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1

Telemann-Festtage, der DDR (9th 1987 Magdeburg Germany). 9. Telemann-Festtage der DDR, Magdeburg, 11.-15. März 1987. [Magdeburg]: Das Zentrum, 1987.

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2

Telemann-Festtage, der DDR (10th 1990 Magdeburg Germany). 10. Telemann-Festtage der DDR, Magdeburg, 13. bis 18. März 1990. [Magdeburg: Der Rat, 1990.

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3

Did Elvis sing in your hometown? Sacramento, Calif: High Sierra Books, 1995.

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4

Telemann-Festtage der DDR. (10th 1990 Magdeburg, Germany). 10. Telemann-Festtage der DDR, Magdeburg, 13. bis 18. März 1990. [Magdeburg: Der Rat, 1990.

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5

Stabile, Michael Edward. An examination of the Total Quality Management (TQM) concept given current Federal/DoD competition initiatives. Monterey, Calif: Naval Postgraduate School, 1992.

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6

Dillman, Robert D. The DOD operational requirements and systems concepts generation processes: A need for more improvement. Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala: Air University Press, 1993.

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7

How did I get here?: Finding your way to renewed hope and happiness when life and love take unexpected turns. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2005.

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8

Ni jing de zhu fu: How did I get here? : finding your way to renewed hope and happiness when life and love take unexpected turns. Taibei Shi: Tian xia yuan jian chu ban gu fen you xian gong si, 2006.

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9

Ondoa, Hyacinthe. Literatur und politische Imagination: Zur Konstruktion der ostdeutschen Identität in der DDR-Erzählliteratur vor und nach der Wende. Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2005.

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10

Internationales Bachfest der DDR (5th 1985 Leipzig, Germany). Bach-Händel-Schütz-Ehrung der DDR 1985: V. Internationales Bachfest in Verbindung mit dem 60. Bachfest der Neuen Bachgesellschaft, Leipzig, 19. bis 27. März 1985. [Leipzig]: Der Rat, 1985.

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11

Internationales Bachfest der DDR. (5th 1985 Leipzig, Germany). Bach-Händel-Schütz-Ehrung der DDR 1985: V. Internationales Bachfest in Verbindung mit dem 60. Bachfest der Neuen Bachgesellschaft, Leipzig, 19. bis 27. März 1985. [Leipzig]: Der Rat, 1985.

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12

Cox, Sheamus. Why did a proposed innovation fail to be introduced?: With particular relevance for the management of future innovative concepts into a large urban FE college. [s.l: The author], 1988.

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13

Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here? Element Books, 2005.

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Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here? Element Books, 2005.

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15

BARROW, DANIEL. Neuroendocrinology (Concepts in Neurosurgery, Vol. 5) (CONCEPTS IN NEUROSURGERY). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 1992.

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16

Cotten, Lee. Did Elvis Sing in Your Hometown, Too? High Sierra Books, 1997.

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17

Graduate, Cambridge. Why Did Francis Bacon Conceal His Identity? Kessinger Publishing, 2005.

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18

Kvint, Vladimir. The Concept of Strategizing. Kemerovo State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21603/978-5-8353-2562-7.

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Book «The Concept of Strategizing» of Dr. Vladimir Kvint is, in essence, a reflection on the main provision of the General Theory of Strategy, which was developed by the author over his forty years in the field. The definitions, conceptual statements, and methodological and practical recommendations set forth in this book are useful for a wide range of readers, including corporate, state, municipal and military leadership, as well as management, theorists and strategists, teachers, and students.
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19

Cottis, David. Towards a British Concept Musical. Edited by Robert Gordon and Olaf Jubin. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988747.013.12.

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The three stage shows written in collaboration by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley—Stop the World—I Want to Get Off (1961), The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd (1964), and The Good Old, Bad Old Days (1972)—are unlike anything that preceded them in the British musical theatre: minimalist, metatheatrical, drawing on contemporary developments in other arts, and ultimately dependent on the persona of Newley, their co-writer and star. This chapter examines the collaboration between Bricusse and Newley, its influences and legacy, as well as the work each did without the other—Newley’s history of musical autobiography and Bricusse’s many literary adaptations.
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20

Schupmann, Benjamin A. The Concept of the Political. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198791614.003.0003.

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Chapter 2 reinterprets Schmitt’s concept of the political. Schmitt argued that Weimar developments, especially the rise of mass movements politically opposed to the state and constitution, demonstrated that the state did not have any sort of monopoly over the political, contradicting the arguments made by predominant Weimar state theorists, such as Jellinek and Meinecke. Not only was the political independent of the state, Schmitt argued, but it could even be turned against it. Schmitt believed that his contemporaries’ failure to recognize the nature of the political prevented them from adequately responding to the politicization of society, inadvertently risking civil war. This chapter reanalyzes Schmitt’s political from this perspective. Without ignoring enmity, it argues that Schmitt also defines the political in terms of friendship and, importantly, “status par excellence” (the status that relativizes other statuses). It also examines the relationship between the political and Schmitt’s concept of representation.
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21

Marques, Teresa, and Åsa Wikforss, eds. Shifting Concepts. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198803331.001.0001.

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Concepts stand at the centre of human cognition. We use concepts in categorizing objects and events in the world, in reasoning and action, and in social interaction. It is therefore not surprising that the study of concepts constitutes a central area of research in philosophy and psychology. Since the 1970s, psychologists have carried out intriguing experiments testing the role of concepts in categorizing and reasoning, and have found a great deal of variation in categorization behaviour across individuals and cultures. During the same period, philosophers of language and mind did important work on the semantic properties of concepts, and on how concepts are related to linguistic meaning and linguistic communication. An important motivation behind this was the idea that concepts must be shared, across individuals and cultures. However, there was little interaction between these two research programs until recently. With the dawn of experimental philosophy, the proposal that the experimental data from psychology lacks relevance to semantics is increasingly difficult to defend. Moreover, in the last decade, philosophers have approached questions about the tension between conceptual variation and shared concepts in communication from a new perspective: that of ameliorating concepts for theoretical or for social and political purposes. The volume brings together leading psychologists and philosophers working on concepts who come from these different research traditions.
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22

Scharp, Kevin, Stewart Shapiro, and Bradley Armour-Garb. Revising Inconsistent Concepts. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199896042.003.0010.

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This chapter investigates the question of when it is reasonable to replace an inconsistent concept. After surveying a number of proposals for how one might understand constitutive principles, it goes on to endorse Burgess’s (2004) account of being pragmatically analytic, as a possible source of insight into constitutive principles. The chapter then raises a question: If truth is an inconsistent concept, does it need to be replaced? According to the argument in the chapter, when an inconsistent concept paralyzes valuable projects, it is time to replace it. And if we are to replace a concept, our replacement should be able to do the work that the inconsistency-yielding one did. This, of course, raises a fundamental question concerning what work the notion of truth does for us. The chapter mounts a case for the claim that inflationists, but not obvious deflationists, about truth should offer a replacement for the concept of truth.
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23

Concert in honor of Rt. Rev. T.I. Dowling, D.D., at Loretto Academy, Mount St. Mary, Hamilton. [S.l: s.n., 1987.

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24

Schlimme, Jann E. Karl Jaspers’ existential concept of psychotherapy. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199609253.003.0011.

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Karl Jaspers developed and portrayed his existential understanding of psychotherapy in a number of papers and in the different editions of his General Psychopathology. In this chapter I will first describe Jaspers’ own understanding of psychotherapy and will argue that for Jaspers’ we, as human beings, need to philosophize with respect to existential questions, as they cannot be tackled in a scientific manner. This entails that there is a gap between the two kinds of liberty which can be achieved through a psychotherapeutical modulation of our behaviour, on the one hand, and which can be grasped as existence in a Jaspersian sense, on the other hand. Accordingly I will argue that due to methodological reasons, Jaspers did not intend to develop an existential form of psychotherapy, but an existential understanding of psychotherapy. I will demonstrate that his writings offer a rich framework for such an understanding.
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25

Leftow, Brian. Anselm on Necessity. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198806035.003.0001.

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This article provides an explanation of Anselm’s understanding of necessity. Anselm did not write much about modality, and what he did write is puzzling. The dominant readings of Anselm see him as having two concepts of necessity, one merely physical or causal, the other logical or “alethic.” This article argues that Anselm has just one concept of necessity, which corresponds best to what is now called broadly logical or absolute necessity, but whose metaphysics is in terms of powers and lacks of power. The rival interpretations of A. D. Smith, Thomas Williams, and Sandra Visser are discussed and criticized in detail.
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26

Løgstrup, K. E., and Hans Fink. Ethical Concepts and Problems. Edited by Bjørn Rabjerg and Robert Stern. Translated by Kees van Kooten Niekerk and Kristian-Alberto Lykke Cobos. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198859048.001.0001.

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This book concerns the nature of ethics and the relation between ethics and politics in the philosophy of Danish philosopher and theologian K. E. Løgstrup. In the book, Løgstrup argues that apart from deontology and teleology, there is a third main tradition within philosophical ethics, which he calls ontological ethics. According to Løgstrup, ontological ethics is rooted in the fundamental conditions of human life and is closely related to Martin Luther’s natural law ethics. Løgstrup sees the fundamental ethical relationship between humans as one of interdependence based on mutual vulnerability. In this respect, Løgstrup is reprising ideas from his earlier work The Ethical Demand (1956), where he introduced his ethical position. In the present book, Løgstrup connects his understanding of the ethical demand with his new key ethical conception of sovereign expressions of life, a concept he introduced a few years earlier in his 1968 Controverting Kierkegaard, but did not then discuss in relation to the ethical demand. Finally, Løgstrup also ventures into the area of political philosophy, discussing how it is possible to connect his own ontological ethics to politics.
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27

LoLordo, Antonia, ed. Persons. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190634384.001.0001.

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This book is a genealogy of the concept of a person, as it is used in philosophy, ethics, the law, and everyday life. It asks, what is the concept of a person? How is the concept of a person distinct from the concept of a human being? How is it distinct from the concept of the self? When and why did the concept of a person come into existence? What is the relationship between moral personhood and metaphysical personhood, and how has our conception of that relationship changed over the last two millennia? The book as a whole argues for two main claims. First, the concept of a person, like other central concepts used in philosophy and everyday life, has gained its significance not through definition but through the accretion of layers of meaning over centuries. Thus, one can only fully understand the concept by learning its history. Second, the concept of a person has five main strands: persons are particulars, roles, entities with special moral significance, rational beings, and selves. Thus, to count someone or something as a person is simultaneously to describe it—as a particular, a role, a rational being, and a self—and to prescribe certain norms concerning how it may act and how others may act toward it.
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28

Cinderella Cleaners 4 Mask Appeal. Scholastic, 2010.

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29

Air University (U.S.). Press and Air University (U.S.). Air Command and Staff College. School of Advanced Airpower Studies, eds. The DOD operational requirements and systems concepts generation processes: A need for more improvement. Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala: Air University Press, 1993.

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30

Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here?: Finding Your Way To Renewed Hope And Happiness When Life And Love Take Unexpected Turns. St Martins Pr, 2005.

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31

Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here?: Finding Your Way to Renewed Hope and Happiness When Life and Love Take Unexpected Turns. St. Martin's Griffin, 2006.

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32

Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here?: Finding Your Way to Renewed Hope and Happiness When Life and Love Take Unexpected Turns. Audio Renaissance, 2005.

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33

Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here?: Finding Your Way to Renewed Hope and Happiness When Life and Love Take Unexpected Turns. St. Martin's Press, 2005.

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34

Angelis, Barbara De. How Did I Get Here?: Finding Your Way to Renewed Hope and Happiness When Life and Love Take Unexpected Turns. Audio Renaissance, 2005.

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35

Novikova, Irina. The Concept of Employment Strategy for the Digital Economy. Kemerovo State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21603/978-5-8353-2609-9.

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The Monograph presents a Holistic Concept of Employment Strategy in the Digital Economy. The Concept is based on the Methodology of Dr. Vladimir L. Kvint. The Concept includes new Economic Categories: Information Potential of Employment, Employee Information Competencies, Workplace Information Components. This Work is of Interest to a Wide Range of Experts, Researchers, Government Officials interested in Issues of Employment Strategy and Human Resources Management in the Digital Economy.
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36

MacBride, Fraser. Kantian Prequel. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198811251.003.0002.

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This chapter argues that Kant in the Critique of Pure Reasons and his Prolegomena problematized the distinction between substance and attribute long before the advent of analytic philosophy. Kant did so because he realized that the distinction between the concepts of substance and attribute is problematic if the concept of causation is problematic, for the reasons Hume gave. Kant’s efforts, including his Metaphysical Deduction and Second Analogy, to transcendentally justify the employment of the category of substantia et accidens were ultimately a failure. This set the stage for Moore’s conceptual realism, an ontological scheme free of both substances and attributes.
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37

Common Services Agency for the Scottish Health Service., ed. Assessment of ultrasound scanners: Dynamic Imaging "Concept", Irex "Meridian", Siemens "Sonoline SX", Diasonics "DRF 200", Hitachi "EUB 240". London: Department of Health and Social Security, NHS Procurement Directorate, 1987.

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38

Cornwell, Hannah. The Meaning of Pax. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805632.003.0001.

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This chapter examines the semantic range of the concept of pax, considering its place in the Roman imaginary alongside ‘associated concepts’ (particularly concordia, otium, bellum, and victoria). The traditional Republican meaning and uses of the term pax are examined in a variety of contexts (contemporary prose, poetry, historical writings, numismatics, and religious dimensions) in order to establish more precisely the conceptualization and meaning of pax within the conventional political language of the Republic. Whilst pax was used to describe a usually unequal relationship of power with either the gods or other civic entities, as well as interpersonal relations, it did not conventionally have a strong political presence in Roman thought prior to the first century BC.
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39

Kundahl, George G., ed. The Formative Years, 1837–1855. University of North Carolina Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/9780807895702_kundahl.6.

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This chapter presents correspondences made by Ramseur to his family during his formative years. It observes that the concept of personal duty was a value repeatedly expressed in his writing from Davidson, sometimes making Ramseur seem too serious for a teenager. The chapter observes further that his interest in politics and an abiding concern for family would never wane. It reports that Stephen Dodson Ramseur was born on May 31, 1837, the eldest son of Lucy and Jacob Ramseur, and was known throughout his life as “Dod” or “Dodson”. The chapter notes that Dod took a special interest in nurturing his brother David, who was two years younger, and, further, that he also seems to have been very close to his sister Lucy, or “Luly,” six years his junior.
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40

What did Jesus Mean?: Explaining the Sermon on the Mount and the Parables in Simple and Universal Human Concepts. Oxford University Press, USA, 2001.

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41

Wierzbicka, Anna. What Did Jesus Mean?: Explaining the Sermon on the Mount and the Parables in Simple and Universal Human Concepts. Oxford University Press, USA, 2001.

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42

Randall, David. The Medieval Reformulations of Conversation. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474430104.003.0003.

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Rhetoric as a whole fragmented during the medieval era, as did the conversational constellation in particular, not fully to cohere again until the humanist reintegration of the Renaissance. Yet the humanist recuperation did not restore an unchanged rhetoric. On the one hand, the concepts of friendship, familiarity, and conversatio had reoriented themselves around the universalizing Christian conception of community during rhetoric’s long medieval rupture, while the sermo of dialogue had begun to concern itself with that eminently Christian subject matter, the interiority of the soul. On the other hand, the ars dictaminis had shifted the medieval letter toward the public realm, and thus toward the traditional realm of oratory. Petrarch’s rediscovery of classical conversation retained these medieval innovations. The Renaissance variant of conversation that sprang from him would partly slough the theory and practice of its medieval predecessor—but the influence of Christianity and the ars dictaminis would endure.
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43

Kantor, Georgy. Property in Land in Roman Provinces. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198813415.003.0003.

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Roman concept of dominium has been fundamental in the formation of concepts of ownership in European legal tradition. It is, however, often considered outside the context of Roman imperial rule and of the multiplicity of legal regimes governing property relations in Roman provinces outside Italy. This chapter starts from the classic passage in the Institutes of Gaius, claiming that the right of dominium did not exist in provincial land, where it belonged to the Roman state. Gaius’ statement is often dismissed in modern historical scholarship as a ‘conveyancer’s fantasy’ (A.H.M. Jones). It is argued here that, on the contrary, this passage and other similar statements in Roman juristic literature and technical literature on land-measurement, show an important facet of Roman ideas of ownership as a socially contingent right, dependent on civic status of the owner, status of the territory within the empire, and Roman recognition of local property regimes.
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44

Clegg, Stewart R., Christopher Biesenthal, Shankar Sankaran, and Julien Pollack. Power and Sensemaking in Megaprojects. Edited by Bent Flyvbjerg. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198732242.013.9.

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Megaprojects are complex achievements of organization, sensemaking, and management of power relations. Typically, engineering practice stresses rationality and linearity, exemplified in the nineteenth-century roots of modern management in writers such as Taylor and Fayol. A concern with contingency theory and the emergence of project management standards hardly changed these auspices. The emergent focus on soft systems theory and a more recent interest in the practice turn did begin to change megaproject management representations somewhat. In practice, megaprojects are occasions for much complex sensemaking, as Weick defines the concept. In turn, where there are different interests in different sensemaking, then power practices and relations need to be brought into focus. The chapter does this through discussing a number of studies in which these issues have been the focus.
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45

Debes, Remy. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199385997.003.0001.

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Until the mid-nineteenth century, the concept of dignity almost invariably connoted elevated social rank, of the sort that marked nobility or ecclesiastic preferment. However, today dignity usually connotes a fundamental moral status belonging to all humans equally, which status is the basis of human rights. How did this radical change in meaning come about? And did anything like our moralized concept of dignity exist before it was named “dignity”? The introduction sketches the way that the chapters in this volume answer these questions, and in turn how they draw the arc of dignity’s conceptual development from Homeric Greek thought to medieval Christian and Islamic theology through eighteenth century enlightenment revolutions all the way to the contemporary era.
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46

Dolman, A. Johannes, Luis U. Vilasa-Abad, and Thomas A. J. Janssen. Ecohydrological Concepts of Water-Vegetation Interaction in the Drylands of Africa. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.554.

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Drylands cover around 40% of the land surface on Earth and are inhabited by more than 2 billion people, who are directly dependent on these lands. Drylands are characterized by a highly variable rainfall regime and inherent vegetation-climate feedbacks that can enhance the resilience of the system, but also can amplify disturbances. In that way, the system may get locked into two alternate stable states: one relatively wet and vegetated, and the other dry and barren. The resilience of dryland ecosystems derives from a number of adaptive mechanisms by which the vegetation copes with prolonged water stress, such as hydraulic redistribution. The stochastic nature of both the vegetation dynamics and the rainfall regime is a key characteristic of these systems and affects its management in relation to the feedbacks. How the ecohydrology of the African drylands will change in the future depends on further changes in climate, human disturbances, land use, and the socioeconomic system.
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47

Doerr-Zegers, Otto, and Héctor Pelegrina-Cetrán. Karl Jaspers’ General Psychopathology in the framework of clinical practice. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199609253.003.0005.

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Jaspers Psychopathology (1913) encompasses all areas of psychiatry and delves deeply into psychology and philosophy. From the beginning it has had a great repercussion in European, Japanese, Latin American and finally, in the English speaking psychiatry. Jaspers greatest achievement was to establish psychopathology as a hard science and the basis of psychiatry as professional practice. He did this from strictly methodological perspective. Besides, he aspired to consider the patient and his psychopathological manifestations on the horizon of the totality of existence. To summarize his contributions would be practically impossible. Therefore, these authors have focused this chapter on some particular topics of his work, such as the introduction of phenomenological method; the development of the method of understanding in contrast to explanation; the concepts of process and development; the overcoming of stimulus/response scheme for conceptualizing the man-world relationship and its replacement by his revolutionary concept of “situation”; and finally, the introduction of dialectical thinking in psychopathology and psychiatry.
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48

Brings-Wiesen, Tobias, and Frederik Ferreau, eds. 40 Jahre "Deutscher Herbst". Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845291475.

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Alleviating the tension between security and freedom is a fundamental challenge for a free and democratic constitutional state. How difficult it is to strike a balance between these concepts became particularly clear during the period of terrorism instigated by the German militant group ‘The Red Army Fraction’ in the 1970s. Forty years later the question of the right way of achieving such a balance is no less relevant. However, in view of our increasingly technological and globalised society, the legal questions which have emerged from this conflict require new responses. The documentation from the ‘JuWissDay 2017’ conference confronts this task. It collates articles regarding the need for reform of Europe’s security architecture, the obligation of the German Federal Intelligence Service to respect fundamental rights, the obligation of transparency in risk prevention law, the function of migration law in counterterrorism as well as reflections on the concept of an ‘anticipated state of emergency’ in legislation. This volume is the first in the series of publications entitled ‘Schriften der Jungen Wissenschaft im Öffentlichen Recht‘. With contributions by Felix Krämer (Gießen); Judith Sikora (Marburg); Timo Schwander (Berlin); Dr. Björn Schiffbauer (Köln); Maria Wilhelm (Münster); Mirka Möldner (Erlangen); Elisabeth Kath, LL.M. (Innsbruck); Dr. Carsten Hörich (Halle/Saale); Dr. Tristan Barczak, LL.M. (Münster); Dr. Benjamin Rusteberg (Freiburg); Tobias Brings-Wiesen (Köln); Dr. Frederik Ferreau (Köln).
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49

International, Rockwell, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., eds. Advanced transportation system study: Manned launch vehicle concepts for two way transportation system payloads to LEO : program cost estimates document (DR6). [Downey, Calif.]: Rockwell International, Space Systems Division, Huntsville Operations, 1994.

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50

Chan, Chen-Jung, Jörg Ennuschat, Chien-Liang Lee, Yuh-May Lin, and Stefan Storr, eds. Die Corona-Krise und das öffentliche Wirtschaftsrecht. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748921301.

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The worldwide outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic is of extraordinary importance for public commercial law. In a very short time, restrictions to the freedom of commerce were made that would have been unimaginable before the beginning of the pandemic. In this compilation, authors from Taiwan, Austria and Germany describe the national concepts to deal with the pandemic and their consequences for public commercial law. By comparing the concepts in three countries that may be geographically distanced but quite similar regarding to their legal systems, it offers an interesting overview over the different concepts to deal with the pandemic and its consequences. With contributions by Prof. Dr. Chen-Jung Chan, Prof. Dr. Hung-Ping Chung, Prof. Dr. Jörg Ennuschat, Johannes Fritsch, Jessica Heuser, Dist.-Prof. Dr. Chien-Liang Lee, Prof. Dr. Yuh-May Lin, Univ.-Prof. Dr. Stefan Storr, Stephanie Szenkurök and Dr. Matthias Zußner.
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