25,280 research outputs found
Stroke self-management programmes could improve patient self-efficacy and satisfaction with self-management behaviours
No abstract available
The forgotten first: John MacCormick's 'DĂšn-Ăluinn'
The first Gaelic novel, John MacCormick's DĂšn-Ăluinn, no an t-Oighre 'na DhĂŹobarach, was serialised in the People's Journal in 1910 before being published in its entirety in 1912. Within a year of the publication of DĂšn-Ăluinn as a novel the second Gaelic novel, Angus Robertson's An t-Ogha Mòr, appeared in print, underlining the renaissance which Gaelic literature was experiencing. Both novels, while remarked upon by contemporaries and by general studies of Gaelic literature, have been all but ignored to date, with no criticism or analysis of either having been published. The main aim of this article is to offer some general comments about MacCormick's DĂšn-Ăluinn and thus to open up both the novel and indeed other early twentieth-century Gaelic writers and their work to further scrutiny. Consideration will be given to the author himself, the contemporary Gaelic literary scene and finally some of the more interesting aspects of the novel itself
Re-examining Husserlâs Non-Conceptualism in the Logical Investigations
A recent trend in Husserl scholarship takes the Logische Untersuchungen (LU) as advancing an inconsistent and confused view of the non-conceptual content of perceptual experience. Against this, I argue that there is no inconsistency about non-conceptualism in LU. Rather, LU presents a hybrid view of the conceptual nature of perceptual experience, which can easily be misread as inconsistent, since it combines a conceptualist view of perceptual content (or matter) with a non-conceptualist view of perceptual acts. I show how this hybrid view is operative in Husserlâs analyses of essentially occasional expressions and categorial intuition. And I argue that it can also be deployed in relation to Husserlâs analysis of the constitution of perceptual fullness, which allows it to avoid a objection raised by Walter Hoppâthat the combination of Husserlâs analysis of perceptual fullness with conceptualism about perceptual content generates a vicious regress
Social Control and Social Criticism: the nineteenth-century còmhradh
The paper discusses the emergence of the còmhradh (dialogue)as the preferred prose genre for the discussion of social issues in the course of the century. It focuses on the way in which the còmhradh was used, first by the Rev. Dr Norman MacLeod (Caraid nan Gaidheal) as a form of Establishment propaganda which aimed to diffuse social unrest during the famines of the 1830s and 1840s, then offers a contrast with the use of the còmhradh in the 1870s and 1880s when it was adopted as part of the campaigning literature of the croftersâ cause
What has Transparency to do with Husserlian Phenomenology?
This paper critically evaluates Amie Thomassonâs (2003; 2005; 2006) view of the conscious mind and the interpretation of Husserlâs phenomenological reduction that it adopts. In Thomassonâs view, the phenomenological method is not an introspectionist method, but rather a âtransparentâ or âextrospectionistâ method for acquiring epistemically privileged self-knowledge. I argue that Thomassonâs reading of Husserlâs phenomenological reduction is correct. But the view of consciousness that she pairs with itâa view of consciousness as âtransparentâ in the sense that first-order, world-oriented experience is in no way given to itselfâis not compatible with it. Rather, Thomassonâs view is, from a Husserlian vantage point, self-undermining in the same way that any genuinely skeptical view is self-undermining: it undermines the conditions of its own possibility. This is one of the motives Husserl has for developing a same-order view of self-consciousness as the complement to his transparent method for self-knowledge acquisition
Burning issues: reactions to the Highland Press during the 1885 election campaign
This paper considers the âprotestâ burning of newspapers in the Highlands in the months immediately preceding the election of November-December 1885. Newspapers took a central role in the Highland Land Agitation, no matter where their political loyalties lay, and the strength of feeling which they awoke among Highlanders is evident in the public burnings of newspapers, particularly those which were perceived to be supporters of the landlords. This paper considers the role which the Highland press played in electioneering as it catered for an expanding and increasingly politicised readership. The dualities of the newspapers, both as purveyors of news, but also featuring in the news, are examined as is the use of Gaelic for electioneering purposes and finally the various reports of newspaper burnings
Wales, the Enlightenment and the New British History
There is no electronic version of this article.PostprintPeer reviewe
Learning and Libraries: Competencies for Full Participation
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