63,432 research outputs found

    Interventions for improving employment outcomes for workers with HIV

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    Acknowledgements We would like to thank Cochrane Work Trials Search Co-ordinators Leena Isotalo and Kaisa Neuvonen for developing the search strategy and Managing Editor Jani Ruotsalainen and Co-ordinating Editor Jos Verbeek for editing the text and providing helpful comments. We would also like to thank Richard Othieno for his contributions to the protocol.Non peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Introduction

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    This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book. The book explores, inter alia, the strategy employed by Augustine in using Plato as a pseudo-prophet against later Platonists and explores Eusebius’ reception of Porphyry’s daemonology. It examines Plotinus’ claim that matter is absolute badness and focuses on Maximus the Confessor’s doctrine of creation and asks whether one may detect any influence on Maximus from Philoponus. The book addresses Christian receptions of Platonic metaphysics and also examines the philosophy of number in Augustine’s early works. It argues that the aspect of Augustine’s philosophy must be read in context with the intellectual problems that occupied him at the beginning of his career as a writer. It draws on a number of sources to investigate the development of the doctrine and the various intellectual issues it confronted, including Plato’s Timaeus, Philo of Alexandria, Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Plotinus and, finally, Athanasius

    KLASIFIKASI EMOSI PEREMPUAN YANG TERPISAH DARI RAGANYA DALAM NOVEL KOMA KARYA RACHMANIA ARUNITA (SEBUAH KAJIAN PSIKOLOGI)

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    Citra Iskandar, Joanita. 2017. “The Classification of Female Emotions Separated from The Body on Koma Novel by Rachmania Arunita: The Review of Literary Psychology”. Thesis. Tier 1 Program in Indonesian Literature. Semarang. Diponegoro University Faculty of Humanities. Leader: Dr. Redyanto Noor, M.Hum. and Ken Widyatwati, S.S., M.Hum. Koma is a novel which told about the main character of Jani who experienced a coma condition. The main character of Jani is described as a soul separated from her body. The condition of coma experienced by the main character of Jani closely to the problems of life that impact on psychological development such as emotions and inner conflict. The author uses the structural theory to understand the intrinsic element in Koma novel. The used structural strategy is about plotting and characters. This research also used a literary pschology to study the classification of emotions and the factors that cause inner conflict. The result of this research is, knowing the emotions of the main character of Jani described as a soul separated from her body, the consept of guilt, the buried guilt, self punishment, shame, sadness, and love, where those emotional feelings related to kind of acts. The factors behind the inner conflict, internal factors such as fear factor, dissapointment, prejudice, and regret. An external factors is a crisis of symphaty from parents. Keyword : Koma, novel, structural, literary psychlogy, the classificaion of emotions

    Jani Cristou

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    Tantilla jani

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    Number of Pages: 1Integrative BiologyGeological Science

    ALEA III: Twentieth Century Strings, October 20, 1989

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    This is the concert program of ALEA III: Twentieth Century Strings, October 20, 1989 performance on Friday, October 20, 1989 at 8:00 p.m., at the Tsai Performance Center, 685 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Works performed were Five Greek Dances by Nikos Skalkottas, Seven Greek Folk Dances, Op. 150 by Alan Hovhaness, Spleen et Ideal Op. 10 by Leo Samama, Preludes and Fugue by Witold Lutoslawski, and Praxis for Twelve by Jani Christou. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund

    Transition of Greek art song from the national school to modernism

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    This study presents the different ways in which two Greek composers, Leonidas Zoras and Jani Christou, viewed modernism. The songs of Zoras are typical example of the gradual withdrawal from the aesthetic framework of the National School which dominated during the first decades of the twentieth century. In contrast, Jani Christou, who spent his childhood in Alexandria and received an exclusively Western-type education, remained untouched by Greek traditional music or the Greek National School. His work was moulded by the ancient Greek philosophical belief in the elation of the listener through the transcendental power of Art. By his Six T. S. Eliot Songs Christou offered some of the best examples of twentieth-century expressionistic vocal music
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