Search results for "Digression"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

“A certain amount of ‘recantation’”: On the origins of Frank H. Knight’s antipositivism

2016

The aim of this paper is to investigate in some detail the origins of Knight’s antipositism and to assess the main influences that brought him to a change in methodological perspective after 1921. As importantly, what follows is also an attempt to increase our general understanding of the methodological debates taking place during the early decades of the last century and to shed new light on the inherently pluralistic character of US interwar economics. This paper is organized as follows: the first section outlines Knight’s methodological views as presented in his early works; the second section discusses Knight’s “recantation” and his attack on behavioristic social science; the third sect…

Economics and EconometricsHistoryAmerican institutionalism060106 history of social sciencesKnight Frank; Economic methodology; Economics and physics; American institutionalismjel:B21jel:B40jel:B410502 economics and businessInstitutionalismEconomics and physic0601 history and archaeologySociology050207 economicsEconomic methodologyRecantationjel:B3105 social sciencesEconomic methodologyCharacter (symbol)06 humanities and the artsKnight FrankNeoclassical economicsDigressionEpistemologySection (archaeology)AntipositivismSettore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero EconomicoKnightFrank H. Knight
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Tacitus on Titus? Visit to the Temple of Venus at Paphos

2020

This article deals with Titus? visit to the temple of Venus at Paphos in the second book of Tacitus? Historiae. I argue that apart from its other literary intentions already mentioned by scholars, this digression implicitly connects Titus not only with Aeneas but also with Julius Caesar. Titus? affair with Berenice that recalls Caesar?s affair with Cleopatra, Tacitus? allusions to Lucan?s De Bello Civili where Caesar?s visit to the tomb of Alexander the Great is described, the ?????Motiv and fortuna?s favour that characterise both Roman generals, all contribute to connect Titus with Caesar and allow the reader to view a parallel between the Flavian and the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Furthermor…

Tacitus? allusions to Lucan?s De Bello Civili where Caesar?s visit to the tomb of Alexander the Great is describedall contribute to connect Titus with Caesar and allow the reader to view a parallel between the Flavian and the Julio-Claudian dynasty. FurthermoreUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRASthe ?????Motiv and fortuna?s favour that characterise both Roman generals:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]1135-9560 8276 Studia philologica valentina 567083 2020 22 7762316 Tacitus on Titus? Visit to the Temple of Venus at Paphos TzounakasSpyridon This article deals with Titus? visit to the temple of Venus at Paphos in the second book of Tacitus? Historiae. I argue that apart from its other literary intentions already mentioned by scholarsthe particular digression allows the historian to present certain aspects of his work and his historiographic practices and to reinforce his credibility. 103 114this digression implicitly connects Titus not only with Aeneas but also with Julius Caesar. Titus? affair with Berenice that recalls Caesar?s affair with Cleopatra
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Expressing digression linguistically: Do digressive markers exist?

2009

Abstract This paper analyzes the relationship between digressions and topic shifts in the light of the Spanish marker por cierto . Against the standard explanation, which takes digression as a well-established linguistic operation, digression is regarded as a rhetorical operation, underspecified at the linguistic level. The most conspicuous trace of digression, the so-called digressive markers , cannot be distinguished from topic shifters on the basis of the instruction provided by the marker alone. Thus, both types of markers should be grouped together as a single class, that of “new relevant information markers” (NRIMs). The perceived differences between topic shifters and digressive mark…

Trace (semiology)Linguistics and LanguageArtificial IntelligenceRhetorical questionSingle classPragmaticsPsychologyRelevant informationLanguage and LinguisticsDiscourse markerDigressionLinguisticsJournal of Pragmatics
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Jane Austen ou la caricature littéraire domestique

2009

Far from the political or literary caricature in vogue in eighteenth-century England, Jane Austen created what could be called domestic caricature. Its targets are all those who feel that they possess superior wisdom or know-how, but also all the empty-headed and long-winded bores who it was a well-brought-up woman's duty to listen to patiently. This article will try to uncover what is specific in Jane Austen's caricature. Basing her work on ordinary social interaction and conversation, she exposes the shape(lessness) of speech and (mis) construction of discourses that characterise this would-be superiority. The article will also try to see how far Austen's work on caricature can be called …

[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literatureconstruction[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteraturemanipulationféminismeLangage[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literaturediscoursdigression
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