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Certain Concepts (certain + concept)
Selected AbstractsThe life of , and ,,A tutorial review of the ubiquitous use of these symbols in Zeeman and magnetic-resonance spectroscopyCONCEPTS IN MAGNETIC RESONANCE, Issue 2 2008John Ashley Weil Abstract Certain concepts and symbolism as applied to electromagnetic radiation and especially the concept of photons are discussed and (perhaps) clarified. A useful summary of the properties of photons is provided, and the concept of polarization is discussed. In particular, the common usage in Zeeman and magnetic-resonance (EPR and NMR) spectroscopy of the symbols , and , is examined herein, both from the historical viewpoint and the scientific standpoint, and certain errors and fallacies are brought to attention. Brief reference to relevant recent work published on dynamic nuclear polarization and on pulse EPR is included. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Concepts Magn Reson Part A 32A: 134,142, 2008. [source] Migration and other Modes of Transnationalism: Towards Conceptual Cross-FertilizationINTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW, Issue 3 2003Steven Vertovec Sociological notions such as social network, social capital and embeddedness have proven valuable when adopted into a wide variety of social scientific fields. This has certainly been the case in the sociology of migration. Similarly, certain concepts drawn from studies on different modes of transnationalism - for instance, research and theory concerning the global activities of social movements and business networks - might serve as useful tools for understanding transnational social forms and practices among migrant groups. [source] Regulating hospital use: length of stay, beds and whiteboardsNURSING INQUIRY, Issue 1 2005Marie Heartfield This paper presents part of a larger study of contemporary nursing practice and the rationalisation of hospital length of stay. Informed by Michel Foucault's work on governmentality, length of hospital stay and the re-engineering of surgical services are examined, not in terms of numerical representations of hospital use, but as part of social and political processes through which certain concepts are made susceptible to measurement and practices are organised. Using data generated through fieldwork in a hospital surgical division this analysis offers understandings of how social practices around length of hospital stay are translated and how they pattern contemporary hospital nursing practice. Nursing practice is explored through the reconstitution of hospital beds and the demands of local administration of hospital length of stay. [source] Developing the Moral Person: The Concepts of Human, Godmanhood, and Feelings in Some Russian Articulations of MoralityANTHROPOLOGY OF CONSCIOUSNESS, Issue 1 20092Article first published online: 23 MAR 200, JARRETT ZIGON ABSTRACT Based on ethnographic research done in Moscow, Russia, this article describes how some Muscovites articulate their moral consciousness, that is, the ways in which persons articulate to themselves and others how they conceptualize morality. While it may be possible, and indeed is often the case, that these concepts influence how people act and help guide individuals toward moral behavior, what is more important for our purposes is that these concepts provide a way for persons to give meaning, both for themselves and for others, to their moral worlds and experience. Thus, what I hope to do in this article is describe just one of the conceptual frameworks within which moral experience is rendered meaningful for my Muscovite interlocutors. In doing so, I will consider how certain concepts of the moral person that have their origins in turn of the century Russian religious philosophy, Russian Orthodox Christianity, and Soviet ideology have all come together to make up various aspects of this moral consciousness. [source] |