Examples of Metaphysical Club in the following topics:
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Pragmatism
- Its direction was determined by The Metaphysical Club members Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, and Chauncey Wright, as well as John Dewey and George Herbert Mead.
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The Song Dynasty
- Citizens gathered to view and trade precious artworks, the populace intermingled at public festivals and private clubs, and cities had lively entertainment quarters.
- However, unlike the Buddhists and Taoists, who saw metaphysics as a catalyst for spiritual development, religious enlightenment, and immortality, the Neo-Confucianists used metaphysics as a guide for developing a rationalist ethical philosophy.
- Mahayana Buddhism influenced Fan Zhongyan and Wang Anshi through its concept of ethical universalism, while Buddhist metaphysics had a deep impact upon the pre-Neo-Confucian doctrine of Cheng Yi.
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Supply of Blood and Nerves to Bone
- Near the epiphysis, they anastomose with the metaphyseal and epiphyseal arteries.
- Epiphyseal and metaphyseal arteries enter on both sides of the growth cartilage, with anastamoses between them being few or absent.
- Young periosteum is more vascular, has more metaphyseal branches, and its vessels communicate more freely with those of the shaft than adult periosteum .
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Venn Diagrams (optional)
- Five percent of the students work part time and belong to a club.
- Let C = student belongs to a club and PT = student works part time.
- The probability that the student belongs to a club.
- The probability that the student belongs to a club AND works part time.
- The probability that the student belongs to a club OR works part time.
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The Working Woman
- Indignant that she and other women were denied admittance to a banquet honoring Charles Dickens in 1868 at the all-male New York Press Club simply because they were women, she resolved to organize a club for women only.
- Croly proposed a conference in New York that brought together delegates from 61 women's clubs.
- The constitution was adopted in 1890, and the General Federation of Women's Clubs was born.
- The GFWC also counts international clubs among its members.
- Although women's clubs were founded primarily as a means of self-education and development for women, the emphasis of most local clubs gradually changed to one of community service and improvement.
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Basidiomycota: The Club Fungi
- The basidiomycota are mushroom-producing fungi with developing, club-shaped fruiting bodies called basidia on the gills under its cap.
- The fungi in the Phylum Basidiomycota are easily recognizable under a light microscope by their club-shaped fruiting bodies called basidia (singular, basidium), which are the swollen terminal cell of a hypha.
- The club-shaped basidium carries spores called basidiospores.
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Ferns and Other Seedless Vascular Plants
- Ferns, club mosses, horsetails, and whisk ferns are seedless vascular plants that reproduce with spores and are found in moist environments.
- Modern-day seedless tracheophytes include club mosses, horsetails, ferns, and whisk ferns.
- The club mosses, or phylum Lycopodiophyta, are the earliest group of seedless vascular plants.
- In club mosses, the sporophyte gives rise to sporophylls arranged in strobili, cone-like structures that give the class its name .
- In the club mosses such as Lycopodium clavatum, sporangia are arranged in clusters called strobili.
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Religious Symbols
- There are many benefits to such a course of inquiry, but in general the comparative study of religion yields a deeper understanding of the fundamental philosophical concerns of religion, including ethics, metaphysics and the nature and form of salvation.
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Environmental Protests
- Organizations like The Sierra Club and Greenpeace, as well as the book "Silent Spring" by Rachel Carson, contributed to the growth of the environmental movement during this time period.
- The Sierra Club was founded on May 28, 1892, in San Francisco, California, by the conservationist and preservationist John Muir, who became its first president.
- During the 1800s, the Sierra Club worked to create national parks, such as Yosemite and Yellowstone National Parks.
- The Sierra Club's most publicized crusade of the 1960s was the effort to stop the Bureau of Reclamation from building two dams that would flood portions of the Grand Canyon.
- President Theodore Roosevelt and nature preservationist John Muir, founder of the Sierra Club, on Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park.
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Introduction
- Hull House also held concerts that were free to everyone, offered free lectures on current issues, and operated clubs for both children and adults.
- Its facilities included a night school for adults, kindergarten classes, clubs for older children, a public kitchen, an art gallery, a coffeehouse, a gymnasium, a girls club, a swimming pool, a bathhouse, a book bindery, a music school, a drama group, a library, and labor-related divisions.