Results for 'Connor Moran'

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  1.  45
    Toward A Formal-Pragmatic Theory of Communicative Memory: Rethinking Habermas's Isolated Speech Situation.Connor Moran - 2024 - Res Philosophica 101 (2):271-297.
    This article argues that Habermas’s formal-pragmatics are better understood as a set of weak-universal dispositions susceptible to erosion over the course of a lifetime, if exposed to continual “disappointing” communicative experiences. Habermas’s rational-reconstructive project to explicate the intuitive rule-consciousness held by competent speakers retains immense theoretical value for analyzing both partisan and mass political discourse, if his emphasis on isolated speech situations is supplemented with a logic of communicative memory better accounting for how disagreement antecedes discourse on the formal-pragmatic register. (...)
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  2. The expression of feeling in imagination.Richard Moran - 1994 - Philosophical Review 103 (1):75-106.
  3.  15
    Unlikely Crusader: John Eldred Swearingen and African-American Education in South Carolina.Edward Janak & Peter Moran - 2010 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 46 (2):224-249.
  4. Kind‐Dependent Grounding.Alex Moran - 2018 - Analytic Philosophy 59 (3):359-390.
    Are grounding claims fully general in character? If an object a is F in virtue of being G, does it follow that anything that’s G is F for that reason? According to the thesis of Weak Formality, the answer here is ‘yes’. In this paper, however, I argue that there is philosophical utility in rejecting this thesis. More exactly, I argue that two currently unresolved problems in contemporary metaphysics can be dealt with if we hold that there can be cases (...)
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  5.  64
    Edmund Husserl's Phenomenology of Habituality and Habitus.Dermot Moran - 2011 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 42 (1):53-77.
    The concept of habit enfolds an enormous richness and diversity of meanings. According to Husserl, habit, along with association, memory, and so on, belongs to the very essence of the psychic.1 Husserl even speaks of an overall genetic “phenomenology of habitualities”. In this paper, as an initial attempt to explicate the complexity of phenomenological treatments of habit, want to trace Husserl’s conception of habit as it emerged in his mature genetic phenomenology, in order to highlight his enormous and neglected original (...)
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  6.  24
    The Mass of the English Troy Pound in the Eighteenth Century.Ad C. Simpson & R. D. Connor - 2004 - Annals of Science 61 (3):321-349.
    An examination of British and French weights exchanged between the Royal Society and the Académie royale des sciences in the 1730s has led to a re‐assessment of the Elizabethan troy standards from the Exchequer and the suggestion that the mass of the troy pound has been revised upwards. In turn this is used to support the idea of an evolutionary relationship between the early bullion ounces of England, France, and the Low Countries.
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  7. Husserl’s transcendental philosophy and the critique of naturalism.Dermot Moran - 2008 - Continental Philosophy Review 41 (4):401-425.
    Throughout his career, Husserl identifies naturalism as the greatest threat to both the sciences and philosophy. In this paper, I explicate Husserl’s overall diagnosis and critique of naturalism and then examine the specific transcendental aspect of his critique. Husserl agreed with the Neo-Kantians in rejecting naturalism. He has three major critiques of naturalism: First, it (like psychologism and for the same reasons) is ‘countersensical’ in that it denies the very ideal laws that it needs for its own justification. Second, naturalism (...)
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  8. Why Agent Causation?Timothy O’Connor - 1996 - Philosophical Topics 24 (2):143-158.
    I Introduction The question of this paper is, what would it be to act with freedom of the will? What kind of control is inchoately in view when we speak, pretheoretically, of being ‘self- determining’ beings, of ‘freely making choices in view of consciously considered reasons’ (pro and con) - of its being ‘up to us’ how we shall act? My question here is not whether we have (or have any reason to think we have) such freedom, or what is (...)
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  9. The Economic Value of Biodiversity.David Pearce & Dominic Moran - 1996 - Environmental Values 5 (1):89-90.
     
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  10. Delusions of Virtue: Kant on Self-Conceit.Kate Moran - 2014 - Kantian Review 19 (3):419-447.
    Little extended attention has been given to Kant's notion of self-conceit, though it appears throughout his theoretical and practical philosophy. Authors who discuss self-conceit often describe it as a kind of imperiousness or arrogance in which the conceited agent seeks to impose selfish principles upon others, or sees others as worthless. I argue that these features of self-conceit are symptoms of a deeper and more thoroughgoing failure. Self-conceit is best described as the tendency to insist upon one to oneself or (...)
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  11. Disjunctivism and the Causal Conditions of Hallucination.Alex Moran - forthcoming - Erkenntnis:1-24.
    Disjunctivists maintain that perceptual experiences and hallucinatory experiences are distinct kinds of event with different metaphysical natures. Moreover, given their view about the nature of perceptual cases, disjunctivists must deny that the perceptual kind of experience can occur during hallucination. However, it is widely held that disjunctivists must grant the converse claim, to the effect that the hallucinatory kind of experience occurs even during perception. This paper challenges that thought. As we will see, the argument for thinking that the hallucinatory (...)
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  12. Interpretation Theory and the First Person.Richard Moran - 1994 - Philosophical Quarterly 44 (175):154-73.
  13.  32
    What Can the Organization of the Brain’s Default Mode Network Tell us About Self-Knowledge?Joseph M. Moran, William M. Kelley & Todd F. Heatherton - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  14. The Philosophy of John Scottus Eriugena: A Study of Idealism in the Middle Ages.Dermot Moran - 1989 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 52 (3):567-567.
     
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  15.  70
    Decision-making capacity for research participation among addicted people: a cross-sectional study.Inés Morán-Sánchez, Aurelio Luna, Maria Sánchez-Muñoz, Beatriz Aguilera-Alcaraz & Maria D. Pérez-Cárceles - 2016 - BMC Medical Ethics 17 (1):1-10.
    BackgroundInformed consent is a key element of ethical clinical research. Addicted population may be at risk for impaired consent capacity. However, very little research has focused on their comprehension of consent forms. The aim of this study is to assess the capacity of addicted individuals to provide consent to research.Methods53 subjects with DSM-5 diagnoses of a Substance Use Disorder and 50 non psychiatric comparison subjects participated in the survey from December 2014 to March 2015. This cross-sectional study was carried out (...)
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  16.  49
    Husserl and the Greeks.Dermot Moran - 2020 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (2):98-117.
    I document Husserl’s growing interest in the foundational character of Greek philosophy for Western culture and show what is unique about Husserl’s appropriation of certain Greek thinkers and conce...
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  17. The authority of self-consciousness.Richard Moran - 1999 - Philosophical Topics 26 (1-2):174-200.
    central to virtually all contemporary thinking on self-consciousness and first-person authority. And a good measure of its importance has been not only as an evolving philosophical account of these phenomena, but also as a model of an account that places the capacity for specifically first-person awareness of one's mental states at the center of what it is to be a subject of mental states in the first place. For not every philosophical account of introspection will take its specifically first-person features (...)
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  18. (1 other version)For Community's Sake: A (Self-Respecting) Kantian Account of Forgiveness.Kate A. Moran - forthcoming - Proceedings of the XI International Kant-Kongress.
    This paper sketches a Kantian account of forgiveness and argues that it is distinguished by three features. First, Kantian forgiveness is best understood as the revision of the actions one takes toward an offender, rather than a change of feeling toward an offender. Second, Kant’s claim that forgiveness is a duty of virtue tells us that we have two reasons to sometimes be forgiving: forgiveness promotes both our own moral perfection and the happiness of our moral community. Third, we have (...)
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  19.  52
    Language and Philosophy: Some Suggestions for an Empirical Approach.A. H. Basson & D. J. O'Connor - 1947 - Philosophy 22 (81):49 - 65.
    Preoccupation with language is a notable feature of modern philosophy. Indeed, it is not too much to say that the influence of language on thought, and particularly its influence on philosophical thought, is a leading topic of philosophical discussion in this century. Every philosopher of any note, no matter what his general interests may be, has found it necessary to define his attitude to this problem. The attitude usually adopted consists of an admission that language does have a great influence (...)
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  20.  20
    Hegel and Phenomenology: Introduction.Dermot Moran & Elisa Magrì - 2017 - Hegel Bulletin 38 (1):1-6.
  21.  13
    Husserl’s Layered Concept of the Human Person: Conscious and Unconscious.Dermot Moran - 2017 - In Dylan Trigg & Dorothée Legrand (eds.), Unconsciousness Between Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  22.  3
    Full Collection of Personal Narratives.Jake Beery, Neethi Pinto, Marcia King, Laura Wachsmuth, Alisha, Katie L. Gholson, T. S. Moran, Calvin R. Gross, Joanne Alfred, Cindy Bitter, Jenna Bennett, Nadia Khan, Clarice Douille, Kristen Carey Rock, Adrienne Feller Novick, Andrea Eisenberg, Japmehr Sandhu, Katherine Bakke, Heer Hendry, Karan K. Mirpuri & Katerina V. Liong - 2024 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 14 (2).
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Full Collection of Personal NarrativesJake Beery, Neethi Pinto, Marcia King, Laura Wachsmuth, Alisha, Katie L. Gholson, T.S. Moran, Calvin R. Gross, Joanne Alfred, Cindy Bitter, Jenna Bennett, Nadia Khan, Clarice Douille, Kristen Carey Rock, Adrienne Feller Novick, Andrea Eisenberg, Japmehr Sandhu, Katherine Bakke, Heer Hendry, Karan K. Mirpuri, and Katerina V. Liong• Being the Difference• Grieving One More Time• Echoes of Grief: Tales from an Emergency Medicine and (...)
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  23.  40
    What Makes an Ethical Account a Natural Law Ethical Account? Contemporary Ethics, Metaethics, and Normative Ethics.John D. O’Connor - 2024 - Studies in Christian Ethics 37 (2):303-326.
    What makes ethical accounts natural law ethical is, I argue, commonly misrepresented in teaching within much of the philosophical academy. Yet those immersed in the field of natural law and ethics rarely give definitions/brief characterisations of what makes ethical accounts natural law ethical. I suggest theoretical reasons for the lack. I argue that bringing natural law into ethics is best understood as leading to theoretically unitary accounts, not simply collections of positions detachable from each other: an overlooked and significant point (...)
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  24.  27
    Die Alchemie in der europaischen Kultur- und Wissenschaftsgeschichte. Christoph Meinel.Bruce Moran - 1987 - Isis 78 (3):482-483.
  25. Stanley Cavell on Recognition, Betrayal, and the Photographic Field of Expression.Richard Moran - 2016 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 23:29-40.
    The ideas of expression and expressiveness have been central to Stanley Cavell’s writing from the beginning, joining themes from his more strictly philosophical writing to the role of human expression as projected in cinema. This paper explores a thread running through several different parts of his writing, relating claims he makes about the photographic medium of film and its implications for the question of expression and expressivity in film There is an invocation of notions of necessity and control in the (...)
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  26.  93
    Sinnboden der Geschichte: Foucault and Husserl on the structural a priori of history.Dermot Moran - 2016 - Continental Philosophy Review 49 (1):13-27.
    In this paper I explore Husserl’s and Foucault’s approaches to the historical a priori and defend Husserl’s richer notion. Foucault borrows the expression ‘historical a priori’ from Husserl and there are continuities, but also significant and ultimately irreconcilable differences, between their conceptions. Both are looking for ‘conditions of possibility,’ forms of ‘institution’ or instauration, and patterns of transformation, for scientific knowledge. Husserl identifies the ‘a priori of history’ with the ‘historical a priori’ and believes that the ‘invariant essential structures of (...)
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  27.  79
    The Philosophical Retreat to the Here and Now: Notes on Living in Time.Richard Moran - 2022 - Philosophy 97 (4):413-433.
    The ordinary human concerns with the past and the future can be seen both as forms of suffering and as illusory because they involve the failure to appreciate the primary reality of the present. In this lecture I argue that while there are certainly ways of being occupied with past or future times that we have reason to criticize, such criticism cannot base itself on any metaphysical claim to the singular or exclusive reality of the present. The task of developing (...)
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  28.  58
    “Our Germans Are Better than Your Germans”: Continental and Analytic Approaches to Intentionality Reconsidered.Dermot Moran - 1999 - Philosophical Topics 27 (2):77-106.
  29.  19
    Kant's conception of pedagogy.Shane Moran - 2015 - South African Journal of Philosophy 34 (1):29-37.
    Confronted with the thoroughgoing marketisation of education, scholars have revisited the nature of pedagogy. The work of Immanuel Kant is a resource for critiquing the channelling of the transformation of self and society into rapacious consumerism. Kant's exploration of the connection between inner freedom and political freedom has been recast as pedagogy of the oppressed. Countering the dismissal of the Enlightenment as an accomplice of colonialism and imperialism, Kantian pedagogy is enlisted in the struggle against the forces undermining the very (...)
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  30.  40
    Husserl’s Idealism Revisited.Dermot Moran - 2021 - In Cynthia D. Coe (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of German Idealism and Phenomenology. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 15-40.
    This chapter explicates Husserl’s transcendental idealism as motivated by his critiques of naturalism and objectivism. The chapter proposes a way of resolving the paradox of transcendental subjectivity, namely: how subjectivity can be both for the world and in the world. Husserl’s idealism has a number of commitments: priority of consciousness over being in the correlation between subjectivity and objectivity; all “meaning and being” depend on transcendental subjectivity; transcendental subjectivity is not a “piece of the world” ; transcendental subjectivity belongs to (...)
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  31.  41
    Ethics and selfhood: A critique.Dermot Moran - 2006 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 14 (1):95 – 107.
  32.  36
    Heidegger’s Phenomenology and the Destruction of Reason.Dermot Moran - 1985 - Irish Philosophical Journal 2 (1):15-35.
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  33. Phenomenology: Critical Concepts in Philosophy Volume 2.Dermot Moran & Lester E. Embree (eds.) - 2004 - Routledge.
     
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  34.  21
    Chapter five impersonality, expression, and the undoing of self-knowledge.Richard Moran - 2001 - In Authority and Estrangement: An Essay on Self-Knowledge. Princeton University Press. pp. 152-194.
  35.  39
    Chapter one. The image of self- knowledge.Richard Moran - 2001 - In Authority and Estrangement: An Essay on Self-Knowledge. Princeton University Press. pp. 1-35.
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  36. Designing for Imprisonment: Architectural Ethics and Prison Design.Dominique Moran, Yvonne Jewkes & Colin Lorne - 2019 - Architecture Philosophy 4 (1).
    Architectural ethics has only begun to consider in earnest what it means, in a moral sense, to be an architect.1 The academy, however, has yet to adequately to explore the ethical problems raised,2 to evaluate the types of moral issues that arise, and to develop moral principles or moral reasons that should guide decisions when encountering these moral issues inherent in certain project types. This is the case despite the practice of architecture entailing “behaviours, our choices of which may be (...)
     
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  37.  38
    Exception, decision and philosophic politics.Brendan Moran - 2014 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 40 (2):145-170.
    Walter Benjamin’s writings are often read in terms of their emphasis on undecidability. This article focuses on Benjamin’s view of decision as a philosophic capacity to suspend recognizable myth. Myth is recognizable as closure. Myth becomes recognizable as myth when exceptions and extremes arise in relation to it. Without necessarily following the specific exception or extreme (which may itself be mythic), philosophy is a politics that is attuned to the capacity of an exception or extreme to perform the limit of (...)
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  38.  35
    El idealismo en la filosofía medieval: el caso de Juan Escoto Eriúgena.Dermont Moran - 2003 - Areté. Revista de Filosofía 15 (1):117-154.
    Quiero sostener en este artículo (en contra de la posición de Myles Burnyeat) que el idealismo es una posibilidad filosófica genuina previa a Descartes. En efecto, podemos encontrar una versión del idealismo que supone un concepto desarrollado de subjetividad en una sofisticada versión del Periphyseon de Escoto Eriúgena. El inmaterialismo intelectualista extremo de Eriúgena difiere del idealismo moderno en la medida en que aquél no está motivado tanto por una consideración epistemológica de argumentos escépticos relacionados con la existencia del mundo (...)
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  39.  13
    Hegel and the fundamental problems of philosophy.Philip Moran - 1988 - Amsterdam: B.R. Grüner Pub. Co..
    "The final chapter is a representative selection of passages on Hegelian philosophy from the work of Mitchell Franklin. It seemed fitting to close the book with a presentation and discussion of a twentieth century philosopher whose work is the culmination of the development of the best in the Hegelian and Marxist traditions"--Introduction, page 11.
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  40.  18
    Lay Culture, Learned Culture: Books and Social Change in Strasbourg, 1480-1599Miriam Usher Chrisman.Bruce Moran - 1984 - Isis 75 (3):613-614.
  41.  17
    Law Made Flesh: Homosexual Acts.Leslie J. Moran - 1999 - Body and Society 5 (1):39-55.
    This article examines the intelligibilities and unintelligibilities through which the sense and nonsense of the male body in its sexual relations with other male bodies is made in law. Taking as its point of departure a recent high profile prosecution against seven men, `the Bolton Seven', for consensual sexual relations, its particular focus is the metaphors of space through which the truth of this male body is imagined within the law. The article examines the simultaneous production of various spatio-corporeal regimes (...)
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  42.  18
    La Sociedad de la Información en España: Oportunidades, propuestas y planes.José Manuel Moran - 2003 - Arbor 175 (690):953-985.
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  43.  26
    San Agustín y la Escolástica.J. Morán - 1970 - Augustinianum 10 (1):118-141.
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  44.  13
    Storia concettuale e filosofia politica. Verso un’analisi situata dei concetti politici in America Latina.Sabrina Morán - 2021 - Scienza and Politica. Per Una Storia Delle Dottrine 33 (64):111-128.
    This article seeks to reflect on the methodological problem that dealing with political concepts with a particular historical and geographical frame entails. After stating how conceptual history, German in its origins, has given rise to different lines of thought throughout the Western World, especially in Europe, we explore how this conceptual approach can be used to address political concepts in Latin America from a philosophical-political perspective.
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  45.  30
    Selbstwissen: Die Grundidee.Richard Moran - 2015 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 63 (4).
    In philosophy it is widely recognized that a person’s first-person perspective on his own thought and action is importantly different from the third-person perspective we may have on the thought and actions of other people. In daily life it is natural to ask someone what he is doing or what he thinks about something, on the assumption that he knows what he is doing or what he is thinking. Some philosophers, however, argue that it is impossible to speak of knowledge (...)
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  46.  29
    Sacerdocio y vida común en la perspectiva conciliar y en la agustiniana.José Morán - 1967 - Augustinianum 7 (1):5-25.
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  47.  24
    Under the Lawn: Engaging the water cycle.Sharon Moran - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (2):129 – 145.
    This paper explores how several water technologies mediate people's relationship with nature in the domestic sphere. While septic systems are critical to the built environment in exurban North America, they remain largely unacknowledged. Their hidden participation in the backyards of private homes silently facilitates—yet outwardly denies—people's continued engagement in the water cycle. Now, a growing array of alternative practices (e.g. composting toilets and greywater systems) are being embraced by individuals choosing to intervene in their local ecology in an active manner. (...)
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  48.  69
    Incarnation and the Multiverse.Timothy O'Connor & Philip Woodward - 2014 - In Klaas J. Kraay (ed.), God and the Multiverse: Scientific, Philosophical, and Theological Perspectives. New York: Routledge. pp. 227-241.
    Timothy O’Connor and Philip Woodward defend a version of a compositional theory, according to which an incarnate deity has two natures, each of which is a distinct component of its being. They then extend this model to permit multiple incarnations. Finally, they consider an objection to this model based on the theological idea that Christ’s work is necessary for ushering in a united community of all divine-image-bearing creatures. In response, they speculate that no such all-encompassing community would be possible, (...)
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  49.  16
    Introduction.Andrea Moran Cimino - 2022 - Phenomenology and Mind 23:12-18.
    Phenomenological axiology (the theory of value) is the area of phenomenology that most explicitly deals with problems currently explored in metaethics. As one authoritative source describes it, metaethics is “the attempt to understand the metaphysical, epistemological, semantic, and psychological presuppositions and commitments of moral thought, talk, and practice” (Sayre-McCord 2014). However, the scope of axiology is broader than the scope of metaethics, which is concerned exclusively with...
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  50.  66
    Valid ICD-11 PGD Scales and Structured Clinical Interviews Needed.Maja O'Connor, Lene Larsen, Biretha V. Joensen, Paul A. Boelen, Fiona Maccallum, Katrine Komischke-Konnerup & Richard A. Bryant - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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