Results for 'Emperor Arcadius'

972 found
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  1.  15
    Index Nominum.Niccolo Acciaiuoli, Franciscus Francesco Accorso Accursius, Pierre D' Ailly, Alexander Aurelius, Severus Alexander, Jacques Almain, Angelus Carletus de Clavasio, An Carletus & Emperor Arcadius - 1997 - In Jill Kraye (ed.), Cambridge translations of Renaissance philosophical texts. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 293.
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  2. Synesius, a Curialis of the Time o the Emperor Arcadius.C. H. Coster - 1940 - Byzantion 15:10-38.
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  3.  35
    The Fall of Eutropius.Michael Dewar - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (02):582-.
    The eunuch Eutropius began his ascendancy over Arcadius, Emperor of the East, in late 395, following the murder of the Praetorian Prefect Rufinus. Eutropius, despite his physical shortcomings, ‘sullied the Fasti’ by holding the consulate in 399. By the end of that same year, however, collusion between the barbarian general Gainas and Tribigild, leader of a rebellion of Ostrogoths in Asia Minor, resulted in Eutropius’ fall from power. He was exiled to Cyprus and executed shortly afterwards.
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  4.  27
    The Inner Citadel: The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.Pierre Hadot, Mark Aurel & Emperor of Rome Marcus Aurelius - 1998 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Edited by Marcus Aurelius.
    The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius are treasured today--as they have been over the centuries--as an inexhaustible source of wisdom. And as one of the three most important expressions of Stoicism, this is an essential text for everyone interested in ancient religion and philosophy. Yet the clarity and ease of the work's style are deceptive. Pierre Hadot, eminent historian of ancient thought, uncovers new levels of meaning and expands our understanding of its underlying philosophy. Written by the Roman emperor for (...)
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  5.  9
    Chapter eighteen.O. F. A.‘Bad’Emperor - 2008 - In Ineke Sluiter & Ralph Mark Rosen (eds.), Kakos: badness and anti-value in classical antiquity. Boston: Brill. pp. 307--477.
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  6. Britain£ 2.50/$5.00 usa volume 2 number 2'm, V^* umversity l'bparfes apr 29 1991.Ancient Land, Of Euphronios & Han Emperor - 1991 - Minerva 2:55.
     
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  7.  25
    The Emperor's No Clothes: Suetonius and the Dynamics of Corporeal Ecphrasis.Bill Gladhill - 2012 - Classical Antiquity 31 (2):315-348.
    This paper studies Suetonius's depiction of the appearance of Emperors through what I call Bodily or Corporeal Ecphrasis. Suetonius's ecphrasis of the Emperor's body directs the readers' gaze over the corpus principis in a way that deconstructs the ontology of the princeps. I will show that Suetonius's construction of emperors' corpora includes an amalgamation of referents to heavenly and animal bodies that upsets a reader's ability to interpret these radically unique images through a purely human criterion.
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  8. The emperor's real mind -- Review of Roger Penrose's The Emperor's new Mind: Concerning Computers Minds and the Laws of Physics.Aaron Sloman - 1992 - Artificial Intelligence 56 (2-3):355-396.
    "The Emperor's New Mind" by Roger Penrose has received a great deal of both praise and criticism. This review discusses philosophical aspects of the book that form an attack on the "strong" AI thesis. Eight different versions of this thesis are distinguished, and sources of ambiguity diagnosed, including different requirements for relationships between program and behaviour. Excessively strong versions attacked by Penrose (and Searle) are not worth defending or attacking, whereas weaker versions remain problematic. Penrose (like Searle) regards the (...)
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  9.  34
    The Emperor has no Clothes … Let us Paint our Loincloths Rainbow: A Classical and Feminist Critique of Contemporary Science Policy.Alastair Mcintosh - 1996 - Environmental Values 5 (1):3-30.
    The British government's White Paper on science together with government research council reports are used as a basis for critiquing current science policy and its intensifying orientation, British and worldwide, towards industrial and military development. The critique draws particulary on Plato and Bacon as yardsticks to address who science is for, what values it honours and where current policy departs from imperatives of socio-ecological justice. Metaphors of the ' Emperor 's new clothes' and incremental spectral shift in attitude help (...)
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  10. (1 other version)The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics.Roger Penrose - 1989 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Winner of the Wolf Prize for his contribution to our understanding of the universe, Penrose takes on the question of whether artificial intelligence will ever ...
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  11.  10
    The Emperor at the Council. Imperial Interventions in Late Antique Church Councils in Literary Sources and Documentary Records.Luisa Andriollo - 2021 - Millennium 18 (1):175-202.
    This paper examines the modes of imperial interactions with Church councils, focusing on the emperor’s participation in episcopal meetings and its representation in late antique sources, both literary and documentary. The author argues that the availability and strategic dissemination of conciliar records could affect, for better or worse, the understanding of the imperial religious policy and attitude towards Church institutions. This is most clearly illustrated by Marcian’s behaviour at Chalcedon, and by the active steps he took to produce an (...)
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  12. The emperor's new 'knows'.Kent Bach - 2005 - In Gerhard Preyer & Georg Peter (eds.), Contextualism in philosophy: knowledge, meaning, and truth. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 51--89.
    When I examine contextualism there is much that I can doubt. I can doubt whether it is a cogent theory that I examining, and not a cleverly stated piece of whacks. I can doubt whether there is any real theory there at all. Perhaps what I took to be a theory was really some reflections; perhaps I am even the victim of some cognitive hallucination. One thing however I cannot doubt: that there exists a widely read pitch of a round (...)
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  13. Avellanus, Arcadius: Pericla Navarchi Magonis.G. D. Forbes - 1915 - Classical Weekly 9:149-151.
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  14.  9
    Zu Arcadius.A. Lentz - 1863 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 19 (1-4):436-436.
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  15.  30
    The Emperor's Nightingale: Some Aspects of Mimesis.Frank Anderson Trapp - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (1):85-103.
    One of Hans Christian Andersen's most beautiful tales is "The Emperor's Nightingale." Its message—an exceptionally sobering one in the present context—is that nature is altogether finer and more enduring than art. It tells how a Chinese emperor, beguiled by a precious imitation bird that had been given him, forsook a natural songster he had once favored. But when that glittering counterfeit broke down, its clockwork sound silenced, the now aged ruler found welcome solace in the real bird's return, (...)
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  16.  24
    The Emperor's Old--and Perennial--Clothes: Two Spanish Fine-Tunings to Andersen's Received Wisdom.Julio Baena - 2015 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 9 (2).
    “The Emperor’s Old—and Perennial—Clothes: Two Spanish Fine-Tunings to Andersen’s Received Wisdom” There are two Spanish versions of the famous story of the Emperor’s new clothes. They differ from Andersen’s version--the one that most people know about—in significant ways. Žižek has often used the story to illustrate the Lacanian, complex, and paradoxical nature of ideology. But nobody has used these two versions to speak of these isues. The Spanish versions maintain the core of the story but offer illuminating deviations, (...)
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  17. The Emperor’s New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, andthe Laws of Physics.Roger Penrose - 1989 - Science and Society 54 (4):484-487.
     
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  18. The emperor's new 'knows'.Kent Bach - 2005 - In Gerhard Preyer & Georg Peter (eds.), Contextualism in philosophy: knowledge, meaning, and truth. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 51--89.
    When I examine contextualism there is much that I can doubt. I can doubt whether it is a cogent theory that I examining, and not a cleverly stated piece of whacks. I can doubt whether there is any real theory there at all. Perhaps what I took to be a theory was really some reflections; perhaps I am even the victim of some cognitive hallucination. One thing however I cannot doubt: that there exists a widely read pitch of a round (...)
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  19.  91
    Akbar, Emperor of India.Richard Garbe - 1909 - The Monist 19 (2):161-201.
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  20.  67
    The Emperor's New Markov Blankets.Jelle Bruineberg, Krzysztof Dołęga, Joe Dewhurst & Manuel Baltieri - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e183.
    The free energy principle, an influential framework in computational neuroscience and theoretical neurobiology, starts from the assumption that living systems ensure adaptive exchanges with their environment by minimizing the objective function of variational free energy. Following this premise, it claims to deliver a promising integration of the life sciences. In recent work, Markov blankets, one of the central constructs of the free energy principle, have been applied to resolve debates central to philosophy (such as demarcating the boundaries of the mind). (...)
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  21.  81
    The Emperor's Newest Clothes.Martin Hollis - 1985 - Economics and Philosophy 1 (1):128-133.
    There is a simple joy in finding that the emperor has positively no clothes and especially when the finger is pointed in ribald good English. Donald McCloskey does this service in “The Rhetoric of Economics”, where he argues with force and wit that “modernism” (meaning, roughly, positivism, as in “Positive Economics”) will do as an account neither of what economists do nor of what it makes philosophical sense for them to attempt. Instead they should recognize that models are always (...)
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  22.  79
    The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics.Roger Penrose - 1999 - Oxford University Press.
    In his bestselling work of popular science, Sir Roger Penrose takes us on a fascinating roller-coaster ride through the basic principles of physics, cosmology, mathematics, and philosophy to show that human thinking can never be emulated by a machine.
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  23. Precis of the emperor's new mind.Roger Penrose - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (4):643-705.
    The emperor's new mind (hereafter Emperor) is an attempt to put forward a scientific alternative to the viewpoint of according to which mental activity is merely the acting out of some algorithmic procedure. John Searle and other thinkers have likewise argued that mere calculation does not, of itself, evoke conscious mental attributes, such as understanding or intentionality, but they are still prepared to accept the action the brain, like that of any other physical object, could in principle be (...)
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  24. The Emperor’s New Concepts.Neil Tennant - 2002 - Noûs 36 (s16):345-377.
    Christopher Peacocke, in A Study of Concepts, motivates his account of possession conditions for concepts by means of an alleged parallel with the conditions under which numbers are abstracted to give the numerosity of a predicate. There are, however, logical mistakes in Peacocke.
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  25.  19
    Emperors and Ancestors: Roman Rulers and the Constraints of Tradition by Olivier Hekster.Raymond Van Dam - 2016 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 109 (4):562-564.
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  26.  32
    Emperors and Usurpers in the Later Roman Empire: Civil Wars, Panegyric, and the Construction of Legitimacy by Adrastos Omissi.Raymond Van Dam - 2019 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 113 (1):105-106.
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  27. The Emperor’s New Intuitions.Jaakko Hintikka - 1999 - Journal of Philosophy 96 (3):127-147.
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  28. The reign of arcadius in Eunapius' histories.D. F. Buck - 1998 - Byzantion 68 (1):15-46.
    L'A. étudie le récit d'Eunapius concernant le règne d'Arcadius à partir de la mort de Théodose en 395 jusqu'en 404. Eunapius de Sarde est un sophiste, un philosophe et un historien grec païen qui a vécu de 347 à environ 414 ; il est un exemple de la rédaction helléniste et son travail peut être classé dans la fiction historique. Il s'oppose aux changements politiques, sociaux, économiques et religieux du 4e siècle ainsi qu'aux régimes de Constantin et Théodose. Son (...)
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  29. Emperor Hundun 渾沌”: A Cultural Hermeneutic.Wu Kuang-Ming - 2007 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 6 (3):263-279.
    Among the four reading-levels, the textual and exegetical levels of Zhuangzi ’s Hundun-story are problem-free, and so we focus expository-wise on its conspicuous hospitality with nine implications. Then, hermeneutically, we see Hundun instructing us against clarity toward unclarity—cosmological, self-composing, cognitive, and communal—of kindly humus, in cosmic confusion, sleep and idleness, mist and pond-dragonfly, and non-ruling people-sovereignty. Pan-hospitality is our Emperor Hundun’s non-arbitrary imperative to nurture life.
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  30.  13
    The Emperor Nero: A Forerunner of Salvino Degli Armato?S. J. Bastomsky - 1972 - Apeiron 6 (2):19 - 23.
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  31.  29
    The emperor's new clothes (confessions of a biologist).Lancelot Hogben - 1932 - The Eugenics Review 24 (1):37.
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  32.  13
    Emperor, Empress, and the Divine in San Vitale and the Binyang Central Cave.Junhyoung Michael Shin - 2020 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 40 (1):369-384.
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  33.  21
    Emperor Wu of Liang on the Immortal Soul, Shen Pu Mieh.Whalen Lai - 1981 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 101 (2):167-175.
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  34.  14
    The emperor is naked again: Comments on Schlinger's assessment of psychological theory.Robert E. Lana - 2004 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 25 (4):271-276.
    Periodically in the history of psychology the state of the field is examined to determine its progress since the last assessment was made . On occasion, the conclusion is drawn that progress is either minimal or non existent. Such a conclusion usually takes the form of questioning psychology’s success in developing theoretical statements, or indeed statements in any context, that successfully allow for consistent prediction of the phenomenon in question. Just such an assessment has recently been offered by Schlinger in (...)
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  35.  12
    Mencius Spins The Emperor's New Groove.Dean A. Kowalski - 2019-10-03 - In Richard B. Davis (ed.), Disney and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 193–205.
    Interpreting Kuzco's character arc in The Emperor's New Groove through Mencius's ideas about human nature sheds light on Kuzco's move away from selfishness and toward compassion. The Emperor's New Groove reminds people that too much wealth can also be detrimental to one's proper moral growth. The early scenes of the film depict a very pampered Kuzco. By interpreting The Emperor's New Groove through Mencius, it seems clear that it is not always a bad thing that people change (...)
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  36.  58
    The Emperor's Old Clothes: The Curious Comeback of Cost-benefit Analysis.John Adams - 1993 - Environmental Values 2 (3):247-260.
    Cost-benefit analysis is enjoying a resurgence. Despite its well documented failures in the past to cope with the environmental damage caused by major transport projects, and despite lack of progress in resolving the causes of these failures, Britain's Department of the Environment now proposes to apply it not just to projects, but to the formulation of policy. Curious.
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  37.  21
    “The Emperor's new clothes”: discourse analysis on how the patient is constructed in the new Swedish Patient Act.Elisabeth Dahlborg Lyckhage, Sandra Pennbrant & Åse Boman - 2017 - Nursing Inquiry 24 (2):e12162.
    The Swedish welfare debate increasingly focuses on market liberal notions and its healthcare perspective aims for more patient‐centered care. This article examines the new Swedish Patient Act describing and analyzing how the patient is constructed in government documents. This study takes a Foucauldian discourse analysis approach following Willig's analysis guide. The act contains an entitlement discourse for patients and a requirement discourse for healthcare personnel. These two discourses are governed by a values‐based healthcare discourse. Neo‐liberal ideology, in the form of (...)
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  38.  23
    Messiahs, Jihads, and God Emperors.Greg Littmann - 2022-10-17 - In Kevin S. Decker (ed.), Dune and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 35–45.
    Paul Atreides's Jihad is only the start of the suffering. Having conquered humanity, Paul becomes dictator of an oppressive theocratic empire that brutally crushes dissent. With his life unnaturally extended by transforming into a human–sandworm hybrid, Leto will rule humanity as “God Emperor” for three and a half millennia. Fremen religion had been carefully cultivated by the Bene Gesserit Missionaria Protectiva, their “black arm of superstition” responsible for manipulating primitive cultures. It is the seeds planted by the Missionaria Protectiva (...)
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  39.  26
    "good Emperors" And Emperors Of The Third Century.Sviatoslav Dmitriev - 2004 - Hermes 132 (2):211-224.
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  40.  11
    What the Emperor Built: Architecture and Empire in the Early Ming. By Aurelia Campbell.Klaas Ruitenbeek - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 141 (4).
    What the Emperor Built: Architecture and Empire in the Early Ming. By Aurelia Campbell. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2020. Pp. xiv + 217. $65.
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  41.  19
    Emperors’ Nicknames and Roman Political Humour.Alexander V. Makhlaiuk - 2020 - Klio 102 (1):202-235.
    Summary The article examines unofficial imperial nicknames, sobriquets and appellatives, from Octavian Augustus to Julian the Apostate, in the light of traditions of Roman political humour, and argues that in the political field during the Principate there were two co-existing competing modes of emperors’ naming: along with an official one, politically loyal, formalised and institutionally legitimised, there existed another – unofficial, sometimes oppositional and even hostile towards individual emperors, frequently licentious, humorously coloured and, in this regard, deeply rooted in Roman (...)
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  42. The Emperor's New Phenomenology? The Empirical Case for Conscious Experience without First-Order Representations.Hakwan Lau & Richard Brown - 2018 - In Adam Pautz & Daniel Stoljar (eds.), Blockheads! Essays on Ned Block’s Philosophy of Mind and Consciousness. new york: MIT Press.
    We discuss cases where subjects seem to enjoy conscious experience when the relevant first-order perceptual representations are either missing or too weak to account for the experience. Though these cases are originally considered to be theoretical possibilities that may be problematical for the higher-order view of consciousness, careful considerations of actual empirical examples suggest that this strategy may backfire; these cases may cause more trouble for first-order theories instead. Specifically, these cases suggest that (I) recurrent feedback loops to V1 are (...)
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  43. The Emperor's New Metaphysics of Powers.Stephen Barker - 2013 - Mind 122 (487):605-653.
    This paper argues that the new metaphysics of powers, also known as dispositional essentialism or causal structuralism, is an illusory metaphysics. I argue for this in the following way. I begin by distinguishing three fundamental ways of seeing how facts of physical modality — facts about physical necessitation and possibility, causation, disposition, and chance — are grounded in the world. The first way, call it the first degree, is that the actual world or all worlds, in their entirety, are the (...)
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  44.  20
    What Is the Emperor to Us?—Relationships, Obligations, and Obedience.Manyul Im - 2022 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 21 (4):611-616.
    In an award-winning essay, Shu-Shan L ee discusses scholarly commentary about obedience to the emperor, focusing on public and hidden records of protest. The thesis of Lee’s essay is that the relationship between authority and subject in imperial Confucianism was built on a conditional obligation of obedience, despite traditional accounts of it as absolute. On his account, the obligation of obedience should be conceived through the rubric of imperial Confucianism as being conditional on fulfillment of reciprocal obligations. As part (...)
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  45.  50
    God, Emperor and Relative Identity.A. P. Martinich - 1979 - Franciscan Studies 39 (1):180-191.
    This article defends my claim, first presented in "identity and trinity," "journal of religion" (1978), that the doctrine of the trinity is consistent. drawing upon tertullian's defense of the doctrine in "adversus praxean", i argue that the logic of the trinity is similar to the logic of emperorship. at various times, two persons, for example, diocletian and maximian, were the same emperor of the roman empire, just as three persons are the same god.
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  46.  37
    Female Emperor Wu Tse-T'ien.Hu Shen-Sheng, Feng Tan-Feng & Huang Lung-Chen - 1975 - Chinese Studies in History 8 (4):15-26.
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  47.  21
    Arcadius Kahan, Russian economic history. The nineteenth century : ed. Roger Weiss , xxi + 244 pp., $47.50 cloth; $18.95 paper. [REVIEW]Roger Munting - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (3):432-433.
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  48.  9
    Marcus Aurelius: The Stoic Emperor.Donald J. Robertson - 2024 - Yale University Press.
    _Experience the world of Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius and the tremendous challenges he faced and overcame with the help of Stoic philosophy_ This novel biography brings Marcus Aurelius (121–180 CE) to life for a new generation of readers by exploring the emperor’s fascinating psychological journey. Donald J. Robertson examines Marcus’s relationships with key figures in his life, such as his mother, Domitia Lucilla, and the emperor Hadrian, as well as his Stoic tutors. He draws extensively on Marcus’s (...)
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  49. Emperor Frederick II.Einstein David G. - 1949
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  50.  8
    The Emperors Clothes.Kathleen Nott - 2015 - Sagwan Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.This work is in the public domain in (...)
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