... Throat values Pertaining to a general phase or component, A Pertaining to the bulk Pertaining to a general phase or component, B Value in the bubble Pertaining to the continuous phase or component, ... buoyancy forces due to pressure gradients within the continuous phase Expanding 1.52 and using the expression 1.33 for the mass interaction, ID , one obtains the following form of the DPME: ρD ... effects of the interstitial fluid are small In the alternative approach, two-fluid models, the disperse phase is treated as a second continuous phase intermingled and interacting with the continuous phase...
... Allegories of Union in Irish and English writing to rectify an important omission in contemporary scholarship: within the broad rethinking of imperial discourse in the nineteenth century initiated more ... of this book owes much to the in uence of their writings on my own Yet my disciplinary training and location in US English studies, as well as my investment in a feminist postcolonial mode of analysis, ... should disappear in England as it has in France, all distinctions would thereby be lost Here Burke avows the central role of masculine heterosexual discipline in creating and maintaining social, political,...
... matter, the philosophy of mind is the philosophical study of minded things just insofar as they are minded The things in question will include people, but may well also include non-human animals ... and powers of reasoning into practice by engaging in intentional action, with the aim of bringing about desired changes in things and states of affairs in the world Finally, in chapter 10, we try ... objects, such as bodies or brains In short, such an answer involves an implicit reification of minds: literally, a making of them into ‘things’ Indo-European languages such as English are overburdened...
... also maintains his difference from the largely subordinate social groups in which these humanist and Protestant notions originated In particular, my argument in this 22 Defending Literature in Early ... dividing/unifying “and” in “profit and pleasure”) To these studies in “philosophy” then were added the traditional arts of courtly chivalry: horsemanship, shooting, fencing, lute playing, dancing, ... to changes in the culture of the English elite 28 Defending Literature in Early Modern England George Cavendish’s Life and Death of Cardinal Wolsey suggests the changes I have inmind Cavendish’s...
... authoritative in the Middle Ages called their authority into question When combined with the propaganda potential of the printing press to disseminate such findings, printing became a major force behind ... or liberal press laws were introduced In revolutionary contexts – including Ireland – newspapers were instrumental in the politicisation of populations and in displaying and interpreting the new ... abridgement, The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge, ) Eisenstein, Printing Press and Eisenstein, Printing Revolution For his critique of Eisenstein see Johns, The Nature...
... myth of the selfdetermining subject.31 Having stressed the ongoing centrality of Enlightenment thought in the 1790s, I want to insist that I am not interested in rethinking our critical relationship ... also shared Godwin’s more particular emphasis on the role of literature in promoting ‘the collision of mind with mind , rather than simply communicating the epiphanies of inspired individuals – ... means of opposing arbitrary authority Arthur O’Connor insisted that the invention of the compass and the printing press had determined the course of history in a direction which Pitt’s repressive...
... of uncertain shapes and living forms Finally, rain would begin again Winters were harsh, as Siberian winds brought inWnities of snow to cover the land One awed oYcial felt ‘‘deep impressions ... of RussiWcation in the Baltic provinces put increasing strain on their position as a ‘‘peculiar institution’’ within Imperial Russian society Articulate Baltic Germans resettling in Germany energetically ... and New York: Oxford University Press, 1990); Jay Winter, Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European Cultural History (Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1995), 13 Stephen...
... Town, Singapore, São Paulo CambridgeUniversityPress The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by CambridgeUniversity Press, New York www .cambridge. org ... Globalisation and Legal Theory Twining: Rethinking Evidence Twining & Miers: How to Do Things with Rules Ward: A Critical Introduction to European Law Ward: Shakespeare and Legal Imagination Zander: Cases ... of Recognition’, in Amy Gutman (ed.), Multiculturalism: Examining the Politics of Recognition (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994) 25–74, at 56 Douzinas puts it succinctly: ‘A key claim...
... Dubai, Tokyo CambridgeUniversityPress The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by CambridgeUniversity Press, New York www .cambridge. org Information ... physics involves uncertainty, how much more uncertainty is there in medicine? Human beings are much more uncertain than atoms and electrons The practical results of statistics in medicine are ... blinded Measurement bias also comes into play in not noticing side effects For instance, when serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) were first developed, early clinical trials did not have rating...
... tJ ch in church J sh in she dg j in jam s in pleasure IJ ng in ring a : a in bad D o in top 3: o in form u u in put a a in about A u in up 3: i in bird Most other symbols look just like ordinary ... without the written permission of CambridgeUniversityPress First published 1994 Ninth printing 1999 Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge A catalogue record for this ... the underlined words in the sentences below? T o help you, here are the meanings of the main Latin prefixes: intro: within, inward o, ob: against in, im: in, into re: again, back de: down, from...
... of fresh rain in a forest in the fall Certainly a unified concept, but we would not consider the smell of fresh rain in a forest in the fall a word In fact, English simply has no single word ... expressing subjunctive infinitive or imperative, respectively This brings us to the last possible interpretation, namely that (6) may refer to the linking verb BE in general, as we would find ... meaning in, into’ we would predict that infer would mean ‘carry into’, which is not even close to the real meaning of infer The meaning of con- in confer is impossible to discern, but again Latin...