#Jackson Hallberg
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2024 San Francisco Giants Roster
Pitchers
#7 Blake Snell (Shoreline, Washington)*
#12 Jordan Hicks (Houston, Texas)*
#23 Robbie Ray (Brentwood, Tennessee)*
#33 Taylor Rogers (Littleton, Colorado)
#38 Alex Cobb (Vero Beach, Florida)
#43 Tristan Beck (Corona, California)
#45 Kyle Harrison (Danville, California)
#57 Austin Warren (Fayetteville, North Carolina)*
#58 Nick Avila (Turlock, California)**
#62 Logan Webb (Rocklin, California)
#63 Ethan Small (Lexington, Tennessee)*
#64 Sean Hjelle (Mahtomedi, Minnesota)
#65 Landen Roupp (Rocky Mount, North Carolina)**
#67 Keaton Winn (Jefferson County, Iowa)
#68 Erik Miller (Creve Coeur, Missouri)**
#70 Kai-Wei Teng (Taichung Shi, Taiwan)**
#71 Tyler Rogers (Littleton, Colorado)
#74 Ryan Walker (Arlington, Washington)
#75 Camilo Doval (Yamasá, Dominican Republic)
#77 Luke Jackson (Ft. Lauderdale, Florida)
Catchers
#14 Patrick Bailey (High Point, North Carolina)
#19 Tom Murphy; Jr. (Hastings, New York)
Infielders
#16 Nick Ahmed (East Longmeadow, Massachusetts)*
#26 Matt Chapman (Lake Forest, California)*
#31 LaMonte Wade; Jr. (Baltimore County, Maryland)
#39 Thairo Estrada (Bejuma, Venezuela)
#41 Wilmer Flores (Valencia, Venezuela)
#49 Tyler Fitzgerald (Rochester Township, Illinois)
Outfielders
#2 Jorge Soler (Havana, Cuba)*
#5 Mike Yastrzemski (Danvers, Massachusetts)
#8 Michael Conforto (Redmond, Washington)
#13 Austin Slater (Jacksonville, Florida)
#51 Jung-Hoo Lee (Nagoya, Japan)**
Coaches
Manager Bob Melvin (Menlo Park, California)
Bench coach Ryan Christenson (Redlands, California)
Hitting coach Pat Burrell (Eureka Springs, Arkansas)
Assistant hitting coach Pedro Guerrero (San Pedro De Macorís, DR)
Assistant hitting coach Justin Viele (Anaheim, California)
Pitching coach Bryan Price (Mill Valley, California)
Assistant pitching coach J.P. Martínez (Baracoa, Cuba)
Bullpen coach Garvin Alston (Mt. Vernon, New York)
1B coach Mark Hallberg (Barron, Wisconsin)
3B coach Matt Williams (Carson City, Nevada)
Assistant coach Alyssa Nakken (Woodland, California)
Assistant coach Fernando Perez (West Windsor Township, NJ)
Assistant coach Uematsu Taira (Tateyama, Japan)
#Sports#Baseball#MLB#San Francisco Giants#Texas#Washington#Missouri#North Carolina#Taiwan#Iowa#Dominican Republic#Florida#Minnesota#Tennessee#New York#Massachusetts#Venezuela#Illinois#Japan#Cuba#Arkansas#Wisconsin#New Jersey#Nevada
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3/6 おはようございます。 Abbey Lincoln Max Roach / Moon Faced And Starry Eyed SR60215 等更新しました。
Anna Maria Alberghetti / I Can't Resist You t887 Anna Maria Alberghetti / Songs By Anna Maria Alberghetti mg20056 Abbey Lincoln Max Roach / Moon Faced And Starry Eyed SR60215 Ella Mae Morse / The Morse Code T898 Melba Liston / And Her 'Bones E1013 Bobby Scott / Scott Free abc-102 Gerry Mulligan / Mulligan Plays Mulligan Prlp7006 George Lewis / Concert blp1208 Milt Jackson / And The Thelonious Monk Quintet bst81509 Horace Silver / the Jody Grind Bst84250 Kenny Clarke Francy Boland / Live At Ronnie's 12007st Kenny Clarke Francy Boland / At Her Majesty's Pleasure BL-131 George Riedel Bengt Hallberg / Reflexioner mflps23 Ney Matogrosso / Ao Vivo 231222 Leny Andrade / Registro 138129 Booker T. & The MG's / Doin' Our Thing S724 VA / Musique Kongo ocr35 Guanabara / On the Move Rjl809 Sonny Okosuns / Mother & Child hmvn030 D'lloyd / Gambang Pop vol2 77503/RLL-508
~bamboo music~
530-0028 大阪市北区万歳町3-41 シロノビル104号
06-6363-2700
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- We just need to acclimate. - I don’t want to acclimate. I want to go.
Midsommar, Ari Aster (2019)
#Ari Aster#Florence Pugh#Jack Reynor#Vilhelm Blomgren#William Jackson Harper#Will Poulter#Ellora Torchia#Archie Madekwe#Henrik Norlén#Gunnel Fred#Isabelle Grill#Agnes Westerlund Rase#Julia Ragnarsson#Mats Blomgren#Lars Väringer#Anna Åström#Hampus Hallberg#Pawel Pogorzelski#The Haxan Cloak#Lucian Johnston#2019
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David Hallberg principal dancer with American Ballet Theatre and Bolshoi Ballet photographed by Pierce Jackson
#David Hallberg#American ballet theatre#Bolshoi ballet#pierce Jackson#feet#ballet#dancer#ballet dancer#ballerino#ballerinos#ballet men#ballet boy#ballet boys#ballet body#male dancer#male ballet dancer
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Review : Midsommar (2019)
In just two short years, Ari Aster has managed to drop two of the most intriguing, reel-me-in trailers I’ve ever seen. Last year, the Hereditary trailer wowed me, and the film absolutely floored me (it was actually my top film of 2018). Relatively early on in 2019, Aster released the trailer for Midsommar, and if Hereditary’s trailer wowed me, then I lack the adjectives for what the Midsommar trailer has done to me. I’ve been anticipating this film for months, needless to say.
Dani (Florence Pugh) finds herself anxiety ridden one evening when she is unable to reach her parents or little sister after a disturbing e-mail she received from the sister. Dani reaches out to her boyfriend Christian (Jack Reynor), who is spending an evening with his friends Josh (William Jackson Harper), Mark (Will Poulter) and Pelle (Vilhelm Blomgren), all of whom are trying to snap Christian out of his funk due to his desire to end the relationship with Dani. Much to the dismay of Dani, she receives the news that her sister not only committed suicide, but killed her parents in the process, leaving Dani alone and shattered, and forcing Christian to stay with her for support. A year later, Dani learns of a trip to Pelle’s native Swedish village of Hårga for a ceremony that occurs once every 90 years that the group of guys plans to attend. Christian unwillingly invites Dani, much to Mark and Josh’s dismay, and the entire group travels to Hårga. Upon arrival, they are immediately given a psilocybin concoction and eventually led to the village, only to find that the ceremony contains rituals they were not prepared to witness or comprehend. Trapped, the group begins to fracture, and all the while, the village of Hårga continues their ceremonies, resulting in irreparable changes to all involved.
Ari Aster made it crystal clear with Hereditary that he isn’t afraid to approach trauma head on, but Midsommar adds in the element of dependency to examine relationship and family dynamics. Most every relationship is initially presented as close, but revealed to be fueled by tension and distance via tools like text and phone conversations, separation via different rooms, group and one on one conversations framed through mirrors, and secrets abound. Dani’s sister’s murder-suicide not only makes Dani an emotional island in a sea of connected groups, but it also serves as a dark seed for unwilling sacrifices that are recontextualized later in the film (in my opinion, anyway). The visual and audio representations of Dani’s post-traumatic stress episodes perfectly represent how a deep trauma can mute out the rest of the world.
This film is laden with symbolism and visual cues, but in a much different and more up-front way than Hereditary does... artwork on the walls throughout the film present runic alphabet formations and imagery of animals and rituals that we will witness as the film progresses, as if to educate (and mentally prepare) us for these events. Rituals, spells, the art of casting, and much more about the realms of mysticism drive this film, with most everything that the group taking part in having a reference or history based in mystic manipulation. The ceremonies, dances, communal experience of deep feelings, feasts and sacrifices play out like a deeply cultural theater.
The opening piece of art presented as the film begins not only informs us about what we are getting into, it’s curtain-like reveal of the film gives a theatrical feeling, one that is doubled-down on when Pelle describes his culture’s ceremonies ‘like theater’. Aster also ramps up his use of disorienting camera moves while leading us into the main portion of the film, while continuing to use God-perspectives wonderfully to make the characters symbolic pawns in the crazy games. The visuals presented during the trips are vivid without crossing the line into ridiculous, and they perfectly present the concept of the Earth as a breathing entity. The humor in this film is much needed, and all of it is based in very real reactions, which actually allows us to let our guard down and dive deeper into the madness. The score is powerfully present, and at times disorienting, as it is not always clear if it is diegetic or not until a band appears.
Florence Pugh delivers a powerhouse performance full of raw pain, post-traumatic stress and willing (but sometimes, unwilling) immersion into the unknown due to a disconnection from a support system. Jack Reynor falls right into every earmark of the minimum effort significant other, making brief grand gestures separated by waning interest in the one you supposedly love, with anything that rings the loudest taking all focus. William Jackson Harper presents a ‘curiosity killed the cat’ scenario personified, with his single-minded interest in his studies causing minimal alienation from his friend group prior to it putting him in true danger. Vilhelm Blomgren lays out the groundwork and lures in the group towards his commune beautifully through his performance. Will Poulter brings much needed levity to the film, but not at the expense of the running tension that propels the film forward. As for those in the commune, Hampus Hallberg compliments Blomgren’s performance quite well in his role as brother, helping to lure the outsiders in. Isabelle Grill comes through in her role as temptress to Reynor without overdoing it. Ellora Torchia and Archie Madekwe represent us as viewers perfectly, bringing true human shock into the film while the others seemingly fall under the grand spell that is cast. Rebecka Johnston, Anna Astrom, Liv Mijones and many more round out the large cast.
Midsommar is the perfect presentation of horror by assimilation or elimination. With two powerful films under his belt, Aster seems to be one of the frontrunners of the horror renaissance that is in motion, and I’m definitely ready for whatever he plans to present to us in the future.
#ChiefDoomsday#DOOMonFILM#AriAster#Midsommar#FlorencePugh#JackReynor#WilliamJacksonHarper#WillPoulter#VilhelmBlomgren#ArchieMadekwe#ElloraTorchia
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The article “The Women “Blackfishing” on Instagram Aren’t Exactly Trying to Be Black” by Lauren Michelle Jackson on November 29, 2018 is about how Instagram makeup and model gurus are conveying ‘black fishing’. The root of blackfishing comes from a word catfishing, which is someone who is posing to be a different person whom they are not. Instagram famous women: Emma Hallberg and Rachel Dolezal are posting photos and videos through social media of them changing their white skin tone to a black persons shade. Besides that the way they dress from clothes to jewelry , their box braids and dreadlocks are other ways these white girls are trying to be black girls.
I think that this is alarming and racist towards some viewers on social media. The way they show themselves off on social media , by the way they color their skin tone with makeup and expose themselves through the internet is a reason why mainly blback peoples find this racist and stereotypical in their culture. In my eyes of a millennial, the way they dress and style themselves is appropriate because it is a trend but if they are clearly white under their makeup they should stay to that relative color. One of the Instagram influencers, Rachel Dolezal says to Buzz feed, “ I do not see myself anything else than white”. She claims to be a white person and her consistent posts and reminders from black dissenters saying this is “Blackfishing” clearly shows how this is not okay to viewers online. Lastly, if these females only knew the history behind black American culture they would take the choice of either making amends or keep exploiting hers to us.
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CHLOE FLOWER
“CAROL OF THE BELLS”
Tras darle al clásico navideño "CAROL OF THE BELLS" un elocuente giro en su último single, la enérgica pianista, productora y activista CHLOE FLOWER lanza hoy el videoclip de la canción, que fue coescrita y coproducida junto al artista ganador de Premios Grammy, Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds. Una vez más, Chloe se une a la directora asiática-estadounidense Deb Tam para rodar el videoclip.
Mira el videoclip aquí
Escucha la canción aquí
"Carol of the bells" ofrece un vídeo de estilo cinematográfico que evoca el glamur del Hollywood de antaño, con viñetas que pasan del blanco y negro al color. Chloe, que rodó en el icónico Grand Prospect Hall de Brooklyn y con un brillo propio de El Gran Gatsby y su acostumbrada elegancia de alta costura, interpretó la canción con una pasión palpable en un piano Steinway & Sons mientras un coro canta un estribillo celestial y los bailarines de salón inician alegremente sus asombrosas rutinas de baile. Los fans ya pueden comprar/escuchar “Carols of the Bells" aquí y ver el videoclip aquí.
"'Carols of the Bells' me ha inspirado a llevar la alegría de la música y el baile a todo el mundo estas navidades," dice Chloe Flower. "Con este vídeo, me propuse crear un mundo de ensueño donde todo el mundo pueda escapar de este momento tan difícil y celebrar el espíritu de la Navidad, independientemente de donde estés. La exquisita visión del Hollywood de antaño de la directora se hizo realidad a través de la mezcla de la moda, la coreografía y el piano, aportando glamour a la música instrumental."
Con estilismo de LoCasscio, el vestuario de Chloe es casi tan impresionante como su nivel interpretativo: la artista luce un abrigo blanco con adornos de Liberace, préstamo de The Liberace Foundation, un minivestido dorado de The Blonds, piezas de Alessandra Rich y Stina Randestad y Gucci clásico.
La pianista también trabajó con James Alonzo en la coreografía y Jackson Hallberg en la dirección artística.
Este mismo año, Chloe lanzó su canción original “Flower Through Concrete.” Con gran éxito de crítica, The Coveteur escribió extensamente sobre la artista y proclamó que “Chloe Flower está cambiando la industria de la música. Cosmopolitan también declara que “Chloe destruirá todo concepto que tengas sobre la música clásica, y lo hará sin perder la elegancia.”
La balada instrumental "Flower Through Concrete" llega tras el lanzamiento de “No Limit” en 2019, de su versión para piano solista del éxito viral "Old Time Road", así como de su exitoso single, "Get What U Get". El estilo musical de Chloe está en constante evolución, convirtiéndose en una artista que abarca varios géneros musicales. "Me siento tan inspirada por el pop y la música clásica que cuando compongo canciones, incorporo ideas de la música clásica de forma natural dentro de la estructura de la música pop". Con el lanzamiento de un nuevo álbum programado para 2021, Chloe tiene la intención de continuar desarrollando su especial estilo “Popsical”, una fusión de música clásica y pop.
Continuando con su objetivo de llevar la música clásica a las masas, Chloe actuó en el evento Roots X BOY MEETS GIRL New York Fashion Week en febrero de 2020 y en el CFDA / Vogue Fashion Fund Finalist and Runner-Up 2019, que Vogue describió como un "espectáculo enérgico y divertido". Actuó junto a Cardi B en los premios GRAMMY de 2019 en una actuación que tuvo una gran repercusión en las redes sociales obteniendo más de 9 millones de impresiones y el elogio unánime de la prensa. Su estilo enérgico y su gusto por la alta costura han atraído la atención de publicaciones como Pitchfork o Harper's Bazaar y de ella Cosmopolitan afirma que "Chloe cambiará todo lo que creas que sabes sobre música clásica". La pianista estrella también ha recibido elogios de The FADER, Entertainment Tonight, People, TIME y muchos otros medios.
SOBRE CHLOE FLOWER
La artista de Pennsylvania comenzó a desarrollar su gusto por la música clásica desde muy pequeña. A la edad de dos años, Flower ya se sentaba sobre el directorio telefónico para llegar al piano y poder tocarlo. A los 12 años, continuó sus estudios en el prestigioso Pre-College de Manhattan School of Music con Zenon Fishbein y más tarde con Herbert Stessin de The Juilliard School. Continuó su educación en la Royal Academy of Music London, donde tuvo una experiencia reveladora que le cambió la vida mientras tocaba Bach y escuchaba hip-hop al mismo tiempo. Decidió mezclarlos y rápidamente se dio cuenta de que «los ritmos de hip-hop y la música clásica suenan muy bien juntos».
En 2010, conoció de manera casual al ícono de la industria Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds y firmó un acuerdo con su sello SODAPOP / Island Def Jam. Muy pronto, se encontró en el estudio trabajando junto a la leyenda y coproduciendo “Lullaby” para Céline Dion. Swizz Beatz la invitó a colaborar en el exitoso “Life is Good” de Nas en 2012. Como resultado, apareció en un lugar destacado en el disco A Queens Story. Más recientemente, se unió a Mike WiLL Made-It, coproduciendo a 2 Chainz en “Poor Fool” de Pretty Girls Like Trap Music de 2017. Más tarde, ese mismo año, también presentó un single navideño titulado “Drummer Boy” junto a Questlove y Babyface, además de otras composiciones solistas. En 2018, coprodujo “Christmas at Swae's” de Swae Lee.
Además de escribir y actuar, Flower dedica gran parte de su tiempo y esfuerzo a la filantropía, trabajando con las Naciones Unidas como Artista Embajadora de la UNODC, combatiendo la trata de personas y apoyando la educación musical a nivel mundial junto a una variedad de organizaciones benéficas, destacando especialmente por su papel como Embajadora de Educación Musical para la Fundación Liberace.
CONECTA CON CHLOE FLOWER
SITIO WEB | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | FACEBOOK | YOUTUBE
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Defensive duo sit out as Hibernian prepare to face Hamilton
Hibernian will be without defenders Jason Naismith and Ryan Porteous for the Ladbrokes Premiership contest with Hamilton.
The pair went off with knee injuries against Dundee United on Sunday.
Stephane Omeonga could play after returning to the club on loan from Genoa while Stevie Mallan (knee) remains out.
Aaron McGowan and Jamie Hamilton will miss Hamilton’s trip to Hibernian because of knocks.
Ciaran McKenna and Ryan Fulton remain on the sidelines with knee injuries.
Accies are looking to make it three wins in a row for the first time this season.
Hibernian provisional squad: Marciano, Stevenson, James, Gray, Whittaker, McGregor, Jackson, Hanlon, Hallberg, Horgan, Allan, Doidge, Shaw, Slivka, Boyle, Newell, Porteous, Kamberi, Omeonga, Bogdan.
Hamilton provisional squad: Fon Williams, Fjortoft, Easton, Hunt, McMann, Want, Hughes, Gogic, Alston, Beck, Cunningham, Oakley, Ogkmpoe, Miller, Dales, Davies, Collar, Winter.
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Artist News: April Part II
April showers are nourishing creativity, as this spring is filled with many opportunities to see the work of artists and projects affiliated with NYFA.
Check out the following exhibitions, screenings, readings, and performances and remember to let us know what you think on social media by tagging us on Twitter, Instagram or Facebook.
Things to do & see in NYC:
Curtis John (Sponsored Project) Fred Kudjo Kuwornu’s BlaxploItalian, a new documentary on the legacy and struggle of Black actors in Italian cinema, was co-produced by Curtis John. It will be screened at the 2017 New Voices in Black Cinema Film Festival. Curtis John is the project director of The Luminal Theater, a fiscally sponsored project. When: April 29, 2017, 2:00 PM Where: BAM Rose Cinema, 30 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11217
Ida Applebroog (Fellow in Graphics '86, Painting '90) Ida Applebroog's Mercy Hospital, a comprehensive selection of 97 drawings the artist made in 1969–70 while she was a patient in the eponymous hospital in San Diego, is on view at Karma. When: Through April 30, 2017 Where: Karma, 188 East 2nd Street, New York, NY 10009
Kalup Linzy (Fellow in Video/Film '15) Kalup Linzy will perform a selection of songs at The 8th Floor. When: May 4, 2017, 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM Where: The 8th Floor, 17 West 17th Street, New York, NY 10011
Kobla Dente (Sponsored Project) Drumsong Productions, Inc. presents Traditional African Drum Carving Workshops at the Onipa Abusia Cultural Center. Registration is required to attend the event! When: Saturdays beginning May 6, 2017 Where: Onipa Abusia Cultural Center, 171-32 Liberty Boulevard, Jamaica, NY 11433 To register: Call 347-849-5955 or email [email protected]
Erin Joyce (Sponsored Project) Erin Joyce’s exhibition My Country Tis of Thy People, You're Dying features artworks by contemporary indigenous North American artists. The exhibition title is a reference to the song of the same title by Buffy Sainte-Marie. When: Now through May 26, 2017 Where: Radiator Gallery, 10-61 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, New York 11106
Annie Lanzillotto (Fellow in Performance Art/Multidisciplinary Work '99, Nonfiction '14) Lanzillotto is releasing her new albums and poetry audiobook. When: Thursday, June 1 and Saturday, June 3, 2017, 7:30 PM Where: CityLore, 56 East 1st Street, New York, NY 10003
Daniel Bejar (Fellow in Interdisciplinary work '15) Bejar is part of a group exhibition titled Marginalia at the Drawing Center as part of Open Sessions 10. When: Now through June 11, 2017 Where: The Drawing Center, 35 Wooster Street, New York, New York 10013
Mary Mattingly (Sponsored Project) Mattingly’s Swale, a free public floating food forest, will be at its first stop, Brooklyn Bridge Park Pier 6, through June 30. When: May 1 - June 30, 2017, Thursdays - Sundays from 12:00 PM - 6:00 PM Where: Brooklyn Bridge Park Pier 6
Get out of town to see:
Kathleen Foster (Sponsored Project) Kathleen Foster’s documentary film on racial profiling and police brutality, Profiled, will be screened at the San Diego Black Film Festival. When: April 28, 2017, 4:30 PM Where: AMC Fashion Valley 18, 7037 Friars Road, San Diego, CA 92108
Albert Paley (Fellow in Crafts '91) Albert Paley will join the Finger Lakes Regional Burn Association (FLRBA) in presenting the 7th Annual Finger Lakes Region Gateway to Healing Art Showcase and Auction featuring the artist's work. Proceeds will benefit the Burn Association’s programs and services including the annual FLRBA’s Children’s Burn Camp. When: April 29, 2017, 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM Where: Paley Studios, 1677 Lyell Avenue, Suite A, Rochester, NY 14606
Daniel Bejar (Fellow in Interdisciplinary work '15) Mana Contemporary is hosting an open house. Stop by Bejar's open studio to take a look at what he has been working on. When: April 30, 2017, 1:00 PM - 6:00 PM Where: Mana Contemporary, 888 Newark Avenue, Jersey City, NJ 07306
Roger Grunwald (Sponsored Project) Grunwald’s The Mitzvah Project, a combination of theater, history lesson, and conversation on the Jewish experience during WWII, will be presented at Portland State University. When: May 2, 2017, 7:00 PM Where: Portland State University, Lincoln Hall 115, 1620 Southwest Park Avenue, Portland, OR 97201
Charise Isis (Sponsored Project) The Grace Project, a series of empowering portraits of women with breast cancer, will be on exhibit at the Outnumbered Gallery in Colorado. When: May 5, 2017, 4:00 PM - 9:00 PM Where: Outnumbered Gallery, 5654 Prince Street, Littleton, CO 80120
Debi Cornwall (Sponsored Project) In collaboration with the International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights in Geneva (FIFDH), the Centre de la photographie Genève presents the first solo exhibition in Europe of Debi Cornwall’s Welcome to Camp America. When: Now through May 14, 2017 Where: Centre de la photographie Genève, Genève, Switzerland
Helene Aylon (Sponsored Project) Internationally acclaimed Jewish feminist artist, Helène Aylon presents her exhibition Afterword: For the Children, a conclusion to The G-d Project at Brandeis University’s Kniznick Gallery. When: Now through June 16, 2017 Where: Kniznick Gallery at Brandeis University, WSRC Epstein Building, 515 South Street, Waltham, MA 02453
NYFA Congratulates:
Anna Deavere Smith (Sponsored Project) Deavere Smith received a nomination for the 2017 Drama League’s Distinguished Performance Award for her performance in Notes From the Field.
Catherine Lacey (Fellow in Fiction '12), Dinaw Mengestu (Fellow in Fiction '06), and Garth Risk Hallberg (Fellow in Fiction '08) Lacey, Mengestu, and Hallberg are three of the best young American novelists according to Granta Magazine.
The NYSCA/NYFAArtist Fellowship Program awards $7,000 grants to individual artists living and working in New York State, and NYFA’s Fiscal Sponsorship program enhances the fundraising capabilities of individual artists and emerging arts organizations.
Follow us on Twitter and Instagram for more events with NYFA affiliated artists. Also, don’t forget to like us on Facebook to see what current fiscally sponsored projects are up to! To receive more artist news updates, sign up for our weekly newsletter, NYFA News.
Image: The Empress, Charise Isis (Sponsored Project)
#artist news#fellows#nyscanyfafellows#fellows30#nyscanyfa#artistfellowship#fiscal sponsorship#nyfa fiscal sponsorship#nyfafiscalsponsorship#instagram
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2/18 おはようございます。 Logg / That Something - Dancing Into The Stars sg359 等更新完了しました。
MJQ / Fontessa sd1231 Al Sears / Swing's the Thing svlp2018 Art Farmer With The Quincy Jones Orchestra / Last Night When We Were Young abc-200 Milt Jackson / and the String Quartet v6-8761 Red Holloway / Red Soul Pr7473 Gerry Mulligan / Presenting mg-36056 Clifford Jordan / Soul Fountain 2010 Charles Lloyd / Of Course of Course cs9212 Kenny Clarke Francy Boland Big Band / Now Hear Our Meanin' sbpg62567 Francy Boland In The Background / Flirt And Dream SB15136ST Bengt Hallberg / Bengt Hallberg P08201l Ben Webster / Last Concert 5c178.24.964/5 Louis Van Dyke / Pavane s7-63811 Gary Burton / Good Vibes Sd1560 JP Rodgers Jr / I Enjoy Making Love 1122lp82 Sophisticated Ladies / I'll Keep Coming Back - This Ain't Really Love Roy Ayers / Fast Money Umd8002 Burundi Black / Burundi Black big3 Moonbase / Waiting for a Train 5038 Logg / That Something - Dancing Into The Stars sg359
~bamboo music~
530-0028 大阪市北区万歳町3-41 シロノビル104号
06-6363-2700
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Scottish Premiership build-up with all 12 clubs in action
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/scottish-premiership-build-up-with-all-12-clubs-in-action/
Scottish Premiership build-up with all 12 clubs in action
Live Reporting
By Thomas McGuigan
All times stated are UK
Rangers delivered a 5-0 thrashing of the Dons, which featured two penalties from captain James Tavernier. Greg Stewart, Alfredo Morelos and Jermain Defoe were also on target for Steven Gerrard’s troops.
SNSCopyright: SNS
Rangers captain James Tavernier fired home two penalties in a 5-0 victory at IbroxImage caption: Rangers captain James Tavernier fired home two penalties in a 5-0 victory at Ibrox
The last time Aberdeen claimed a league victory against Rangers at Pittodrie? You have to go back to September 2016, when a certain James Maddison – now strutting his stuff in England’s Premier League with Leicester City – scored a last-minute free-kick in a 2-1 win.
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James Maddison celebrates clinching the Dons’ last league win v Rangers at Pittodrie in 2016Image caption: James Maddison celebrates clinching the Dons’ last league win v Rangers at Pittodrie in 2016
18:54
LINE-UPS AT RUGBY PARK
Kilmarnock v St Johnstone (19:45)
Kilmarnock:Branescu, O’Donnell, Del Fabro, Bruce, Hamalainen, Power, Dicker, El Makrini, Burke, Brophy, Millar.
Substitutes:Koprivec, Johnson, Wilson, McKenzie, Thomas, St. Clair, Sow.
St Johnstone:Clark, Ralston, Booth, Gordon, Kerr, Craig, Wright, McCann, Holt, O’Halloran, Kane.
Substitutes: Parish, May, Wotherspoon, Swanson, Kennedy, Duffy, Tanser.
18:52
MacPhee seeks Hearts clarity
Hearts v Livingston (19:45)
Will tonight be Austin MacPhee’s last game in temporary charge at Hearts? MacPhee has been steering the Jambos’ ship since Craig Levein’s sacking at the end of October.
Hearts have made former Barnsley boss Daniel Stendel an offer to become their manager but MacPhee remains in the dugout for Livingston’s visit.
Getty ImagesCopyright: Getty Images
Austin MacPhee remains in temporary charge as Hearts await Daniel Stendel’s decisionImage caption: Austin MacPhee remains in temporary charge as Hearts await Daniel Stendel’s decision
MacPhee, who has overseen one win and three defeats, admits he is in the dark regarding his future at the club.
“Obviously there are talks going on with other people and I will speak to [Hearts owner Ann Budge] again at some point. If there is anything to be communicated I will always do that with the players. She has very good lines of communication with the senior players as well.”
18:47
Celtic gear up for Cup Final against Hamilton
Celtic vs Hamilton Accies (19:45)
Jonathan Sutherland
BBC Sport Scotland at Celtic Park
Celtic are aiming to make it 11 wins in a row tonight to make sure they keep the foot to the floor in terms of the Premiership title race.
But the League Cup Final this weekend very much part of the narrative. How will tonight impact on that huge game against Rangers? Just how fit are the likes of Hayes, Bolingoli, Elyonoussi and – most importantly – Odsonne Edouard?
A tough night in prospect for a Hamilton Academical side with their own injury issues…
SNSCopyright: SNS
Celtic midfielder Nir Bitton and full-back Moritz BauerImage caption: Celtic midfielder Nir Bitton and full-back Moritz Bauer
18:44
LINE-UPS AT GLOBAL ENERGY STADIUM
Ross County v Hibernian (19:45)
Ross County: Baxter, Kelly, Fontaine, Morris, Gardyne, Paton, Mullin, Spence, Foster, Stewart, Graham,
Substitutes:Laidlaw, Fraser, Erwin, McKay, Watson, Henderson, Spittal.
Hibernian:Maxwell, Naismith, Porteous, Hanlon, Stevenson, Hallberg, Slivka, Allan, Boyle, Kamberi, Doidge
Substitutes:Marciano, Jackson, James, Horgan, Whittaker, Mallan, Shaw.
18:42
Pittodrie poised for blockbuster
Aberdeen v Rangers (19.45)
Tyrone Smith
BBC Scotland at Pittodrie
Previous Aberdeen v Rangers encounters have been deserving of their Scottish football blockbuster billing, and tonight’s Pittodrie showdown is no different. There is plenty at stake for the two rivals.
For the hosts, an expectant home crowd will be demanding the Dons atone for their 5-0 thrashing to Rangers at Ibrox at the end of September.
Third-place Aberdeen’s form has certainly picked up, they’ve lost just one of the eight league games they have played since that humbling experience in Govan.
SNSCopyright: SNS
The Rangers players, including Greg Stewart, enjoying a stroll across the Pittodrie turfImage caption: The Rangers players, including Greg Stewart, enjoying a stroll across the Pittodrie turf
As for Rangers, they are hoping to successfully overcome another hurdle as they continue to challenge on all fronts at home and abroad.
While the visitors could perhaps be forgiven for having one eye on Sunday’s League Cup final date with Celtic, boss Steven Gerrard knows he can’t allow that to happen.
Separated by just one goal from leaders Celtic at the Premiership summit, Rangers are determined to keep up the pressure on their Old Firm rivals, and that means taking care of business in the Granite City tonight.
18:40
LINE-UPS AT PITTODRIE
Aberdeen v Rangers (19:45)
Aberdeen:Lewis, Logan, Taylor, McKenna, Considine, Vyner, Leigh, Ferguson, Gallagher, Wilson, Cosgrove
Substitutes:Cerny, Devlin, Campbell, McLennan, Anderson, Hedges, Main
Rangers:McGregor, Tavernier, Helander, Goldson, Flanagan, Jack, Davis, Arfield, Aribo, Kent, Morelos
Substitutes:Foderingham, Katic, Halliday, Kamara, Ojo, Stewart, Defoe
18:38
LINE-UPS AT CELTIC PARK
Celtic v Hamilton Accies (19:45)
Celtic:Forster, Bauer, Bitton, Ajer, Taylor, Brown, McGregor, Christie, Ntcham, Forrest, Morgan.
Substitutes: Gordon, Frimpong, Jullien, Rogic, Sinclair, Johnston, Griffiths
Hamilton Accies:Southwood, Easton, Stubbs, McMann, McGowan, Miller, Gogic, Collar, Smith, Martin, Moyo
Substitutes: Fon Williams, Hunt, Oakley, Cunningham, Beck, Hamilton, Ogkmpoe
18:36
LINE-UPS AT TYNECASTLE
Hearts v Livingston (19:45)
Hearts:Zlamal, Smith, Berra, Halkett, Hickey, Whelan, Damour, Mulraney, Clare, Walker, Naismith.
Substitutes: Pereira, Wighton, Maclean, Ikpeazu, Brandon, Irving, Meshino.
Livingston:Sarkic, Jacobs, Lamie, Guthrie, Taylor-Sinclair, Bartley, Pittman, Robinson, Sibbald, Lawless, Dykes.
Substitutes: Stewart, McMillan, Souda, Lithgow, Odoffin, Lawson and Erskine.
18:34
Tonight’s Premiership action
(All 19:45 kick-offs)
BBC SportCopyright: BBC Sport
18:32
Prediction powers…
There’s a full card of Premiership fixtures tonight as the hectic December schedule begins.
In the last edition ofBBC Scotland’s Sportscene predictor,Thommo was left sprawling on the canvas by wrestler Grado, so will he fare any better against Scottish UFC fighter Paul Craig?
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18:30
Tight at the top…
Christmas has come early in the Scottish Premiership with six cracking fixtures to get us in the festive mood.
With the title race continuing to rattle along at a thrilling pace, league leaders Celtic host Hamilton Accies while Rangers lock horns with Aberdeen at Pittodrie.
BBC SportCopyright: BBC Sport
The top two are locked on 37 points, with Celtic top of the table courtesy of goal difference (+1).
What does tonight have in store?
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Photo
Baxter St at The Camera Club of New York invited me to participate in a public art project for the San Gennaro Feast in Little Italy. Come and get your portrait taken in front of my background!
When: September 13 – September 23, 2018, 3 – 11pm.
Where: Hester Street between Mulberry and Mott Streets
Participating Artists: Jackson Hallberg, Pixy Yijun Liao, Devin N. Morris, Elizabeth Renstrom, Marco Scozzaro, Tiffany Smith
More info: https://www.facebook.com/events/685496985142152/?active_tab=off_permalink
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Jackson Hallberg
American, b. 1993, based in New York, NY, United States
Through distorting images, Hallberg creates “glitches” in beautiful outdoor landscapes. His work has inspired me to experiment with placing images in locations they don’t appear to belong and document through photography
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June 28, 2017
Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, Vol. 99, #2, 2017 Ethics, Vol. 127, #4, 2017 Contemporary Pragmatism, Vol. 14, #2, 2017 Journal for General Philosophy of Science, Vol. 48, #2, 2017 Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 143, #2, 2017 Journal of Moral Philosophy, Vol. 14, #3, 2017 Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 113, #11, 2016 Journal of Social Philosophy, Vol. 48, #2, 2017 Nursing Philosophy, Vol. 18, #3, 2017 Philosophy & Social Criticism, Vol. 43, #6, 2017 Philosophy of Science, Vol. 84, #3, 2017 Politics, Philosophy & Economics, Vol. 16, #2, 2017 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Modern Physics Synthese, Vol. 194, #6, 2017
Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, Vol. 99, #2, 2017 Articles David Ebrey. The Asceticism of the Phaedo: Pleasure, Purification, and the Soul’s Proper Activity. Agnes Callard. Enkratēs Phronimos. Jean-Luc Solère. Bayle and Panpsychism. Matias Slavov. Hume’s Fork and Mixed Mathematics. Book Reviews Christian Vassallo. Pierre Destrée / Penelope Murray (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Aesthetics. Bernd Goebel. Katherin A. Rogers, Freedom and Self-Creation: Anselmian Libertarianism. Back to top
Ethics, Vol. 127, #4, 2017 Articles Robert Cowan. Rossian Conceptual Intuitionism. Benjamin Bagley. Properly Proleptic Blame. Discussions Matthew Salett Andler. Gender Identity and Exclusion: A Reply to Jenkins. Jacob M. Nebel. Priority, Not Equality, for Possible People. Review Essay David Estlund. The Ideal, the Neighborhood, and the Status Quo: Gaus on the Uses of Justice. Book Reviews Fred Feldman, Distributive Justice: Getting What We Deserve from Our Country is reviewed by Joseph Mendola. Christopher Kutz, On War and Democracy is reviewed by Jonathan Parry. Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen, Luck Egalitarianism is reviewed by Kristin Voigt. Tim Mulgan, Purpose in the Universe: The Moral and Metaphysical Case for Ananthropocentric Purposivism is reviewed by Thaddeus Metz. Michael A. Neblo, Deliberative Democracy between Theory and Practice is reviewed by Kai Spiekermann. Carolyn Price, Emotion is reviewed by Christine Tappolet. Scott Sehon, Free Will and Action Explanation: A Non-causal, Compatibilist Account is reviewed by Maria Alvarez. William R. Shaw, Utilitarianism and the Ethics of War is reviewed by Ryan Jenkins. Toby Svoboda, Duties Regarding Nature: A Kantian Environmental Ethic is reviewed by Emily Brady. Allen W. Wood, Fichte’s Ethical Thought is reviewed by Nedim Nome. Notes on Contributors // Manuscript Reviewers for 2016 Back to top Contemporary Pragmatism, Vol. 14, #2, 2017 Research Articles John Capps. A Pragmatic Argument for a Pragmatic Theory of Truth. Kenji Juzuu. Philosophical Exorcism and Pragmatic Sharing of the Unsharable: A Return from Rorty to Dewey through John Cassavetes and David Lynch. Joseph W. Long. When to Believe Upon Insufficient Evidence: Three Criteria. Rodrigo Laera. Dogmatic Evidence of "The Given." Stéphane Madelrieux. Pragmatism: The Task before Us. Alexander Livingston. Pragmatism, Practice and the Politics of Critique. Brad Elliott Stone. A Prophetic Pragmatist Response to Koopman’s Transitional Pragmatism. Colin Koopman. Being Pragmatist about Pragmatism: Replies to Stéphane Madelrieux, Alexander Livingston, and Brad Stone. Book Reviews Alva Nöe. Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature, review by Brian E. Butler Pentti Määthttänen. Mind in Action: Experience and Embodied Cognition in Pragmatism, review by Joel Richeimer. Michael Slater. Pragmatism and the Philosophy of Religion, review by Nate Jackson. Beth L. Eddy. Evolutionary Pragmatism and Ethics, review by Justin Bell. Back to top
Journal for General Philosophy of Science, Vol. 48, #2, 2017 Obituary Margareta Hallberg. Revolutions and Reconstructions in the Philosophy of Science: Mary Hesse (1924–2016). Articles Jan Baedke, Tobias Schöttler. Visual Metaphors in the Sciences: The Case of Epigenetic Landscape Images. Jacques Bair, Piotr Błaszczyk, Robert Ely. Interpreting the Infinitesimal Mathematics of Leibniz and Euler. Jean-Michel Delhôtel. Retaining Structure: A Relativistic Perspective. Boris Kožnjak. Kuhn Meets Maslow: The Psychology Behind Scientific Revolutions. Reports Alexander Christian. The Second International Conference of the German Society for Philosophy of Science (GWP.2016), 8–11 March 2016. Nicole J. Saam. What is a Computer Simulation? A Review of a Passionate Debate. Book review Stephan Kornmesser and Gerhard Schurz (eds): Die multiparadigmatische Struktur der Wissenschaften. Stefan Heidl. Back to top
Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 143, #2, 2017 Thematic Symposium: Ethics, Technology and Organizational Innovation (articles 1-7); Issue Editors: Antonino Vaccaro, Stefano Brusoni Editorial Notes Stefano Brusoni, Antonino Vaccaro. Ethics, Technology and Organizational Innovation. Original Papers Christian Voegtlin, Andreas Georg Scherer. Responsible Innovation and the Innovation of Responsibility: Governing Sustainable Development in a Globalized World. Arnaldo Camuffo, Federica De Stefano, Chiara Paolino. Safety Reloaded: Lean Operations and High Involvement Work Practices for Sustainable Workplaces. Aoife Brophy Haney. Threat Interpretation and Innovation in the Context of Climate Change: An Ethical Perspective. Bari L. Bendell. I don't Want to be Green: Prosocial Motivation Effects on Firm Environmental Innovation Rejection Decisions. Edwin Rühli, Sybille Sachs, Ruth Schmitt, Thomas Schneider. Innovation in Multistakeholder Settings: The Case of a Wicked Issue in Health Care. Tommaso Ramus, Antonino Vaccaro. Stakeholders Matter: How Social Enterprises Address Mission Drift. Chanhoo Song, Seung Hun Han. Stock Market Reaction to Corporate Crime: Evidence from South Korea. Xingqiang Du, Jianying Weng, Quan Zeng, Hongmei Pei. Culture, Marketization, and Owner-Manager Agency Costs: A Case of Merchant Guild Culture in China. Andre A. Pekerti, Denni Arli. Do Cultural and Generational Cohorts Matter to Ideologies and Consumer Ethics? A Comparative Study of Australians, Indonesians, and Indonesian Migrants in Australia. François Maon, Valérie Swaen, Adam Lindgreen. One Vision, Different Paths: An Investigation of Corporate Social Responsibility Initiatives in Europe. Back to top
Journal of Moral Philosophy, Vol. 14, #3, 2017 Research Articles David Miller. Fair Trade: What Does It Mean and Why Does It Matter? Aaron James. Fortune and Fairness in Global Economic Life. Jessica Flanigan. Seat Belt Mandates and Paternalism. Stephen J. White. Responsibility and the Demands of Morality. Book Reviews Thom Brooks. Unlocking Morality from Criminal Law. Benjamin De Mesel. Lecture on Ethics, edited by Edoardo Zamuner, Ermelinda Valentina Di Lascio, and D.K. Levy. Eric Reitan. Terrorism: A Philosophical Investigation, written by Igor Primoratz Diane Williamson. Kant on Emotion and Value, edited by Alix Cohen. Jonathan Spelman. Ignorance and Moral Obligation, written by Michael J. Zimmerman. Lawrence J. Jost. Rethinking Virtue Ethics, written by Michael Winter. Back to top
Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 113, #11, 2016 http://proxy.lib.umich.edu/login?url= Articles Carolina Sartorio. PAP-Style Cases. Duncan Pritchard. Epistemic Risk. Lei Zhong. Physicalism, Psychism, and Phenomenalism. New Books: Translations Back to top
Journal of Social Philosophy, Vol. 48, #2, 2017 Original Articles Sarah Sorial. The Expression of Anger in the Public Sphere. Jeremy Fischer. Self-Assessment and Social Practices. James Stacey Taylor. How Not to Argue for Markets (or, Why the Argument from Mutually Beneficail Exchange Fails). Jeffry L. Ramsey and Olivia O'Connor. Hume and Same-Sex Marriage. Vittorio Bufacchi. Colonialism, Injustice, and Arbitrariness. Nicole Dular. Moral Testimony under Oppression. Corrigendum Back to top Nursing Philosophy, Vol. 18, #3, 2017 Editorial Derek Sellman. Nursing, recycling and the environment. Original Articles Renzo Zanotti and Daniele Chiffi. Nursing knowledge: hints from the placebo effect. Carole Rushton and David Edvardsson. Reconciling concepts of space and person-centred care of the older person with cognitive impairment in the acute care setting. Alastair Morgan. Against compassion: in defence of a “hybrid” concept of empathy. Marc Roberts. A critical analysis of the failure of nurses to raise concerns about poor patient care. Sylvia Määttä, Kim Lützén and Stina Öresland. Contract theories and partnership in health care. A philosophical inquiry to the philosophy of John Rawls and Seyla Benhabib. Roger Alan Newham. The emotion of compassion and the likelihood of its expression in nursing practice. Dialogue Contribution Sherry Dahlke and Sarah Stahlke Wall. Does the emphasis on caring within nursing contribute to nurses' silence about practice issues? Philosophers for Nursing Peter Allmark. Aristotle for nursing. Book Review Martin Lipscomb. Will nurse researchers and educationalists rise to the challenge thrown out by John Paley? Back to top
Philosophy & Social Criticism, Vol. 43, #6, 2017 Articles Jon Mahoney. The politics of religious freedom: Liberalism and toleration in Muslim-majority states. Kathy Kiloh. Towards an ethical politics: T.W. Adorno and aesthetic self-relinquishment. Ben Holland. The Perpetual Peace Puzzle: Kant on persons and states. Joshua Preiss. Libertarian personal responsibility: On the ethics, practice and American politics of personal responsibility. Armin Khameh. Political toleration, exclusionary reasoning and the extraordinary politics. Back to top
Philosophy of Science, Vol. 84, #3, 2017 Articles William Roche, Elliott Sober. Explanation = Unification? A New Criticism of Friedman’s Theory and a Reply to an Old One. Jacob Stegenga, Tarun Menon. Robustness and Independent Evidence. Christian Loew. The Asymmetry of Counterfactual Dependence. Gerhard Schurz. Interactive Causes: Revising the Markov Condition. Nina Emery. A Naturalist’s Guide to Objective Chance. Richard Bradley, Casey Helgeson, Brian Hill. Climate Change Assessments: Confidence, Probability, and Decision. Justin Garson. A Generalized Selected Effects Theory of Function. Paolo Galeazzi, Michael Franke. Smart Representations: Rationality and Evolution in a Richer Environment. Discussion Note Marcel Weber. Which Kind of Causal Specificity Matters Biologically? Essay Reviews Nora Mills Boyd. Franklin’s Field Guide to Scientific Experiments. Samuel C. Fletcher. Against the Topologists: Essay Review of New Foundations for Physical Geometry. Oron Shagrir. Review of Physical Computation: A Mechanistic Account by Gualtiero Piccinini. Back to top
Politics, Philosophy & Economics, Vol. 16, #2, 2017 Introduction Andrew Williams. Symposium on justice, the family and public policy. Articles Ingvild Almås, Alexander W Cappelen, Kjell G Salvanes, Erik Ø Sørensen, Bertil Tungodden. Fairness and family background. Elizabeth Brake. Fair care: Elder care and distributive justice. Serena Olsaretti. Children as negative externalities? Gina Schouten. Citizenship, reciprocity, and the gendered division of labor: A stability argument for gender egalitarian political interventions. Brian Kogelmann. Aggregating out of indeterminacy: Social choice theory to the rescue. Back to top
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Modern Physics Editorial board and publication information Articles Jan Potters, Bert Leuridan. Studying scientific thought experiments in their context: Albert Einstein and electromagnetic induction. Barbara Drossel. Ten reasons why a thermalized system cannot be described by a many-particle wave function. Alexei Grinbaum. How device-independent approaches change the meaning of physical theory. Jeffrey A. Barrett. Typical worlds. O.J.E. Maroney. Measurements, disturbances and the quantum three box paradox. Katie Robertson. Can the two-time interpretation of quantum mechanics solve the measurement problem? Daniel Jon Mitchell. Making sense of absolute measurement: James Clerk Maxwell, William Thomson, Fleeming Jenkin, and the invention of the dimensional formula. Back to top
Synthese, Vol. 194, #6, 2017 Original Papers María Manzano, Enrique Alonso. A note on Visions of Henkin. Lenny Clapp. On denying presuppositions. Jie Gao. Rational action without knowledge (and vice versa). Matthew W. McKeon. Statements of inference and begging the question. Christian Loew Pages 1945-1965. Causation, physics, and fit. Charles H. Pence. Is genetic drift a force? Boris Hennig. The man without properties. Markos Valaris. What reasoning might be. Paul D. Thorn. On the preference for more specific reference classes. Matthew Tugby. The problem of retention. John D. Greenwood. Solitary social belief. Benjamin Lennertz. Probabilistic consistency norms and quantificational credences. Yongfeng Yuan. Rational metabolic revision based on core beliefs. Fernando Broncano-Berrocal. A robust enough virtue epistemology. J. Adam Carter, Martin Peterson. The modal account of luck revisited. Benjamin Rohrs. Supervaluational propositional content. Luc Lauwers. Infinite lotteries, large and small sets. Christopher Clarke. How to define levels of explanation and evaluate their indispensability. Stefan Buijsman. Accessibility of reformulated mathematical content. Back to top
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