Results for 'Julia Dratva'

933 found
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  1.  86
    A Longitudinal Study on Generalized Anxiety Among University Students During the First Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Switzerland.Simone Amendola, Agnes von Wyl, Thomas Volken, Annina Zysset, Marion Huber & Julia Dratva - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    ObjectiveThe COVID-19 pandemic and government measures implemented to counter the spread of the infection may be a major stressor affecting the psychological health of university students. This study aimed to explore how anxiety symptoms changed during the pandemic.Methods676 students at Zurich University of Applied Sciences participated in the first and second survey waves. Anxiety symptoms were assessed using the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-Scale-7. Risk and protective factors were examined.ResultsGAD-7 scores decreased significantly from T0 to T1. Participants with moderate-to-severe anxiety score were (...)
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  2.  88
    No Evidence for a Decrease in Physical Activity Among Swiss Office Workers During COVID-19: A Longitudinal Study.Andrea Martina Aegerter, Manja Deforth, Gisela Sjøgaard, Venerina Johnston, Thomas Volken, Hannu Luomajoki, Julia Dratva, Holger Dressel, Oliver Distler, Markus Melloh & Achim Elfering - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    PurposeThe COVID-19 lockdown interrupted normal daily activities, which may have led to an increase in sedentary behavior. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the level of physical activity among Swiss office workers.MethodsOffice workers from two Swiss organizations, aged 18–65 years, were included. Baseline data from January 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic became effective in Switzerland were compared with follow-up data during the lockdown phase in April 2020. Levels of physical activity were (...)
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  3.  98
    Aristotle’s Metaphysics: Books M and N.Julia Annas - 1976 - Philosophical Review 87 (3):479-485.
  4.  47
    Slavery and Race: Philosophical Debates in the Eighteenth Century.Julia Jorati - 2023 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Discussions about the morality of slavery are a central part of the history of early modern philosophy. This book explores the philosophical ideas, theories, and arguments that occur in eighteenth-century debates about slavery, with a particular focus on the role that race plays in these debates. This exploration reveals how closely Blackness and slavery had come to be associated and how common it was to believe that Black people are natural slaves, or naturally destined for slavery. The book examines not (...)
  5.  38
    Non-binary gender in African personhood?Julia Huysamer & Louise du Toit - 2023 - South African Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):246-260.
    A case has been made by various authors that the normative and processual notion of personhood found in African philosophy is discriminatory: it has been labelled as sexist, ableist and anti-queer. Within the anti-queer critique, one area that has not been specifically addressed in the literature is whether this notion of personhood is biased against people who identify as non-binary with respect to gender. This includes people who are gender fluid and gender neutral, among others. In this article, we argue (...)
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  6. Philosophical Agreement and Philosophical Progress.Julia Smith - 2024 - Episteme:1-19.
    In the literature on philosophical progress it is often assumed that agreement is a necessary condition for progress. This assumption is sensible only if agreement is a reliable sign of the truth, since agreement on false answers to philosophical questions would not constitute progress. This paper asks whether agreement among philosophers is (or would be) likely to be a reliable sign of truth. Insights from social choice theory are used to identify the conditions under which agreement among philosophers would be (...)
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  7. "Self-Knowledge in Early Plato".Julia Annas - 1985 - In Dominic J. O'Meara (ed.), Platonic Investigations. Catholic University of Amer Press. pp. 111-138.
  8. What Does It Mean to Be Human Today?Julia Alessandra Harzheim - forthcoming - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.
    With the progress of artificial intelligence, the digitalization of the lifeworld, and the reduction of the mind to neuronal processes, the human being appears more and more as a product of data and algorithms. Thus, we conceive ourselves “in the image of our machines,” and conversely, we elevate our machines and our brains to new subjects. At the same time, demands for an enhancement of human nature culminate in transhumanist visions of taking human evolution to a new stage. Against this (...)
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  9. Aristotle on Virtue and Happiness.Julia Annas & Hsin-li Wang - 1989 - Philosophy and Culture 35 (4):157-170.
    Author Julia Annas Aristotle made ​​the German Asia-mile out and fortunately Fuk The arguments related point, and the role of external good fortune Fook in the problems caused. And text analysis and dialectical Happy Stoic school and school for good moral behavior and external point of view. Author argues, Aristotle on the German sub-km behavior regardless of the state with the fortunate Fook, reflecting the hope臘human ethics ideological consensus, and he left to posterity to resolve the discovery. Aristotle on (...)
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  10. Epicurus on Pleasure and Happiness.Julia Annas - 1987 - Philosophical Topics 15 (2):5-21.
  11.  55
    Personal Love and Kantian Ethics in Effi Briest.Julia Annas - 1984 - Philosophy and Literature 8 (1):15-31.
  12.  56
    How Basic Are Basic Actions?Julia Annas - 1978 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 78:195 - 213.
    Julia Annas; XII*—How Basic are Basic Actions?, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 78, Issue 1, 1 June 1978, Pages 195–214, https://doi.org/10.1093.
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  13. Plato and Common Morality.Julia Annas - 1978 - Classical Quarterly 28 (02):437-.
    In the Republic, Socrates undertakes to defend justice as being in itself a benefit to its possessor. Does he do this, or does he change the subject? In a well-known article, David Sachs pointed out that there seems to be a shift in what Plato is defending. The challenge to Socrates is put by Thrasymachus, who admires the successful unjust man, and by Glaucon and Adeimantus, who do not, but are worried that justice has no adequate defence against Thrasymachus. In (...)
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  14.  29
    Cyberbullying Among Adolescent Bystanders: Role of Affective Versus Cognitive Empathy in Increasing Prosocial Cyberbystander Behavior.Julia Barlińska, Anna Szuster & Mikołaj Winiewski - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  15.  46
    The role of religious beliefs in ethics committee consultations for conflict over life-sustaining treatment.Julia I. Bandini, Andrew Courtwright, Angelika A. Zollfrank, Ellen M. Robinson & Wendy Cadge - 2017 - Journal of Medical Ethics 43 (6):353-358.
    Previous research has suggested that individuals who identify as being more religious request more aggressive medical treatment at end of life. These requests may generate disagreement over life-sustaining treatment (LST). Outside of anecdotal observation, however, the actual role of religion in conflict over LST has been underexplored. Because ethics committees are often consulted to help mediate these conflicts, the ethics consultation experience provides a unique context in which to investigate this question. The purpose of this paper was to examine the (...)
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  16.  43
    Merely voting or voting Well? Democracy and the requirements of citizenship.Julia Maskivker - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    Much ink has been spilled in the last years on whether voting is a duty that citizens ought to discharge in a democracy that aspires to be acceptably just. In this essay, I concentrate on whether a moral duty to participate in elections logically entails that people ought to vote simpliciter or well. I propose that voting well – i.e. with information and a sense of justice – is the electoral duty that we should value. Voting as such is not (...)
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  17.  25
    The Precarious Spaces Between Us: The Exchange of Food and Merit in Thailand's Affective Moral Economy during the COVID‐19 Pandemic.Julia Cassaniti - 2024 - Journal of Religious Ethics 51 (4):737-760.
    In the middle of 2020, Buddhism in Thailand looked quite different than it had just prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Monasteries had closed their doors to the public, and monastic ordinations ceased. The institution of Thai Buddhism stayed relevant, however, largely by promoting a quite unusual practice. In addition to the typical religious activity of lay followers offering food to monks, and receiving merit from the monks in return, the path that food traveled during the pandemic also turned the other (...)
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  18.  68
    VI-My Station and its Duties: Ideals and the Social Embeddedness of Virtue.Julia Annas - 2002 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 102 (1):109-123.
    In the Stoics we find a combination of two perspectives which are commonly thought to conflict: the embedded perspective from within one's social context, and the universal perspective of the member of the moral community of rational beings. I argue that the Stoics do have a unified theory, one which avoids problems that trouble some modern theories which try to unite these perspectives.
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  19.  77
    Wickedness as Psychological Breakdown.Julia Annas - 2005 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 43 (S1):1-19.
  20.  20
    Emotional expressivity of the observer mediates recognition of affective states from human body movements.Julia Bachmann, Adam Zabicki, Jörn Munzert & Britta Krüger - 2020 - Cognition and Emotion 34 (7):1370-1381.
    Research on human motion perception shows that people are highly adept at inferring emotional states from body movements. Yet, this process is mediated by a number of individual factors and experie...
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  21.  11
    The Brazilian Pharmaceutical Industry: Actors, Institutions, and Policies.Julia Paranhos, Lia Hasenclever & Fernanda S. Perin - 2023 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 51 (S1):126-135.
    This paper aims to characterize the main actors in the Brazilian pharmaceutical industry — national companies, foreign companies and public laboratories — and analyze how they were affected and how they reacted to changes over the last 30 years in the institutional framework. The results show that national companies have been gaining prominence in the Brazilian pharmaceutical market with their internationalization movement and their strengthening of innovation strategies.
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  22.  24
    A Taxonomy Proposal for Types of Interactions of Language and Place-Value Processing in Multi-Digit Numbers.Julia Bahnmueller, Hans-Christoph Nuerk & Korbinian Moeller - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  23.  17
    The Guardians and the Law in Plato’s Republic.Julia Annas - 2024 - In David Keyt & Christopher Shields (eds.), Principles and Praxis in Ancient Greek Philosophy: Essays in Ancient Greek Philosophy in Honor of Fred D. Miller, Jr. Springer Verlag. pp. 99-113.
    I begin with some points from the Republic which are familiar, perhaps over-familiar, to everyone, and then raise an issue about the role of law in Kallipolis which points us to something not so familiar. I hope that this contribution to honoring Fred Miller will lead to the kind of discussion that his own work has stimulated over the years, across an incredibly wide range of topics. I am honored and delighted to contribute to honoring Fred, and hope that this (...)
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  24. Plato, Republic V–VII.Julia Annas - 1986 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series 20:3-18.
    The long section on knowledge and the philosopher in books V–VII of the Republic is undoubtedly the most famous passage in Plato's work. So it is perhaps a good idea to begin by stressing how very peculiar, and in many ways elusive, it is. It is exciting, and stimulating, but extremely hard to understand.
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  25.  12
    Sattelzeit’: the invention of ‘premodern history’ in the 1970s.Julia Angster - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    In her historicisation of the concept of the ‘Sattelzeit,’ Julia Angster argues that the term does not represent a meaningful definition of a specific historical epoch. Instead, it serves as source material for analysing the notions of West German historians during the 1970s. Although their conception of the ‘Sattelzeit’ built on the work of R. Koselleck, it simplifies his concept by transforming an analytical tool of conceptual history into a starting point for social history. It enabled the conception of (...)
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  26. Breaking Into Language in a New Modality: The Role of Input and Individual Differences in Recognising Signs.Julia Elisabeth Hofweber, Lizzy Aumonier, Vikki Janke, Marianne Gullberg & Chloe Marshall - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    A key challenge when learning language in naturalistic circumstances is to extract linguistic information from a continuous stream of speech. This study investigates the predictors of such implicit learning among adults exposed to a new language in a new modality. Sign-naïve participants were shown a 4-min weather forecast in Swedish Sign Language. Subsequently, we tested their ability to recognise 22 target sign forms that had been viewed in the forecast, amongst 44 distractor signs that had not been viewed. The target (...)
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  27.  84
    The Frontier of Race in Mimetic Theory: American Lynchings and Racial Violence.Julia Robinson Moore - 2021 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 28 (1):1-31.
    René Girard stands as one of the most fascinating figures in the study of violence and religion. As a thinker, theorist, and theologian, his contribution to literary and cultural theory is indicative of his profound ability to see beyond societal phenomena into the very mechanizations of human existence. Historians, economists, philosophers, psychologists, and even neuroscientists have followed Girard's lead and stepped into the waters of mimetic theory in order to surf the waves of such concepts as desire, imitation, and violence. (...)
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  28.  56
    The Forgotten Etruscans.Julia Cooley Altrocchi - 1927 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 2 (2):179-196.
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  29.  49
    Aristotle on Mind and the Senses. Proceedings of the Seventh Symposium AristotelicumG. E. R. Lloyd G. E. L. Owen.Julia Annas - 1979 - Isis 70 (3):463-463.
  30.  47
    From Nature to Happiness.Julia Annas - 1998 - Apeiron 31 (1):59-74.
  31. Ought' in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics.Julia Annas - 2018 - In David Owen Brink, Susan Sauvé Meyer & Christopher John Shields (eds.), Virtue, happiness, knowledge: themes from the work of Gail Fine and Terence Irwin. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    It is sometimes argued that Aristotle has no distinctive way of making deontic claims; some, however, argue that his ethics depends on deontic claims. In this article I survey all the uses in the Nicomachean Ethics of the deontic terms dei and chre, and also a grammatical form of the verb which is used to make deontic claims. I argue that the correct view of the place in Aristotle of deontic claims lies between the two familiar extremes. Aristotle does make (...)
     
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  32.  14
    Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy: Volume V: 1987.Julia Annas (ed.) - 1987 - Clarendon Press.
    Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy is an annual publication containing original articles, which may be of substantial length, on a wide range of topics in ancient philosophy, and review articles of major books. Contributors to Volume V: Thomas C. Brickhouse, Theodor Ebert, Yahei Kanayama, A. C. Lloyd, P. Mitsis, R.W. Sharples, Nicholas D. Smith, Charlotte Stough, C. C. W. Taylor, and Gregory Vlastos.
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  33.  26
    Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy: Volume Vi: 1988.Julia Annas (ed.) - 1989 - Clarendon Press.
    Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy is an annual publication which includes original articles, some of substantial length, on a wide range of topics in ancient philosophy, and review articles of major books. Contributors include Mary Margaret Mackenzie, Aryeh Finkelberg, Charles H. Kahn, Christopher Shields, Paul Woodruff, Christopher Gill, Rosalind Hursthouse, G.E.R Lloyd, Henry Maconi, and David Bostock.
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  34.  10
    Response to Crisp.Julia Annas - 1994 - Philosophical Books 35 (4):241-245.
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  35.  10
    Self‐Interest and Morality.Julia Annas - 1993 - In The Morality of Happiness. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Ancient ethical theories do not, like many modern ethical theories, recognize a gap in the theory between morality and self‐interest. Rather, self‐interest, developed into an appropriate concern with one's happiness, will already incorporate other‐concern, which in the different theories has different scope.
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  36.  8
    [VI] humans and beasts: Moral theory and moral psychology.Julia Annas - 1999 - In Platonic Ethics, Old and New. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. pp. 117-136.
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  37.  11
    The City in a Garden: A Photographic History of Chicago's Parks.Julia S. Bachrach - 2001 - Center for American Places.
    Enhanced by 140 images, a documentary chronicle of Chicago's parks profiles thirty-one of the city's finest spaces--both contemporary and historical-along with detailed vignettes and captions to trace their development.
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  38.  17
    Province and empire: Brittany and the Carolingians.Julia Barrow - 1993 - History of European Ideas 17 (5):696-697.
  39.  29
    QALYs, Disability Discrimination, and the Role of Adaptation in the Capacity to Recover: The Patient-Sensitive Health-Related Quality of Life Account.Julia Mosquera - 2023 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 32 (2):154-162.
    Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) and Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) are two of the most commonly used health measures to determine resource prioritization and the population burden of disease, respectively. There are different types of problems with the use of QALYs and DALYs for measuring health benefits. Some of these problems have to do with measurement, for example, the weights they ascribe to health states might fail to reflect with exact accuracy the actual well-being or health levels of individuals. But even (...)
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  40. Narrativas de los ex penitenciarios imputados en el Juicio por Delitos de Lesa Humanidad cometidos bajo el control operacional del V Cuerpo del Ejército.María Julia Giménez - 2012 - Aletheia: Anuario de Filosofía 3 (5):5 - 10.
  41. Is the world really a mess? The circularity objection.Julia Göthling & Matthias Paul - 1999 - In Matthias Paul (ed.), Nancy Cartwright: Laws, Capacities and Science : Vortrag und Kolloquium in Münster 1998. Münster: Lit.
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  42.  13
    Self-Realization and Justice: A Liberal-Perfectionist Defense of the Right to Freedom From Employment.Julia Maskivker - 2011 - Routledge.
    In this book, Maskivker argues that there ought to be a right not to participate in the paid economy in a new way; not by appealing to notions of fairness to competing conceptions of the good, but rather to a contentious (but defensible) normative ideal, namely, self-realization. In so doing, she joins a venerable tradition in ethical thought, initiated by Aristotle and developed in the work of important eighteenth and nineteenth century thinkers including Smith, Hume, and Marx.The book engages on-going (...)
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  43.  26
    Rules and Regulators.Julia Black - 1997 - Oxford Socio-Legal Studies.
    Julia Black's book is the first authoritative study of rulemaking in one of the most important areas of economic life: financial services. The books has three main aims: first, to build a jurisprudential and linguistic analysis of rules and interpretation, drawing out the implication of these analyses and developing quality proposals for how rules could be used as instruments of regulation. Second, it interprets that analysis and set of proposals with an empirical study of the formation and use of (...)
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  44.  18
    Immigration in Psychoanalysis: Locating Ourselves.Julia Beltsiou (ed.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    Immigration in Psychoanalysis: Locating Ourselves presents a unique approach to understanding the varied and multi-layered experience of immigration, exploring how social, cultural, political, and historical contexts shape the psychological experience of immigration, and with it the encounter between foreign-born patients and their psychotherapists. Beltsiou brings together a diverse group of contributors, including Ghislaine Boulanger, Eva Hoffman and Dori Laub, to discuss their own identity as immigrants and how it informs their work. They explore the complexity and the contradictions of the (...)
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  45.  47
    Medieval romances in today's popular culture: The feminist in the castle.Julia Bettinotti - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (3):1146-1152.
  46.  17
    Scale-Independent Aggression: A Fractal Analysis of Four Levels of Human Aggression.Julia J. C. Blau & Alexandra Paxton - 2020 - Complexity 2020:1-8.
    Using fractal analyses to study events allows us to capture the scale-independence of those events, that is, no matter at which level we study a phenomenon, we should get roughly the same results because events exhibit similar structure across scales. This is demonstrably true in mathematical fractals but is less assured in behavioral fractals. The current research directly tests the scale-independence hypothesis in the behavioral domain by exploring the fractal structure of aggression, a social phenomenon comprising events that span temporal (...)
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  47.  14
    Frontmatter.Julia Maria Mönig - 2017 - In Vom »oikos« zum Cyberspace: Das Private in der politischen Philosophie Hannah Arendts. Bielefeld: transcript Verlag. pp. 1-4.
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  48.  21
    La cultura y el “combate de las formas”. Claves para pensar la dimensión afirmativa de la ética foucaultiana.Julia Monge - 2021 - Griot : Revista de Filosofia 21 (2):27-45.
    Teniendo en cuenta las principales objeciones que se le han planteado a la problematización ética de Michel Foucault, en el presente trabajo proponemos reconstruir dos motivos para pensar su dimensión afirmativa: la cultura y el “combate de las formas”. La cultura como objeto de crítica y transformación posible y las _formas_ como relevo histórico de los universales, ideales y trascendentales, son referencias constantes en el pensamiento de Foucault que, recuperadas a la luz de los planteos y aportes teórico-metodológicos de sus (...)
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  49.  18
    ¿Puede la verdad prescindir de artificios? De la retorización de la filosofía a la ontología de la veridicción en Michel Foucault.Julia Monge - 2021 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 63:109-128.
    This paper aims to analyze the alleged inversion of truth discourse ́s appraisal in Michel Foucault’s works between the early seventies and his last lectures of the eighties. We propose that, by reconstructing the contraposition between philosophical discourse and sophistical practice and the dispute between Socrates’s parrhesia and rhetoric presented in each moment, the question can be treated as the problem of truth discourse’s operation on the field of social practices. Considering the ethical and political stipulations and effects of both (...)
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  50.  7
    Prison, Punishment and Penance in Late Antiquity.Julia Hillner - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book traces the long-term genesis of the sixth-century Roman legal penalty of forced monastic penance. The late antique evidence on this penal institution runs counter to a scholarly consensus that Roman legal principle did not acknowledge the use of corrective punitive confinement. Dr Hillner argues that forced monastic penance was a product of a late Roman penal landscape that was more complex than previous models of Roman punishment have allowed. She focuses on invigoration of classical normative discourses around punishment (...)
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