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1

Hewitt, Elizabeth. "Romanticism of Numbers: Hamilton, Jefferson, and the Sublime". American Literary History 31, nr 4 (2019): 619–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajz035.

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Abstract This essay analyzes the narrative elements of the partisan dispute concerning Hamilton’s fiscal proposals in the first years of the 1790s. Focusing especially on a sequence of letters from the summer of 1792 between Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson, it proposes that we should study Hamilton’s response to his opponents as an aesthetic argument. More specifically, Hamilton crafts the nation’s economic policy by conceiving of the sublimity of capital and finance, and I propose we should read Hamilton’s writing with an eye toward Immanuel Kant’s theory of the sublime. The essay also situates Hamilton in relation to other theorists of the economic sublime, including Fredric Jameson, François Lyotard, and Max Weber.
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2

Chan, Michael D. "Alexander Hamilton on Slavery". Review of Politics 66, nr 2 (2004): 207–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s003467050003727x.

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This article seeks to refute the prevailing scholarly view that Hamilton, like the Founders generally, lacked a deep concern about slavery. The first part examines Hamilton's political principles and shows that they were not Hobbesian but consistent with the views of more traditional natural law theorists. Accordingly, Hamilton understood that the natural rights of man imposed a corresponding duty to end slavery. The second part examines Hamilton's endorsement of a compensated emancipation, his opinions of the Constitution, his conduct of American foreign policy, his involvement in the state abolition societies, and his economic policies to demonstrate that ending slavery was in fact one of his abiding concerns.
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3

Lotery, Kevin. "an Exhibit/an Aesthetic: Richard Hamilton and Postwar Exhibition Design". October 150 (październik 2014): 87–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/octo_a_00202.

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The story, as Richard Hamilton told it years later, begins with something of an insult. Upon viewing Hamilton's 1955 exhibition Man, Machine, and Motion, Victor Pasmore, the Constructivist sculptor and Hamilton's then-colleague at King's College in Newcast le, delivered a snide quasi-compliment, dismissing the iconographical content (and main attraction) of the project only to praise the mere apparatus of exhibiting—the bracket and framing system that Hamilton had invented to exhibit his imposing photographic enlargements of men and their technical prostheses. “It would have been very good,” Pasmore is purport-ed to have said, “if it hadn't been for all those photographs.”2 But clearly the exhibition intrigued Pasmore, who would approach Hamilton later in the hope of collaborating with the younger artist. Hamilton recalls: Remembering his comment on Man, Machine and Motion I proposed that we might make a show which would be its own justification: no theme, no subject, not a display of things or ideas—pure abstract exhibition.3
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4

Knott, Stephen F. "The Four Faces of Alexander Hamilton: Jefferson’s Hamilton, Hollywood’s Hamilton, Miranda’s Hamilton, and the Real Hamilton". American Political Thought 7, nr 4 (wrzesień 2018): 543–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/699909.

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5

Slater, Peter. "Cunningham, Jr., Ed., Jefferson Vs. Hamilton - Confrontations That Shaped A Nation". Teaching History: A Journal of Methods 28, nr 1 (1.04.2003): 51–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.33043/th.28.1.51-52.

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Ask undergraduates about Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton and they will probably tell you that Jefferson was a president who had children with a slave mistress and that Hamilton was killed in a duel. One virtue of Noble E. Cunningham's compilation of documents is that its emphasis is very different from these current ones. Jefferson vs. Hamilton focuses on how in the 1790s the two Revolutionary War patriots became bitter opponents and leaders of the first American political parties, a rivalry that continued until Hamilton's untimely death during Jefferson's first term.
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6

Boyle, Deborah. "Elizabeth Hamilton on Sympathy and the Selfish Principle". Journal of Scottish Philosophy 19, nr 3 (wrzesień 2021): 219–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jsp.2021.0309.

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In A Series of Popular Essays (1813 ) , Scottish philosopher Elizabeth Hamilton (1758–1816) identifies two ‘principles’ in the human mind: sympathy and the selfish principle. While sharing Adam Smith's understanding of sympathy as a capacity for fellow-feeling, Hamilton also criticizes Smith's account of sympathy as involving the imagination. Even more important for Hamilton is the selfish principle, a ‘propensity to expand or enlarge the idea of self’ that she distinguishes from both selfishness and self-love. Counteracting the selfish principle requires cultivating sympathy and benevolent affections from birth. Since no one can do this alone, Hamilton's prescription appeals ineliminably to the caregivers of the very young; and Hamilton was ahead of her time in claiming that these caregivers need not be female.
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7

Tomalin, Marcus. "William Rowan Hamilton and the Poetry of Science". Articles, nr 54 (15.12.2009): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/038763ar.

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AbstractThis article explores the scientific and literary work of William Rowan Hamilton (1805-1865). Hamilton was recognised as one of the finest scientists of his generation, and he made lasting contributions to the discipline that eventually became known as ‘physics’. In addition, though, he was fascinated by the relationship between mathematics and poetry. He wrote extensively about this subject, and, from 1827 onwards, he sustained a close friendship with Wordsworth who provided detailed critical analyses of Hamilton’s own poems. Influenced by these revealing exchanges, Hamilton identified poetical qualities in physical and mathematical treatises, and this article probes his views concerning these perceived interconnections with reference to other ‘Romantic’ scientists such as Humphry Davy. In particular, Hamilton’s striking claim that a text such as Joseph-Louis Lagrange’sMécanique Analytique(1788) can be viewed as ‘a kind of scientific poem’ is assessed.
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8

GOKCEKUS, SAMIN. "Elizabeth Hamilton's Scottish Associationism: Early Nineteenth-Century Philosophy of Mind". Journal of the American Philosophical Association 5, nr 3 (2019): 267–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/apa.2019.2.

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AbstractThis article compares early nineteenth-century English and Scottish theories of the mind and the way that it develops to findings in today's developmental psychology and neuroscience through a close observation of the work of Elizabeth Hamilton (1756–1816). Hamilton was a Scottish writer and philosopher who produced three pedagogical works in her lifetime, consisting of her carefully formulated philosophy of mind and practical suggestions to caretakers and educators. Although Hamilton has received relatively little attention in modern philosophical literature, her understanding of the mind and the way it develops—based on her nuanced understanding of associationism and Scottish faculty psychology—is overwhelmingly supported by empirical findings today. In addition to utilizing Hamilton's work for the sake of understanding early nineteenth-century philosophy of mind, I argue that a large portion of Hamilton's work should be used to inform future research programs, early caregiving guides, and educational methods.
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9

Walling, Karl. "Was Alexander Hamilton a Machiavellian Statesman?" Review of Politics 57, nr 3 (1995): 419–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034670500019690.

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Many important scholars have seen significant similarities in the political thought of Alexander Hamilton and Niccolo Machiavelli, but the only two references to Machiavelli in Hamilton's papers suggest deep misgivings about the kinds of politics we now call Machiavellian. This essay attempts to clarify Hamilton's ambiguous relation to the sage Florentine by focussing on the problem of waging war effectively and remaining free at the same time in the thought of both statesmen. Although Hamilton understood at least as well as Machiavelli the necessity of dynamic virtù in princes and civic virtue in free citizens, he sought to establish a new order of the ages, a republican empire, which would supply an effectual moral alternative to the genuine Machiavellian regimes of his day.
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10

Todd, D. D. "An Inquiry into Thomas Reid". Dialogue 39, nr 2 (2000): 381–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0012217300005989.

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This book is the second volume of a critical edition of the writings of Thomas Reid, an edition that will include many of his manuscript remains as well as his previously published works. These volumes are intended to displace the heretofore standard 8th edition of Reid's works edited by Sir William Hamilton (1788–1856). Hamilton's edition is marred by his numerous, often intrusive, and obtuse footnotes. Reid's spelling and punctuation were also sometimes “corrected” by Hamilton, so his edition does not present a fully accurate version of the original editions whose publication was superintended by Reid. The type in the Hamilton edition is also archaic and very small, making reading the text excessively difficult. The present and subsequent volumes are intended to present canonical texts free of the flaws in the Hamilton text. This volume succeeds admirably in that project.
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11

Wurman, Ilan. "Alexander Hamilton on Executive Authority". American Journal of Legal History 63, nr 3 (1.09.2023): 251–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajlh/njad005.

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Abstract The ‘residuum’ theory of executive power maintains that Article II’s Vesting Clause grants to the president of the United States a residuum of royal prerogative powers that have not been assigned to other departments of the national government or otherwise limited elsewhere in the text of the Constitution. This theory is often traced to Alexander Hamilton’s Pacificus essay, in which he defended President Washington’s proclamation of neutrality with a version of that theory. Two years earlier, however, in his opinion on the constitutionality of the Bank of the United States, Hamilton appears to have rejected the residuum theory; at a minimum, he had incentive to propound that theory but did not do so. Although not the only possible way to interpret Hamilton’s opinion, scholars of executive power must contend with this possibility before concluding that Hamilton believed in a residual vesting of prerogative powers.
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12

Johnston, Tiffany L. "American Dionysus: Carl W. Hamilton (1886–1967), collector of Italian Renaissance art". Journal of the History of Collections 31, nr 2 (31.10.2018): 411–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhy026.

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Abstract For nearly a decade Carl W. Hamilton was in possession of one of the most important private collections of Italian Renaissance painting in America. A self-made millionaire from humble beginnings, the young Hamilton captivated the art dealer Joseph Duveen and Duveen’s foremost experts in Italian Renaissance painting, Bernard and Mary Berenson. By inspiring and instructing Hamilton, Duveen and the Berensons hoped to focus his wealth and ambition to create a great collection and thereby profit by both him and the glory of his achievement. Though Hamilton’s personal collection proved ephemeral, many of his most important works of art nevertheless found their way into American public collections. Furthermore, Hamilton’s formative collecting experience – which developed his prejudices and preferences, sharpened his keen negotiating skills and solidified his zeal for collecting – helped to shape two significant collections of Old Masters in the Carolinas: the Museum & Gallery at Bob Jones University and the North Carolina Museum of Art.
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13

Rose, Marika. "Don't Say Practical Criticism, Say Fuck the Police". CounterText 7, nr 1 (kwiecień 2021): 180–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/count.2021.0224.

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This article responds to John Wilkinson's piece, ‘Moreover: Reading Alfred Starr Hamilton’. Opening with a consideration of the connections between language, law, economy, and freedom, it draws attention to Wilkinson's discussion of letters Hamilton wrote to the Montclair Police Department in 2020. These letters suggest that Hamilton's work might be usefully read as emerging from the economy of racial capitalism, and indicate the limits of his poetic search for freedom.
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14

Bressler, Sylvie. "Hamilton". Esprit Octobr, nr 10 (2016): 82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/espri.1610.0082.

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15

Lotery, Kevin. "Rooms: Richard Hamilton and Postmodernism". October 159 (styczeń 2017): 55–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/octo_a_00282.

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In 1978, Richard Hamilton mounted The artist's eye at the National Gallery, London, the second in the museum's series of artist-designed exhibitions. The result was a strange space in which Bosch and Velázquez commingled with an Eames recliner, an ironing board, and a working television. Five years later, Hamilton constructed Treatment Room (1983–84), in which painting's skillful gestures found themselves interrogated by Orwellian machineries of destruction and paranoia. This essay argues that Hamilton's remobilization of traditions of painterly imagination and skill held a critical spatial function: to equip spectators with cognitive tools for thinking through and imagining routes out of the traumatic “rooms” of a postmodern decade.
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16

Fusco Girard, Mario. "Evaluation of the Feynman Propagator by Means of the Quantum Hamilton-Jacobi Equation". Quanta 12, nr 1 (24.04.2023): 22–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.12743/quanta.v12i1.223.

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It is shown that the complex phase of the Feynman propagator is a solution of the quantum Hamilton–Jacobi equation, namely, it is the quantum Hamilton's principal function (or quantum action). Therefore, the Feynman propagator can be computed either by means of the path integration, or by the way of the Hamilton–Jacobi equation. This is analogous to what happens in classical mechanics, where the Hamilton's principal function can be computed either by integrating the Lagrangian along the extremal paths, or as a solution of partial differential equation, namely the classical Hamilton–Jacobi equation. If the path is decomposed in the classical one and quantum fluctuations, the contribution of these quantum fluctuations satisfies a non-linear partial differential equation, whose coefficients depend on the classical action. When the contribution of the quantum fluctuations depend only on the time, it can be computed by means of a simple integration. The final results for the propagators in this case are equal to the Van Vleck–Pauli–Morette expressions, even though the two derivations are quite different.Quanta 2023; 12: 22–26.
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17

Junker, Philipp, i Daniel Balzani. "An extended Hamilton principle as unifying theory for coupled problems and dissipative microstructure evolution". Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics 33, nr 4 (7.06.2021): 1931–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00161-021-01017-z.

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AbstractAn established strategy for material modeling is provided by energy-based principles such that evolution equations in terms of ordinary differential equations can be derived. However, there exist a variety of material models that also need to take into account non-local effects to capture microstructure evolution. In this case, the evolution of microstructure is described by a partial differential equation. In this contribution, we present how Hamilton’s principle provides a physically sound strategy for the derivation of transient field equations for all state variables. Therefore, we begin with a demonstration how Hamilton’s principle generalizes the principle of stationary action for rigid bodies. Furthermore, we show that the basic idea behind Hamilton’s principle is not restricted to isothermal mechanical processes. In contrast, we propose an extended Hamilton principle which is applicable to coupled problems and dissipative microstructure evolution. As example, we demonstrate how the field equations for all state variables for thermo-mechanically coupled problems, i.e., displacements, temperature, and internal variables, result from the stationarity of the extended Hamilton functional. The relation to other principles, as the principle of virtual work and Onsager’s principle, is given. Finally, exemplary material models demonstrate how to use the extended Hamilton principle for thermo-mechanically coupled elastic, gradient-enhanced, rate-dependent, and rate-independent materials.
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18

ROBERTS, TYSON R. "Francis Hamilton and the freshwater stingrays described in his Gangetic fishes (1822)". Archives of Natural History 25, nr 2 (czerwiec 1998): 267–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.1998.25.2.267.

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Direct evidence bearing on identification of the two new species of Gangetic stingrays named Raia fluviatilis and R. sancur by Hamilton, 1822 comprises 1) the first written account by Hamilton (then Buchanan) of his encounters with Gangetic stingrays in 1807–1813, written at the time in manuscript, but not published until 1877; 2) Hamilton's accounts of Raia fluviatilis and Raia sancur published in 1822; 3) Hamilton drawing IV 7 in the archives of the Asiatic Society of Bengal (never published, original now lost); and 4) Hamilton drawing IV 65 in the same archives (published by Hora, 1929, original now lost; this drawing is not a copy or a version of drawing IV 7). The description of R. sancur clearly is based on a species of the genus Pastinachus. Drawing IV 7 presumably is the unfinished drawing of R. sancur mentioned by Hamilton, 1822, and is therefore also of a Pastinachus. Drawing IV 65, not mentioned by Hamilton, a complete drawing with dorsal and ventral views of a newborn male Pastinachus with an intact sting, is identified as based on Raia fluviatilis. Pending revision of the genus Pastinachus, the Gangetic species is tentatively identified as P. sephen (Forsskål, 1775). Identification of Raia fluviatilis with a large freshwater species of Gangetic Himantura advocated by Annandale, 1910; Chaudhuri, 1912; Compagno and Cook, 1996; and Zorzi, 1996 is based on unwarranted assumptions. There is no definite evidence that Hamilton ever saw a Gangetic Himantura. Himantura chaophraya Monkolprasit and Roberts, 1990 is the only available name applicable to huge large tropical Asian freshwater stingrays of the dasyatid genus Himantura. No specimens of Gangetic Himantura exist in present museum collections.
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19

Grams, Grant W. "Louis Hamilton: A British Scholar in Nazi Germany". Fascism 5, nr 2 (27.10.2016): 177–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116257-00502005.

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Louis Hamilton (1879–1948) was a British national that lectured at various institutions of higher learning in Berlin from 1904–1914, and 1919–1938. During the Third Reich (1933–1945) Hamilton was accused of being half-Jewish and his continued presence at institutions of higher learning was considered undesirable. Hamilton like other foreign born academics was coerced to leave Germany because the Nazi educational system viewed them as being politically unreliable. Hamilton’s experiences are an illustration of what foreign academics suffered during the Third Reich. The purpose of this article is to shed new light on the fate of foreign academics in Nazi Germany. Although the fate of Jewish professors and students has been researched non-Jewish and non-Aryan instructors has been a neglected topic within the history of Nazism.
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20

Holmlund, Chris. "M.I.A.: Actors, acting and Swedish superspy Carl Hamilton". Journal of Scandinavian Cinema 9, nr 3 (1.09.2019): 289–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jsca_00005_1.

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Carl Gustaf Gilbert Hamilton is the best-known of Swedish fictional spies – in Scandinavia at least. The brain child of novelist Jan Guillou, Hamilton is Sweden’s James Bond or Dirty Harry. Five prominent Swedish actors – Stellan Skarsgård, Peter Haber, Stefan Sauk, Peter Stormare and Mikael Persbrandt – have played the spy on-screen, yet unlike Sean Connery and Daniel Craig as Bond or Clint Eastwood as Harry, their performances have been largely unnoticed, even in Sweden. This article studies their acting with two goals in mind: (1) to show how actors have shaped Sweden’s best-known secret agent on film and for TV, and (2) to elucidate how their acting decisions respond to genre customs and constraints. In conclusion I comment on why the screen Hamiltons have not found audiences outside Scandinavia and indicate ways that transnational action genres have helped reshape Swedish culture, transforming one of its national icons, Hamilton, in the process.
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21

Fusco Girard, Mario. "The Quantum Hamilton–Jacobi Equation and the Link Between Classical and Quantum Mechanics". Quanta 11, nr 1 (3.11.2022): 42–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.12743/quanta.v11i1.202.

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We study how the classical Hamilton's principal and characteristic functions are generated from the solutions of the quantum Hamilton–Jacobi equation. While in the classically forbidden regions these quantum quantities directly tend to the classical ones, this is not the case in the allowed regions. There, the limit is reached only if the quantum fluctuations are eliminated by means of coarse-graining averages. Analogously, the classical Hamilton–Jacobi scheme bringing to the motion's equations arises from a similar formal quantum procedure.Quanta 2022; 11: 42–52.
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22

Bacarese-Hamilton, Tito, Francesco Bistoni i Andrea Crisanti. "Protein Microarrays: From Serodiagnosis to Whole Proteome Scale Analysis of the Immune Response Against Pathogenic Microorganisms". BioTechniques 33, nr 6S (grudzień 2002): S24—S29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2144/dec02-hamilton.

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23

Schrader, Valerie Lynn. "‘Who Tells Your Story?’: Narrative Theory, Public Memory, and the Hamilton Phenomenon". New Theatre Quarterly 35, nr 03 (18.07.2019): 261–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x19000265.

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The popularity of Lin-Manuel Miranda's hit musical Hamilton has been unprecedented. Hamilton tells the story of the first United States Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, a founding father who, until recently, was often forgotten in American public memory. Miranda's unique musical, which fuses an eighteenth- and nineteenth-century story with contemporary music and text, features actors of various races and genders in order to tell the story of ‘America then’ by and for ‘America now’. Through a close textual analysis of the musical's script, cast recording, and sheet music, Valerie Lynn Schrader uses narrative theory to explore how Hamilton creates public memory of one of the lesserknown US founding fathers. She argues that, through the narrative paradigm, Hamilton creates what narrative theorist Walter Fisher refers to as ‘public moral argument’,1 through which audience members can discern life lessons, or ‘equipment for living’,2 for their own lives. Finally, the article suggests that the rhetorical theory of Burkean identification may play a role in how public memory of Hamilton's story is formed and how audience members learn life lessons from the musical. Valerie Lynn Schrader is Associate Professor of Communications Arts and Sciences at the Schuylkill Campus of the Pennsylvania State University. Her research focuses on rhetorical messages in theatre works, especially musical theatre productions. She is herself a classically trained lyric soprano/soubrette.
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Wilkinson, John. "Moreover: Reading Alfred Starr Hamilton". CounterText 7, nr 1 (kwiecień 2021): 160–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/count.2021.0223.

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This article addresses the challenge to professionalised practices of reading represented by the oeuvre of Alfred Starr Hamilton (1914–2005), with broader implications for the contested category of Outsider Writing. Drawing on the author's experience, three types of early life encounter with poetry are specified, guided to its objects by cultural and parental authority and later reaction against them: a fetish of the book and representations of the poet, oral pleasure, and the magic of the word as an illimitably productive and plastic material. These are linked to encounter with Hamilton's poetry, at once unrelentingly repetitive, and sponsored and structured by a small seedbank of magic words, occasioning the sudden florescence of beauty. To read Hamilton requires a feline practice of submitting to reverie while registering disturbance and aesthetic shock precisely.
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25

RAGHAVAN, RAJEEV, NEELESH DAHANUKAR i RALF BRITZ. "The type locality of Tor mosal (Hamilton, 1822) (Teleostei: Cyprinidae)". Zootaxa 4317, nr 3 (5.09.2017): 593. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4317.3.12.

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Hamilton (1822) described Cyprinus mosal, now assigned to the genus Tor, from the ‘Kosi’, a tributary of the Ganges. The fact that two Gangetic tributaries with the name Kosi exist, has resulted in confusion in the Indian ichthyological literature and beyond regarding the type locality of Hamilton’s T. mosal. A critical review of Hamilton’s treatise on the fishes of the Ganges, as well as several other works by and on Hamilton, revealed that T. mosal was collected in and described from the Kosi (=Koshi), a Gangetic tributary that originates in the northern slopes of the Himalayas in the Tibet Autonomous Region and drains the southern slopes of Nepal and Bihar (India); and not from the more western Gangetic tributary by the same name flowing through Ramnagar in Uttarakhand State, India.
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26

Loubert, Aart. "Sovereign Debt Threatens the Union: The Genesis of a Federation". European Constitutional Law Review 8, nr 3 (październik 2012): 442–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1574019612000284.

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Eurozone sovereign debt crisis – Europe's ‘Alexander Hamilton Moment’ – American sovereign debt crisis of 1780s – Articles of Confederation – U.S. Constitution – Assumption of states' debt – Constitutional transformation key factor in enabling Alexander Hamilton's debt restructuring
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27

Glaser. "Reading Hamilton Backward: Some Difficulties in Hamilton's Democratic Prescriptions". Good Society 26, nr 1 (2018): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/goodsociety.26.1.0087.

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BAILEY, JEREMY D. "The New Unitary Executive and Democratic Theory: The Problem of Alexander Hamilton". American Political Science Review 102, nr 4 (listopad 2008): 453–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003055408080337.

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Central to the recent argument from the “unitary executive” is the claim that the unitary executive is consistent with the text and history of the Constitution. But because this veracity and importance of this claim is contested, unitarians also argue that the unitary executive is consistent with democratic theory. This article examines that argument by addressing a question in the political thought of Alexander Hamilton. Although Hamilton was an important defender of an energetic executive, and is associated with an expansive interpretation of executive power, he wrote inThe Federalistthat the president and Senate would share the removal power. In contrast with existing scholarship, which either overlooks Hamilton's statement on removals or dismisses it as a careless error, this article argues that Hamilton's statement limiting presidential removals illuminates his larger argument about executive energy. By showing how “duration” would check “unity,” this article clarifies Hamilton's political thought and offers an important critique of the modern argument from the unitary executive.
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Rice, Robin, i Joan Simon. "Ann Hamilton". Woman's Art Journal 24, nr 2 (2003): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1358786.

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Purcell, John. "Hamilton, Ontario". Raven: A Journal of Vexillology 18 (2011): 70–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/raven20111838.

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Winkelstein, Warren. "Alice Hamilton". Epidemiology 17, nr 5 (wrzesień 2006): 591. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.ede.0000229952.68394.26.

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Mosher, John. "Alexander Hamilton". History: Reviews of New Books 33, nr 1 (styczeń 2004): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03612750409602111.

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Rowell, Charles H., i Ride Hamilton. "Ride Hamilton". Callaloo 29, nr 4 (2006): 1203–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cal.2007.0068.

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Mimpriss, Rob. "Hamilton Park". New Writing 11, nr 3 (28.04.2014): 396–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14790726.2014.909856.

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Lodewijks, John. "Clive Hamilton". International Journal of Development Issues 2, nr 2 (luty 2003): 91–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb045836.

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36

Garbarini, Nicole. "Replacing Hamilton". Scientific American Mind 16, nr 2 (czerwiec 2005): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/scientificamericanmind0605-8b.

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37

Green, Richard T. "Alexander Hamilton". Administration & Society 34, nr 5 (listopad 2002): 541–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009539902237275.

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38

Normark, Benjamin B. "Unruly Hamilton". Trends in Genetics 18, nr 7 (lipiec 2002): 377. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0168-9525(02)02693-8.

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39

SBM i DPF. "Max Hamilton". Psychiatric Bulletin 13, nr 1 (styczeń 1989): 43–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.13.1.43.

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40

Kapp, Clare. "Hamilton Naki". Lancet 366, nr 9479 (lipiec 2005): 22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(05)66811-0.

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41

Hrimiuc, D. "Hamilton geometry". Mathematical and Computer Modelling 20, nr 4-5 (sierpień 1994): 57–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0895-7177(94)90156-2.

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42

Presser, S. B. "Alexander Hamilton". Journal of American History 93, nr 1 (1.06.2006): 192–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4486092.

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43

Piper, Laurence. "Representing Hamilton". Representation 53, nr 1 (2.01.2017): 5–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00344893.2017.1346878.

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44

YANG, LIYUAN, CHRISTOPHER H. DIETRICH i YALIN ZHANG. "Three new Macropsini (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) leafhopper species from Australia". Zootaxa 4273, nr 2 (2.06.2017): 271. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4273.2.7.

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Three new species, Macropsella recta, Toropsis minuspina and Varicopsella apecurvata spp. nov. are described and illustrated from Australia. Leafhoppers of the subfamily Macropsinae are found abundantly in the Holarctic, Oriental and Australian regions (Linnavuori, 1978) and have been collected from around the world, except for Antarctica, Oceania and South America (Hamilton, 1980). Both Hamilton (1980) and Evans (1966) suggested that there were likely a myriad of uncollected and undescribed species in Australia alone and Evans (1971) commented that the Macropsinae are possibly more abundant in Australia than anywhere else in the world. Day and Fletcher (1994) listed 45 macropsine species in eight genera and mentioned that the Australian fauna needs “a thorough examination to establish the generic affinities of the species…”. In her unpublished doctoral dissertation, Semeraro (2014) recently completed a revision and phylogeny of the Australian fauna, documenting an additional 50 undescribed species and proposing changes to the generic classification, but this work has not yet been published. The new Australian species described herein, representing three genera, one not previously recorded in Australia, were not included in Semeraro’s (2014) dissertation.Study of samples recently collected from Australia revealed the presence of 3 new species, representing the genera Macropsella Hamilton, Toropsis Hamilton and Varicopsella Hamilton.Macropsella was established by Hamilton (1980) with Macropsis saidora Evans, 1971 as the type species. Five Macropsis species describeded by Evans (1971), one Macropsis species described by Kirkaldy (1907) and new species Macropsella complicata Hamilton (1980) were previously included in this genus. The seven species of this genus are known only from New Guinea and Northern Australia. Members of this genus can be distinguished by their usually white spotted tegminal veins, tapered male pygofer and laterally directed short ventral pygofer spines.Toropsis was established by Hamilton (1980) with Oncopsis balli Kirkaldy, 1907 as the type species. Six Oncopsis species (Evans, 1935, 1941) and three Macropsis species (Evans, 1971; Metcalf, 1966) were transferred to this genus by Hamilton (1980). So far, ten species recorded in this genus, and all of these species are recorded only from Australia. Toropsis can be distinguished by the wide face, small and flat front, inflated pronotum, unarmed male pygofer and relatively small dorsal connectives.Varicopsella was established by Hamilton (1980) for seven species from the Oriental region, with Macropsis breakeyi Merino, 1936 as its type species. More recently, Li et al. (2014) added a new species and subgenus Varicopsella (Multispinulosa) hamiltoni from China, but this species appears to be incorrectly placed in Varicopsella. Yang et al. (2016) added V. odontoida from Thailand. This genus can be distinguished by the depressed head, fused lora and frontoclypeus, and the two-jointed dorsal connective of the male.
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45

SHEEHAN, COLLEEN A. "Madison v. Hamilton: The Battle Over Republicanism and the Role of Public Opinion". American Political Science Review 98, nr 3 (sierpień 2004): 405–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003055404001248.

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This article examines the causes of the dispute between James Madison and Alexander Hamilton in the early 1790s. Though Hamilton initially believed that Madison's opposition to the Federalist administration was probably motivated by personal animosity and political advantage, in later years he concluded what Madison had long argued: the controversy between Republicans and Federalists stemmed from a difference of principle. For Madison, republicanism meant the recognition of the sovereignty of public opinion and the commitment to participatory politics. Hamilton advocated a more submissive role for the citizenry and a more independent status for the political elite. While Madison did not deny to political leaders and enlightened men a critical place in the formation of public opinion, he fought against Hamilton's thin version of public opinion as “confidence” in government. In 1791–92 Madison took the Republican lead in providing a philosophic defense for a tangible, active, and responsible role for the citizens of republican government.
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46

王秀明 i 周吟秋. "Research on dynamics theory based on the framework of energy conservation". Acta Physica Sinica, 2022, 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.7498/aps.71.20212272.

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Based on the analysis of establishing dynamic equations by using Newton mechanics, Lagrange and Hamilton mechanics, a new idea of establishing dynamic equations under the framework of energy conservation is proposed. Firstly, the use of Newton’s second law to derive wave equations of motion is introduced. Secondly, the Lagrange equation, Hamilton canonical equation, and the corresponding dynamical equations in a continuum are derived by using Hamilton’s variational principle. Thirdly, under the framework of energy conservation, the Lagrange equation, Hamilton canonical equation, and acoustic dynamics equation of continuum are established, and the results are proved to be consistent with those derived from classical mechanics. Some of fuzzy understandings when using Hamilton's variational principle to establish Lagrange’s equation and Hamilton’s canonical equation, are clarified. A series of dynamical equations established under the framework of energy conservation provides alternative way to characterize and represent the propagation characteristics of wave motions in various complex media without involving the variational principle of functional extremum. Finally, as an application example, the differential equation of dynamics in viscoelastic medium is given under the framework of energy conservation.
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47

"Solution of the Hamilton – Jacobi Equation in a Central Potential Using the Separation of Variables Method with Staeckel Boundary Conditions". Jordan Journal of Physics 14, nr 4 (21.09.2021): 301–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.47011/14.4.3.

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Abstract: This manuscript aims at solving Hamilton-Jacobi equation in a central potential using the separation of variables technique with Staeckel boundary conditions. Our results show that the Hamilton – Jacobi variables can be completely separated, which agrees with other results employing different methods. Keywords: Lagrangian mechanics, Hamilton-Jacobi, Staeckel boundary conditions, Staeckel matrix, Staeckel vector, Hamilton's characteristic function, Hamilton's principal function.
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48

Giaimo, Stefano. "Medawar and Hamilton on the selective forces in the evolution of ageing". History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 43, nr 4 (25.11.2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40656-021-00476-6.

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AbstractBoth Medawar and Hamilton contributed key ideas to the modern evolutionary theory of ageing. In particular, they both suggested that, in populations with overlapping generations, the force with which selection acts on traits declines with the age at which traits are expressed. This decline would eventually cause ageing to evolve. However, the biological literature diverges on the relationship between Medawar’s analysis of the force of selection and Hamilton’s. Some authors appear to believe that Hamilton perfected Medawar’s insightful, yet ultimately erroneous analysis of this force, while others see Hamilton’s analysis as a coherent development of, or the obvious complement to Medawar’s. Here, the relationship between the two analyses is revisited. Two things are argued for. First, most of Medawar’s alleged errors that Hamilton would had rectified seem not to be there. The origin of these perceived errors appears to be in a misinterpretation of Medawar’s writings. Second, the mathematics of Medawar and that of Hamilton show a significant overlap. However, different meanings are attached to the same mathematical expression. Medawar put forth an expression for the selective force on age-specific fitness. Hamilton proposed a full spectrum of selective forces each operating on age-specific fitness components, i.e. mortality and fertility. One of Hamilton’s expressions, possibly his most important, is of the same form as Medawar’s expression. But Hamilton’s selective forces on age-specific fitness components do not add up to yield Medawar’s selective force on age-specific fitness. It is concluded that Hamilton’s analysis should be considered neither as a correction to Medawar’s analysis nor as its obvious complement.
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49

Donayre, Luiggi. "Hamilton Versus Hamilton: Spurious Nonlinearities". SSRN Electronic Journal, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3874223.

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Xiuming Wang i Yinqiu Zhou. "Research on dynamics theory based on the framework of energy conservation". Acta Physica Sinica, 2023, 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.7498/aps.72.20212272.

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Based on the analysis of establishing dynamic equations by using Newton mechanics, Lagrange and Hamilton mechanics, a new idea of establishing dynamic equations under the framework of energy conservation is proposed. Firstly, the use of Newton's second law to derive wave equations of motion is introduced. Secondly, the Lagrange equation, Hamilton canonical equation, and the corresponding dynamical equations in a continuum are derived by using Hamilton's variational principle. Thirdly, under the framework of energy conservation, the Lagrange equation, Hamilton canonical equation, and acoustic dynamics equation of continuum are established, and the results are proved to be consistent with those derived from classical mechanics. Some of fuzzy understandings when using Hamilton's variational principle to establish Lagrange's equation and Hamilton's canonical equation, are clarified. A series of dynamical equations established under the framework of energy conservation provides alternative way to characterize and represent the propagation characteristics of wave motions in various complex media without involving the variational principle of functional extremum. Finally, as an application example, the differential equation of dynamics in viscoelastic medium is given under the framework of energy conservation.
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