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socialistworld · 2 years ago
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BERLIN PUBLIC MEETING | Internationalism in the 21st century
BERLIN PUBLIC MEETING | Internationalism in the 21st century
Fight War, Exploitation & Capitalism Why only the working class can defeat the system Speakers: Anja Voigt, Berlin hospital striker Tony Saunois, Committee for a Workers‘ International Chiara Stenger, Youth for Socialism (Berlin) Prasad Welikumbura, […]
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azaleamodelsaustralia · 4 years ago
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CHIARA VOIGT with AZALEA Models Australia. Scouted at our Sydney Model Workshop! Mother Agency: AZALEA Models
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theolympusrp · 4 years ago
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E chegamos ao nosso tão esperado torneio. Este será dividido em chaves e teremos 3 dias diretos de combates entre duplas, não podendo ser utilizado nenhuma arma, mas tendo a utilização de suas habilidades. O objetivo no caso não é só atingir a outra dupla, mas sim juntar suas habilidades ao de seu parceiro, aprenderem a lutar em equipe, afinal esse trabalho é necessário.
Além do mais, os terceiro, segundo e primeiro lugar receberão medalhas e premiação em dracmas. O terceiro lugar ganhará 250 dracmas cada participante da dupla, o segundo lugar 500 dracmas para cada e o primeiro lugar 500 dracmas + uma arma de sua escolha para que o próprio Hefesto a faça.
Aproveitem essa quinta-feira para conhecerem as habilidades um do outro e treinarem entre si.
Lembrando que as regras do combate servem para o torneio: É proibido ferimentos muito graves que possam gerar morte.  Como dito acima, não poderão utilizar armas, será um combate mão a mão e com suas habilidades.
Bom torneio!
- Morfeu
DUPLAS:
1. Jake Kang e Victoria Santos 2. Robin Kwon e Ravena Polanyi 3. Alyssa Harvey e Wang Jianyu 4. Devon Strizer e Egan Hunter 5. Gael Caetano e Shimizu Rize 6. Karim Abdallah e Miles Carter 7. Davika Suwan e Ramona Villanueva 8. Alina Falkenberg e Ezra Bower 9. Mikael Voigt e Pyo Jinhwan 10. Lilibeth Mabini e Mia Sattler 11. Kim Subin e Dominic Aluccardi 12. Anushka Kapoor e Saint Voorhees 13. Alejandra Ávilla e Chiara Loveridge 14. Anastasia Petrova e Aaron Cavendish 15. Scarlet Kamon e Cameron Enoch 16. Juan Carlos Martinez e Cassandra 17. Mikhail Moon e Carlota Portilla 18. Alexander Lewis e Kasper Ostvang 19. Aspen Kang e Wolfgang Nielsen 20. Kenji Kurosawa e Lule Kaleshi 21. Caterine Bosch e Daisy Simmons 22. Alexa Campbell e Moon Dohyun 23. Jeon Bomi e Zhang Weiqi 24. Kailash Kapoor e Phelix Ibanescu
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DIA 1 ㅡ 31/07:
CHAVE 1:
9:00 ㅡ 1. DUPLA 2 X DUPLA 11 11:00 ㅡ 2. DUPLA 13 X DUPLA 5 14:00 ㅡ 3. DUPLA 18 X DUPLA 23 16:00 ㅡ 4. DUPLA 3 X DUPLA 15 18:00 ㅡ 5. DUPLA 14 X DUPLA 9 20:00 ㅡ 6. DUPLA 10 X DUPLA 1
CHAVE 2:
9:00 ㅡ 7. DUPLA 6 X DUPLA 8  11:00 ㅡ 8. DUPLA 24 X DUPLA 4 14:00 ㅡ 9. DUPLA 22 X DUPLA 17 16:00 ㅡ 10. DUPLA 7 X DUPLA 12 18:00 ㅡ 11. DUPLA 20 X DUPLA 19 20:00 ㅡ 12. DUPLA 16 X DUPLA 21
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DIA 2 ㅡ 01/08:
PARTE 1:
9:00 ㅡ 1. DUPLA 2 X DUPLA 5 9:00 ㅡ 2. DUPLA 18 X DUPLA 3 11:00 ㅡ 3. DUPLA 14 X DUPLA 1 11:00 ㅡ 4. DUPLA 8 X DUPLA 24 14:00 ㅡ 5. DUPLA 22 X DUPLA 12 14:00 ㅡ 6. DUPLA 20 X DUPLA 21
PARTE 2:
16:00 ㅡ 1. DUPLA 2 X DUPLA 18 18:00 ㅡ 2. DUPLA 14 X DUPLA 24 20:00 ㅡ 3. DUPLA 12 X DUPLA 21
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DIA 3 ㅡ 02/08:
FINAL TRIPLA:
17:00 ㅡ DUPLA Y X KAILASH E PHELIX X ANUSHKA E SAINT
NOTA OOC:
Mod, como vai funcionar? 
1. Terá um nivelamento diferente. Como observado, pessoas com 10 habilidades acabam tendo habilidades mais fortes antes daqueles que tem 20 habilidades, já que estas são mais mescladas, geralmente. Sendo assim, por conta dessa observação, o nivelamento não irá se basear em uma habilidade fixa. Seu personagem poderá usar METADE DAS HABILIDADES TOTAIS dele. Ou seja: Personagem X tem 10 habilidades, então poderá usar até a 5; se tiver 14, poderá usar até a 7; se tiver 20 até a 10, e assim por diante. Isso independe do nível que ele está. Se ele tiver 10 habilidades e estiver no nível 6, por exemplo, ele só poderá usar até o nível 5. "Mas tenho habilidades ímpar", arredonda pra cima, tá legal?!
2. Ambos das duplas devem ter suas participações ativas, inclusive descrever no POV como que foi o trabalho de equipe deles.
3. O POV dessa vez será por DUPLA, então vocês deverão se conversar, descrever e entregarem apenas UM POV para a dupla. No início desse POV deve estar citando o nome da dupla, ok?
4. O POV que valerá 25 pontos é o primeiro, desse primeiro combate, até porque é o que todos irão participar. Este poderá ser entregue até o dia 03/08 às 23:59.
5. Os POVs das duplas que forem avançando continuarão tendo os 5 pontos comuns de POVs de desenvolvimento. Mas pedimos para que, já que se inscreveram, participem. Achamos que é bem legal que vocês tenham essa atividade.
6. Também deixaremos o chat do discord do campo de batalha aberto nos 3 dias, caso vocês queiram jogar isso de forma mais ativa. Apenas nos avisem para que possamos divulgar, ok?
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tannertoctoo-blog · 8 years ago
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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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