Results for 'S. Piccone Stella'

940 found
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  1.  31
    E. Colombo e G. (a cura di), Multiculturalismo quotidiano. Le pratiche della differenza.S. Piccone Stella - 2008 - Polis 22 (1):149-151.
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  2.  41
    Pour une étude sur la vie des femmes dans les années 1950.Simonetta Piccone Stella - 2002 - Clio 16:245-269.
    Je propose ici une enquête sur les années 1950, décennie significative dans l'histoire des transformations sociales et culturelles concernant la vie des femmes et le développement de leur identité. Cet intérêt pour cet aspect spécifique – la vie et l'identité des femmes – s'inscrit pour moi dans un intérêt plus vaste pour certains caractères et changements sociaux de cette période dense et peu étudiée. En tant que telle, cette proposition de recherche n'est qu'un titre, la suggestion d'un tra...
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  3.  13
    S. Piccone Stella, "Esperienze multiculturali: origini e problemi".M. Sarfatti Larson - 2004 - Polis 18 (1):180-182.
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  4.  26
    Gli sbandati, i precari, i guariti. Tre facce della tossicodipendenza giovanile.Simonetta Piccone Stella - 1997 - Polis 11 (3):437-462.
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  5.  24
    The relative salience of numerical and non-numerical dimensions shifts over development: A re-analysis of.Lauren S. Aulet & Stella F. Lourenco - 2021 - Cognition 210 (C):104610.
  6.  11
    Perceived number is not abstract.Lauren S. Aulet & Stella F. Lourenco - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44.
    To support the claim that the approximate number system represents rational numbers, Clarke and Beck argue that number perception is abstract and characterized by a second-order character. However, converging evidence from visual illusions and psychophysics suggests that perceived number is not abstract, but rather, is perceptually interdependent with other magnitudes. Moreover, number, as a concept, is second-order, but number, as a percept, is not.
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  7.  49
    The Developing Mental Number Line: Does Its Directionality Relate to 5- to 7-Year-Old Children’s Mathematical Abilities? [REVIEW]Lauren S. Aulet & Stella F. Lourenco - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  8.  40
    Demarcating Descartes’s geometry with clarity and distinctness.Stella S. Moon - 2023 - Synthese 202 (4):1-29.
    Descartes’s doctrine of clarity and distinctness states that whatever is clearly and distinctly perceived is true. This paper looks at his early doctrine from Rules for the Direction of the Mind, and its application to the demarcation problem of curves in Descartes’s Geometry. This paper offers and defends a novel account of the demarcation criterion of curves: a curve is geometrical just in case it is clearly and distinctly perceivable. This account connects Descartes’s rationalist epistemological programme with his ontological views (...)
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  9.  25
    A theory of perceptual number encoding.Stella F. Lourenco & Lauren S. Aulet - 2023 - Psychological Review 130 (1):155-182.
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  10. Business and Ethics Basics of Law Firm Management.Stella M. Tsai, Nicholas M. Centrella, Laura C. Mattiacci, Leslie E. John, Brian S. Quinn, Shelley R. Smith, Robert S. Tintner & Raymond M. Williams (eds.) - 2022 - Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Bar Institute.
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  11.  49
    Right idea, wrong magnitude system.Stella F. Lourenco, Lauren S. Aulet, Vladislav Ayzenberg, Chi-Ngai Cheung & Kevin J. Holmes - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  12.  14
    Marvin Farber.R. D'Amico, S. -K. Kim & P. Piccone - 1980 - Télos 1980 (46):165-169.
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  13.  24
    Quantifying the Interplay of Semantics and Phonology During Failures of Word Retrieval by People With Aphasia Using a Multiplex Lexical Network.Nichol Castro, Massimo Stella & Cynthia S. Q. Siew - 2020 - Cognitive Science 44 (9):e12881.
    Investigating instances where lexical selection fails can lead to deeper insights into the cognitive machinery and architecture supporting successful word retrieval and speech production. In this paper, we used a multiplex lexical network approach that combines semantic and phonological similarities among words to model the structure of the mental lexicon. Network measures at different levels of analysis (degree, network distance, and closeness centrality) were used to investigate the influence of network structure on picture naming accuracy and errors by people with (...)
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  14.  19
    At Play with Krishna. Pilgrimage Dramas from Brindavan.Stella Sandahl & J. S. Hawley - 1983 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 103 (2):437.
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  15.  23
    Gramsci's Prison Notebooks -- The Remake.P. Piccone - 1991 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1991 (90):177-183.
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  16.  18
    Schmitt's "Testament" and the Future of Europe.P. Piccone & G. L. Ulmen - 1990 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1990 (83):3-34.
  17.  45
    Reasoning from the Uterus: Casanova, Women's Agency, and the Philosophy of Birth.Stella Villarmea - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (1):22-41.
    The emerging area of philosophy of birth is invaluable, first, to diagnose fallacious assumptions about the relation between the womb and reason, and, ultimately, to challenge potentially damaging narratives with major impact on birth care. With its analysis of eighteenth-century epistemic and medical discussions about the role of the uterus in women's reasoning, this article supports two arguments: first, that women's “flawed thinking” was a premise drawn by many modern intellectual men, one that was presented as based upon empirical evidence; (...)
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  18.  9
    The Antinomies of Miglio's Neo-Federalism.Paul Piccone - 1994 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1994 (100):167-176.
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  19.  36
    Milton's Epitaphium Damonis: The Debt to Neo-Latin Poets.Stella P. Revard - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (3):309 - 316.
    Epitaphium Damonis, Milton's lament for his friend Charles Diodati, is usually described as most strongly indebted to Theocritus? idylls, to Virgil's eclogues, and to Ovid's lament for Tibullus. However, closer examination reveals that Milton was even more closely indebted to Neo-Latin poets such as Sannazaro, Buchanan, Castiglione, Mantuan, and Zanchi. Whereas there are lines in Epitaphium Damonis that resemble those in Virgil and Ovid, there are just as many that resemble those in Neo-Latin poets. Although a pastoral, the tone and (...)
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  20.  65
    The Metaphysics of Love: Gender and Transcendence in Levinas.Stella Sandford - 2000 - Athlone Press.
    In The Metaphysics of Love, however, Stella Sandford argues that an over-emphasis on ethics in the reception of Levinas's thought has concealed the basis and ...
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  21.  51
    Gouldner's theoretical method and reflexive sociology.Charles Lemert & Paul Piccone - 1982 - Theory and Society 11 (6):733-757.
  22.  13
    Introduction to Tronti's "Workers and Capital".Paul Piccone - 1972 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1972 (14):23-24.
  23.  44
    Herbert Marcuse's Heideggerian Marxism.P. Piccone & A. Delfini - 1970 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1970 (6):36-46.
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  24.  31
    «La source des femmes» : Aristophane et Platon, politiciens du genre féminin.Massimo Stella - 2013 - Chôra 11:201-219.
    The aim of this essay is to focus the function of women in Aristophanes’ theatre and in Plato’s book V of the Republic, in an attempt to compare the different strategies adopted by these two authors in staging the female subject on the scene of their respective writings. This enquiry involves raising some fundamental questions such as : is the world of women, evoked by Aristophanes in his dramas and by Plato in his dialogues, a simple metaphor and a mere (...)
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  25.  9
    The Provocation of Levinas for Feminism.Stella Villarmea - 1999 - European Journal of Women's Studies 6 (3):291-304.
    The article introduces some aspects of Levinas's writings which are important to review his reception within feminist circles. It then analyses his text `And God Created Woman', and shows to what extent his view of women can be criticized as being traditional and patriarchal. Finally, it deals with the relation between Levinas and feminism of difference, and rejects the idea that his theory can be effectively applied to move beyond the debate equality vs difference.
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  26.  52
    Gramsci's hegeliam marxism.Paul Piccone - 1974 - Political Theory 2 (1):32-45.
  27.  60
    Heraclitus on Фύσις.Enrique Hülsz Piccone - 2013 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 17 (2):179-194.
    Presocratic philosophy as a historical category was defined by Aristotle as physics, or physical philosophy, because φύσις (understood as a single genus of being, among others) was its object of study, its practitioners being since tagged accordingly as φυσικοί or φυσιόλογοι. The central part of the paper deals briefly with the four pioneering Heraclitean uses of the word φύσις (frs. DK B106, B1, B112, and B123), in which the sense of the only Homeric use of the term seems to be (...)
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  28.  9
    (1 other version)Narcissism After the Fall: What's on the Bottom of the Pool?P. Piccone - 1980 - Télos 1980 (44):112-121.
  29.  25
    Exploring disempowerment in women’s accounts of endometriosis experiences.Stella Bullo - 2018 - Discourse and Communication 12 (6):569-586.
    This work explores disempowerment caused by discourses surrounding the life-altering gynaecological disease of endometriosis. Despite affecting one in 10 women, the worldwide average diagnosis time is 7.5 years, and it is mainly diagnosed when exploring infertility rather than complaints about incapacitating pain and other associated manifestations. The aim of this article is to identify dis/empowerment caused by discourses in the healthcare and social environment of women as manifested in their accounts of endometriosis experiences. Having been informed and shaped by a (...)
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  30.  10
    Articulate the missing: The role of religion in political modernity.Stella Casola - 2021 - European Journal of Social Theory 24 (4):467-484.
    In this article, I argue that Habermas’s genealogical approach to modern reason and methodological agnosticism can lead us to a better understanding of the role of religion in our societies. I underline the relevance of Habermas’s awareness that ‘something is missing’ when we take faith out of modernity and consider the truths of philosophical reason to be infallible. Habermas succeeds in highlighting the complexity of the modern relationship between the religious and the secular domains, a relationship that is not merely (...)
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  31. Conceptual Change and Emancipatory Practices: an Approach from Wittgenstein's On certainty / Emancypacja w praktyce a pewne zmiany pojęciowe: wokół traktatu Wittgensteina O pewności.Stella Villarmea - 2013 - Annales Umcs. Sectio I (Filozofia, Socjologia) 38 (1):7-24.
     
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  32.  31
    Introduction to Bologna's "Class Composition and Theory of the Party".Paul Piccone - 1972 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1972 (13):1-3.
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  33.  23
    Il la faut( la logique), Yes, yes: Deconstruction's Critical Force.Stella Gaon - 2018 - Derrida Today 11 (2):196-210.
    Jacques Derrida regularly appeals to an affirmative gesture that is ‘prior’ to or more ‘originary’ than the form of the question, and this suggests one way to understand deconstruction's critical force. The ‘Yes, yes’, he says, situates a ‘vigil or beyond of the question’ with respect to an ‘irreducible responsibility’. Some Derrida scholars therefore construe the double affirmation as a source or ground of critique. In this paper, I refute this suggestion. While an originary ‘Yes, yes’ or ‘come’ (viens) does (...)
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  34. Heraclitus, Plato, and the philosophic dogs.Enrique Hülsz Piccone - 2015 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 15:105-115.
    The paper focuses on a neglected instance of the Platonic reception of Heraclitus in the Republic, trying to show that it’s likely that Plato’s passage makes an allusion to Heraclitus’ B97 and B85. The main claim is that Plato’s use of the image of dogs looks back to Heraclitus, which invites an exploration of the possibility that at least some elements of Plato’s kallipolis might derive from Heraclitus – particularly from some ethical and political fragments. A brief survey of these (...)
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  35. Kant, race, and natural history.Stella Sandford - 2018 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 44 (9):950-977.
    This article presents a new argument concerning the relation between Kant’s theory of race and aspects of the critical philosophy. It argues that Kant’s treatment of the problem of the systematic unity of nature and knowledge in the Critique of Pure Reason and the Critique of the Power of Judgment can be traced back a methodological problem in the natural history of the period – that of the possibility of a natural system of nature. Kant’s transformation of the methodological problem (...)
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  36.  63
    Centers and peripheries: The development of British physiology, 1870?1914.Stella V. F. Butler - 1988 - Journal of the History of Biology 21 (3):473-500.
    By 1910 the Cambridge University physiology department had become the kernel of British physiology. Between 1909 and 1914 an astonishing number of young and talented scientists passed through the laboratory. The University College department was also a stimulating place of study under the dynamic leadership of Ernest Starling.I have argued that the reasons for this metropolitan axis within British physiology lie with the social structure of late-Victorian and Edwardian higher education. Cambridge, Oxford, and University College London were national institutions attracting (...)
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  37.  24
    Se soumettre pour se libérer. Une esclave turque face à son maître espagnol à Cadix en 1704.Alessandro Stella - 2003 - Clio 17:163-174.
    Le procès intenté par une esclave contre son maître, à Cadix, en 1704, est surprenant. Elle demandait au tribunal ecclésiastique d’obliger son maître à lui octroyer la charte d’affranchissement, puisqu’elle avait passé un contrat verbal avec lui contemplant ses services sexuels en échange de la liberté. Sous quel registre inscrire cette démarche? La prostitution publique des esclaves était interdite, et sa pratique (contrairement au cas des affranchies) inconnue. Mais dans le secret des maisons les relations sexuelles maître-esclave était monnaie courante. (...)
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  38.  33
    ‘As If’ There Were a ‘Jew’: The (non)Existence of Deconstructive Responsibility.Stella Gaon - 2014 - Derrida Today 7 (1):44-58.
    The argument of this paper hinges on Derrida's relation to Judaism as a religious heritage and/or as an essential experience. If he can be said to ‘appropriate his Jewish roots’ at all, as Colby Dickinson (2011) has recently proposed, this is not because Derrida concurs that all belief in an ultimate reality (‘as such’) must now be understood in merely conditional terms (‘as if’). Rather, it is because Derrida deconstructs the difference between the Jew and the non-Jew, along with the (...)
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  39.  16
    Cross-Cultural Biotechnology: A Reader.Stella Gonzalez Arnal, Donald Chalmers, David Kum-Wah Chan, Margaret Coffey, Jo Ann T. Croom, Mylène Deschênes, Henrich Ganthaler, Yuri Gariev, Ryuichi Ida, Jeffrey P. Kahn, Martin O. Makinde, Anna C. Mastroianni, Katharine R. Meacham, Bushra Mirza, Michael J. Morgan, Dianne Nicol, Edward Reichman, Susan E. Wallace & Larissa P. Zhiganova (eds.) - 2004 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This book is a rich blend of analyses by leading experts from various cultures and disciplines. A compact introduction to a complex field, it illustrates biotechnology's profound impact upon the environment and society. Moreover, it underscores the vital relevance of cultural values. This book empowers readers to more critically assess biotechnology's value and effectiveness within both specific cultural and global contexts.
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  40. Sex: a transdisciplinary concept. From structure to rhizome: transdisciplinarity in French thought (1).Stella Sandford - 2011 - Radical Philosophy 165:23-30.
    What is sex? Some feminists have harboured suspicions about this form of question, given its philosophical (or ‘metaphysical’1) pedigree. But philosophy no longer has the disciplinary monopoly on it. Indeed, with regard to sex, the more interesting task today is to pose and to attempt to answer the question from within a transdisciplinary problematic. For the question requires a theoretical response capable of recognizing that it concerns a cultural and political (and therefore neither a specifically philosophical nor a merely empirical) (...)
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  41.  43
    Beauvoir's transdisciplinarity: from philosophy to gender theory.Stella Sandford - 2017 - In Laura Hengehold & Nancy Bauer (eds.), A Companion to Simone de Beauvoir. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 15-27.
    This paper begins with a brief survey of recent attempts to identify the nature of Beauvoir’s contested relation to philosophy. It then discusses the transition from her early, more conventionally philosophical essays to her much more unconventional great work The Second Sex. It argues that the philosophical innovations of The Second Sex were dependent on Beauvoir’s relations to other disciplines and intellectual fields, such that Beauvoir’s philosophical originality has interdisciplinary conditions of possibility. The paper then argues that The Second Sex, (...)
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  42.  23
    The Obsolescence of Utopia.Paul Piccone - 1999 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1999 (115):161-176.
    The subtitle of Jacoby's book, “Politics and Culture in the Age of Apathy,” aptly captures the way the present American political situation is usually perceived. Unlike conventional wisdom that celebrates this state of affairs as the achievement of genuine consensus, Jacoby bemoans it as an indication of general confusion: the result of the exhaustion of radical alternatives and a collapse of those utopian visions that generate political projects. The evidence seems compelling. Any cursory survey of the kind of issues being (...)
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  43.  40
    Kant's legacy.Stella Sandford - 2017 - In Anthony Morgan (ed.), The Kantian catastrophe? Conversations on finitude and the limits of philosophy. Bigg Books. pp. 65-80.
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  44.  31
    Cavalier Poets and the Classics - (S.) Pugh Herrick, Fanshawe and the Politics of Intertextuality. Classical Literature and Seventeenth-century Royalism. Pp. x + 196, ills. Farnham and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2010. Cased, £50. ISBN: 978-0-7546-5614-2. [REVIEW]Stella P. Revard - 2011 - The Classical Review 61 (1):290-291.
  45.  28
    Policy Implications of Achievement Testing Using Multilevel Models: The Case of Brazilian Elementary Schools.Igor G. Menezes, Victor R. Duran, Euclides J. Mendonça Filho, Tainã J. Veloso, Stella M. S. Sarmento, Christine L. Paget & Kai Ruggeri - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  46.  17
    The framing of initial COVID‐19 communication: Using unsupervised machine learning on press releases.Stella Tomasi, Sushma Kumble, Pratiti Diddi & Neeraj Parolia - 2023 - Business and Society Review 128 (3):515-531.
    The COVID-19 pandemic was a global health crisis that required US residents to understand the phenomenon, interpret the cues, and make sense within their environment. Therefore, how the communication of COVID-19 was framed to stakeholders during the early stages of the pandemic became important to guide them through specific actions in their state and subsequently with the sensemaking process. The present study examines which frames were emphasized in the states' press releases on policies and other COVID information to influence stakeholders (...)
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  47.  66
    Remystifying Film: Aesthetics, Emotion and The Queen.Stella Hockenhull - 2012 - Film-Philosophy 16 (1):165-182.
    Part way through Stephen Frears’s film, The Queen , the monarch undergoes an extraordinary, magical experience whilstjourneying into the Scottish landscape that surrounds Balmoral, her grandancestral holiday home. Despite the anxious offers from her estate workersto chauffeur her, she drives alone into the mountains and proceeds to breakdown in the centre of a fast flowing river. While awaiting help a strangeevent occurs: a stag appears magically as if from nowhere and, unable tohide her admiration for the beast, the Queen gently (...)
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  48.  17
    Debrizzi's Undimensionality.T. Luke & P. Piccone - 1978 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1978 (37):148-152.
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  49.  34
    From Geschlechtstrieb to Sexualtrieb : the originality of Freud's conception of sexuality.Stella Sandford - 2018 - In Richard Gipps & Michael Lacewing (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychoanalysis. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 83-105.
    This chapter examines the apparent proximity between Schopenhauer’s and Freud’s views on the nature and importance of what is called, amongst other things, ‘sexuality’, the ‘sexual impulse’, the ‘sexual instinct’ or ‘the ‘sexual drive’. It argues, against the idea that Freud's conception is basically borrowed from Schopenhauer, for the originality of Freud’s early theory of sexuality and suggest that the significance of this theory, apart from its obvious psychiatric and social import, lies in its possible contribution to a philosophical anthropology. (...)
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  50.  32
    Contemporary Artists’ Books and the Intimate Aesthetics of Illness.Stella Bolaki - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (1):21-39.
    This essay brings together critical perspectives from the discrete traditions of artists’ books and the medical humanities to examine artists’ books by three contemporary artists – Penny Alexander, Martha A. Hall and Amanda Watson-Will – that treat experiences of illness and wellbeing. Through its focus on a multimodal and multisensory art form that has allegiances with, but is not reduced to, narrative, the essay adds to recent calls to rethink key assumptions of illness narrative study and to challenge utilitarian approaches. (...)
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