Current Search: Humanism (x)
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Title
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Vladimir Bukovsky on Freedom and Captivity.
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Creator
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American Federation of Teachers
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Abstract/Description
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This item is part of the Political & Rights Issues & Social Movements (PRISM) digital collection, a collaborative initiative between Florida Atlantic University and University of Central Florida in the Publication of Archival, Library & Museum Materials (PALMM).
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Date Issued
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1975
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00002716
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Subject Headings
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Human rights
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Osteological Analysis of the Human Remains at Markham Park I and II: Social Standing and Age Questions.
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Creator
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Verdes, Ruben, Detwiler, Kate M., Florida Atlantic University, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, Department of Anthropology
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Abstract/Description
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This thesis attempts to analyze the osteological material of Markham Parks I and II, two sites from Broward County, Florida from a bioarchaeological perspective in order to understand the possible presence of social stratification that existed between both populations at Markham Park and in line with other Florida populations. The analysis includes a look at the average stature of both populations through the use of estimation formulas, as well as taking note of any features on long bones...
Show moreThis thesis attempts to analyze the osteological material of Markham Parks I and II, two sites from Broward County, Florida from a bioarchaeological perspective in order to understand the possible presence of social stratification that existed between both populations at Markham Park and in line with other Florida populations. The analysis includes a look at the average stature of both populations through the use of estimation formulas, as well as taking note of any features on long bones that could denote the possible presence of injury or nutritional maladies which could be indications of social hardships. It also includes a close look at dentition for the presence of possible nutritional deficiencies such as enamel hypoplasias, as well as an analysis to corroborate findings made in initial reports regarding the cataloging of the remains, particularly in the areas of MNI and ancestry. Such analysis can hopefully bring further insight into the lifestyles of those that occupied Florida before contact.
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Date Issued
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2016
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00004681
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Subject Headings
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Human remains (Archaeology) -- Florida., Human skeleton -- Analysis., Human skeleton -- Identification.
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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AUTOMATIC SEQUENTIAL PRIMING OF DIGITS.
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Creator
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SYLVAN, ANITA., Florida Atlantic University
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Abstract/Description
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Previous research has shown that priming of digits is a function of the ordinal distance of the target digit from the priming sequence and that under certain conditions this effect may be automatic. The present experiment, which employs a choice RT task, was designed to test automaticity by manipulating subjects' expectancies and the time available for processing the priming sequence. Schematically valid primes (e.g., "1,2,3" preceding "4") were presented on 30%, 50%, or 70% of the trials to...
Show morePrevious research has shown that priming of digits is a function of the ordinal distance of the target digit from the priming sequence and that under certain conditions this effect may be automatic. The present experiment, which employs a choice RT task, was designed to test automaticity by manipulating subjects' expectancies and the time available for processing the priming sequence. Schematically valid primes (e.g., "1,2,3" preceding "4") were presented on 30%, 50%, or 70% of the trials to a given subject. Invalid primes (e.g., "5, 6, 7" preceding "4") were presented on the remaining trials. There was a highly significant effect of priming modified by interactions with exposure time and frequency. Employing a cost-benefit analysis to the frequency factor, it was found that the most frequently occurring prime resulted in decreased response latency but the less frequently occurring prime did not result in an increase in response latency (benefit wihout cost). On this basis, it is concluded that frequency influences an automatic process in this experiment. Since frequency interacts with priming, it is therefore argued that priming also affects an automatic process.
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Date Issued
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1983
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14183
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Subject Headings
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Human information processing, Perception
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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CULTURAL DIFFERENCES AMONG REGIONAL MANIFESTATIONS OF HOPEWELL: A CULTURAL-ECOLOGICAL APPROACH.
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Creator
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WILLIAMS, WILLIAM STANLEY JR., Florida Atlantic University, Sears, William H., Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, Department of Anthropology
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Abstract/Description
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Four regional manifestations of Hopewell were selected on the basis of readily available evidence. These regional manifestations were compared to note their similarities and differences. Similarities were readily explained by commonality of participation in the Hopewell Cult. Differences were explained in terms of the type of environment to which each regional manifestation was subjected. These differences in complexity led to a definition of Hopewell more consistent with the evidence at hand...
Show moreFour regional manifestations of Hopewell were selected on the basis of readily available evidence. These regional manifestations were compared to note their similarities and differences. Similarities were readily explained by commonality of participation in the Hopewell Cult. Differences were explained in terms of the type of environment to which each regional manifestation was subjected. These differences in complexity led to a definition of Hopewell more consistent with the evidence at hand, and were the result of the use of the Cultural Ecological approach as an explanatory model. Cultural ecology, through the use of theories provided by Steward and others, gives us tools by which culture and culture change can be studied and perhaps general laws can be developed. The most important factor of cultural ecology is the relationship of technology and environment. The above regional manifestations were studied in terms of technology and environment and their relationship forms the basis for the evidence in the thesis.
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Date Issued
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1975
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/13745
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Subject Headings
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Hopewell culture, Human ecology
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Human capital and endogenous growth.
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Creator
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Stewart, John Richard., Florida Atlantic University, Yuhn, Ky-hyang
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Abstract/Description
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Using both exogenous and endogenous theory, this paper develops a synthesized model treating human capital as an endogenous contributor to long run economic growth. Human capital is assumed to be the basis of such growth, therefore, the focus is not on technological change per se. Through empirical analysis, human capital is measured by knowledge, and that the accumulation of knowledge, or specialization, is determined through an incentive system. The incentive system, in turn, is determined...
Show moreUsing both exogenous and endogenous theory, this paper develops a synthesized model treating human capital as an endogenous contributor to long run economic growth. Human capital is assumed to be the basis of such growth, therefore, the focus is not on technological change per se. Through empirical analysis, human capital is measured by knowledge, and that the accumulation of knowledge, or specialization, is determined through an incentive system. The incentive system, in turn, is determined by the difference in wages paid to certain types of knowledge, those being a general level and a specialized level of knowledge. It is assumed that the learning process can take place at any time, therefore, the specialization process is not limited to an academic environment. A spillover effect associated with specialized knowledge provides for increasing returns to scale in the model, which is also supported by empirical data.
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Date Issued
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1999
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/15659
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Subject Headings
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Human capital, Economic development
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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PERCEPTUAL SEGREGATION AND THE CATEGORY EFFECT.
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Creator
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ROSENTHAL, ALAN., Florida Atlantic University, Hock, Howard S., Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, Department of Psychology
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Abstract/Description
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A category effect of alphanumeric characters in a visual search paradigm was examined to see whether the effect could be accounted for by the number of memory comparisons or by an early stage of perceptual processing. In Experiments 1 and 2, subjects searched for targets in either a within-category or between-category condition. The two experiments differed by the point in the trials where "catch trials" were presented. Experiment 3 used new configurations based on Gestalt principles which...
Show moreA category effect of alphanumeric characters in a visual search paradigm was examined to see whether the effect could be accounted for by the number of memory comparisons or by an early stage of perceptual processing. In Experiments 1 and 2, subjects searched for targets in either a within-category or between-category condition. The two experiments differed by the point in the trials where "catch trials" were presented. Experiment 3 used new configurations based on Gestalt principles which had been shown to influence target detection times at an early level of perceptual processing. The results of Experiments 1 and 2 favored a perceptual explanation mediating the effect. In Experiment 3, the critical interaction of category and Gestalt factors which would have demonstrated a competition in perceptually parsing the display fell short of significance.
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Date Issued
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1980
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14036
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Subject Headings
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Human information processing, Perception
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Functional stabilization of unstable systems.
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Creator
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Foo, Patrick Stephen, Florida Atlantic University, Kelso, J. A. Scott
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Abstract/Description
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Humans are often faced with tasks that require stabilizing inherently unstable situations. We performed four experiments to explore the nature of functional stabilization. In Experiment 1 participants balanced a pole until a time criterion was reached. The geometry, mass, and characteristic "fall time" of the pole were manipulated. Distributions of timing between pole and hand velocities showed strong action-perception coupling. When actions demonstrated a potential for failure, the period of...
Show moreHumans are often faced with tasks that require stabilizing inherently unstable situations. We performed four experiments to explore the nature of functional stabilization. In Experiment 1 participants balanced a pole until a time criterion was reached. The geometry, mass, and characteristic "fall time" of the pole were manipulated. Distributions of timing between pole and hand velocities showed strong action-perception coupling. When actions demonstrated a potential for failure, the period of hand oscillation correlated significantly with the "time to balance" (t bal=theta/theta.), where q is pole angle re: the vertical balance point, but not other quantities such as theta and theta. alone. This suggested that participants were attending to available t bal information during critical situations. In a model analysis and simulation, we demonstrated how discrete t bal information may be used to adjust the parameters of a controller to perform this task. In Experiment 2 participants balanced a virtual inverted pendulum under manipulations designed: (1) to decouple the mechanics of the system from its visual image; (2) to alter the mapping of perception and action; and (3) to perturb successful balancing. A replication of the correlation analysis of Experiment 1 revealed that across all conditions, significant relationships existed between visually specified t -variables and hand oscillation during critical motions of the pole. These results suggested that participants use the same t bal information to successfully stabilize both virtual and physical unstable systems, despite quite dramatic visual and mechanical transformations. In Experiments 3 and 4 we investigated how parts of the body, or individuals in a social dyad cooperate to perform a functional stabilization task. Participants balanced a pole either intermanually (using 2 separate hands) or interpersonally (2 persons each using their preferred right hand) until a time criterion was reached. Although the magnitudes of the forces exerted by each hand were different, an analysis of the timing of the forces revealed that intermanual (interpersonal) participants developed a consistent antiphase (inphase) coordination pattern. These different coordination patterns allowed for the recruitment of previously unavailable efferent and afferent connections to produce the net forces that served to stabilize the pole via theta. (see Experiment 1).
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Date Issued
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2000
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12656
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Subject Headings
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Psychology, Experimental, Human mechanics
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Electromagnetic radiation absorption in block models of human bodies.
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Creator
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Jong A Kiem, Raymond Eduard., Florida Atlantic University, Sadiku, Matthew
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Abstract/Description
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In this thesis an attempt is made to calculate the power absorbed in different parts of a human block model which is located in free space and is exposed to a plane electromagnetic wave. The moment method is applied to solve an integral equation which relates the incident field to the induced electric field in an arbitrarily shaped biological body. To obtain more accurate results, a numerical integration technique developed here has been used. The computations on the induced electric fields...
Show moreIn this thesis an attempt is made to calculate the power absorbed in different parts of a human block model which is located in free space and is exposed to a plane electromagnetic wave. The moment method is applied to solve an integral equation which relates the incident field to the induced electric field in an arbitrarily shaped biological body. To obtain more accurate results, a numerical integration technique developed here has been used. The computations on the induced electric fields compare well with earlier work done in this area. It has been found that there is indeed heating of tissues outside the region of intended treatment in hyperthermia at 80 MHz.
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Date Issued
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1988
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14491
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Subject Headings
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Electromagnetic waves, Human body
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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DEFENSIBLE SPACE IN A PRIVATELY-OWNED HOUSING PROJECT.
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Creator
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VANHORN, SHARYN J., Florida Atlantic University, Tata, Robert J., Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, Department of Geosciences
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Abstract/Description
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This paper analyzes a high density housing project in terms of its defensible space. The behavior of residents of Citrus Park Homes was seen as indicative of tenant attitudes toward their home project, its sense of community, of safety and security, and pride of ownership. Analysis of this privately-owned project includes a description of the physical structure, spatial characteristics, tenant characteristics and tenant attitudes, as evidenced in interviews with 83 adult residents. Where poor...
Show moreThis paper analyzes a high density housing project in terms of its defensible space. The behavior of residents of Citrus Park Homes was seen as indicative of tenant attitudes toward their home project, its sense of community, of safety and security, and pride of ownership. Analysis of this privately-owned project includes a description of the physical structure, spatial characteristics, tenant characteristics and tenant attitudes, as evidenced in interviews with 83 adult residents. Where poor spatial design and physical structure are evidenced by poor behavior and attitude (lack of recognition or acceptance of territory) changes in the spatial or architectural design were suggested.
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Date Issued
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1973
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/13618
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Subject Headings
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Human territoriality, Geographical perception
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Emergence and maintenance in impression formation.
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Creator
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Weider, Alan Warren, Florida Atlantic University, Vallacher, Robin R.
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Abstract/Description
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Impression formation has in the past always been viewed as an instantaneous one time event. In this experiment impression formation was viewed as a process occurring over time. Subjects received descriptions of a hypothetical individual and then gave trait judgments indicating how they perceived this person. Subjects continued to receive information and make judgments through ten successive trials. Correlations were performed between seven major variables evaluated over the course of the...
Show moreImpression formation has in the past always been viewed as an instantaneous one time event. In this experiment impression formation was viewed as a process occurring over time. Subjects received descriptions of a hypothetical individual and then gave trait judgments indicating how they perceived this person. Subjects continued to receive information and make judgments through ten successive trials. Correlations were performed between seven major variables evaluated over the course of the trials. Results showed that the major work of impression formation occurs early in the process and that less is accomplished as time goes on. It was also found that an information processing point of view accommodated much of the results quite nicely.
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Date Issued
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1993
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14926
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Subject Headings
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Human information processing
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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COMBATING HUMAN TRAFFICKING WITH THE LAW: A CONTENT ANALYSIS OF STATE LAWS AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR LEGAL REFORM.
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Creator
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Branscum, Caralin, Fallik, Seth Wyatt, Florida Atlantic University, School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, College of Social Work and Criminal Justice
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Abstract/Description
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Human trafficking is a heinous human rights violation, impacting as many as 40.3 million people around the globe (Global Slavery Index, 2018). In the United States of America (USA), the Trafficking Victims Protections Act of 2000 (TVPA), and its subsequent reauthorizations, comprise the bulk of the federal response to human trafficking. As a result, federal policies have received a lot of praise and scrutiny in the literature. However, less is known about statewide legislative efforts to...
Show moreHuman trafficking is a heinous human rights violation, impacting as many as 40.3 million people around the globe (Global Slavery Index, 2018). In the United States of America (USA), the Trafficking Victims Protections Act of 2000 (TVPA), and its subsequent reauthorizations, comprise the bulk of the federal response to human trafficking. As a result, federal policies have received a lot of praise and scrutiny in the literature. However, less is known about statewide legislative efforts to combat human trafficking. To fill this gap, the current study analyzes state human trafficking statutes through content analysis. Overall, state legislation could best be described as a hodge-podge of laws related to three themes: 1) conceptualizing human trafficking, 2) victim centeredness, and 3) perpetrator centeredness. Accordingly, several recommendations are made that would reduce inconsistency and increase implementation of evidence-based policy.
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Date Issued
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2020
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013453
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Subject Headings
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Human trafficking, Content analysis, Human trafficking—Law and legislation
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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BONE COLLECTORS: PERSONHOOD AND APPEAL IN THE SALE AND TRADE OF HUMAN SKELETAL REMAINS ON FACEBOOK.
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Creator
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Breda, Evelyn, Ellis, Meredith A.B., Florida Atlantic University, Department of Anthropology, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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The desire to own human skeletal remains has been prevalent for many years; in our modern technological age avenues for this market have exploded across the internet. This research focuses on Facebook groups dedicated to oddity sales and collecting. Purchasing human remains is illegal in Georgia, Louisiana, and Tennessee as well as prohibited by Facebook terms of service, but these sales persist. Over the course of 2021, 319 listings for human skeletal remains were recorded across six...
Show moreThe desire to own human skeletal remains has been prevalent for many years; in our modern technological age avenues for this market have exploded across the internet. This research focuses on Facebook groups dedicated to oddity sales and collecting. Purchasing human remains is illegal in Georgia, Louisiana, and Tennessee as well as prohibited by Facebook terms of service, but these sales persist. Over the course of 2021, 319 listings for human skeletal remains were recorded across six Facebook groups. These listings accounted for most skeletal elements found within the human skeleton. Many elements are artistic in nature, something viewed as “Giving a second life” to the remains, as observed within these groups. To fully understand the driving force behind this market requires cultural insight about the perception of human remains as well as the culture found within these groups. Kinship, friendship, and trust are all clearly expressed between buyers and sellers.
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Date Issued
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2023
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00014173
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Subject Headings
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Human skeleton--Collectors and collecting, Human remains (Archaeology), Personhood
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Bioarchaeological Implications of Porotic Hyperostosis in the Pre-Columbian Societies of Coastal Ecuador.
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Creator
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Rivas, Daniel Gonzalo Alava, Ellis, Meredith B., Florida Atlantic University, Department of Anthropology, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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This thesis focuses on identifying the presence of porotic hyperostosis in a sample made up of 119 individuals to a) assess the possible causes of porotic hyperostosis in the ancient Ecuadorian coastal societies, b) reconsider porotic hyperostosis as a nutritional stress marker, and c) propose bartonellosis as an alternative cause for the appearance of porotic lesions in the skull over 4,000 years in the Northern Andes. By applying the BoPLE (Bone Porous Lesions Evaluation) method, results...
Show moreThis thesis focuses on identifying the presence of porotic hyperostosis in a sample made up of 119 individuals to a) assess the possible causes of porotic hyperostosis in the ancient Ecuadorian coastal societies, b) reconsider porotic hyperostosis as a nutritional stress marker, and c) propose bartonellosis as an alternative cause for the appearance of porotic lesions in the skull over 4,000 years in the Northern Andes. By applying the BoPLE (Bone Porous Lesions Evaluation) method, results obtained and clinical evidence propose that parasite infections and iron deficiencies are two of the probable causes of porotic hyperostosis in the prehistory of the Ecuadorian coast. Furthermore, the results suggested that a female skull associated with Valdivia culture phase II (3,300 – 2,800 BCE) is Ecuador's oldest record of this symptom. Likewise, the clinical characteristics of bartonellosis suggests it to be a plausible cause of porotic hyperostosis in ancient Ecuador.
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Date Issued
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2024
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00014374
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Subject Headings
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Hyperostosis, Human remains (Archaeology), Human remains (Archaeology)--Ecuador, Bartonellosis
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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THE EFFECTS OF SITUATIONAL CONSTRAINT AND SELF-SELECTION ON THE CROSS-SITUATIONAL CONSISTENCY OF BEHAVIOR.
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Creator
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WALKER, JACK B., Florida Atlantic University
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Abstract/Description
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Many psychologists have promoted the use of personality traits and other dispositional constructs for the prediction of human behavior. However, other psychologists have concluded that individuals do not exhibit sufficient cross-situational consistency in their behavior to warrant the use of dispositional measures as predictors of behavior (e.g., Mischel, 1968; Nisbett, 1980). The present research was designed to demonstrate that cross-situational consistency correlation coefficients may be...
Show moreMany psychologists have promoted the use of personality traits and other dispositional constructs for the prediction of human behavior. However, other psychologists have concluded that individuals do not exhibit sufficient cross-situational consistency in their behavior to warrant the use of dispositional measures as predictors of behavior (e.g., Mischel, 1968; Nisbett, 1980). The present research was designed to demonstrate that cross-situational consistency correlation coefficients may be inadequate indicators of the utility of dispositional constructs. In particular, it was proposed that a consideration of the situational constraint present within a situation and the degree of the opportunity to self-select into a situation are important factors which aid in the specification of when personality traits can and cannot be used successfully to predict human behavior.
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Date Issued
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1986
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14344
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Subject Headings
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Personality, Human behavior, Prediction (Psychology)
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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The coordination dynamics of single limb multijoint movement patterns: Spatial bifurcations and hysteresis.
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Creator
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Buchanan, John J., Florida Atlantic University, Kelso, J. A. Scott
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Abstract/Description
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The aim of this research was to study the coordinative dynamics of multijoint arm movements as a function of forearm spatial orientation. Six subjects rhythmically coordinated flexion and extension of the right elbow and wrist under the following conditions: (1) forearm supine: wrist flexion/elbow flexion and vice versa; and (2) forearm prone: wrist flexion/elbow extension and vice versa. Starting in either pattern, subjects rotated the forearm in eight 20 steps, producing 15 cycles of motion...
Show moreThe aim of this research was to study the coordinative dynamics of multijoint arm movements as a function of forearm spatial orientation. Six subjects rhythmically coordinated flexion and extension of the right elbow and wrist under the following conditions: (1) forearm supine: wrist flexion/elbow flexion and vice versa; and (2) forearm prone: wrist flexion/elbow extension and vice versa. Starting in either pattern, subjects rotated the forearm in eight 20 steps, producing 15 cycles of motion at a frequency of 1.25 Hz. Switching from pattern (1) to pattern (2) and vice versa was observed at a critical spatial orientation. The critical point depended on the direction of forearm rotation, thus revealing the hysteretic nature of the switching. En route to the transition, regardless of direction of change, critical fluctuations and critical slowing down were observed in the relative phasing between the joints. Such results provide definitive evidence that relative phase is a viable order parameter, spatial orientation a relevant control parameter and loss of stability the chief mechanism leading to observed changes in coordination.
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Date Issued
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1992
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/14806
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Subject Headings
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Arm, Forelimb, Human mechanics, Kinesiology
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Lecture at Danish Women's Museum.
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Creator
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Shusterman, Richard, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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Dr. Richard Shusterman giving a lecture at the Danish Women's Museum.
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Date Issued
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2017
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FAUIR000356
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Subject Headings
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Human body (Philosophy), Aesthetics--Physiological aspects.
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Format
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Video file
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Title
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Szómaesztétika és az élet művészete.
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Creator
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Shusterman, Richard, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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Dr. Richard Shusterman giving a talk titled "Szómaesztétika és az élet művészete" at the University of Szeged in Hungary.
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Date Issued
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2018
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FAUIR000355
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Subject Headings
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Human body (Philosophy), Aesthetics--Physiological aspects.
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Format
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Video file
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Title
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Contested Territories: The Art World.
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Creator
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Shusterman, Richard, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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This video is a panel discussion which took place at the Tate Museum in London, England.
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Date Issued
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2006
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00005231
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Subject Headings
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Human body (Philosophy), Aesthetics--Physiological aspects.
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Format
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Video file
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Title
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Embodiment and Education.
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Creator
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Shusterman, Richard, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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This video is a panel discussion which took place at the Kyung Hee University in Seoul, Korea.
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Date Issued
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2010
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00005264
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Subject Headings
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Human body (Philosophy), Aesthetics--Physiological aspects.
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Format
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Video file
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Title
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Ethics and Aesthetics: Somaesthetics and the Art of Living.
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Creator
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Shusterman, Richard, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
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Abstract/Description
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This video is a lecture which took place at the Universytet Lodzki in Lodz, Poland
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Date Issued
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2014
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00005233
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Subject Headings
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Human body (Philosophy), Aesthetics--Physiological aspects.
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Format
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Video file
Pages