School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 11
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Sumptuary Law
    Kovesi, C (Routledge, 2022-05)
    Sumptuary laws, designed to regulate a wide range of expenditure and ritual practices, became a characteristic feature of European societies in the late Middle Ages. These laws reflect the impact of a burgeoning consuming class whose ability to consume beyond the necessities of life was a relatively new phenomenon. These new consumers were seen to pose a variety of social, economic, political and moral dilemmas to the ruling classes. Though most laws targeted clothing, and that of women in particular, any analysis of sumptuary law needs to attend to the differing roles of clothing in the lives of women and men. Sumptuary laws were often finely calibrated to individual social situations and are a rich source of information about the consuming habits of late medieval Europe.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Dictator
    Vervaet, F ; Hornblower, S ; Spawforth, A ; Eidinow, E (Oxford University Press, 2022-01-28)
    Soon after the establishment of the Republic (traditionally dated to 509 BCE), an aristocratic democracy marked by collegial rule and limitation of tenure, the Romans introduced the office of dictator, initially to create an additional and ranking military command whenever required. Appointed by the chief annual magistrate by decree of the Senate, the dictator had no equal colleague, the main constraints on his authority being his official commission as defined by the Senate and the obligation to abdicate promptly following the completion of this specific task. From 363 to 301 especially, the dictatorship became a frequent fixture of the republican machinery of state, thereafter occurring only infrequently until the Second Punic War, which saw another spate of appointments. Rather than being created to deal with external or internal emergencies, dictators were mostly appointed to execute one or more routine tasks normally conducted by consuls or praetors, ranging from military commands to obscure religious rituals, as per the exigencies of the moment. Significantly, the office played an important and constructive role in the resolution of the so-called struggle of the orders and the gradual shaping of the republican polity. Throughout the entire early and middle republican period, the Senate retained close control over the dictator and his activities. After the Second Punic War, as Roman power rapidly expanded across the Mediterranean and prorogation of consular and praetorian power became the norm, the office lapsed completely. The age of civil war (88-30 BCE) saw first Sulla and next Caesar revive the dictatorship, albeit by means of constitutive laws and in vastly enhanced and autocratic form. Irrevocably tarnished by the actions of these strongmen, Augustus consistently refused to accept the dictatorship, causing it to vanish with the Republic it was originally devised to serve.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Hans Eysenck
    Buchanan, R ; Brunstein, A (Oxford University Press, 2020)

    Hans Jurgen Eysenck (b. 1916–d. 1997) was a towering figure in personality psychology, notable for the audacity of his theorizing, the expansive scope of his empirical research, and the often-controversial views he expressed. Eysenck was the most significant figure in the history of British psychology by almost any measure. He is also likely to remain so because historical circumstances ensured he had an impact on a developing discipline that can never be duplicated. Eysenck was born in Berlin in 1916 at the height of the Great War, the only child of German film and stage performers Ruth Werner (aka Helga Molander) and Eduard Eysenck. The toxic prewar political climate in Germany saw him emigrate to England in 1934 soon after finishing secondary school. Almost by accident, Eysenck took up psychology at University College, London, and was mentored by Cyril Burt. He was almost interred as an enemy alien during the early stages of the war but was subsequently recruited by Aubrey Lewis in 1942 to lead the psychology program at Mill Hill Emergency Hospital – which functioned as the relocated Maudsley Hospital at the time. After the war, Lewis founded the Institute of Psychiatry, adjacent and affiliated with the Maudsley in south London. By 1955, Eysenck was made full professor within an independent psychology department at the institute and remained there for the rest of his career. Eysenck took the individual differences approach pioneered by Spearman and Burt to a new level. He developed a distinctively programmic approach that began with his derivation of three key dimensions of personality: neuroticism, extraversion, and psychoticism. Much of Eysenck’s later research explored how these dimensional differences played out across a wide variety of areas. Eysenck also attempted to give his personality dimensions a neurobiological basis. Eysenck’s research legacy was assured by his huge output—at least eighty-five books and more than a thousand scientific papers, many highly cited. He also laid the blueprint for the development of clinical psychology in Britain, founded several journals and professional associations, and trained many students. Yet Eysenck was full of contradictions. He advocated a no-nonsense, empirical rigor, but his critics came to distrust the numbers he presented. He consistently lambasted psychoanalysis at the height of its mainstream influence but took fringe areas such as astrology, ESP, and parapsychology seriously. For much of his career, this quiet, introverted man was the public face of the discipline in Britain. Many of his books were geared to popular audiences. However, Eysenck’s late career interventions in the race and IQ debate and the smoking and health issue would cement his polarizing reputation as a fearless, if politically incorrect, controversialist.

  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Israel: Museums
    Tully, C ; Smith, C (Springer New York, 2014)
    With over 230 museums, the State of Israel has the most museums per capita in the world. These range in size and sophistication from small house museums to those representing state-of-the-art contemporary museum design, such as the Yad Vashem Holocaust History Museum. Israel’s diverse assortment of museums covers time periods spanning prehistory to the present day. Not all museums are concerned with archaeology and many focus on other topics as varied as military history, grain, computers, sport, clandestine immigration, founding figures, visual art, folklore, and transport.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Museums of Israel
    Tully, C ; Smith, C (Springer, 2017)
    Archaeology the study of human cultures through the analysis and interpretation of artefacts and material remains continues to captivate and engage people on a local and global level. Internationally celebrated heritage sites such as the pyramids both Egyptian and Mayan Lascaux caves, and the statues of Easter Island provide insights into our ancestors and their actions and motivation.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    British Museum
    Tully, C ; Smith, C (Springer, 2017)
    Situated in Great Russell Street, London, the British Museum (http://www.britishmuseum.org/) was created by an Act of Parliament in 1753 and opened to the public in 1759. Governed by a board of 25 trustees in accordance with the British Museum Act of 1963 and the Museums and Galleries Act of 1992, the museum is a nondepartmental public body, sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. The museum’s stated purpose is “to hold for the benefit and education of humanity a collection representative of world cultures and to ensure that the collection is housed in safety, conserved, curated, researched and exhibited” (British Museumn.d.).
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Two-Dimensional Semantics
    Schroeter, L ; Zalta, EN (Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, 2017)
    Two-dimensional (2D) semantics is a formal framework that is used to characterize the meaning of certain linguistic expressions and the entailment relations among sentences containing them. The 2D framework has also been applied to thought contents. This entry explains the 2D formalism and the philosophical theses the formalism has been used to support. The 2017 revisions to the entry involve significant new material (about 6,000 words) reflecting current debates over the philosophical applications of the 2D framework.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Ancient Doxography
    RUNIA, D (Oxford University Press, 2016)
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Paphos
    HITCHCOCK, L (Routledge, 2016)
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Cyprus
    HITCHCOCK, L (Routledge, 2016)
    Chronologically, the volume's scope extends from pre-historical antiquity in the third millennium B.C.E. through the rise of Islam in the seventh century C.E. An interdisciplinary approach draws out the common issues and elements between ...