58,916 research outputs found

    Tort Law: Cases & Critique

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    My goal in creating this casebook is to do my part to make legal education more affordable, accessible, and adaptable. That’s why I’m making the book available to all for free. By using a CC BY-NC license, I’m also inviting others to adapt these materials for their own use, so long as they adhere to the non-commerciality and attribution terms. (Anyone interested in “remixing” this book for their own purposes should feel free to contact me, including if you’d like a more adaptable non-PDF version.) You’re welcome to print any part of this casebook if you want a hard copy to accompany the digital version. If you do print it, I ask that you please be environmentally conscious by using double-sided pages. Because the digital version can be easily searched, it contains no index or other finding aids that are conventional for printed books. You should also be able to enhance your experience with the digital version by highlighting text, adding comments, and annotating it in other ways you find helpful. To see the syllabus accompanying this casebook, please visit www.thomaskadri.com/torts.https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/books/1168/thumbnail.jp

    Connecticut College Literary Journal

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    v. 80, issue 4, March 1, 2013

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    Spartan Daily September 3, 2009

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    Volume 133, Issue 6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/1275/thumbnail.jp

    Spring 1983

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    The pre-scientific concept of a "soul": A neurophenomenological hypothesis about its origin.

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    In this contribution I will argue that our traditional, folk-phenomenological concept of a "soul� may have its origins in accurate and truthful first-person reports about the experiential content of a specific neurophenomenological state-class. This class of phenomenal states is called the "Out-of-body experience� (OBE hereafter), and I will offer a detailed description in section 3 of this paper. The relevant type of conscious experience seems to possess a culturally invariant cluster of functional and phenomenal core properties: it is a specific kind of conscious experience, which can in principle be undergone by every human being. I propose that it probably is one of the most central semantic roots of our everyday, folk-phenomenological idea of what a soul actually is

    Slipping Under

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    Hawks\u27 Eye -- May 7, 1998

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    Volume 56, Issue 1: Full Issue

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    Spartan Daily February 21, 2011

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    Volume 136, Issue 13https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/1120/thumbnail.jp
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