39 resultados para Boys of Color


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Printed from First series, v. 10 (p. 33-70) of the Decennial publications of the University of Chicago.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Illustrations include mounted color samples.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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"In this autobiography, [the author] tells us the events of his life over the past fifty years. It is, too, a brief history of Los Angeles from the turn of the century--certainly, as far as the Negroes in Los Angeles are in the picture"--Preface. Jamaican-born Somerville became a Los Angeles dentist deeply involved in the NAACP.

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Supersedes and combines The ISCC-NBS method of designating colors and a dictionary of color names by K.L. Kelly and D.B. Judd and A universal color language by K.L. Kelly.

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"Printed by Alfred Martien, 21 South Seventh Street, Philadelphia."--verso of title page.

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Many philosophers, especially in the wake of the 17th century, have favored an inegalitarian view of shape and color, according to which shape is mind-independent while color is mind-dependent. In this essay, I advance a novel argument against inegalitarianism. The argument begins with an intuition about the modal dependence of color on shape, namely: it is impossible for something to have a color without having a shape (i.e. without having some sort of spatial extension, or at least spatial location). I then argue that, given reasonable assumptions, inegalitarianism contradicts this modal-dependence principle. Given the plausibility of the latter, I conclude that we should reject inegalitarianism in favor of some form of egalitarianism—either a subjective egalitarianism on which both shape and color are mind-dependent or an objective egalitarianism on which both shape and color are mind-independent.

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Sculpture, Japanese, Late Kofun; H: 1 ft. 13/32 in.; earthenware with traces of color

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Illustrations consist of color chips.

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"From the Laboratory of Genetics of the Bussey Institution."