55,555 research outputs found

    John R. Mott and John D. Rockefeller, Jr.: Dimensions of an Unlikely Friendship

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    This research report is based on research performed at the Rockefeller Archive Center during January 2019. The report explores several dimensions to the friendship and professional relationship of Dr. John R. Mott and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. John R. Mott was a Nobel Peace Prize laureate of 1946 and was one of the most important ecumenical and Christian mission leaders in the first half of the twentieth century. Mott traveled the world to establish student Christian associations in many different countries, and also served in diplomatic missions for the Wilson administration. He refused Woodrow Wilson’s offer to be the U.S. ambassador to China. Rockefeller was a financial supporter of Mott and of Mott’s projects for over four decades. Projects discussed in this paper include aid to soldiers during World War I, the funding of a large survey research project about Christian mission around the world, and support of a Russian Orthodox seminary in Paris after the Bolshevik Revolution. Similarities with regard to theological views of Mott and Rockefeller are also briefly discussed in this report

    We should aim for open refereeing of academic articles in the information age

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    James Hartley argues that new technology used for submitting papers to academic journals increases the possibilities for gathering data, analysing it and improving the refereeing process

    A Bibliographical Guide for United Methodist Doctrinal Examination Questions

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    The Evolution of Senses: My Research Journey into the Nervous System of Cnidaria

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    Our understanding of the evolutionary history of animals is improving, but knowledge of the ancient sensory systems that early animals used to interact with their environments is still largely unknown. Using molecular cloning and in situ hybridization staining procedures, I was able to test the hypothesis that some senses evolved prior to the evolution of animals with bilateral symmetry. My data provides evidence that cnidarians can taste using genes that are closely related to human taste receptors. This finding changes our current understanding of when tasteevolved by hundreds of millions of years. The in situ hybridization results also demonstrated co-localization, or overlap, of the expression of taste and photosensitivity genes, which provides preliminary evidence that cnidarians use a polymodal sensory-motor (PSM) neuron to sense light and chemical cues (“tastes”) to coordinate their feeding behavior. The cDNA constructs I have produced will also provide further biochemical insights into their function. My long-term research projects have taught me about the process of making scientific discoveries, and I hope to continue conducting research throughout my career

    Diakonia and Mission: Charting the Ambiguity

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    The food of coarse fish

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    Remarkably little has been published on the feeding habits of the non-salmonid fishes of British fresh waters. The following report briefly summarizes the results obtained from the examination of the stomach contents of some 2,700 fish, belonging to 19 species, which were obtained during 1939. The results of all examinations of gut contents were analysed, species by species, upon a simple basis of the presence of different types of food. Foodstuffs were divided up into six main categories— fish, molluscs, insects, crustaceans, higher plants together with filamentous algae, and diatoms—and the occurrence of members of any of these categories was recorded for each fish

    Salvation and Sociology in the Methodist Episcopal Deaconess Movement

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    Excerpt: Rather than being an American innovation which was spread to missionary contexts abroad, the deaconess movement in the Methodist Episcopal Church began on the Methodist missionary frontiers of India and Germany in the late 19th century. The appeals to General Conference in April 1888 to establish the office of deaconess originated in the Bengal Conference in India and the Rock River Conference in Illinois. Bishop James Thoburn, a well-known missionary from India, led the petitions through the intricacies of the General Conference with the urging of his missionary sister, Isabella Thoburn, who had recently joined forces with Chicago\u27s Lucy Rider Meyer in their common cause to gain General Conference recognition of the deaconess movement
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