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guy60660 · 1 year
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Dunstanburgh Castle | © National Trust | David Sellman | Financial Times
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badgaymovies · 4 years
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Shut Up And Kiss Me (2010)
Shut Up And Kiss Me (2010)
DEVIN HAMILTON
Bil’s rating (out of 5): 0. 
USA, 2010.  Kerrdog Productions.  Screenplay by Ron Smith.  Cinematography by Armin Balg.  Produced by Devin Hamilton, Ron Smith.  Music by John Munt.  Costume Design by Jeff Cooper.  Film Editing by Devin Hamilton.  Podcast: Bad Gay Movies.
Ronnie Kerrwrites and stars in this…
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vm4vm0 · 2 years
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In Full Bloom (dir. Maegan Houang) from Maegan Houang on Vimeo.
A project by VSCO Voices starring Kieu Chinh
Write-up in Short of the Week: shortoftheweek.com/2019/06/26/in-full-bloom/
Intriguing Female Characters Highlight these 8 Sci-Fi & Fantasy Shorts: io9.gizmodo.com/intriguing-female-characters-highlight-these-8-new-sci-1836894263
Featured in No Budge: nobudge.com/main/in-full-bloom
Interview in Directors' Notes: directorsnotes.com/2019/06/27/maegan-houang-in-full-bloom/
Featured in First Showing: firstshowing.net/2019/watch-maegan-houangs-surrealist-fairytale-short-film-in-full-bloom/
Featured in Film Shortage: filmshortage.com/shorts/in-full-bloom/
OFFICIAL SELECTION: 2019 Atlanta Film Festival 2019 LAAPFF 2019 CAAMFest Runner up AT&T 2019 Film Awards Futuristic Category 2019 Twister Alley Film Festival 2019 Breakthroughs Film Festival 2019 Oak Cliff Film Festival Best Fiction Film 2019 Vidlings & Tapeheads Film Festival 2019 42nd Asian American International Film Festival 2019 Traverse City Film Festival 2019 Hollyshorts Film Festival 2019 Horrible Imaginings Film Festival 2019 DC Shorts Film Festival 2019 Sao Paulo International Short Film Festival 2019 Sidewalk Film Festival 2019 New Orleans Film Festival 2019 Fantastic Fest 2019 Indie Memphis 2019 Nitehawk Film Festival 2019 San Diego Asian American Film Festival 2020 London Short Film Festival 2020 MoPop SFFSFF For more information about screenings go here: ifbfilm.com/screenings
Director: Maegan Houang (maegahouang.com) Producer: John J. Lozada, Vanessa Elliott Cinematographer: Christopher Ripley (christopherripley.com) Production Designer: Emmy Eves Editor: Gus Spelman Stop Motion Animator: Jason Whetzell VFX Supervisor: Matthew Waukhonen Score: Robert Ouyang Rusli Sound Design: Grant Meuers Costume Design: Anne Valiant Casting by: Liz Lewis Casting Partners Cecile's Husband: Long Dinh Co-Producer: David Miller, Adele Pham Hair & Make-up: Kelly Park Assistant Director: Ted Keffer Gaffer: Jake Kaster 1st AC: Megan Johnson, Kyle Frank, Shaw Fisher 2nd AC: Isue Shin Still Photographers: Michelle Tsaikaros, Taylor Johnson Art Director: Teagan Morin Set Decorator: Megan Bartley-Matthews Set Dresser: Jamie Kim Prop Master: Cynthia Wu Pupper Flower: Josh Spooner Storyboard Artist: Joy Sun Art Coordinator: Alyssa Forstmann Art PA: Zoe Baxter, Elijah Beckner, Leah Khambata, Ruby Lanet, Pernell Langhorne, Ben Mendina SPFX Coordinator: Michael Valenzuela FX Foreman: Chip Mefford FX Technician: Richard Valenzuela Title Design: Tiffany Liang Music Supervisor: Dylan Bostick Visual Effects Artists: Sevan Najarian, Matthew Waukhonen, Austin Piko Color: Christopher Ripley Truck Drivers: Marc Kaplan, Harry Kemp Key Grip: Marlon O'Brien, Andrew Robes, Anthony Christ, Sean Hunt BBE: Ryan Johnson, Mohamed Samra Swing Grip: Barrie Brown, Noah Sellman, Andrew McWilliams PA: Josh Gordon, Genki Hall, Taylor Johnston, Brooke Kushwaha, Josh Palmer, Charlotte Rand
Production Company: Imposter Executive Producer: Alex Brinkman, Avtar Khalsa Head of Production: Alexis Celic
Copyright Maegan Houang
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mysticalhearth · 3 years
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V
Victor/Victoria - Broadway - October 25, 1995 (Opening Night) (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT:  MP4 (HD) CAST: Julie Andrews (Victoria Grant / Victor Grazinski), Tony Roberts (Carroll Todd), Michael Nouri (King Marchand), Rachel York (Norma Cassidy) NOTES: Captured for Japanese Television in HD in 1995! Later released on BluRay dvd. Victor/Victoria - Broadway - January-February, 1997 FORMAT:  VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Liza Minnelli (t/r Victoria Grant / Victor Grazinski), Tony Roberts (Carroll Todd), Michael Nouri (King Marchand), Rachel York (Norma Cassidy), Gregory Jbara (Squash), Adam Heller (Henri Labisse) A View From the Bridge - West End - March 26, 2015 (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT:  AVI (HD) CAST: Mark Strong (Eddie), Phoebe Fox (Catherine), Nicola Walker (Beatrice), Richard Hansell (Alfieri), Luke Norris (Rodolpho), Emun Elliott (Marco) Violet - Broadway - March 30, 2014 (Preview) (SunsetBlvd79's master) FORMAT:  MP4 (HD) CAST: Sutton Foster (Violet), Joshua Henry (Flick), Colin Donnell (Monty), Emerson Steele (Young Vi), Alexander Gemignani (Father), Annie Golden (Old Lady/Hotel Hooker), Ben Davis (Preacher/Radio Singer/Bus Driver 1/Bus Driver 4), Austin Lesch (Virgil/Billy Dean/Bus Driver 2/Radio Singer/Bus Passenger), Anastacia McCleskey (Music Hall Singer/Bus Passenger), Rema Webb (Lula Buffington/Almeta/Bus Passenger), Charlie Pollock (Leroy Evans/Radio Soloist/Bus Driver 3/Bus Passenger) NOTES: Beautiful HD capture of this wonderful show with no obstructions. The cast was divine and did an exquisite job performing and telling the story. A+ Violet - Broadway - May 24, 2014 FORMAT:  MP4 (HD) CAST: Sutton Foster (Violet), Joshua Henry (Flick), Colin Donnell (Monty), Emerson Steele (Young Vi), Alexander Gemignani (Father), Annie Golden (Old Lady/Hotel Hooker), Ben Davis (Preacher/Radio Singer/Bus Driver 1/Bus Driver 4), Austin Lesch (Virgil/Billy Dean/Bus Driver 2/Radio Singer/Bus Passenger), Anastacia McCleskey (Music Hall Singer/Bus Passenger), Rema Webb (Lula Buffington/Almeta/Bus Passenger), Charlie Pollock (Leroy Evans/Radio Soloist/Bus Driver 3/Bus Passenger) NOTES: Very beginning of the show is missing, but it picks up about halfway through Water in the Well and complete from there with a couple quick dropouts. Well filmed with clear picture and good sound. Violet - Charing Cross Theatre (London) - January-April, 2019 (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT:  MP4 (HD) CAST: Kaisa Hammarlund (Violet), Jay Marsh (Flick), Matthew Harvey (Monty), Madeleine Sellman (Young Vi), Keiron Crook (Father), Janet Mooney (Old Lady/Hotel Hooker), Kenneth Avery-Clark (Preacher/Radio Singer/Bus Driver 1/Bus Driver 4), Danny Michaels (Virgil/Billy Dean/Bus Driver 2/Radio Singer/Bus Passenger), Angelica Allen (Music Hall Singer/Bus Passenger), Simbi Akande (Lula Buffington/Almeta/Bus Passenger), James Gant (Leroy Evans/Radio Soloist/Bus Driver 3/Bus Passenger) NOTES: Beautiful multi-camera proshot, performed in the round The Visit - Broadway - April 11, 2015 (Preview) (SunsetBlvd79's master) FORMAT:  VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Chita Rivera (Claire Zachanassian), Roger Rees (Anton Schell), Jason Danieley (Frederich Kuhn), David Garrison (Peter Dummermut), Mary Beth Peil (Matilde Schell), George Abud (Karl Schell), Matthew Deming (Louis Perch) NOTES: Great HD capture of the Kander & Ebb musical that finally made it to Broadway. At times a head can block the Actor's feet on the far right side, but rarely an issue. Chita still in wonderful form here and always delivers in this dark tale of a scorned woman! A-
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artwalktv · 7 years
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Agency: Forsman & Bodenfors Creatives: Karin Jacobsson, Gustav Johansson, Stefan Thomson, Magnus Almberg Agency producer: Lena Sellman Production company: Camp David Film Stockholm Executive producer: Rickard Edholm Editor: Marty Schenk Grading: James Bamford/The Mill London Vfx/Online: Frost VFX Stockholm Sound editing: Redpipe Stockholm Music: Jonas Quant 
Service Production: Orange Films Exec Producer: Vivian Esterhuyse Production Designer / Fabrication Supervisor: Rob Carlisle Art Director: Jason Human Wardrobe Stylist: Sophie Fraser Administrator: Elsa Carlisle Puppeteer (Animatronics): Xander Bosman Marionette Puppeteer: Hansie Visagie Marionette Puppeteer: Thea Visagie Set Dresser: Marissa Horn Set Dresser: Kaitlyn Coss Set Dresser: Hein Smith Puppet Stylist / Puppeteer: Zania Gerber
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chriskarrtravelblog · 5 years
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Hidden Cornwall: Top sights in West Penwith
Discover the beautiful, beguiling and rugged land of West Penwith by visiting its top sights in the far reaches of Cornwall. By Felix Rowe
It’s called Land’s End for good reason. Tucked away in the extreme southwest of mainland Britain, the Penwith peninsula feels like the very edge of the world. Flanked by the Atlantic on all sides – and often bearing the full brunt of its rages – the landscape here is as wild and rugged as it comes. And it’s all the more beautiful for it. If you’re looking to escape the throngs of city and enter the wilderness then West Penwith is not a bad place to start. A land where the myths and legends are as impenetrable as the fog that rolls in from the sea. Welcome to the Wild West.
But in fact, with a direct train line to London Paddington, recently improved road links, and Cornwall Airport Newquay linking the wider county to cities across the UK, Penwith today isn’t as inaccessible as you might first think. And upon arrival you’ll soon find yourself swept away by its myriad charms.
When a relatively small area boasts not one, but two of the country’s most magnificent wonders – in the form of St Michael’s Mount and the Minack Theatre – it’s perhaps understandable that surrounding treasures can get overlooked. St Michael’s Mount is a dramatic tidal island, connected to the mainland only via a granite causeway at low tide, on which is perched a medieval castle, itself built on the site of an 8th-century monastery. It bears striking resemblance to its Normandy namesake, Mont-Saint-Michel.
The Minack, meanwhile, is a construction as breathtaking as its clifftop setting: a magical place for outdoor theatre in the warmer months. Both landmarks enjoy wide coverage for good reason and they must be experienced. Yet deeper exploration of West Cornwall reveals so much more.
Another highlight of Mount’s Bay is the harbour village of Mousehole – that’s ‘Mowzul’ to locals. Poet Dylan Thomas famously found it to be “the loveliest village in England”, and that sums it up quite neatly. A day watching the boats come and go is always an absolute delight. Spend the afternoon with a well-thumbed copy of iconic children’s tale, The Mousehole Cat, and a slice of the local speciality, stargazy pie.
The Minack Theatre is magical. Credit: incamerastock/Alamy
Nor is the Minack the only reason to explore Porthcurno. This sleepy headland was once the communications centre of the world, the terminal for the 19th-century submarine telegraph cables connecting Britain to her empire, with huge cables landed on the beach from as far away as India. The Telegraph Museum and underground Second World War tunnels make a fascinating detour.
Long before Cornwall’s influx of tourism, the county relied on its lucrative mining industry: it was once the mining capital of the world. Look out for the ruins of engine houses lining the coastline, including Botallack, managed by the National Trust. Some local mining tunnels extend out miles into the sea. Fans of the TV series Poldark may recognise scenes from their screens, and the crew are often seen filming locally over the summer months.
The abandoned engine houses of Botallack Credit: © National Trust Images/David Sellman
Despite its remoteness, Penwith has been inhabited for thousands of years. At first, it’s hard to fathom what would bring people to settle somewhere so extreme, until you encounter the almost magnetic draw first-hand. The area is positively littered with prehistoric monuments and henges, less publicised than their more famous cousins, yet no less beguiling. Cornwall is said to host a particularly high concentration, from standing stones to burial chambers, some variants entirely unique to the area, and invariably accompanied by their own local legends.
Men-an-Tol is said to be guarded over by a fairy. Credit: Paul Williams/Alamy
Men-an-Tol, for instance, is said to be guarded over by a fairy, or piskie as they are known locally, with miraculous healing powers. According to local mythology, passing a naked child through the hole of the central circular stone nine times will cure them of rickets. Women are advised not to pass through the hole seven times backwards during a full moon if they wish to avoid becoming pregnant. Nearby Madron Holy Well has been revered for millennia for its legendary remedial qualities. Look out for offerings, or ‘clouties’, such as ribbons tied to the surrounding trees.
The Neolithic stone circle, the Merry Maidens of Boleigh, complete with two further stones known as the Pipers, is equally intriguing. Supposedly the 19 maidens danced as the pipers played, only to be turned to stone for daring to enjoy such frivolities on the Sabbath. Kiss your lover while standing in the centre of the stones to ensure enduring happiness. 
The Iron Age and Neolithic coastal villages of Chysauster and Carn Euny are uncannily reminiscent of the equally remote Skara Brae in the Orkney Islands at the other extreme of the British Isles.
Penwith is home to scores of beautiful, ancient Christian churches, often built on earlier pagan sites. St Senara’s Church gave rise to another legend of Cornish folklore – the Mermaid of Zennor, who fell in love and subsequently eloped with the local churchwarden’s son. A 15th-century carved chair, which may have inspired the tale, can still be seen in the church today.
Owing to its abundant scenery and famed quality of natural light, West Cornwall has long been a haven for artists. The Newlyn, St Ives and Lamorna schools are particularly well known, as is St Ives’ Leach Pottery. Painters drawn to the area have included the British abstract artist Sir Terry Frost and SJ ‘Lamorna’ Birch. 
St Ives is clustered around a little harbour. Credit: Matt Jessop
The scene’s prominence was significant enough to tempt the Tate to take residence above St Ives’ Porthmeor Beach in 1993, and the gallery has recently been extended. The Barbara Hepworth Sculpture Garden is a tranquil haven hidden away within the town, and there are many smaller independent galleries across the region that equally delight. Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens occupy a wonderful position overlooking St Michael’s Mount, while nearby Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange and Penlee House Gallery are must-visits too.
Many revere Cornwall as a top foodie destination. The beloved pasty, Cornwall’s signature snack, now has ‘protected designation of origin’ status. St Ives has its own popular food festival in May, one of many similar events across the county. Pick up an ice cream from Jelberts in Newlyn – don’t be fooled by the low-key shopfront or the fact that they only do one flavour. Made with fresh Cornish clotted cream, many say it’s the best you’ll ever experience. But, in the name of balance, Moomaid of Zennor is pretty good too. 
If your thirst needs quenching, pay a visit to the family-run Polgoon on the outskirts of Penzance, for a tasting and tour of the vineyard and orchard. Meanwhile, being a small-batch operation hasn’t stopped St Ives Cider from winning international awards. There are several enterprising microbreweries in the area, helping to propel the country’s artisan ale revolution.
With provenance on everyone’s minds, you don’t need to travel far to experience fantastic, locally-sourced produce. Enjoy fish as fresh as it gets, straight off the boats from Newlyn, St Ives and other local harbours.
Mousehole Credit: Pixel Memoirs/Alamy Stock Photo
Cornwall’s fishing and seafaring heritage goes way back. Many will know Penzance for Gilbert and Sullivan’s eponymous pirates. Today, walking down its narrow alleys and opeways you can stumble upon historic taverns, once frequented by seafarers of a decidedly nefarious nature. 
But it’s also home to a grand promenade and the recently restored Art Deco lido. A regular port of call for cruising yachtspeople, Penzance is also the gateway to the Isles of Scilly, reached aboard the Scillonian.
West Cornwall boasts a rich pilchard-fishing history. Sadly, overfishing swiftly saw an end to the trade, but not before significantly contributing to the vernacular architecture, with pretty whitewashed stone fisherman’s cottages and pilchard cellars lining the coast. 
So, there’s much more to West Cornwall than first meets the eye. Replete with independent boutiques, bistros and galleries, and glorious scenery at every turn, Penwith harbours many hidden gems just waiting to be discovered.
The post Hidden Cornwall: Top sights in West Penwith appeared first on Britain Magazine | The official magazine of Visit Britain | Best of British History, Royal Family,Travel and Culture.
Britain Magazine | The official magazine of Visit Britain | Best of British History, Royal Family,Travel and Culture https://www.britain-magazine.com/features/top-sights-west-penwith/
source https://coragemonik.wordpress.com/2019/08/29/hidden-cornwall-top-sights-in-west-penwith/
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easytravelpw-blog · 5 years
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Full text write on https://easy-travel.pw/the-top-things-to-do-in-undiscovered-northamptonshire-england/england/
The Top Things to Do in Undiscovered Northamptonshire, England
01 of 06
Britain’s Best Surprise
Loop Images/Andrew Baskott/Getty Images
Northamptonshire, about an hour and a half straight up the M1 from Central London, has got to be one of the UK's most unfairly overlooked and underrated regions for visitors. And yet it has all the attractions that vacationers and holiday-makers arrive in Britain to visit. The county is host to numerous historic homes, notable hotels, charming market towns and gardens, the epicenter of British motorsport, and even the childhood home and final resting place of Princess Diana.
So why don't more people know about and visit Northamptonshire? Recently, a group representing local attractions, businesses and boosters asked the same question and decided to change all that with a colorful and stylish campaign — Northamptonshire: Britain's Best Surprise.
The campaign shows the region off as a great destination target, whether for UK touring or weekend breaks from London or the cities of the Midlands and the North of England. If you are racing up the motorway to visit Diana's grave, then battling rush hour traffic back on the M1, you are missing the opportunity for a great short break. Here's why.
Continue to 2 of 6 below.
02 of 06
Visit Historic Homes and Castles
Photo courtesy of Holdenby House
At under 100 miles from London, Northamptonshire was just far enough away for politically ambitious aristocrats of the Tudor and Elizabethan times to stay out of sight and out of mind, yet close enough to reach the court in a few days of hard riding if summoned.
As a result, in addition to a few older castles — including Rockingham, originally built by William the Conqueror, more than 900 years ago — Northamptonshire has a wealth of Medieval, Tudor and Elizabethan stately homes that you can visit. In fact, the county claims more stately homes than any county in Britain. These are just a few:
Holdenby House: Pictured above, this lovely country house, surrounded by wonderful gardens, is just a shadow of its former self (or about one quarter actually). Built as a grand country estate by an Elizabethan courtier, it was turned over to the crown as a palace for King James and the ill-fated Charles I. Charles was imprisoned there during the Civil War and then arrested by Parliamentary forces. The archways he walked through heading for his final, bloody fate, are still standing. Check out the music room, where rare and unusual instruments have been collected from all over the world by the current occupants of the house. And make time to stay for a falconry demonstration. If you can imagine Holdenby draped in rotting vegetation, you might just remember it from the 2011 BBC production of Great Expectations with Gillian Anderson as Miss Haversham. It was the stand-in for her house.
Althorp: Keen Royal watchers already know that this was the late Princess Diana's childhood home. But maybe you never knew that it has been in the same family for more than 500 years, has a spectacular collection of paintings (including a whole room of Joshua Reynolds portraits, another of Lely paintings of court mistresses and the only known life portrait of the tragic Lady Jane Grey) or that you can hire it for weddings and posh events.
Deene Park: This once grand, originally Medieval, house was having a facelift under scaffolding in April 2017 – so a bit hard to judge. But a highlight is the room devoted to the notorious 7th Earl of Cardigan who led the infamous charge of the light brigade during the Battle of Balaclava (described in one account as “the greatest old woman in the army”). The room includes a portrait of his ravishingly beautiful (and scandalous) second wife and a glass case holding half of Ronald, the horse Cardigan rode into battle. Some years ago it was discovered that the taxidermed Ronald was becoming a bit moth eaten so now only half of him remains.
Burghley House: A house full of many of its original treasures and works of art, built by William Cecil, Lord High Treasurer to Queen Elizabeth I and still considered one of the greatest Elizabethan houses in Britain.
Boughton House: Begun in 1528 by the ancestors of the current owners, the Buccleuch family, the house morphed from a modest Tudor manor to a French style palace, sometimes called “The English Versailles”. Among its treasures are paintings by El Greco, Van Dyke and Gainsborough as well as 150 acres of gardens and landscapes..
Apethorp Palace: A palace that once belonged to Queen Elizabeth I, and was a favorite of Jacobean and Stuart kings, was at risk of total collapse when purchased for the nation by English Heritage. Now, through a remarkable 80-year arrangement between English Heritage and the current owners, the house is being completely restored. It's open to the public by guided tours only, 50 days a year.
Do keep in mind that most of the stately homes in Northamptonshire are still private family homes, with limited public openings. Check their websites to find out the dates of opening and the conditions of entry.
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03 of 06
Explore Charming Gardens
VisitBritain/David Sellman / Getty Images
Most of the stately homes mentioned above have gardens that can usually be visited even when the houses are not open to the public. And there are some great ones — from a restored Elizabethan kitchen garden at Holdenby House to a landscape by the legendary Lancelot Capability Brown at Burghley. 
There are 35 acres of gardens, open every day, year-round, set in the 10,000 acre Castle Ashby estate. And the county is laced with country parks, woodlands, arboretums and wetland reserves.
But by far the most impressive garden is also one of the smallest. At ten acres, plus another 5-acre bluebell wood and a wildflower meadow, Coton Manor Garden is an attraction that punches well above its weight.
Created in 1925 by the grandparents of the current owners, the garden is still managed by a small family team, assisted by students and volunteers. It's colorful herbaceous borders, water gardens, walled gardens full of roses and several more garden “rooms” are arranged around a small, private 17th century manor house. They hold more than 1,000 varieties of plants, many of them rare and hard to find elsewhere. You can buy plants in the nursery, attend a gardening school, have lunch or tea in the cafe and visit with the “wildlife”. They include a pond full of wildfowl, a pair of elegant flamingos who have been resident for more than 40 years, some very cute kune kune pigs and several English longhorn cows.
The garden is open several days a week between April and September and every day during bluebell season (end of April to mid May). A visit throughout the season is bound to be rewarded with ever changing, colorful displays.
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04 of 06
Feed Your Need for Speed
Rhapsode/Getty Images
If you've ever sat in front of one of those motor racing arcade games, enjoying the VROOM VROOM sound effects while imagining yourself speeding around the Grand Prix course in Monte Carlo, you are going to love Northamptonshire, the super-revved up motorsport capital of Britain.
Five of the world's Formula 1 teams — Mercedes, Force India, Williams, Renault (formerly Lotus) and Red Bull — are based in an area that has become known as Formula 1 Valley, covering Northamptonshire and adjacent bits of Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire. The county claims the creation of 80 percent of the world's Formula 1 cars and engines.
And Silverstone, the Northamptonshire home of the F1 British Grand Prix, is the place where you can get behind the wheel and experience those G-forces for yourself.
When it's not hosting the Grand Prix or classic car races, Silverstone offers a variety of driving experiences, ranging from a “hot ride”, as a passenger in a race-prepared sports car with a professional driver (£45 in 2017 ) to the Silverstone Challenge — an all day driving experience in eight different kinds of racing cars (£995 in 2017). The variations in between include going round the track in a Silverstone single-seater and short training sessions followed by your own chance to drive at speed on the famous track.
We tried out a hot ride in an Aston Martin driven by professional racing and stunt driver Sam Maher-Loughnan. Fitted out with a fireproof hood and a racing helmet, each of us climbed in beside Sam for the ride of our lives, three times around the track at about 130mph. Whether you enjoy it will depend on whether you like speed, whether the idea of going sideways gives you butterflies and how well you can tolerate the extra G-forces of going round corners without breaking. It's definitely an adrenaline rush.
Not into Formula 1? You could head for Rockingham Motor Speedway, which claims to be Europe's fastest banked oval racing circuit, where experiences you can book include super cars, drift driving and NASCAR-style training. Or how about a deafening day out at Santa Pod Raceway, home of the European Drag Racing Championships. On scheduled public track days there, you can take your own car or motorcycle out on the quarter-mile drag strip to test out its full-throttle performance.
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05 of 06
Fulfill Your Shoe Fetish Fantasy
Anna Clopet/Getty Images
Northamptonshire was once the center of shoemaking for most of the British Empire. It's still a center for high quality, custom made men's shoes, several major work shoe brands and, perhaps the most iconic English shoe brand, Dr. Martens.
The Northampton Museum and Art Gallery tells the story of the history of shoes with the largest collection of shoes and shoe related objects in the world. It includes more than 15,000 shoes and 50,000 archival records, documentary footage and shoe related fine art. Visit to see shoes worn by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, Tom Thumb's boot and hundreds of years of shoes fashions
It's a wonderful rainy day outing for shoe lovers and fashionistas, but you'll have to plan your trip for 2018 to see this fabulous collection as the museum is currently undergoing a major expansion. Happily, it's just one of many in the county — ranging from small local history and industry museums to transport museums and several heritage railways. 
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06 of 06
Stay in a Historic Luxury Accommodation
Richard Croft/CC BY-SA 2.0
Plan a romantic getaway to Northamptonshire at the Grade 1 Listed Rushton Hall, a historic manor that is now a fabulous luxury hotel and spa.
Begun in the early 15th century, the house has a complicated history of colorful owners and plots. It even has a priests hole where secret Catholics hid their family clergy during the reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and later during the English Civil War.
The Tresham family, its first owners, were implicated in the Gunpowder Plot, now annually remembered in England on Bonfire Night. Charles Dickens was a frequent visitor and the hotel's amazing hall with its double hammerbeam ceiling may have been the model for Miss Haversham's house in Great Expectations. The Hope family, for whom the Hope Diamond is named, once owned the house and the fabulous jewel, now part of the British crown, was probably kept here.
You can no doubt find a member of staff to expound at length about the history of this enormous and beautifully kept house, but it's much easier to simply enjoy its large, luxurious rooms, its first class kitchen and its extensive, landscaped grounds. Guest rooms overlook a lake with an island where sheep pose as if placed by an artist. The hotel spa includes a small but well equipped gym and a beautiful 18 meter heated pool. 
Rooms in 2017 start at a reasonable £240 for two that includes dinner (a very accomplished three-course menu, easily worth £50 per person), bed and breakfast and full use of the spa.
As is common in the travel industry, the writer was provided with complimentary services for review purposes. While it has not influenced this review, TripSavvy.com believes in full disclosure of all potential conflicts of interest.
#travel #airlinetickets #airtickets #cheapairfare #planetickets #travelinsurance #travelquotes #travelblogger #traveller #travelling #travelocity #travelodge #vacation
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refocusedmedia · 7 years
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vimeo
SEMCON - The Internet of S**t from Daniel Warwick on Vimeo.
danielwarwick.com Agency: Forsman & Bodenfors Creatives: Karin Jacobsson, Gustav Johansson, Stefan Thomson, Magnus Almberg Agency producer: Lena Sellman Production company: Camp David Film Stockholm Executive producer: Rickard Edholm Editor: Marty Schenk Grading: James Bamford/The Mill London Vfx/Online: Frost VFX Stockholm Sound editing: Redpipe Stockholm Music: Jonas Quant 
Service Production: Orange Films Exec Producer: Vivian Esterhuyse Production Designer / Fabrication Supervisor: Rob Carlisle Art Director: Jason Human Wardrobe Stylist: Sophie Fraser Administrator: Elsa Carlisle Puppeteer (Animatronics): Xander Bosman Marionette Puppeteer: Hansie Visagie Marionette Puppeteer: Thea Visagie Set Dresser: Marissa Horn Set Dresser: Kaitlyn Coss Set Dresser: Hein Smith Puppet Stylist / Puppeteer: Zania Gerber
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tannertoctoo-blog · 7 years
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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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imfreakwoohoo · 7 years
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ALIUS Bulletin, n. 1, 2017 Analytic Philosophy, Vol. 58, #1, 2017 Developing World Bioethics, Vol. 17, #1, 2017 International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Vol. 81, #1-2, 2017 Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 113, #7, 2016 Journal of Social Ontology, Vol. 3, #1, 2017 Law & Social Inquiry, Vol. 42, #1, 2017 Méthexis, Vol. 29, #1, 2017 Nursing Philosophy, Vol. 18, #2, 2017 Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 98, #1, 2017 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, Vol. 57, February 2017
ALIUS Bulletin, n. 1, 2017 Articles Robin Carhart-Harris (interviewed by Martin Fortier & Raphaël Millière). Consciousness and Psychedelics. Jakob Hohwy (interviewed by Matthieu Koroma). On Different Ways of being Conscious: Modes of Consciousness and the Predictive Mind. Tanya Luhrmann (interviewed by Martin Fortier). The Anthropology of the Mind: Exploring Unusual Sensations and Spiritual Experiences Across Cultures. Simon McCarthy-Jones (interviewed by Mathieu Frerejouan). The Phenomenon of Voice-Hearing: An Interdisciplinary Approach. Rebecca Seligman (interviewed by Arnaud Halloy). Towards a Biocultural Approach to Dissociative Consciousness. Jennifer Windt (interviewed by Alessio Bucci & Raphaël Millière). Relocating Dreams on the Conceptual Map: How the Analysis of Slepp and Dreaming Cgallenges our Taxonomy of Mental States. Back to Top
Analytic Philosophy, Vol. 58, #1, 2017 Recently Published Articles Cathay Liu. Re-Examining Descartes’ Algebra and Geometry: An Account Based on the Reguale. John Morrison. Perceptual Confidence and Categorization. Rachel N. Denison. Precision, Not Confidence, Describes the Uncertainty of Perceptual Experience: Comment on John Morrison's “Perceptual Confidence”. Bradley Rives. Concepts and Analytic Intuitions. Joseph Gottlieb. Transitivity and Transparency. Back to Top
Developing World Bioethics, Vol. 17, #1, 2017 Editorial Udo Schuklenk and William Rooney. Vulnerability and Dignity: Labeling Problems Away. Articles David R. Hall and Anton A. van Niekerk. Reconsidering Counseling and Consent. Lisa Diependaele, Julian Cockbain and Sigrid Sterckx. Raising the Barriers to Access to Medicines in the Developing World – The Relentless Push for Data Exclusivity. Gerald M. Ssebunnya. Beyond the Sterility of a Distinct African Bioethics: Addressing the Conceptual Bioethics Lag in Africa. Pierre-Marie David. Measurements, "Scriptural Economies," and Social Justice: Governing HIV/AIDS Treatements by Numbers in a Fragile State, the Central African Republic (CAR). Chitu Womehoma Princewill, Ayodele S. Jegede, Karin Nordström, Bolatito Lanre-Abass and Bernice Simone Elger. Factors Affecting Women's Autonomous Decision Making In Research Participation Amongst Yoruba Women Of Western Nigeria. Kimberly Jarvis. Dilemmas in International Research and the Value of Practical Wisdom. Book Review Christine Straehle. Debating Brain Drain – May Governments Restrict Emigration? Back to Top
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Vol. 81, #1-2, 2017 Special issue: Approaches to Faith; Issue editors: Rebekah L.H. Rice, Daniel J. McKaughan, Daniel Howard-Snyder Editorial Rebekah L. H. Rice, Daniel McKaughan. Special (Double) Issue: Approaches to Faith. Articles Daniel J. McKaughan. On the Value of Faith and Faithfulness. Daniel Howard-Snyder. Markan Faith. Samuel Lebens. The Life and Faith as a Work of Art: A Rabbinic Theology of Faith. Terence Cuneo. Aligning with Lives of Faith. George Tsai. Supporting Intimates on Faith. Lara Buchak. Faith and the Steadfastness in the Face of Counter-Evidence. Michael Pace. The Strength of Faith and Trust. Frances Howard-Snyder. The Pearl of Great Price. Beth A. Rath. Christ's Faith, Doubt, and the Cry of Dereliction. Dale Tuggy. Jesus as an Exemplar of Faith in the New Testament. Anne Jeffrey. Does Hope Morally Vindicate Faith? Brian Ballard. The rationality of Faith and the Benefits of Religion. Back to Top
Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 113, #7, 2016 Articles Roy T. Cook and Philip A. Ebert. Frege’s Recipe. Comments and Criticism Knut Olav Skarsaune. Moral Deference and Authentic Interaction. Book Reviews Carolyn Brighouse. Frank Arntzenius: Space, Time, and Stuff. Back to Top
Journal of Social Ontology, Vol. 3, #1, 2017 Articles Teresa Marques. The Relevance of Causal Social Construction. Raphael van Riel. Mental Disorder and the Indirect Construction of Social Facts. Lena Wahlberg. Legal Ontology, Scientific Expertise and The Factual World. Heikki J. Koskinen. Mediated Recognition and the Categorial Stance. Dave Elder-Vass. Material Parts in Social Structures. Christopher Woodard. Three Conceptions of Group-Based Reasons. Book Reviews Guglielmo Feis. An Introduction to Metametaphysics. Janna van Grunsven. The Phenomenology of Sociality: Discovering the “We”. Olle Blomberg. Complicity and Moral Accountability. Back to Top
Law & Social Inquiry, Vol. 42, #1, 2017 Articles Symposium: How Law Works—Editor's Introduction. Don Herzog. Democracy, Law, Compliance. Gillian K. Hadfield. The Problem of Social Order: What Should We Count as Law? Daryl Levinson. The Inevitability and Indeterminacy of Game-Theoretic Accounts of Legal Order. Robin Bradley Kar. The Evolutionary Game-Theoretic Foundations of Law. Robert C. Ellickson. Forceful Self-Help and Private Voice: How Schauer and McAdams Exaggerate a State's Ability to Monopolize Violence and Expression. Janice Nadler. Expressive Law, Social Norms, and Social Groups. Richard H. McAdams. Reply to Commentators. Frederick Schauer. Preferences for Law? Mila Versteeg and Tom Ginsburg. Measuring the Rule of Law: A Comparison of Indicators. Ashley T. Rubin. The Consequences of Prisoners’ Micro-Resistance. Mary Gallagher and Yujeong Yang. Getting Schooled: Legal Mobilization as an Educative Process. Doron Dorfman. Re-Claiming Disability: Identity, Procedural Justice, and the Disability Determination Process. Review Essays Howard S. Erlanger. Review Section. Rachel E. Stern. Activist Lawyers in Post-Tiananmen China. Andrew David Edwards. The American Revolution and Christine Desan's New History of Money. Back to Top
Méthexis, Vol. 29, #1, 2017 Research Articles Laura Rosella Schluderer. Speaking and Acting the Truth: The Ethics of Heraclitus. Michael Schramm. Der Homo-Mensura-Satz des Protagoras. Refik Güremen. The Myth of Protagoras: A Naturalist Interpretation. Francesca Pentassuglio. Eschine di Sfetto: Alcune Nuove Testimonianze. Brad Berman. Why Can’t Geometers Cut Themselves on the Acutely Angled Objects of Their Proofs? Aristotle on Shape as an Impure Power. Massimo Catapano. The Two Modes of Scepticism and the Aporetic Structure of Foundationalism. Thomas Blackson. The Stoic Explanation of the Origin of Vice. Aldo Brancacci. John Moles, Historian of Ancient Philosophy. Luca Gili. Plato, Soph. 216 a3–4. Tiziano Dorandi. Usener Redivivus. Alessandro Linguiti. «È Impossibile Che L’anima Sia Corpo». Il Decimo Libro Delle Leggi di Platone come Fonte di Plotino, Enneadi IV 7 [2], 4. Pieter d’Hoine. Parmenide Neoplatonico: Intorno a un Nuovo Studio sulla Presenza di Parmenide nel Commento alla Fisica di Simplicio. Book Reviews Jonathan Lavilla de Lera. Who is Phaedrus? Keys to Plato’s Dyad Masterpiece, written by Marshall Carl Bradley. Mario Vegetti. Philosophical Themes in Galen, written by P. Adamson, R. Hansberger, J. Wilberding. Franco Trabattoni. Lives of Eminent Philosophers, edited by Tiziano Dorandi. Back to Top
Nursing Philosophy, Vol. 18, #2, 2017 Editorial Derek Sellman. Fake News, Truth and Ideology: Galileo, Censorship and Nursing. Original Articles Gavin J. Andrews. Geographical Thinking in Nursing Inquiry, Part Two: Performance, Possibility, and Non-Representational Theory. Diane Tapp and Mireille Lavoie. The Humanbecoming Theory as a Reinterpretation of the Symbolic Interactionism: A Critique of its Specific Nature and Scientific Underpinnings. Krzysztof Pezdek and Lotar Rasiński. Between Exclusion and Emancipation: Foucault's Ethics and Disability. Peter Kevern. Spiritual Care as a Response to an Exaptation: How Evolutionary Psychology Informs the Debate. Dialogue Contributions Sam Porter. Evaluating Realist Evaluation: A Response to Pawson's Reply. Philosophers for Nursing Lynne Williams, Jo Rycroft-Malone and Christopher R. Burton. Bringing Critical Realism to Nursing Practice: Roy Bhaskar's Contribution. Postgraduate Essay Prize Winner Aimee Milliken. Subjective from the Start: A Critique of Transformative Criticism. Back to Top
Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 98, #1, 2017 Original Articles Andrew McAninch. Activity, Passivity, and Normative Avowal. Paul Silva Jr. The Composite Nature of Epistemic Justification. Per-Erik Milam. How is Self-Forgiveness Possible? Benjamin McMyler. Requesting Belief. B. J. C. Madison. Epistemic Value and the New Evil Demon. Chase B. Wrenn. Truth is not (Very) Intrinsically Valuable. Sam Baron. Back to the Unchanging Past. Back to Top
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, Vol. 57, February 2017 Original Research Articles Joshua Luczak. Talk about Toy models. Paul Tappenden. Objective Probability and the Mind-Body Relation. Jacob Pearce. The Unfolding of the Historical Style in Modern Cosmology: Emergence, Evolution, Entrenchment. David Wallace. More Problems for Newtonian Cosmology. David Merritt. Cosmology and Convention. Balázs Gyenis. Maxwell and the Normal Distribution: A Colored Story of Probability, Independence, and Tendency toward Equilibrium. Angelo Baracca, Silvio Bergia, Flavio Del Santo. The Origins of the Research on the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics (And Other Critical Activities) in Italy during the 1970s. Yemima Ben-Menahem. The PBR Theorem: Whose Side is it on? Gábor Hofer-Szabó. How Human and Nature Shake Hands: The Role of No-Conspiracy in Physical Theories. Klaas Landsman. On the Notion of Free Will in the Free Will Theorem. Matthias Egg. The Physical Salience of Non-Fundamental Local Beables. Darren Bradley. Deutsch on the Epistemic Problem in Everettian Quantum Theory. Rainer Dick. Quantum Jumps, Superpositions, and the Continuous Evolution of Quantum States. William Rehg, Kent Staley. "Agreement" in the IPCC Confidence Measure. Back to Top
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