TL;DR: Theodore K Rabb's "Contemplative Book of Seventeenth Century Europe" as mentioned in this paper offers a new interpretation of the seventeenth century Europe, focusing on a crucial transition from turmoil to relative tranquility.
Abstract: Theodore K Rabb's contemplative book offers a new interpretation of the seventeenth century Europe, focusing on a crucial transition from turmoil to relative tranquility. The book shows, in splendid illustrations, how painters, like writers and scientists, reflected the change that is his main theme - the shift from belligerence to restraint, from upheaval to calm.
TL;DR: Phyletic analysis of fifty characters of advanced snakes as discussed by the authors, Phyletical analysis of 50 characters of the advanced snakes, and the analysis of the characters of 50 advanced snakes.
Abstract: Phyletic analysis of fifty characters of advanced snakes , Phyletic analysis of fifty characters of advanced snakes , مرکز فناوری اطلاعات و اطلاع رسانی کشاورزی
TL;DR: Tomsons and Mayer as discussed by the authors discuss the relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people in the context of philosophy and Aboriginal rights in an edited volume of critical dialogues.
Abstract: Sandra Tomsons and Lorraine Mayer eds., Philosophy and Aboriginal Rights: Critical Dialogues. Oxford: OUP Canada, 2013. 512 pages. ISBN 978-0-195-43130-8. $70.95 paperback.There is reason to believe that we have entered on a new sort of relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people (and peoples) in Canada. Some of these reasons are social or political, as in the increased profile of Aboriginal persons in various professional fields or the serious attention which a group such as Idle No More has received. Other reasons are more philosophical and involve the expression of uniquely Aboriginal perspectives on abstract issues and problems. Recognition of Native philosophy as a distinct sub-class of the discipline of philosophy is in its infancy, but while Aboriginal persons may be informed as to the content of these unique perspectives by virtue of being Aboriginal, non-Aboriginals are usually at a loss. There are not many sources to which one can turn for Native philosophy outside of Dennis McPherson and J. Douglas Rabb's Indian From the Inside: Native American Philosophy and Cultural Renewal (2nd ed., McFarland 2011) and Anne Waters's anthology American Indian Thought: Philosophical Essays (Wiley-Blackwell 2003). Aside from these, there is scant literature that would permit interested non-Aboriginal scholars to enter into dialogue with their Native counterparts or colleagues. It is this lack which Tomsons and Mayer's Philosophy and Aboriginal Rights attempts to make good, at least with respect to the political and moral issue stated in its title. So this book is, I think, a welcome one.Fairness of representation requires exchange, and Tomsons and Mayer try to model this dialogue in their "conversations" which conclude each of the four parts into which the book is divided. Tomsons takes the position of the non-Aboriginal philosopher and Mayer the Aboriginal. As artificial as this approach is, nevertheless it is still a step in the right direction. Further, the spiritual grandfathers of the project, Dennis McPherson and Douglas Rabb, provide a prologue for the work, cheekily titled "Prolegomena to Any Further Discussion of Rights That May be Considered Aboriginal." The other contributors to the volume also seem to exemplify this spirit of dialogue because twelve of the twenty-nine contributors identify themselves as being Aboriginal or as having Aboriginal ancestry. The division of the book into sections - on the relation of Indigenous philosophy to Aboriginal rights, on the content of those rights, on the notion of Aboriginal sovereignty, and on possible avenues for reconciliation of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal views on these matters - is entirely appropriate and just what one should expect from something that purports to make heard the previously-silent Native voices on these issues.However, there are important deficiencies in this edited volume that cannot be ignored. For one, the quality of the papers is very un- even. Indeed, despite the attempts to articulate some clear notion of Aboriginal philosophy by McPherson and Rabb in their "Prolegomena" and Tomsons and Mayer in their "General Introduction," it's not clear how, for example, Janice Green's "What Mauchibinesse Taught Me about Aboriginal Rights" can be seen as philosophy. While inclusion of such work is not a serious defect because non-academic contributors will sometimes fail to hit the expected note, it is nevertheless illustrative of a certain immaturity (for lack of a better term) in the subdiscipline of Aboriginal or Native or Indigenous philosophy itself. The same deficiency, for instance, can be observed in Anne Waters's American Indian Thought. Yet it is no aid to the discipline to include as representative cases material that is not clearly philosophical in character. Rabb and McPherson's efforts notwithstanding, treating a descriptive account of one's heritage as "phenomenological" conflates the distinction between ethnography and philosophy. …
TL;DR: A Note on Transliteration from Cyrillic Notes on the Contributors Preface Henry Kozicki Introduction: Contemporary Historiography: Some Kicks in the Old Coffin Sidney Monas Part One: OBJECT AND SUBJECT IN HISTORY Rationality and History Georg G. Goldstein Dialectical Rationality in History: A Paradigmatic Approach to Karl Marx's The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte Michael A. Kissell Part Two: SOURCES, RESOURCES and EXPLANATIONS 'A Fetishism of Documents'?: The
Abstract: A Note on Transliteration from Cyrillic Notes on the Contributors Preface Henry Kozicki Introduction: Contemporary Historiography: Some Kicks in the Old Coffin Sidney Monas PART ONE: OBJECT AND SUBJECT IN HISTORY Rationality and History Georg G. Iggers Text, Context, and Psychology in Intellectual History Gerald N. Izenberg Whither History? Reflections on the Comparison between Historians and Scientists Theodore K. Rabb The Sociological Historiography of Charles Tilly Leon J. Goldstein Dialectical Rationality in History: A Paradigmatic Approach to Karl Marx's The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte Michael A. Kissell PART TWO: SOURCES, RESOURCES AND EXPLANATIONS 'A Fetishism of Documents'?: The Salience of Source-based History Arthur Marwick Marxism and Historians of the Family Richard T. Vann 'They Were Not Quite Like Us': The Presumption of Qualitative Difference in Historical Writing Eero Loone Strategies of Causal Explanation in History Andrus Park Index