40 resultados para The Wake
em University of Michigan
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Imperfect copy: portion of t.p. containing imprint missing.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Westminster ed."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Half-title.
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v. 1. Poems.--v. 2. Yeast.--v. 4. Hypatia.--v. 6. Westward ho !--v. 8. Two years ago.--v. 11. Herward the Wake.--v. 12. The hermits.
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The water-hole / Maxwell Struthers Burt -- The wake / Donn Byrne -- Chautonville / Will Levington Comfort -- La Derniere mobilisation / W. A. Dwiggins -- The citizen / James Francis Dwyer -- Whose dog? / Frances Gregg -- Life / Ben Hecht -- T. B. / Fannie Hurst -- Mr. Eberdeen's house / Arthur Johnson -- Vengeance is mine / Virgil Jordan -- The weaver who clad the summer / Harris Merton Lyon.
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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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On spine and cover: The works of Charles Kingsley.
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Vital Subjects: Race and Biopolitics in Italy is an interdisciplinary study of how racial and colonial discourses shaped the “making” of Italians as modern political subjects in the years between its administrative unification (1861-1870) and the end of the First World War (1919)
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Maps on lining-papers.