1,922 research outputs found

    Intersex and the Pardoner’s Body

    Get PDF
    Most scholars today have retreated from reading into the Pardoner\u27s body in favor of more figurative readings that emphasize his lack of masculinity, and such lack is then linked to his dejection and despair. Other, more affirming readings center the Pardoner\u27s performance, which allows him to model any sort of body desired through figuration. While such positions dominate and older theories like Beryl Rowland\u27s proposal of an intersex Pardoner are dismissed, in fact, an intersex reading might be a more life-affirming interpretation, not only in terms of reframing the Pardoner\u27s body as manifesting variation as opposed to lack, but also being more inclusive. The reception of Rowland\u27s work shows a reluctance to consider intersex bodies and to incorporate our understanding of intersex today. Much medieval studies scholarship is invested in figurative \u27hermaphrodities\u27--a term offensive today yet maintained in medieval scholarship--while the reality of intersex people\u27s literal bodies is elided, an erasure that is to the detriment of medieval studies. Reexamining the Pardoner through the history of science gives this Chaucerian character back his body and recenters marginalized bodies both then and now

    The US AneuRx Clinical Trial: 6-year clinical update 2002

    Get PDF

    Progressive Load Balancing in Distributed Memory

    Get PDF

    MAX WEBER'S THEORY OF LAW EDUCATION AND POLITICAL VIEWS OF RELIGION

    Get PDF
    In order to better evaluate Weber's most popular views on the economic ethics of religion, by comparison and due to the interaction of the opposites and sets of views expressed in them, in this work, the discipline of human rights will also be analysed, which will closely identify Weber's asceticism about the spirit of normative Protestantism and the ethics of capitalism and law school and education. The purpose of the research is to establish and identify the ideas expressed by Weber regarding the value scope of social classes, layers and typology of religion, by analysing them – conventionally, but specifically – through the doctrine of lex nature and education impact in school of sociology. Additionally, the purpose of the present work is to answer what is the general structure of Weber's philosophical thoughts and views on school of law, to find and identify in it the asceticism of the sociology of religion, interspersed with the theory of conflict and domination. But the relevance of the research is rooted in the fact that the methods of Weber's scientific approach are used to analyse the state's institutional and orderly system-theoretical dependence from the bureaucratized forms of public authority and this impact in knowledge.

    The Domestication of Equidae in Third-Millennium BCE Mesopotamia

    Get PDF
    It has been forty years since the first edition of this book, as an Oriental Institute doctoral dissertation, was completed. Now, in a fully revised and much expanded study, CUSAS 24 presents a comprehensive discussion of the philological, historical, and archaeological evidence for the range of equidae known now from much of Wester

    Banded Agates, Origins and Inclusions

    Get PDF

    Adverse Childhood Events, Empathy, and Altruism

    Get PDF
    poster abstractWith a growing prevalence of adverse treatment of children, it is important to look into the longterm effects of negative childhood experiences – specifically their capacities for empathic concern and helping behavior. Empathy is the tendency to read and interpret others’ emotions. Long-term outcomes of adverse childhood events (ACE) include a host of mental health disorders. Other studies have found that, on the other hand, ACE is correlated to an increase in empathy. Previous studies have also indicated that stress can increase prosocial behavior; the latter seems to function in offsetting the effects of the former. Clarification can be found in a motivational process model, which theorizes that experiencing ACE increases one’s motivation to help others who may experience the same circumstances. While ACE may indeed initially result in a blunting of affect, successfully overcoming the effects of these events often leads to a desire to change outcomes for others. 836 adults (72.5% female) completed an online survey that included the Interpersonal Reactivity Index, the Adverse Childhood Events scale, and the altruistic behaviors scale. In line with previous research, both Adverse Childhood Events, r=.155, p<.001, and empathic concern, r=.188, p<.001, are positively correlated with altruism. However, there is little research that determines the link between adverse childhood events and empathy. Not only are empathic concern, B=.153, p=<.001, and the experience of adverse childhood events, B=.190, p<.001, positively associated with altruism, but there is a strong interaction affect between empathic concern and adverse childhood events, B=.107, p=.002. In other words, the interaction between empathic concern and a history of adverse childhood events is positively associated with altruism. Most research on factors associated with altruism has focused on simple main effects. However, by exploring interaction effects, we can better determine what types of people are more likely to behave altruistically

    Charitable Giving and Tax Incentives

    Get PDF
    Over $400 billion were donated to nonprofits in 2017, a record high. However, despite the increases in charitable dollars, the share of households that donate has been declining: in 2000, 67 percent of American households donated to nonprofits, but in 2014, only 56 percent of American households donated. This trend in decreasing donors pre-dates the passage of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), but could be accelerated by the recent policy changes. TCJA significantly changed federal tax policy and these changes are expected to affect charitable giving [3-5]. Nonprofit leaders, as well as policymakers, have been exploring additional policy proposals to offset the potential negative impact on charitable giving

    Colorimetric method for susceptibility testing of voriconazole and other triazoles against Candida species

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72523/1/j.1439-0507.1999.00511.x.pd

    Stimulated emission and optical properties of pyranyliden fragment containing compounds in PVK matrix

    Get PDF
    This work has been supported by National Research program “Multifunctional materials and composites, photonics and nanotechnology (IMIS2)”. Financial support provided by Scientific Research Project for Students and Young Researchers No. SJZ2015/12 realised at the Institute of Solid State Physics, University of Latvia is greatly acknowledged.Organic solid state lasers are thoughtfully investigated due to their potential applications in communication, sensors, biomedicine, etc. Low amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) excitation threshold value is essential for further use of the material in devices. Intramolecular interaction limits high molecule density load in the matrix. It is the case of the well-known red light emitting laser dye - 4-(dicyanomethylene)-2-methyl-6-(4-dimethylaminostyryl)-4H-pyran (DCM). The lowest ASE threshold value of the mentioned laser dye could be obtained within the concentration range between 2 and 4 wt%. At higher concentration threshold energy drastically increases. In this work optical and ASE properties of three original DCM derivatives in poly(N-vinylcarbazole) (PVK) at various concentrations will be discussed. One of the derivatives is modified DCM dye in which the methyl substituents in the electron donor part have been replaced with bulky trityloxyethyl groups (DWK-1). These sterically significant functional groups do not influence electron transitions in the dye but prevent aggregation of the molecules. The chemical structure of the second investigated compound is similar to DWK-1 where the methyl group is replaced with the tert-butyl substituent (DWK-1TB). The third derivative (DWK-2) consists of two N,N-di(trityloxyethyl)amino electron donor groups. All results were compared with DCM:PVK system. Photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) is up to ten times larger for DWK-1TB with respect to DCM systems. Bulky trityloxyethyl groups prevent aggregation of the molecules thus decreasing interaction between dyes and amount of non-radiative decays. The red shift of the photoluminescence and amplified spontaneous emission at higher concentrations were observed due to the solid state solvation effect. The increase of the investigated dye density in the matrix with a smaller reduction in PLQY resulted in low ASE threshold energy. The lowest threshold value was obtained around 21 ÎŒJ/cm2 (2.1 kW/cm2) in DWK-1TB:PVK films.National Research program IMIS2; ISSP UL Scientific Research Project for Students and Young Researchers No SJZ2015/12; Institute of Solid State Physics, University of Latvia as the Center of Excellence has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Framework Programme H2020-WIDESPREAD-01-2016-2017-TeamingPhase2 under grant agreement No. 739508, project CAMART
    • 

    corecore