10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «DISBURDENMENT» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
disburdenment in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
disburdenment im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Crazy Mountains: Learning from Wilderness to Weigh Technology
If we pursue disburdenment in this unchecked and unreflective manner, as
people are doing in the stage of mature technology, then these are the results we
should expect. However, it may seem as though we have been just too nostalgic.
2
Society, Ethics, and Technology
Thus, ironic consequences follow from the disburdenment of every hassle,
problem, or felt demand. If we pursue disburdenment in this unchecked and
unreflective manner, as people are doing in the stage of mature technology, then
these are ...
Morton Winston, Ralph Edelbach, 2013
3
Solon the Athenian, the Poetic Fragments
[the Athenians' traditional ability to cover up even the ugliness of things with
auspicious and kindly terms was used first by Solon] when he called his
cancelling of debts a “disburdenment”. For the first of his public measures was an
enactment ...
Maria Noussia Fantuzzi, 2010
4
The Engineering Project: Its Nature, Ethics, and Promise
Somewhere there must be a balance: how much disburdenment will still permit
an engagement that enriches life and elevates the spirit? The kind of engineering
that contributes to such a balance I call focal engineering. Still, you might ask, ...
5
Susan Sontag: An Annotated Bibliography 1948-1992
Takes Sontag's short fiction as relating more to her criticism—in that her A14
stories illustrate life lived in a dissociating urban image-world—than to her earlier
novels; where “travel” in the novels is an interior journey toward disburdenment, ...
Leland Poague, Kathy A. Parsons, 2003
6
Readings in the Philosophy of Technology
The lord and the lady must always reckon with the moods, the insubordination,
and the frailty of the servants.8 The device provides social disburdenment, i.e.,
anonymity. The absence of the master-servant relation is of course only one ...
But Solon was the first, it would seem, to use this device, when he called his
cancelling of debts a " disburdenment." For the first of his public measures was
an enactment that existing debts should be remitted, and that in future no one
should ...
8
The Path to Tyranny: A History of Free Society's Descent ...
... and those who accepted such payments were no losers. But most writers agree
that the "disburdenment" was a removal of all debt, and with such the poems of
Solon are more in accord.” Aristotle writes in The Athenian Constitution (Section ...
9
Controlling Technology: Contemporary Issues
The lord and the lady must always reckon with the moods, the insubordination,
and the frailty of the servants.8 The device provides social disburdenment, i.e.,
anonymity. The absence of the master-servant relation is of course only one ...
Eric Katz, Andrew Light, William B. Thompson
10
Viennese Jewish Modernism: Freud, Hofmannsthal, ...
Within the tainted pantomime, as noted, Taube is doomed because she mimics
her father's false disburdenment and, absorbing his dybbuk, must live out its fatal
destiny. Whether an echo of a kabbalistic practice or an evocation of Eastern ...
3 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «DISBURDENMENT» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
disburdenment im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Is There Anything You Did as a Writer Starting Out That You Now …
I was gravitating toward a certain disburdenment, but in this unloading I was also making myself too simple. I realized I'd been conducting a ... «New York Times, Jul 14»
Do Critics Make Good Novelists?
Sontag described criticism as “an act of intellectual disburdenment,” and for me, posing certain dilemmas explicitly in my criticism has meant I ... «New York Times, Mai 14»
The Case for Mediated Public Diplomacy
Such criticisms have led to the disburdenment of the United State Information Agency (USIA) during the second term of Clinton's presidency. «Diplomatic Courier, Jul 13»