平成24年派遣労働者実態調査について
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2012-9-14 10:00)
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薬事工業生産動態統計調査(公表予定)
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2012-9-14 10:00)
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第7回医療裁判外紛争解決(ADR)機関連絡調整会議の開催について
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2012-9-14 9:00)
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第6回社会保障審議会生活困窮者の生活支援の在り方に関する特別部会議事録
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2012-9-14 0:00)
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第7回社会保障審議会生活困窮者の生活支援の在り方に関する特別部会
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2012-9-14 0:00)
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Walter Chatton
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2012-9-13 9:04)
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[Revised entry by Rondo Keele on September 12, 2012.
Changes to: Main text]
Walter Chatton or more rarely "Catton" (c. 1290 - 1343) was an English theologian and philosopher who trained at Oxford around the same time as his famous colleague and frequent philosophical target, William of Ockham. More inclined to speculative metaphysics and less skeptical of reason than Ockham, Chatton was one of the most energetic and gifted critics of the influential brand of nominalism which arose...
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Empedocles
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2012-9-12 13:21)
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[Revised entry by Richard Parry on September 11, 2012.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
In antiquity, Empedocles (ca. 495 - 435 BCE) was characterized as active on the democratic side in the politics of his native city of Acragas in Sicily, and as a physician, as well as a philosopher and poet. His philosophical and scientific theories are mentioned and discussed in several dialogues of Plato, and they figure prominently in Aristotle's writings on physics and biology and, as a result, also...
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Constitutionalism
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2012-9-12 12:40)
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[Revised entry by Wil Waluchow on September 11, 2012.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html]
Constitutionalism is the idea, often associated with the political theories of John Locke and the founders of the American republic, that government can and should be legally limited in its powers, and that its authority or legitimacy depends on its observing these limitations. This idea brings with it a host of vexing questions of interest not only to legal scholars, but to anyone keen to explore the legal and...
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Antoine Le Grand
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2012-9-11 10:12)
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[Revised entry by Patricia Easton on September 10, 2012.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
Antoine Le Grand (1629 - 1699) was a philosopher and catholic theologian who played an important role in propagating the Cartesian philosophy in England during the latter half of the seventeenth century. He was born in Douai, (at the time under rule by the Spanish Hapsburgs), and early in life was associated with an English community of Franciscans who had a college there. Le Grand became a Franciscan Recollect friar prior to...
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Judah Abrabanel
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2012-9-11 7:28)
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[Revised entry by Aaron Hughes on September 10, 2012.
Changes to: Bibliography]
Judah Abrabanel (ca. 1465 - after 1521), also known as Leone Ebreo, is an important transitional figure in the history of Jewish philosophy. Common to any transitional figure, however, is the problem of contextualization. In the case of Judah Abrabanel, do we regard him as the last of the medieval Jewish philosophers or the first of the early modern ones? His work, for example, is certainly in...
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