 2020): 537–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.31275/20201735.

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There is a long history of discussions of mediumship as related to dissociation and the unconscious mind during the Nineteenth Century. After an overview of relevant ideas and observations from the mesmeric, hypnosis, and spiritualistic literatures, I focus on the writings of Jules Baillarger, Alfred Binet, Paul Blocq, Théodore Flournoy, Jules Héricourt, William James, Pierre Janet, Ambroise August Liébeault, Frederic W.H. Myers, Julian Ochorowicz, Charles Richet, Hippolyte Taine, Paul Tascher, and Edouard von Hartmann. While some of their ideas reduced mediumship solely to intra-psychic processes, others considered as well veridical phenomena. The speculations of these individuals, involving personation, and different memory states, were part of a general interest in the unconscious mind, and in automatisms, hysteria, and hypnosis during the period in question. Similar ideas continued into the Twentieth Century.
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Mills, Eric L. "From Discovery to discovery: the hydrology of the Southern Ocean, 1885–1937." Archives of Natural History 32, no. 2 (October 2005): 246–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2005.32.2.246.

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The work at sea of George Deacon on the RRS William Scoresby and RRS Discovery II between 1927 and 1937 resulted in the publication of “The hydrology of the Southern Ocean” (1937) and a description of the Southern Ocean and the names of its water masses that are still in use. Deacon's interpretations were publicized by Sverdrup, Johnson and Fleming in the text The oceans (1942), but their origin is in earlier work, mainly German, between 1898 and 1922, in which Gerhard Schott, Erich von Drygalski, Alfred Merz, and Georg Wüst, and especially Wilhelm Brennecke, added significantly to knowledge of the meridional circulation of the Atlantic Ocean. Deacon's great contribution was to systematize the physical oceanography of the Southern Ocean and to show that it was part of a global system.
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