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annamariaward · 2 years
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August Jam Number 1 | Album Eyes From the moment I saw the Dangerous Album cover as a kid I was mesmerized by his eyes. Mark Ryden's art absolutely captured my imagination. I hope I get to see the original piece one day and that I managed to capture some of the og sparkle in this piece
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msclaritea · 9 months
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Wes Anderson's 'The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar' Sets Theatrical Release Date
Sure, we were absolutely delighted to learn that Wes Anderson would be making his Netflix-only debut with his upcoming short film, The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar. But, still, it was a bummer that the symmetric shooting style the filmmaker is synonymous with wouldn’t be seen on the big screen this time around. Now, fans can have their cake and eat it too as their sugar fix will be available both at home and in theaters. Prior to its premiere on the streamer on September 27, 2023, The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar will celebrate a limited theatrical release on September 20, 2023.
As they’ve done in the past with titles including Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio and Adam McKay’s Don’t Look Up, the streamer made the move to do a simultaneous drop, allowing fans to decide how they’d like to see Anderson’s latest project. Known for bringing fantastically vibrant worlds to life in his productions, with the most recent being Asteroid City, catching the filmmaker’s second dip into the world of Roald Dahl’s catalog following 2009’s stop-motion flick, Fantastic Mr. Fox won’t be one to miss.
In Dahl’s classic story, audiences follow the titular character on a seemingly mundane trip to the doctor’s office. While there, he reads about a man in India who’s found a way to see without the use of his eyes. Quickly dreaming up a scheme, Henry realizes that he could benefit greatly should he be able to harness the same particular skill set. For the next three years, the grifter immerses himself in meditation studies, finally gaining the ability to see through cards and look into the future. After putting himself through the ultimate test at a casino, he discovers that his powers have taken away the fun of gambling. In a turn of events, the gambler’s heart grows in size, and he decides to use his unusual skills for good, making plans to open an orphanage. But, realizing he’ll need a large sum of cash for the project, Henry gets in over his head with the Las Vegas mafia and soon finds himself on a global journey to escape his pursuers.
The Wes Anderson Twist
The-Wonderful-Story-of-Henry-Sugar-Roald-Dahl-Wes-Anderson-Benedict-Cumberbatch-Dev-PatelImage by Annamaria Ward
While this is the basis of Dahl’s story, Anderson will undoubtedly put his own spin on the tale. In the past, the filmmaker has touched on just about every theme under the sun, blending human experiences like grief and loneliness with a flair of whimsy. In what will be the director’s shortest feature to date, viewers can expect the aspiring guru’s journey to play out over a brief 37 minutes - perfect for a quick watch at home or in the theater.
Benedict Cumberbatch leads the cast in The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar as the titular gamblin’ man with an ensemble of familiar to the Anderson cinematic universe names (as well as some newbies) including Ralph Fiennes (The Grand Budapest Hotel), Rupert Friend (The French Dispatch), Dev Patel (The Green Knight), Ben Kingsley (Iron Man 3), and Richard Ayoade (Submarine).
As of right now, there’s no trailer for The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar yet, but you can check out a teaser for Anderson’s latest flick, Asteroid City below. The title is now streaming on Peacock.
I actually got excited there, for a minute. Asteroid City didn't do well, mainly due to its short length. I don't get this because theater ticket prices don't change and I refuse to get a Netflix account. Also given the fact this project ALSO features similar narratives from his other projects, I don't know. I just don't know.
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sketchbookjam · 6 years
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Steven eating flour on its own came as no surprise to me since Rebecca Sugar loves the Simpsons
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leafvy · 3 years
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𝐋𝐨𝐧𝐠 𝐧𝐚𝐦𝐞𝐬 𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐭
hello everyone! i am finally back with a new name list, i hope you enjoy it and find it usefull!
[ disclaimer: my sincere apologies if there are any spelling/meaning/origin mistakes in any of my name lists, i am by no means a professional in this area, i just like creating lists to help aid storytellers. i do try my best to find each name’s corresponding origin/meaning/spelling but i am a human who is prone to make the odd mistake. p.s, i take requests! ]
Female
Adalina - German derived - Noble 
Adelaide - English - Noble natured 
Adrianna - Latin - Person from Hadria 
Aishwarya - Sanskrit - Wealth, prosperity 
Alethea - Greek - Truth
Alexandria - Greek derived - Feminine form of Alexandros, defender of men
Alexandrina - Greek derived - Feminine form of Alexandros, defender of men
Alianora - Unknown - Unknown
Amaryllis - Greek - Sparkle, shine
Anastasia - Greek - Ressurection
Anastazja - Polish - Reborn 
Angelina - Greek - Messenger
Angelique - Latin - Messenger of God
Annabella - Italian - Loving
Annabelle - English - Favoured grace
Annalisa - Latin - Graced with God’s bounty
Annamaria - Italian/French/German - Bitter, grace
Anneliese - Latin - Graced with God’s bounty
Antoinetta - Latin - Praiseworthy
Antoinette - French - Priceless one
Antonella - Italian - First born
Antonia - Italian - Priceless, praiseworthy, beautiful
Antonina - Spanish - Priceless, highly esteemed
Arabella - Latin - Yielding to prayer
Araceli - Latin - Altar of heaven, heavenly homemaker
Araminta - English - Prayer, protection
Arianna - Greek/Italian - Most holy
 Ariella - Hebrew - Lion of God
Aubrianna - German - Elf
Augusta - Latin - Great, magnificent
Augustina - Latin - The exalted one
Avabella - Hebrew - My God is an oath
Avalina - English - Little bird
Avianna - Latin - Birdlike
Avrielle - Unknown - Unknown
Bathilda - Germanic/Norse - Battle
Benedetta - Latin/Spanish - Blessed
Benedicta - Latin - Blessed
Bernadetta - French - Brave Bear
Bernadette - French - Brave Bear
Busarakham - Thai - Yellow Sapphire
Cairistonia - Unknown - Unknown
Calliope - Greek - Beautifully voiced
Candelaria - Spanish - Candle
Carlotta - Italian - Free man
Carolina - Latin/French - Free man
Cassandra - Greek - The one who shines & excels over men
Cassiopeia - Greek - Unknown
Catalina - Spanish - Pure
Celestina - Spanish/Italian - Heavenly
Celestine - Latin - Heavenly
Charlotta - French/German - Manly
Charlotte - French - Free man
Chrysanthemum - Greek - Gold flower
Cleobella - Unknown - Unknown
Cleopatra - Greek - Glory of her father
Cordelia - Welsh - Jewel of the sea
Corinthia - Greek - Woman of Corinth 
Cressida - Greek - Gold 
Daniella - Latin/Hebrew - God is my judge 
Dayanara - Spanish - Forceful 
Debbonaire - French - Good natured 
Deianira - Greek - Man destroyer 
Delphina - Greek - Woman from Delphi 
Demetria - Greek - Follower of Demeter 
Desdemona - Greek - Misery, unlucky 
Dolores - Latin - Sorrowful 
Dominica - French/Latin - Lord
Dominique - French/Latin - Lord
Donatella - Italian - Gift of God
Dulcinea - Spanish - Sweetness
Ekaterina - Russian/Bulgarian - Pure
Eleanora - Greek - Sun ray
Elenora - Greek - Sun ray
Elisabet - Scandinavian - Pledged to God
Elisabetta - Italian - Pledged to God
Elizabella - Spanish - God is my oath
Elizabeth - Hebrew - My God is an oath
Elizaveta - Russian - God is my oath
Elladora - Greek - A gift sent from heaven, one who is filled with light
Emmanuella - Hebrew - God is with us
Emmeline - French/German - Work
Esmerelda - Spanish - Emerald
Esperanza - Spanish - Hope
Estefania - Spanish/Greek - Crown, garland
Eulalia - Greek - Well-spoken
Evalina - Latin - Desired
Evangelina - Latin - Gospel
Evangeline - Latin - Gospel
Evelyna - Unknown - Unknown
Fatehmeh - Arabic - Captivating, woman who abstains
Federica - Italian - Peaceful ruler
Felicity - Latin - Happiness
Fernanda - Portuguese/Spanish/Italian - Bold voyager
Fiorella - Italian - Little flower
Francesca - Italian - From France
Frederica - German/English - Peaceful ruler
Gabriella - Spanish/Italian - God is my strength
Galatea - Greek - She who is milk-white
Galilea - Italian/Hebrew - Born in Galilee
Gayatari - Sanskrit - Goddess
Geneva - French - Juniper tree
Genevieve - Celtic/French/German - White wave
Georgetta - French/Greek/Latin - Farmer
Georgianna - Catalan/English/Greek/Romanian - Farmer
Georgina - Greek - Farmer
Giovanetta - Unknown - Unknown
Giullietta - Italian/Latin - Youthful
Gwendolyn - Welsh - White ring
Helena - Greek - Shining light
Henrietta - French/English - Estate ruler
Hydrangea - Greek/Latin - Water vessel
Ingeborg - Norse - Stronghold, protection
Isabella - Italian - God is my abundance
Isabellina - Portuguese - My god is a vow
Isadora - Greek - Gift of Isis
Itzayana - Mayan - Gift of God
Jacqueline - French - Supplanter
Jaganmata - Hindu - Mother of the world
Jasmina - French/Persian - God’s gift
Jessamina - Persian - Gift of God
Jessamine - Persian - Gift of God
Josephina - Hebrew - Jehovah increases
Julianna - Latin - Youthful
Julietta - Italian/Latin - Youthful
Katerina - Greek - Pure
Katherine - Greek - Pure
Kathleen - Irish/Greek - Pure
Laurentia - Latin - From Laurentium
Leocadia - Spanish - Splendid brightness
Leonora - Greek - Compassion, light
Liliana - Spanish/Italian - Lily, flower
Liliosa - Spanish - Lily, flower
Louisiana - German - Famous warrior
Luciana - Latin - Light
Lucinda - Latin - Light
Maddelena - Italian - Woman from Magdala
Magdalena - Greek - Woman from Magdala
Magnolia - Latin - Magnol’s flower
Marcelina - Latin - Dedicated to Mars
Marceline - Latin - Dedicated to Mars
Margaery - French - Pearl
Margaretha - Greek/Latin - Pearl, margarita
Marguerita - Greek - Pearl
Marguerite - French - Pearl
Mariana - Spanish - Grace, drop of the sea
Mariella - Latin/Dutch - Star of the sea
Marielle - Latin/Dutch - Star of the sea
Melania - Greek - Black, dark
Miabella - Italian - Beauty
Millicent - German - Strong in work
Mirabella - Latin - Wondrous beauty
Momilani - Hawaiian - Pearl of heaven
Montserrat - Latin - Jagged mountain
Morganna - Welsh - Sea-born
Nicoletta - Greek - People of victory
Nicolina - Greek - People of victory
Octavia - Latin - Eighth
Olivia - Latin - Olive tree
Olympia - Greek - From Mount Olympus
Onaiwah - Native American - Awake
Ophelia - Greek - Help
Penelope - Greek - Weaver
Persephone - Greek - Bringer of destruction
Petronella - Latin/Greek - Stone, rock
Petronilla - Italian/Latin - Stone, rock
Philomena - Greek - Friend of strength
Priscilla - Latin - Ancient
Raffaella - French - God has healed
Raphaela - Hebrew - God has healed
Rosabelle - Latin - Beautiful rose
Rosalina - German - Gentle horse
Samantha - Hebrew - Told by God
Santana - Spanish - Holy
Saphhira - Greek - Sapphire
Seraphina - Hebrew - Burning ones
Serenity - Latin - Peaceful
Shoshana - Hebrew - Lily, rose
Sophronia - Greek - Wise
Stellamaris - Latin - Star of the sea
Tatiana - Russian - Fairy Queen
Temperance - English - Moderation
Theodora - Greek - Gift of God
Ululani - Hawaiian - Heavenly inspiration
Valencia - Latin - Strong, healthy
Valentina - Latin - Strong, healthy
Vasilisa - Russian - Queen, Empress
Venezia - Italian - From Venice
Veronica - Latin - She who brings victory
Victoria - Latin - Victory
Violetta - Italian - Purple
Virginia - Latin - Virginal, pure
Vivienne - French - Life
Waleria - Polish - Healthy, strong
Wilhelmina - Dutch/German - Will, desire, helmet, protection
Williamina - German - Protection, resolute
Xanthippe - Greek - Yellow Horse
Yaroslava - Slavic - Fierce, glorious
Yevgeniya - Russian - Well born
Zenobia - Greek - Life of Zeus
Male
Aballach - Arthurian - Father of Modron
Abraham - Hebrew - Father of multitudes
Acacius - Greek - Thorny
Alessandro - Italian - Defender of mankind
Alexander - Latin - To ward off, defend & protect
Alexandros - Greek - Defender, protector of man
Algernon - Norman-French - Moustached man
Alistair - Scottish - Defending men
Alphonsus - Spanish/Italian - Noble & ready
Ambrose - Greek/Latin - Immortal
Ambrosius - Greek/Latin - Divine, immortal
Anderson - Greek - Son of Andrew
Antonio - Spanish/Italian - Priceless one
Archibald - Germanic - Bold, genuine
Augustus - Latin - Majestic, venerable
Aurelius - Latin - Golden
Balthasar - Greek - Bal protects the King
Barnaby - English - Young warrior
Bartholomew - Aramaic - Son of Talmai
Beauchamp - English/French - Beautiful field
Beauregard - French - Beautiful gaze
Beckett - English - Beehive
Belvidere - Italian - Beautiful to see
Benedict - Latin - Blessed
Benjamin - Hebrew - Son of the right hand
Broderick - Welsh/Irish/Norse - Son of Rhydderch, descendent of Bruadar, Ginger brother
Callahan - Irish - Descendent of Ceallachán
Caspian - Arabic - Treasure of the sea
Cassander - Spanish/Greek - Brother of heroes
Channing - English/French - Young wolf, church offical
Christian - English - Follower of Christ
Christopher - English/Greek - Bearing Christ
Cillian - Irish - War, strife, church
Cleveland - English - Cliff land
Clifford - English - Lives near the cliff
Constantine - Latin/Greek - Steadfast, constant
Constantino - Latin/Greek - Steadfast, constant
Cornelius - Latin - Horn
Dartagnan - French - From Artagnan
Dashiell - French/Scottish - Heaven, sky
Douglas - Scottish - Dark water
Elmwood - English - Forest of Elm trees
Elwood - English - Forest of Elder trees
Emerson - German - Son of Emery
Emiliano - Italian - Rival
Emmanuel - Hebrew - God is with us
Evander - Greek/Scottish - Strong man, bow warrior
Finnegan - Irish - Son of fair haired
Fiorello - Italian - Little flower
Fitzwilliam - English - Son of William
Francesco - Latin/Spanish - French man, free man
Frederick - German - Peaceful ruler
Gabriel - Hebrew - God is my strength
Grayson - English - Grey haired one
Gregory - Latin - Gregarious
Guillermo - Spanish - Resolute protector
Harrison - English - Son of Harry
Heathcliffe - English - Cliff near a heath
Henderson - Scottish - Son of Henry
Holden - English - Hollow in the valley
Humphrey - French/English - Peaceful warrior, bear cub
Hyperion - Greek - The high one
Ignatius - Latin/Etruscan - Fiery one
Jackson - English - Son of Jack
Jameson - English - Son of James
Jefferson - English - Son of Jeffrey
Jeremiah - Hebrew - Yhwh will raise
Jonathon - Hebrew - Son of Jehovah
Joshua - Hebrew - Yhwh is salvation
Kenderick - Scottish/English - Royal ruler, champion
Lancaster - English - Habitational name
Lawrence - Latin - From Laurentium
Leander - Greek - Lion man
Leonardo - Italian/Spanish/Portuguese - Strong as a Lion
Leopold - Germanic - Brave people
Lorenzo - Italian/Spanish - From Laurentium
Lysander - Greek - Liberator
Madigan - Irish - Little dog
Malachi - Hebrew - Messenger of God
Marcellus - French - Young warrior
Marmaduke - Irish/Gaelic - Follower of Maedoc, leader of the seas
Maverick - American - Independent
Maximilianus - Latin - Greatest
Maximillian - Latin - Greatest
Montgomery - French - Gomeric’s hill
Mordecai - Hebrew - Little man
Morrison - English/Scottish - Son of Morris
Muhammad - Arabic - Praised, commendable
Napoleon - Greek - Lion of the new city
Nathaniel - Greek/Hebrew - God has given
Nicholas - Greek - Victory of the people
Nicholson - English/Greek - Son of Nicholas
Octavian - Latin - Eighth
Oswald - Anglo-Saxon - Divine power, ruler
Ozymandias - Greek - Tyrant, dictator
Percival - French - Pierce the vale
Peregrine - Latin - One from abroad
Phineas - Hebrew - Oracle
Randolph - English/German - Chief-Wolf
Reginald - Latin - King
Remington - English - Place on a riverbank
Roderick - Germanic - Famous ruler
Salvatore - Italian - Savior
Santiago - Spanish/Latin - Saint James
Sebastian - Latin - Venerable
Simeon - Hebrew - To hear, to be heard
Solomon - Hebrew - Man of peace
Sullivan - Irish - Black eyed one
Sylvester - Latin - Wooded, wild
Tennyson - English - Son of Dennis
Thaddeus - Aramaic - Courageous heart
Theodore - Greek - God given
Tiberius - Latin - Of the Tiber
Tobias - Hebrew/Greek - God is good
Tristram - Welsh - Noise
Ulysses - Greek - Wrathful, hater
Valentino - Latin - Strong
Vincenzo - Italian - To conquer
Wallace - Scottish/English - Foreigner
Wellington - English - Place name
Whittaker - English - White field
William - Germanic - Strong-willed warrior
Willoughby - English - Willow farm
Xerxes - Persian - Hero among heroes
Zacchaeus - Hebrew/Greek - Pure, innocent
Zachariah - Persian/Hebrew - God remembers
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dankr-cannabis · 3 years
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More To Be Done To Address Cannabis Amnesty
More To Be Done To Address Cannabis Amnesty
Article by Andrew Ward, StratCann For countless lives impacted by Canada and America’s drug wars, legalization means little if they don’t receive some form of restorative justice. In Canada, lawmakers continue to say that automatic expungement is impossible. In the U.S., federal prohibition continues to limit progress. In 2020, Annamaria Enenajor, director of the Campaign for Cannabis Amnesty,…
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tannertoctoo-blog · 7 years
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April 05, 2017
Artificial Intelligence and Law, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 European Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Feminist Philosophy Quarterly, Vol. 3, #1, 2017 Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 141, #1, 2017 Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 141, #2, 2017 Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 125, #2, 2017 Linguistics and Philosophy, Vol. 40, #2, 2017 Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 94, #2, 2017 Science and Engineering Ethics, Vol. 23, #2, 2017 Social Epistemology, Vol. 31, #2, 2017
Artificial Intelligence and Law, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Special Issue: Artificial Intelligence for Justice; Issue Editors: Floris Bex, Henry Prakken, Tom van Engers, Bart Verheij Editorial Floris Bex, Henry Prakken, Tom van Engers, Bart Verheij. Introduction to the special issue on Artificial Intelligence for Justice (AI4J). Original Papers L. Karl Branting. Data-Centric and Logic-Based Models for Automated Legal Problem Solving. Trevor Bench-Capon, Sanjay Modgil. Norms and Value Based Reasoning: Justifying Compliance and Violation. Marc van Opijnen, Cristiana Santos. On the Concept of Relevance in Legal Information Retrieval. Giovanni Sileno, Alexander Boer, Tom van Engers. Reading Agendas between the Lines, an Exercise. Olga Shulayeva, Advaith Siddharthan, Adam Wyner. Recognizing Cited Facts and Principles in Legal Judgements. Bart Verheij. Proof with and without Probabilities. Back to Top
European Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Original Articles Alex Worsnip. Cryptonormative Judgments. Michael Kremer. A Capacity to Get Things Right: Gilbert Ryle on Knowledge. David Horst. Enkratic Agency. Solveig Aasen. Object-Dependent Thought Without Illusion. Martin Sticker. Kant's Criticism of Common Moral Rational Cognition. Sharon Krishek. Kierkegaard on Impartiality and Love. Aaron Ridley. Nietzsche, Nature, Nurture. Martin Hartmann. A Comedy We Believe In: A Further Look at Sartre's Theory of Emotions. Book Reviews Errol Lord. Action, Knowledge, and Will, by John Hyman. Amber L. Griffioen. Evidence and Religious Belief, Edited by Kelly James Clark and Raymond J. VanArragon. Daniel Brigham. Propositional Content, by Peter Hanks. Jeremy Forster. Nietzsche on Mind and Nature, edited by Manuel Dries and P. J. E. Kail. Simon Blackburn. From Empiricism to Expressivism, by Robert Brandom. Joshua Foa Dienstag. Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860–1900, by Frederick C. Beiser. Back to Top
Feminist Philosophy Quarterly, Vol. 3, #1, 2017 Serene J. Khader. Transnational Feminisms, Nonideal Theory, and “Other” Women’s Power. Kate M. Phelan. Is Feminism Yet a Theory of the Kind That Marxism Is?  Brady T. Heiner. Feminism and the Carceral State: Gender-Responsive Justice, Community Accountability, and the Epistemology of Antiviolence. Amy R. Baehr. A Capacious Account of Liberal Feminism. Back to Top
Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 141, #1, 2017 Original Papers Alessandra Capezio, Lu Wang, Simon L. D. Restubog. To Flatter or To Assert? Gendered Reactions to Machiavellian Leaders. Milton Sousa, Dirk van Dierendonck. Servant Leadership and the Effect of the Interaction Between Humility, Action, and Hierarchical Power on Follower Engagement. Olivier Fournout. The Hero-Leader Matrix in Business and Cinema. Dongseop Lee, Yongduk Choi, Subin Youn, Jae Uk Chun. Ethical Leadership and Employee Moral Voice: The Mediating Role of Moral Efficacy and the Moderating Role of Leader–Follower Value Congruence. Joanne Lyubovnikova, Alison Legood, Nicola Turner. How Authentic Leadership Influences Team Performance: The Mediating Role of Team Reflexivity. Meena Andiappan, Lucas Dufour. A Difficult Burden to Bear: The Managerial Process of Dissonance Resolution in the Face of Mandated Harm-Doing. Chenwei Li, Keke Wu, Diane E. Johnson, James Avey. Going Against the Grain Works: An Attributional Perspective of Perceived Ethical Leadership. Charlotte Cloutier, Ann Langley. Negotiating the Moral Aspects of Purpose in Single and Cross-Sectoral Collaborations. Jaydeep Balakrishnan, Ayesha Malhotra, Loren Falkenberg. Multi-Level Corporate Responsibility: A Comparison of Gandhi’s Trusteeship with Stakeholder and Stewardship Frameworks. Shenjiang Mo, Junqi Shi. Linking Ethical Leadership to Employees’ Organizational Citizenship Behavior: Testing the Multilevel Mediation Role of Organizational Concern. Nicholas Clarke, Nomahaza Mahadi. Mutual Recognition Respect Between Leaders and Followers: Its Relationship to Follower Job Performance and Well-Being. Chiou-Shiu Lin, Pei-Chi Huang, Shyh-Jer Chen. Pseudo-transformational Leadership is in the Eyes of the Subordinates. Cornelia Beck, John Dumay, Geoffrey Frost. In Pursuit of a ‘Single Source of Truth’: from Threatened Legitimacy to Integrated Reporting. Book Review Knut Kipper. Contemplating Rainer Forst’s Justification and Critique: Toward a Critical Theory of Politics and The Right to Justification: Elements of a Constructivist Theory of Justice—Book Reviews. Acknowledgment Reviewers 2016 Back to Top
Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 141, #2, 2017 Original Papers Caroline Moraes, Nina Michaelidou. Introduction to the Special Thematic Symposium on the Ethics of Controversial Online Advertising. Ouidade Sabri. Does Viral Communication Context Increase the Harmfulness of Controversial Taboo Advertising? Selma Kadić-Maglajlić, Maja Arslanagić-Kalajdžić. Controversial Advert Perceptions in SNS Advertising: The Role of Ethical Judgement and Religious Commitment. Aleksandra Gregorič, Lars Oxelheim, Trond Randøy. Resistance to Change in the Corporate Elite: Female Directors’ Appointments onto Nordic Boards. Cathrine Seierstad, Gillian Warner-Søderholm. Increasing the Number of Women on Boards: The Role of Actors and Processes. Fara Azmat, Ruth Rentschler. Gender and Ethnic Diversity on Boards and Corporate Responsibility: The Case of the Arts Sector. Nuria Reguera-Alvarado, Pilar de Fuentes, Joaquina Laffarga. Does Board Gender Diversity Influence Financial Performance? Evidence from Spain. Anne Marie Ward, John Forker. Financial Management Effectiveness and Board Gender Diversity in Member-Governed, Community Financial Institutions. Alejandro Fontana, Susana Sastre-Merino, Maritza Baca. The Territorial Dimension: The Component of Business Strategy that Prevents the Generation of Social Conflicts. Wei Li, Yaping Wang, Liansheng Wu, Jason Zezhong Xiao. The Ethical Dimension of Management Ownership in China. Charles H. Cho, Jay Heon Jung, Byungjin Kwak, Jaywon Lee. Professors on the Board: Do They Contribute to Society Outside the Classroom? Ninghua Zhong, Shujing Wang, Rudai Yang. Does Corporate Governance Enhance Common Interests of Shareholders and Primary Stakeholders? Erratum Ninghua Zhong, Shujing Wang, Rudai Yang. Erratum to: Does Corporate Governance Enhance Common Interests of Shareholders and Primary Stakeholders? Back to Top
Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 125, #2, 2017 Articles Jérôme Adda, Christian Dustmann, Katrien Stevens. The Career Costs of Children. Davide Cantoni, Yuyu Chen, David Y. Yang, Noam Yuchtman, Y. Jane Zhang. Curriculum and Ideology. Arnaud Chevalier, Olivier Marie. Economic Uncertainty, Parental Selection, and Children’s Educational Outcomes. Annamaria Lusardi, Pierre-Carl Michaud, Olivia S. Mitchell. Optimal Financial Knowledge and Wealth Inequality. Shanker Satyanath, Nico Voigtländer, Hans-Joachim Voth. Bowling for Fascism: Social Capital and the Rise of the Nazi Party. Manisha Shah, Bryce Millett Steinberg. Drought of Opportunities: Contemporaneous and Long-Term Impacts of Rainfall Shocks on Human Capital. Alex Solis. Credit Access and College Enrollment. JPE Submissions Back to Top
Linguistics and Philosophy, Vol. 40, #2, 2017 Original Research Miguel Hoeltje. Genetics and Ways of Being Normal. Glyn Morrill. Grammar Logicised: Relativisation. Gregory Scontras. A New Kind of Degree. Back to Top
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 94, #2, 2017                Articles Michael Cholbi. Grief's Rationality, Backward and Forward. Gunnar Björnsson and Kendy Hess. Corporate Crocodile Tears? On the Reactive Attitudes of Corporate Agents. Anik Waldow. Activating the Mind: Descartes' Dreams and the Awakening of the Human Animal Machine. Sophie Archer. Defending Exclusivity. Benjamin Anders Levinstein. Permissive Rationality and Sensitivity. Shen-yi Liao and Aaron Meskin. Aesthetic Adjectives: Experimental Semantics and Context-Sensitivity. Nina Emery. The Metaphysical Consequences of Counterfactual Skepticism. Symposium Gurpreet Rattan. Are Propositions Mere Measures Of Mind? Robert J. Matthews. The Elusive Case for Relationalism about the Attitudes: Reply to Rattan. Book Symposium: Ontology and the Ambitions of Metaphysics Thomas Hofweber. Précis of Ontology and the Ambitions of Metaphysics. Karen Bennett. Language, Ontology, and Metaphysics. AgustÍn Rayo. Hofweber's Philosophy of Mathematics. Thomas Sattig. Metaphysical Ambitions in the Ontology of Objects. Thomas Hofweber. Replies to Bennett, Rayo, and Sattig. Recent Publications Back to Top
Science and Engineering Ethics, Vol. 23, #2, 2017 Review Paper Yoann Guntzburger, Thierry C. Pauchant. Ethical Risk Management Education in Engineering: A Systematic Review. Original Papers Raheleh Heidari, David Martin Shaw, Bernice Simone Elger. CRISPR and the Rebirth of Synthetic Biology. Angela Cirigliano, Orlando Cenciarelli, Andrea Malizia. Biological Dual-Use Research and Synthetic Biology of Yeast. Milenko Rakic, Isabelle Wienand, David Shaw, Rebecca Nast. Autonomy and Fear of Synthetic Biology: How Can Patients’ Autonomy Be Enhanced in the Field of Synthetic Biology? A Qualitative Study with Stable Patients. Keith W. Miller, Marty J. Wolf, Frances Grodzinsky. This “Ethical Trap” Is for Roboticists, Not Robots: On the Issue of Artificial Agent Ethical Decision-Making. Hutan Ashrafian. Can Artificial Intelligences Suffer from Mental Illness? A Philosophical Matter to Consider. Bjørn Hofmann. Toward a Method for Exposing and Elucidating Ethical Issues with Human Cognitive Enhancement Technologies. Richard Heersmink. Distributed Cognition and Distributed Morality: Agency, Artifacts and Systems. Corinne Cath, Luciano Floridi. The Design of the Internet’s Architecture by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and Human Rights. Heidi Furey. Aristotle and Autism: Reconsidering a Radical Shift to Virtue Ethics in Engineering. Karim Bschir. Risk, Uncertainty and Precaution in Science: The Threshold of the Toxicological Concern Approach in Food Toxicology. Simona Hašková. Holistic Assessment and Ethical Disputation on a New Trend in Solid Biofuels. Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva, Judit Dobránszki. Notices and Policies for Retractions, Expressions of Concern, Errata and Corrigenda: Their Importance, Content, and Context. Troy E. Hall, Jesse Engebretson, Michael O’Rourke. The Need for Social Ethics in Interdisciplinary Environmental Science Graduate Programs: Results from a Nation-Wide Survey in the United States. Ryan C. Campbell, Denise Wilson. Engineers’ Responsibilities for Global Electronic Waste: Exploring Engineering Student Writing Through a Care Ethics Lens. Commentary Barbara K. Redman. Commentary: Legacy of the Commission on Research Integrity. Erratum Troy E. Hall, Jesse Engebretson, Michael O’Rourke. Erratum to: The Need for Social Ethics in Interdisciplinary Environmental Science Graduate Programs: Results from a Nation-Wide Survey in the United States. Letters Shahryar Sorooshian. Scholarly Black Market. Govindasamy Agoramoorthy. Multiple First Authors as Equal Contributors: Is It Ethical? Hossein Yahaghi, Shahryar Sorooshian, Javad Yahaghi. Unethical Postgraduate Supervision. Paolo Gonthier, Ivan Visentin, Danila Valentino. The Legitimate Name of a Fungal Plant Pathogen and the Ethics of Publication in the Era of Traceability. Javad Yahaghi, Salmia Bnt Beddu, Zakaria Che Muda. Plagiarism in Publications Using the Unpublished Raw Data of Archived Research. Back to Top
Social Epistemology, Vol. 31, #2, 2017 Introduction James H. Collier. Introduction. Articles Michael E. Gorman & Nora H. Kashani. A. Jean Ayres and the Development of Sensory Integration: A Case Study in the Development and Fragmentation of a Scientific Therapy Network. Original Articles Barrett R. Anderson & Gregory J. Feist. Transformative Science: A New Index and the Impact of Non-funding, Private Funding, and Public Funding. Sofia Liberman & Roberto López Olmedo. Psychological Meaning of “Coauthorship” Among Scientists Using the Natural Semantic Networks Technique. Shannon Nicole Conley, Rider W. Foley, Michael E. Gorman, Jessica Denham & Kevin Coleman. Acquisition of T-shaped Expertise: An Exploratory Study. Line Edslev Andersen. Outsiders Enabling Scientific Change: Learning from the Sociohistory of a Mathematical Proof. Stephen Kemp. Transformational Fallibilism and the Development of Understanding. Derek Egan Anderson. Conceptual Competence Injustice. William T. Lynch. Cultural Evolution and Social Epistemology: A Darwinian Alternative to Steve Fuller’s Theodicy of Science. Back to Top
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The Tutor’s Son (ch 10)
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Fandom: Barbie as the Princess and the Pauper
Pairing: Anneliese x Julian
Rating: G
Summary:  Duty or love; which would you choose? •♡• Anneliese is living the life of a princess: attending important events, going to council meetings, and being trained by her mother to take the throne one day. Then a childhood friend comes back into her life and she is faced with a difficult decision: Duty or love?
(read the whole story)
ao3 ||| ff.net ||| wattpad
The trade negotiations went surprisingly well. My act at the ball had entirely convinced the king that there was nothing untoward happening between Julian and I – not that there was anyway. This also made him rely less on his mother's council, as she continually wanted to put us at a disadvantage.
Of course, Mother had me sit in on all of the meetings so that I knew how trade negotiations went, so I hardly saw Julian all week.
Finally, the day came when the Marvian family was to return home. While I did enjoy some of their company, everyone was so on edge with them around, it would be nice to be on our own again.
Mother and I stood at the palace gates as the Marvian family got ready to leave. The carriages pulled up and I began my farewells to the children.
Just as I was shaking Prince Alexander's hand, I saw Julian running up the path to the palace. He tried to get my attention but I turned away. Whatever it was, it could wait until the prying Marvian eyes were gone.
I went on to Princess Lucy, who stood beside her mother, holding onto her skirts.
"Farewell, Princess Lucy," I said curtseying to her.
She returned the curtsey and said a quickly, "Goodbye."
Queen Annamaria smiled and embraced me. "Thank you for a lovely visit," she said.
"Oh, no," I said. "Thank you for coming all this way, especially with your entire family. It has been a pleasure having you."
My eye was caught again by movement at the gate. Julian was urgently waving his arms as he spoke with two of the guards. He saw me looking at him and mouthed something I didn't understand.
The coachmen were starting to look at him suspiciously and I knew it was only a matter of time before more people noticed him.
"Please excuse me," I said to King Leopold as I hurried towards Julian.
When I passed by the carriages, he desperately pushed past the guards. "Anneliese, no!" he called out.
Suddenly, all the coachmen pulled off their livery, exposing the weapons concealed beneath.
That was what Julian had tried to tell me: They're not coachmen.
A strong hand grabbed my arm, but I kicked the man in the shin and managed to pull away. I rushed away from the group of men who I saw were armed with picks, axes, and a few swords and spears.
The sound of running steps echoed from the palace. Good, the palace guard has been alerted, I thought. Then I noticed that they had no way to get to me. I was flanked on either side by our attackers. In going towards Julian, I had isolated myself from everyone else.
To my right, I saw Julian disarm a man and take his axe. He swung it around him, clearing a path to me.
He rushed towards me. "Are you alright?" he asked quickly, warding off attackers.
"I'm fine," I said.
The attackers were closing in and Julian turned towards them and stepped in front of them. "Stay behind me," he said, handing me a small knife from his belt. "If they get to you, don't hesitate."
The carved wooden handle felt strange in my hand, heavy with what Julian had said.
Don't hesitate.
Julian had not seen Anneliese afraid in a long time. But she looked scared now, her eyes wide as he had handed her the knife. It wasn't the best weapon, but it was all he had on him.
"Julian!" the queen called out from somewhere to their left. She sounded calm and authoritative, much different from her normal soft tone. Julian now understood the stories he had heard from older men about how she used to speak to the troops. "Get her out of here!"
Looking around him, Julian saw that they were standing in front of the walkway up to the main doors. Unfortunately, the walkway was four feet up and the steps were inaccessible to them.
He swung the axe around to ward off any approaching rebels and asked Anneliese, "Can you get up onto that ledge?"
She looked up apprehensively. "Not on my own."
Two rebels approached and Julian knocked their weapons aside. They had to get out of here, before more came. He could see another group coming. Sweeping the axe around again one last time, he put it down and pulled Anneliese back to the ledge. Ignoring her questions, he lifted her up so she sat on the ledge.
She quickly got up and held out her hand to help him up.
"Go!" Julian told her, picking up the axe again and backing against the wall, fighting off more rebels.
"Take my hand!" she insisted.
"Get out of here!"
"Take. My. Hand." She repeated.
He looked up at her. Her eyes flashed with determination. If she didn't go soon, the rebels would get to her. They were already going up the steps. So, he tossed his axe into the ledge and, using Anneliese's help, pulled himself up onto the ledge.
As soon as he was up, I dragged him towards the doorway. I heard running footsteps and saw a group of men running at us from the steps.
Still gripping Julian's hand tightly, I pulled us down the hallway and turned into the first doorway I saw.
Julian slammed the door behind us and stood against it, keeping it closed as I glanced around the room. It was the Blue Hall, and I quickly went over to one of the tables and started to push it towards the door. Julian saw what I was doing, but couldn't leave the door as we could already hear the men on the other side trying to get in.
Finally, I pushed the table against the door and we both sat on it to give it more weight.
"I'm sorry I didn't listen to you," I said, a little out of breath.
His lips tightened and he nodded.
"How did you know what was happening?"
"I overheard the plans in a pub and came as quickly as I could."
Before I could respond, the door and table shuddered as the door was dealt a heavy blow. Another blow soon followed and Julian and I looked at each other.
"If they get through," Julian said. "You run to the other door while I hold them off."
"There are at least five men out there," I hissed urgently. "I'm not going without you."
"You have to get out," he insisted. "I- you're the heir to the throne." Another shuddering blow accompanied with the sound of cracking wood. "The kingdom needs you."
But it doesn't need me, I heard in his voice. "But I-" I was interrupted by the door giving way, sending Julian and I tumbling to the floor.
Julian was up first and he pulled me to my feet and pushed me to the back of the room.
"Go!" he shouted.
°•♡•°
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annamariaward · 3 years
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Grateful for all his inspiration in my life as a fan. We miss you. Tribute piece based on Greg Gormans photography
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annamariaward · 4 years
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Earth song project. MJ fan artists (including myself) collaborated to illustrate a different lyric from the song in support of recognizing eartha problems and the firea in Australia. See the video on charenels instagram
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annamariaward · 3 years
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Annagator #339. I haven't drawn in nearly two months. I was getting bored with what I was making and just needed a break. In that time we got a new cat! I'm finally feeling excited to draw again starting with simple doodles (for my eyes only) and perhaps a few comics.
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annamariaward · 4 years
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In celebration of Michael Jackson's birthday I'm sharing the completed version of JAM June 14. I previously just shared the sketch. HUMANITARIAN WORK: In 1992 Michael Jackson visited various parts of Africa where he visited medical centers, churches, orphanages, schools and educational charities for disabled children.
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annamariaward · 3 years
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Captain EO Year One is a Fan Project by Annamaria Ward. #EOY1
Hey-O! It’s EO! The name is Eric Ocean but don’t you dare call him that, only his parents use his full name.... and maybe a teacher or two. EO is 17 years old and is about to enter his Capstone year at the Academy. He has a good heart but can at times be a little over-ambitious when trying to reach his goals. What is his dream?  It’s his dream to have skills worthy of the command so he can become a Captain, maybe even a commander just like his grandfather. He hopes to maybe even help some folks along the way. To do this he has to work with a crew of other students (who are also completing their Capstone years), he isn’t sure if he will get along with any of them, but he is going to do his best. 
New art posts will drop like an old-school episode every Thursday. Next Thursday we will see EO from several angles. 
See behind-the-scenes decisions and work in progress in my Patreon. This month I will be sharing my logo design process for the Captain EO Year One logo. As the project grows I plan to share more on there and eventually create an art of booklet.
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annamariaward · 4 years
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I believe these are the real superstars of Animal Crossings Bunny Day.
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annamariaward · 4 years
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I'm very excited about the fall season. One of my favorite memories as a child was watching the film, 'Beatrix Potter- The World of Peter Rabbit and Friends' and for some reason, I've always identified it with spring and fall. Do you have any books you associate with fall? Here Peter Rabbit finds the Perfect Pumpkin for his mother.
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annamariaward · 4 years
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I made a piece to show how I feel about a 2020 indoor dining experience. Several versions of this piece have sat on my computer for the last three months. I didn't think it would still be relevant in September 2020... but here we are.
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annamariaward · 4 years
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It ain’t too much for me to Jam
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