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Imagining Performances: Entangled Temporalities and Corporalities in Drag King Encounters
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In: The Oxford Handbook of Language and Sexuality ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03648889 ; The Oxford Handbook of Language and Sexuality, 2022, ⟨10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190212926.013.71⟩ (2022)
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L’hybridité constitutive du Je romanesque ; First-person narrative and its pretense games: a constitutive hybridity
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In: ISSN: 0765-4944 ; EISSN: 2111-5044 ; Les cahiers de praxématique ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03639446 ; Les cahiers de praxématique, Montpellier : Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée, 2006-, 2022, Hétérogénéité énonciative et discours en interaction (2) ; http://praxematique.revues.org/ 10.4000/praxematique.6936 (2022)
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Writing At the Horizon: How Producing Imagined Narratives Affects Mood
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In: Senior Projects Fall 2021 (2021)
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« Glaring Invisibilities and Loud Silences in ‘The Gipsy’s Baby’ by Rosamond Lehmann »
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In: ISSN: 1168-4917 ; EISSN: 2271-5444 ; Études britanniques contemporaines - Revue de la Société dʼétudes anglaises contemporaines ; https://hal-univ-pau.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03474007 ; Études britanniques contemporaines - Revue de la Société dʼétudes anglaises contemporaines, Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée, 2021, Invisible Lives, Silent Voices (2021)
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L’impossible paysage de l'âme haïtienne dans Gouverneurs de la rosée de Jacques Roumain (1944)
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In: Colloque sur Paysage et représentations ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03581841 ; Colloque sur Paysage et représentations, 2021 (2021)
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The Image of the Invisible God (Col. 1:15): Forming a Sacramental Imagination through the Works of Hopkins and O'Connor ...
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: University of Virginia, 2021
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Critique of Reason in Gaston Bachelard's Philosophy of the Imagination ...
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Critique of Reason in Gaston Bachelard's Philosophy of the Imagination ...
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Contagio e immaginazione
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In: Lexicon Philosophicum: International Journal for the History of Texts and Ideas; Nr. 8 (2020): Lexicon Philosophicum ; Lexicon Philosophicum: International Journal for the History of Texts and Ideas; No. 8 (2020): Lexicon Philosophicum ; Lexicon Philosophicum: International Journal for the History of Texts and Ideas; Núm. 8 (2020): Lexicon Philosophicum ; Lexicon Philosophicum: International Journal for the History of Texts and Ideas; N. 8 (2020): Lexicon Philosophicum ; 2283-7833 (2021)
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Pelas asas da tradição com destino à imaginação: abordagem científico-pedagógica de provérbios
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“Let their imaginations flow”: Investigating Irish primary teachers’ views on the use of mythology in the classroom
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Migalhas do banquete homérico ; Crumbs from the Homeric banquet
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Thomas Reid on Language and Mind
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In: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (2021)
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Abstract:
The dissertation concerns Thomas Reid’s philosophy of language. In the first three chapters, I discuss his philosophy of language in relation to his developmental psychology. More specifically, I discuss his answers to two questions: (i) what does the ability to understand artificial linguistic signs make possible? and (ii) what makes the ability to understand artificial linguistic signs possible? The focus is on Reid’s claim that the mind’s ability to understand artificial linguistic signs makes it possible for it to acquire a number of distinct mental abilities, such as to conceive universals, to judge, and to reason. I argue this claim commits him to the further claim that artificial language makes it possible for the mind to acquire moral liberty. The focus is also on Reid’s claim that it was possible for humans to first invent artificial linguistic signs, and, subsequently, for children to be taught artificial linguistic signs, only if they possess an innate faculty by the exercise of which they can understand natural linguistic signs that express social operations of the mind. I explain that claim, reconstruct Reid’s arguments for it, and argue that the account of artificial linguistic signs presupposed by said arguments is prima facie incompatible with his claim that artificial language makes moral liberty possible. In the fourth chapter, I discuss Reid’s accounts of perception, memory, and imagination. I argue he holds that we perceive, remember, and imagine before learning artificial language, and, consequently, is committed to the view that such acts do not essentially involve the exercise of those abilities that artificial language makes possible. I argue that it follows from this that Reid’s commentators have not fully understood his accounts of the conceptual content in perception, memory, and imagination; the processes through which said acts come to involve distinct conceptual content; and the distinction between acquired perceptions and habitual judgments.
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Keyword:
History of Philosophy; imagination; language; memory; perception; Reid; social operations
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URL: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/8314 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=10916&context=etd
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Kesan emosi terhadap penerimaan bantuan dan hubungannya dengan kesejahteraan hidup dalam kalangan asnaf : satu kajian di Sabah
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The psychometric evaluation of the Subjective Happiness Scale-Physically Disabled (SHS-PD) in Malaysia
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Environmental program and its effect on youth’s attitude towards the environment
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