Results for 'Lisbon Earthquake, Portugal, 1755. '

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  1. How Leibniz would have responded to the Lisbon earthquake.Lloyd Strickland - 2016 - In Lloyd Strickland, Erik Vynckier & Julia Weckend (eds.), Tercentenary Essays on the Philosophy & Science of G.W. Leibniz. Cham: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 257-278.
    On 1 November 1755, the city of Lisbon in Portugal was virtually destroyed by the largest documented seismic event ever to hit Europe. It is often claimed that the catastrophe severely damaged the plausibility of Leibniz’s optimism, and even the wider project of theodicy. Leibniz died several decades before the Lisbon earthquake struck, and so was unable to address it and the challenges thrown up by it, which would have included an account of how the event was consistent (...)
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  2.  8
    El ocaso del optimismo: de Leibniz a Hamacher: debates tras el terremoto de Lisboa de 1755.Ricardo Hurtado Simó - 2016 - Madrid: Biblioteca Nueva.
  3.  3
    Das Erdbeben von Lissabon in seiner Beziehung zum Problem des Übels in der Welt.Arthur Kemmerer - 1958 - Frankfurt am Main,:
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  4. The Lisbon earthquake and the confrontation between Pope and Leibniz in the 1750s.A. Zanconato - 1999 - Filosofia 50 (102):7-30.
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  5. The End of the World: From the Lisbon Earthquake to the Last Days.Kyrre Kverndokk - 2018 - In Helge Jordheim & Erling Sandmo (eds.), Conceptualizing the world: an exploration across disciplines. New York: Berghahn.
     
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  6.  31
    Michael Freeman, Victorians and the prehistoric: Tracks to a lost world. New Haven and London: Yale university press, 2004. Pp. X+310. Isbn: 0-300-10334-4. £25.00 . Jan T. kozák, Victor S. Moreira and David R. Oldroyd, iconography of the 1755 lisbon earthquake. Prague: Geophysical institute of the academy of sciences of the czech republic and academia, the publisher of the academy of sciences of the czech republic, 2005. Pp. 84. isbn: 80-239-4390-1 , 80-200-1322-9 . No price given. [REVIEW]Jack Morrell - 2007 - British Journal for the History of Science 40 (2):295-295.
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  7.  11
    The Earthquake Observers. Disaster Science from Lisbon to Richter - by Deborah R. Coen.Andrea Westermann - 2014 - Centaurus 56 (2):124-126.
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  8.  35
    Human aspects of earthquakes: Deborah R. Coen: The Earthquake observers: Disaster science from Lisbon to Richter. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2013, 360pp, $35.00 HB.Agustín Udías - 2013 - Metascience 23 (2):323-326.
    Seismology is a science that has received little attention from historians of science; most of what has been written about it has been by seismologists. Thus, it is interesting to see the different ways of approaching this subject by seismologists and historians. The approach followed by Deborah Coen is of great interest. Instead of writing about seismology as a physical science, which seismologists would prefer, she has chosen to delve into the human aspects of the experience of earthquakes, that is, (...)
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  9.  25
    The Counterhuman Imaginary: Earthquakes, Lapdogs, and Traveling Coinage in Eighteenth-Century Literature.Laura Brown - 2023 - Cornell University Press.
    The Counterhuman Imaginary proposes that alongside the historical, social, and institutional structures of human reality that seem to be the sole subject of the literary text, an other-than-human world is everywhere in evidence. Laura Brown finds that within eighteenth-century British literature, the human cultural imaginary can be seen, equally, as a counterhuman imaginary—an alternative realm whose scope and terms exceed human understanding or order. Through close readings of works by Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, and Alexander Pope, along with lapdog lyrics, (...)
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  10.  33
    Deborah R. Coen. The Earthquake Observers: Disaster Science from Lisbon to Richter. 348 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2012. $35. [REVIEW]Claudine Cohen - 2014 - Isis 105 (1):228-229.
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  11.  19
    Deborah R. Coen, The Earthquake Observers: Disaster Science from Lisbon to Richter. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2013. Pp. viii+348. ISBN 978-0-226-11181-0. £22.50. [REVIEW]Lorena Valderrama - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Science 47 (3):576-577.
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  12.  15
    Law and morals: proceedings of the special workshop held at the 28th World Congress of the International Association for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy in Lisbon, Portugal, 2017.André Ferreira Leite de Paula & Andrés Santacoloma Santacoloma (eds.) - 2019 - Stuttgart: Nomos.
    The relationship between law and morality is a topic which receives special importance and attention, especially in "liberal democracies" in which the law is supposed to regulate highly pluralized and fragmented societies. Under conditions of plurality of values, many social forces and legal theories require a certain kind of neutrality from the legal system, a means of compatibility of the many "world views" and "moral systems" that are present within the same social space. Such a conciliating commitment sounds particularly relevant (...)
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  13.  13
    We Don’t Have Thirty Years Reflections on Lisbon’s Earthquake.Susan Neiman - 2012 - Philosophical Readings 4 (3):35-41.
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  14. {ECAI} 2010 - 19th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Lisbon, Portugal, August 16-20, 2010, Proceedings.Daniele Porello & Ulle Endriss (eds.) - 2010
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  15.  11
    Report on the Participation in 28th IVR World Congress in Lisbon, Portugal in 2017.Byung-Sun Oh & Jin-Sook Yun - 2017 - Korean Journal of Legal Philosophy 20 (3):343-348.
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  16.  56
    Kant, Irigaray, and Earthquakes.Rachel Jones - 2013 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 17 (1):273-299.
    In 1755, Lisbon was destroyed by an earthquake whose aftershocks were felt across Europe. One of the less well-known responses to this abyssal event is that offered by Kant in his three essays on earthquakes and their causes. According to Irigaray, Kant's concern with an earth that moves is not incidental, but central to the emergence of his critical project. The goal of this paper is to trace a line from Kant's earthquake essays, through his later writings on the (...)
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  17. the History of Science in Non-Western Traditions. Vanda Alves teaches science at the secondary school level in Portugal. She has a Licence in Biology and Geology Education (University of Lisbon). Her interests include the construction and testing of materials for classrooms within a Vygotskian and Bernsteinian approaches, where the multiple aspects of the nature. [REVIEW]Stephen G. Brush & Sílvia Calado - 2004 - Science & Education 13:257-259.
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  18.  23
    Ana Simões, Ana Matilde SousaThe global adventure of science: Einstein, Eddington and the eclipse. Lisbon, Portugal: Chili com Carne, 2019, 245 pp. ISBN: 9789898363411. [REVIEW]Jürgen Renn - 2021 - Centaurus 63 (3):616-617.
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  19. Secrecy, Ostentation, and the Illustration of Exotic Animals in Sixteenth-Century Portugal.Palmira Fontes da Costa - 2009 - Annals of Science 66 (1):59-82.
    Summary During the first decades of the sixteenth century, several animals described and viewed as exotic by the Europeans were regularly shipped from India to Lisbon. This paper addresses the relevance of these ‘new’ animals to knowledge and visual representations of the natural world. It discusses their cultural and scientific meaning in Portuguese travel literature of the period as well as printed illustrations, charts and tapestries. This paper suggests that Portugal did not make the most of its unique position (...)
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  20.  14
    Diasporic Governmentality: On the Gendered Limits of Migrant Wage-Labour in Portugal.Kesha Fikes - 2008 - Feminist Review 90 (1):48-67.
    This essay explores the meaning of diasporic practice as it has been applied within the contemporary Black Atlantic context. The general focus of this topic has been visible or performative practices that have broad audiences, ranging from diasporic members to the sociopolitically included or the privileged citizen. Moreover, the objects or products of diasporic practice are largely understood to be aesthetic; the literature has highlighted music, dance, art, and religion, for instance. In this essay I argue that a taken-for-granted prerequisite (...)
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  21.  26
    Science, patronage, and academies in early seventeenth-century Portugal: The scientific academy of the nobleman and university professor André de Almada.Luís Miguel Carolino - 2016 - History of Science 54 (2):107-137.
    This paper revisits the historiography of seventeenth-century scientific academies by analyzing an informal academy established in Coimbra (Portugal) by André de Almada, a nobleman and professor of theology at the University of Coimbra. By promoting this academy and sponsoring the publication of science books, Almada stimulated research on astronomy and animated links of patronage, which included not only members of the universities but also the community of astronomers and astrologers active in Lisbon. This paper challenges the traditional view of (...)
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  22.  61
    The Eclipse, the Astronomer and his Audience: Frederico Oom and the Total Solar Eclipse of 28 May 1900 in Portugal.Luís Miguel Carolino & Ana Simões - 2012 - Annals of Science 69 (2):215-238.
    Summary This study offers a detailed analysis of an episode of the popularization of astronomy which took place in Portugal, a peripheral country of Europe, and occurring in the early twentieth century. The episode was driven by the 28 May 1900 total solar eclipse which was seen on the Iberian Peninsula (Portugal and Spain). Instead of focusing on one of the ends of the popularization process, we analyze the circulation of knowledge among scientists and the public, contrast the aims of (...)
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  23.  20
    Taking Internal Advantage of External Events - Two Astronomical Examples From Nineteenth Century Portugal.Vitor Bonifácio, Isabel Malaquias & João Fernandes - 2009 - Centaurus 51 (3):213-234.
    A country‘s development is bound to be influenced by external occurrences. This article analyses two astronomical examples in which Portuguese nationals used high visibility events in the international scientific community to press their own scientific interests upon the government, whether these interests were, or were not, directly linked to the events themselves.During the 1840s and 1850s the parallax, i.e. the distance, of Groombridge’s star 1830 was hotly debated. The astronomer Hervé Faye‘s suggestion at the Académie des Sciences de Paris that (...)
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  24. Staying Optimistic: The Trials and Tribulations of Leibnizian Optimism.Lloyd Strickland - 2019 - Journal of Modern Philosophy 1 (1):1-21.
    The oft-told story of Leibniz’s doctrine of the best world, or optimism, is that it enjoyed a great deal of popularity in the eighteenth century until the massive earthquake that struck Lisbon on 1 November 1755 destroyed its support. Despite its long history, this story is nothing more than a commentators’ fiction that has become accepted wisdom not through sheer weight of evidence but through sheer frequency of repetition. In this paper we shall examine the reception of Leibniz’s doctrine (...)
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  25.  16
    For the greater credibility: Jesuit science and education in modern Portugal (1858–1910).Francisco Malta Romeiras - 2018 - History of Science 56 (1):97-119.
    Upon the restoration of the Society of Jesus in Portugal in 1858, the Jesuits founded two important colleges that made significant efforts in the promotion of hands-on experimental teaching of the natural sciences. At the Colégio de Campolide (Lisbon, 1858–1910) and the Colégio de São Fiel (Louriçal do Campo, 1863–1910) the Jesuits created modern chemistry and physics laboratories, organized significant botanical, zoological and geological collections, promoted scientific expeditions with their students to observe eclipses and to collect novel species of (...)
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    Genovesi e a economia política ilustrada em Portugal.José Luís Cardoso - 2017 - Cultura:205-216.
    Esta contribuição discute a influência da obra do napolitano Antonio Genovesi em Portugal, destacando a importância da inspiração que proporcionou para a formação do discurso da economia política ilustrada. Tendo como referência os traços essenciais do seu legado e da sua apropriação em contextos nacionais específicos, o presente texto procede a um balanço dos vestígios e legados da presença de Genovesi no ensino da filosofia na Universidade de Coimbra e no memorialismo económico da Academia das Ciências de Lisboa.
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  27.  14
    The sphere and the dome: The Calouste Gulbenkian Planetarium in Lisbon and the imperial myth of the Estado Novo.Pedro M. P. Raposo - 2021 - History of Science 59 (2):179-196.
    Inaugurated in 1965, the Calouste Gulbenkian Planetarium (CGP) was the first institution of its kind in Portugal. The CGP was established in the context of the relocation of the Maritime Museum of Lisbon (Museu de Marinha) to Belém, an area of the Portuguese capital highly symbolic of Portuguese maritime and imperial history. The dictatorial regime known as Estado Novo used Belém as a ground for major events that affirmed the legitimacy of Portugal’s overseas empire by celebrating the maritime deeds (...)
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  28.  9
    Die Erschütterung der vollkommenen Welt: die Wirkung des Erdbebens von Lissabon im Spiegel europäischer Zeitgenossen.Wolfgang Breidert - 1994
    On the Lisbon earthquake of 1755; its effects on thinking of the time.
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  29.  27
    A journey from Lisbon to Rome: reading and interpretation of a eighteenth century manuscript.Maria Luísa Cabral - 2011 - Cultura:89-102.
    Ou como um manuscrito do século XVIII, que não mereceu a glória de ser publicado, constitui uma fonte documental de indesmentível interesse. Trata-se de um relato de viagem de Lisboa a Roma na segunda metade do século XVIII o qual, embora não corresponda à descrição de uma peregrinação, revela com clareza questões culturais e religiosas que atormentam o Portugal de setecentos. Um diário de viagem que ajuda a compreender, em parte, o rótulo de exótico que a Europa iluminada atribuía a (...)
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  30.  25
    A Space of One’s Own: Barbosa du Bocage, the Foundation of the National Museum of Lisbon, and the Construction of a Career in Zoology.Daniel Gamito-Marques - 2018 - Journal of the History of Biology 51 (2):223-257.
    This paper discusses the life and scientific work of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage, a nineteenth-century Portuguese naturalist who carved a new place for zoological research in Portugal and built up a prestigious scientific career by securing appropriate physical and institutional spaces to the discipline. Although he was appointed professor of zoology at the Lisbon Polytechnic School, an institution mainly devoted to the preparatory training of military officers and engineers, he succeeded in creating the conditions that allowed him to (...)
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  31.  35
    How did a Lutheran astronomer get converted into a Catholic authority? The Jesuits and their reception of Tycho Brahe in Portugal.Luís Miguel Carolino - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-22.
    This article explores the complex process of integrating Tycho Brahe's theories into the Jesuit intellectual framework through focusing on the international community of professors who taught mathematics at the College of Saint Anthony (Colégio de Santo Antão), Lisbon, during the first half of the seventeenth century. Historians have conceived the reception of the Tychonic system as a straightforward process motivated by the developments of early modern astronomy. Nevertheless, this paper argues that the cultural politics of the Counter-Reformation Church curbed (...)
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  32.  31
    The Emergence of New Scientific Disciplines in Portuguese Medicine: Marck Athias's Histophysiology Research School, Lisbon (1897–1946).Isabel Amaral - 2006 - Annals of Science 63 (1):85-110.
    Summary This paper discusses the emergence of new medical experimental specialties at the Medical School of Surgery (Escola Médico-Cirúrgica) and the Faculty of Medicine of Lisbon University (Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Lisboa) between 1897 and 1946, as a result of the activities of Marck Athias's (1875?1946) histophysiology research school. In 1897, Marck Athias, a Portuguese physician who had graduated from the Faculty of Medicine in Paris, founded a research school in Lisbon along the lines of Michael (...)
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  33.  15
    How to build a scientific discipline in the nineteenth century: In search of autonomy for zoology at the Lisbon Polytechnic School (1837–1862). [REVIEW]Daniel Gamito-Marques - 2022 - Science in Context 35 (2):103-131.
    ArgumentThis article discusses the conditions that lead to the autonomy of scientific disciplines by analyzing the case of zoology in the nineteenth century. The specialization of knowledge and its institutionalization in higher education in the nineteenth century were important processes for the autonomy of scientific disciplines, such as zoology. The article argues that autonomy only arises after social and political power is mobilized by specific groups to acquire appropriate conceptual, physical, and institutional spaces for a discipline. This is illustrated through (...)
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  34.  52
    Galen and the Best of All Possible Worlds.R. J. Hankinson - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (01):206-.
    Voltaire's Pangloss, the man who held among other things that noses were clearly created in order to support spectacles, is the very archetype of the lunatic teleologist; a caricature of sublimely confident faith in the general and undeniable goodness of the world's arrangement, a faith that managed astoundingly to survive the Lisbon earthquake and his own subsequent auto dafé. Voltaire, of course, is poking fun at such conceptions; and, no doubt, in their extreme sanguinity as well as in their (...)
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  35.  7
    The Providence of God: A Polyphonic Approach.David Fergusson - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    The concept of providence is embedded in the life and theology of the church. Its uses are frequent and varied in understandings of politics, nature, and individual life-stories. Parallels can be discerned in other faiths. In this volume, David Fergusson traces the development of providential ideas at successive periods in church history. These include the early appropriation of Stoic and Platonic ideas, the codification of providence in the Middle Ages, its foregrounding in Reformed theology, and its secular applications in the (...)
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  36. Temporal reality.Lynne Rudder Baker - 2010 - In Joseph Keim Campbell, Michael O'Rourke & Harry S. Silverstein (eds.), Time and Identity. Bradford.
    Nonphilosophers, if they think of philosophy at all, wonder why people work in metaphysics. After all, metaphysics, as Auden once said of poetry, makes nothing happen.1 Yet some very intelligent people are driven to spend their lives exploring metaphysical theses. Part of what motivates metaphysicians is the appeal of grizzly puzzles (like the paradox of the heap or the puzzle of the ship of Theseus). But the main reason to work in metaphysics, for me at least, is to understand the (...)
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  37.  41
    Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy (review).Paul S. Miklowitz - 2004 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 42 (3):347-348.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of PhilosophyPaul S. MiklowitzSusan Neiman. Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2002. Pp. xii + 358. Cloth, $29.95.Contemporary philosophy in America tends to regard epistemological questions as the most fundamental of the discipline, but Susan Neiman's Evil in Modern Thought sets itself against this assumption in an attempt to sketch "an alternative history of (...)
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  38.  98
    Irrationalism in Eighteenth Century Aesthetics.Irmgard Scherer - 2007 - The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 12:23-29.
    This essay deals with a particularly recalcitrant problem in the history of ideas, that of irrationalism. It emerged to full consciousness in mid-eighteenth century thought. Irrationalism was a logical consequence of individualism which in turn was a direct outcome of the Cartesian self-reflective subject. In time these tendencies produced the "critical" Zeitgeist and the "epoch of taste" during which Kant began thinking about such matters. Like Alfred Bäumler, I argue that irrationalism could not have arisen in ancient or medieval philosophical (...)
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  39.  7
    The early Rousseau.Mario Einaudi - 1967 - Ithaca, N.Y.,: Cornell University Press.
    The early writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau were dismissed by his contemporaries as the paradoxes of a madman. Later critics, weighing the early works against such classics as the Confessions and Emile, were convinced that the views of the young Rousseau could not be reconciled with those of his more famous period. In this stimulating book Professor Einaudi argues that the denigrators of Rousseau's early work were wrong: the early and later views can be reconciled. Indeed, full understanding of the mature (...)
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  40.  38
    Human Rights in Camera.Sharon Sliwinski - 2011 - University of Chicago Press.
    From the fundamental rights proclaimed in the American and French declarations of independence to the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Hannah Arendt’s furious critiques, the definition of what it means to be human has been hotly debated. But the history of human rights—and their abuses—is also a richly illustrated one. Following this picture trail, _Human Rights In Camera_ takes an innovative approach by examining the visual images that have accompanied human rights struggles and the passionate responses people have (...)
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  41.  16
    Forbidden Aesthetics, Ethical Justice, and Terror in Modern Western Culture.Emmanouil Aretoulakis - 2016 - Langham: Lexington Books.
    The book explores the forbidden feelings of beauty, admiration, or satisfaction before instances of terror and human pain from eighteenth-century natural disasters to twenty-first-century terrorist destruction. It explores the fascination felt by the subject witnessing major disasters directly or in a mediated fashion. Emmanouil Aretoulakis' makes the challenging proposition that there is, paradoxically, an ethics in the aesthetic appraisal of terror.
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  42.  26
    Deborah R. Coen.Oliver Hochadel - 2014 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 37 (3):293-294.
    The Earthquake Observers: Disaster Science from Lisbon to Richter, Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press 2013. 348 S., geb., $ 35,00. ISBN 978‐0‐226‐11181‐0.
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  43.  20
    Directions of precision: George Graham’s instructions for his pendulum astronomical clocks.Luís Tirapicos - 2024 - Annals of Science 81 (1):124-138.
    In the 1720s two Jesuit astronomers working at the court of King João V of Portugal, in Lisbon, received several instruments produced by the best makers in London, Paris and Rome. With the crucial help of the Portuguese diplomatic network contacts with academies, savants and instrument makers were established, seeking technical advice and the best astronomical instruments available at the time. It was in this context that in April 1726 a set of Latin instructions accompanying pendulum clocks made by (...)
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  44.  52
    Beliefs, practices and attitudes of portuguese undergraduate youth (Crenças, práticas e atitudes da juventude universitária portuguesa). DOI: 10.5752/P.2175-5841.2012v10n26p432. [REVIEW]José Pereira Coutinho - 2012 - Horizonte 10 (26):432-455.
    This paper presents results of the author’s PhD research: Catholic beliefs and practices, attitudes toward marriage, life and sexuality. The empirical support is a survey made to a sample of 500 students from Lisbon public universities, using a non-random sampling in two phases, first a quota sampling and after a convenience one. There are some results that stand out. More than half of students of the sample call themselves Catholic and believe in the dogmatic representations about God, Jesus and (...)
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  45.  13
    RETRACTION NOTICE: Sports and cultural megaevents and their consequences.Fernando Magalhães - 2023 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 21 (2).
    Retraction note: Magalhães, F. (2022). Overtourism, gentrificação e turismofobia em Lisboa. Sports and cultural megaevents and their consequences. Overtourism, gentrification and tourismophobia in Lisbon. HUMAN REVIEW. International Humanities / Revista Internacional De Humanidades, 12(6), 2–15. https://doi.org/10.37467/revhuman.v11.3992 The Editorial Office of Eurasia Academic Publishing Group has retracted this article. An investigation carried out by our Research Integrity Department has found a group of articles, among which this one is found, that are not within the thematic scope of the journal. We (...)
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  46.  35
    Thank God for Evil?Freya Mora - 1983 - Philosophy 58 (225):399 - 401.
    God's public image has perennially suffered from the apparent botch He has made of Creation, or our portion of it, at any rate. “What's so good about God”, people ask, “when He permits volcanoes in Lisbon, famines in Ghana, earthquakes in San Francisco?” Why is there always, in fact, whichever way we bite it, a worm in the apple?
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  47.  41
    Kierkegaard’s Indirect Politics: Interludes with Lukács, Schmitt, Benjamin and Adorno.Bartholomew Ryan (ed.) - 2014 - Amsterdam: Brill Rodopi.
    This book argues that a radical political gesture can be found in Søren Kierkegaard’s writings. The chapters navigate an interdisciplinary landscape by placing Kierkegaard’s passionate thought in conversation with the writings of Georg Lukács, Carl Schmitt, Walter Benjamin and Theodor Adorno. At the heart of the book’s argument is the concept of “indirect politics,” which names a negative space between methods, concepts, and intellectual acts in the work of Kierkegaard, as well as marking the dynamic relations between Kierkegaard and the (...)
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  48.  20
    Mathematical Correspondences and Critical Editions.Maria Teresa Borgato, Erwin Neuenschwander & Irène Passeron (eds.) - 2018 - Springer Verlag.
    Mathematical correspondence offers a rich heritage for the history of mathematics and science, as well as cultural history and other areas. It naturally covers a vast range of topics, and not only of a scientific nature; it includes letters between mathematicians, but also between mathematicians and politicians, publishers, and men or women of culture. Wallis, Leibniz, the Bernoullis, D'Alembert, Condorcet, Lagrange, Gauss, Hermite, Betti, Cremona, Poincaré and van der Waerden are undoubtedly authors of great interest and their letters are valuable (...)
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  49.  58
    Les États pontificaux face à Philippe II, marge ou centre alternatif de la Monarchie catholique ? Retour sur les fondements juridiques, politiques et pragmatiques d'un empire conjoncturel.Boris Jeanne - 2012 - Astérion. Philosophie, Histoire des Idées, Pensée Politique 10 (10).
    The Catholic Monarchy is the short-lived dynastic union (1580-1640) between the kingdoms of Spain and Portugal. By returning on the legal, political and pragmatic foundations of this empire which cannot be called Empire (because this name belongs to the Holy Roman Empire of the cousins of Vienna), the article tries to seize better the internal functioning of this heterogeneous political set, by adopting two points of view: that of America (how the notion of Catholic Monarchy is understood in the reynos, (...)
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    Introduction.Olga Pombo - 2015 - Axiomathes 25 (1):1-3.
    The papers of this Axiomathes special issue were presented at the “Lisbon International Conference: Philosophy of Science in the 21st Century—Challenges and Tasks”, which took place 4–6 December 2013. The conference was organized by the Center for Philosophy of Science of Lisbon University , the only research center exclusively dedicated to Philosophy of Science in Portugal, with the propose of surveying the main challenges and tasks for Philosophy of Science in the 21st century.The selection of papers now presented (...)
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