954 resultados para Martin, Edward, 1879-
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comp. and transl. by Scherzinger J. Arnold
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The search for predictions of species diversity across environmental gradients has challenged ecologists for decades. The humped-back model (HBM) suggests that plant diversity peaks at intermediate productivity; at low productivity few species can tolerate the environmental stresses, and at high productivity a few highly competitive species dominate. Over time the HBM has become increasingly controversial, and recent studies claim to have refuted it. Here, by using data from coordinated surveys conducted throughout grasslands worldwide and comprising a wide range of site productivities, we provide evidence in support of the HBM pattern at both global and regional extents. The relationships described here provide a foundation for further research into the local, landscape, and historical factors that maintain biodiversity.
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Myosin B (MyoB) is one of the two short class XIV myosins encoded in the Plasmodium genome. Class XIV myosins are characterized by a catalytic "head," a modified "neck," and the absence of a "tail" region. Myosin A (MyoA), the other class XIV myosin in Plasmodium, has been established as a component of the glideosome complex important in motility and cell invasion, but MyoB is not well characterized. We analyzed the properties of MyoB using three parasite species as follows: Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium berghei, and Plasmodium knowlesi. MyoB is expressed in all invasive stages (merozoites, ookinetes, and sporozoites) of the life cycle, and the protein is found in a discrete apical location in these polarized cells. In P. falciparum, MyoB is synthesized very late in schizogony/merogony, and its location in merozoites is distinct from, and anterior to, that of a range of known proteins present in the rhoptries, rhoptry neck or micronemes. Unlike MyoA, MyoB is not associated with glideosome complex proteins, including the MyoA light chain, myosin A tail domain-interacting protein (MTIP). A unique MyoB light chain (MLC-B) was identified that contains a calmodulin-like domain at the C terminus and an extended N-terminal region. MLC-B localizes to the same extreme apical pole in the cell as MyoB, and the two proteins form a complex. We propose that MLC-B is a MyoB-specific light chain, and for the short class XIV myosins that lack a tail region, the atypical myosin light chains may fulfill that role.
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Vorbesitzer: Bartholomaeusstift Frankfurt am Main
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What meaning does God’s name convey? This was a question Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig had to answer when working on their translation of the Bible. They noticed that, as certain crucial biblical verses suggest, there is indeed a meaning behind God’s name in the Bible. Thus, an important moment in their joint translation was their account of the self-revelation of God in Exod. III, together with the question of how best to translate the tetragrammaton YHWH— the name of God. This article will explore their decisions, based both on their dialogue concerning the translation of the Bible, and on their papers, especially Rosenzweig’s well-known article ‘Der Ewige’ (‘The Eternal’) and Buber’s response to it. Less well known is the fact that there exist two unpublished typescripts by Martin Buber reflecting on the name of God, which will also be taken into consideration. Contrary to the received view that the choice of the personal pronoun to transliterate the name of God in the Bible translation was mainly Rosenzweig’s, I will show that it was actually a joint decision in which both thinkers’ philosophies,1 and a question that had haunted Buber since his youth, played an important part. The choice of the personal pronoun is an answer to this question, addressing the omnipresent God, the eternal Thou, in a kind of cultic acclamation.
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Boberach: Im Dialog mit seiner Frau wirbt ein Bauer dafür, dafür zu sorgen, daß nur gewählt wird, wer für das Volk und gegen die Beamtenherrschaft eintritt
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Boberach: Das Ergebnis der Ermittlungen gegen 401 Teilnehmer am pfälzischen Aufstand, von denen 28 außer Verfolgung gesetzt wurden, enthält eine mit Zitaten belegte Darstellung der Ereignisse in den einzelnen Landesteilen; unter den Angeklagten sind Heinrich Didier, Karl Wilhelm Schmidt, Nikolaus Schmitt, Dr. Philipp Hepp, Peter Fries, August Culmann, Friedrich Schüler, Martini [sic!] (MdNV), Hans Alfred Erbe (MdNV), Schlöffel, Ferd. Fenner v. Fenneberg, Franz Zitz, Paquillier [sic!], Ludwig Blenker, Gottfried Kinkel, Johann [sic!] Kudlich, Franz Grün, Gustav Struve, Karl d'Ester, Friedrich Anneke [sic!], Friedrich v. Beust, Reinhard Schimmelpfennig, Franz Sznayda [sic!], August Willich, Ludwig Mieroslawsky, Victor Schily