890 resultados para The Clock of Character
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Cf. J. Hyde. A bibliography of the works of Emanuel Swedenborg (no. 3271)
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Published by order of Congress.
Resumo:
The letter to Kennet (an answer to Francis Atterbury's attack) is substantially the same as the preface to the Scottish historical library.
Resumo:
Includes index.
Resumo:
Afterwards reissued under title: Eminent sons and daughters of Columbia.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Paged continuously. "Books quoted or referred to": vol. v, p.1416-1422. Published 1914. Published in 1905 under title: Seventy centuries of the life of mankind.
Resumo:
Includes Dicken's The Tugg's at Ramsgate, and A little talk about spring and the sweeps.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
The effectiveness of rapid and controlled heating of intact tissue to inactivate native enzymatic activity and prevent proteome degradation has been evaluated. Mouse brains were bisected immediately following excision, with one hemisphere being heat treated followed by snap freezing in liquid nitrogen while the other hemisphere was snap frozen immediately. Sections were cut by cryostatic microtome and analyzed by MALDI-MS imaging and minimal label 2-D DIGE, to monitor time-dependent relative changes in intensities of protein and peptide signals. Analysis by MALDI-MS imaging demonstrated that the relative intensities of markers varied across a time course (0-5 min) when the tissues were not stabilized by heat treatment. However, the same markers were seen to be stabilized when the tissues were heat treated before snap freezing. Intensity profiles for proteins indicative of both degradation and stabilization were generated when samples of treated and nontreated tissues were analyzed by 2-D DIGE, with protein extracted before and after a 10-min warming of samples. Thus, heat treatment of tissues at the time of excision is shown to prevent subsequent uncontrolled degradation of tissues at the proteomic level before any quantitative analysis, and to be compatible with downstream proteomic analysis.
Resumo:
This thesis explores the character of Hamlet in Shakespeare's same-titled work in the light of certain aspects of stoicism and medieval Christian philosophy. Throughout the course of the play we see Hamlet struggling with his thoughts. At first he deliberates without taking action as a consequence of his reasoning, but in the later stages of the play he gives in to passion, which ultimately leads to his own demise. The thesis gives an account of certain aspects of both philosophies that are displayed in the play and shows how those ideas influence the character of Hamlet and contextualize his personal tragedy. Hamlet fails to follow the philosophies that he praises and to grow as a character by overcoming his passions over the course of the play.