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Engineered nanoparticles : structure, properties and mechanisms of toxicity / Ashok K. Singh

Singh, Ashok K., author




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Nanoscience : the science of the small / edited by Rich Falcon




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Nanoscience : the science of the small in physics, engineering, chemistry, biology and medicine / Hans-Eckhardt Schaefer

Schaefer, Hans-Eckhardt, author




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[ASAP] Design, Optimization, and Study of Small Molecules That Target Tau Pre-mRNA and Affect Splicing

Journal of the American Chemical Society
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c00768




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[ASAP] Transformation Network Culminating in a Heteroleptic Cd<sub>6</sub>L<sub>6</sub>L'<sub>2</sub> Twisted Trigonal Prism

Journal of the American Chemical Society
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c03798




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[ASAP] Molecular Mechanism for the Suppression of Alpha Synuclein Membrane Toxicity by an Unconventional Extracellular Chaperone

Journal of the American Chemical Society
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c01894




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ESI hospital gets nod for Covid-19 plasma trials

ESI Hospital at Sanathnagar have received permission to carry out plasma therapy trials for Covid- 19 patients along with the state-run Gandhi Hospital. ICMR officially accorded permission to both hospitals for six months.




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2009 Network Professional Association Awards for Professionalism Honor Excellence in Networking Industry

Cisco Press, in support of the Network Professional Association (NPA), announced today the winners of the 2008 Awards for Professionalism program.




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Metal soaps in art: conservation and research / Francesca Casadio, Katrien Keune, Petria Noble, Annelies Van Loon, Ella Hendriks, Silvia A. Centeno, Gillian Osmond, editors

Online Resource




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Modern Synthetic Methodologies for Creating Drugs and Functional Materials (MOSM2018): proceedings of the II International Conference: conference date, 15-17 November 2018: location, Yekaterinburg, Russia / editors, Grigory V. Zyryanov, Sougata Santra and

Online Resource




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Smart membranes / editor: Liang-Yin Chu

Online Resource




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Wine Tourism Destination Management and Marketing: Theory and Cases / Marianna Sigala, Richard N.S. Robinson, editors

Online Resource




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A class approach to hazard assessment of organohalogen flame retardants / Committee to Develop a Scoping Plan to Assess the Hazards of Organohalogen Flame Retardants, Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology, Division on Earth and Life Studies

Online Resource




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2018 AIChE Spring Meeting & 14th Global Congress on Process Safety proceedings: 7th Process Safety Management Mentoring (PSMM) Forum / American Institute of Chemical Engineers

Online Resource




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Life cycle assessment in the chemical product chain: challenges, methodological approaches and applications / Simone Maranghi, Carlo Brondi, editors

Online Resource




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Romans disarmed : resisting empire, demanding justice / Sylvia C. Keesmaat and Brian J. Walsh

Keesmaat, Sylvia C., author




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Jews and anti-Judaism in the New Testament : decision points and divergent interpretations / Terence L. Donaldson

Donaldson, Terence L




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The meaning of Jesus' death : reviewing the New Testament's interpretations / Barry D. Smith

Smith, Barry D., 1957 December 4- author




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Resurrection, hell and the afterlife : body and soul in antiquity, Judaism and early Christianity / Mark T. Finney

Finney, Mark T., author




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'Hand this man over to Satan' : curse, exclusion and salvation in 1 Corinthians 5 / David Raymond Smith

Smith, David Raymond, author




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Strangers to family : diaspora and 1 Peter's invention of God's household / Shively T.J. Smith

Smith, Shively T. J., author




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Jesus beyond nationalism : constructing the historical Jesus in a period of cultural complexity / edited by Halvor Moxnes, Ward Blanton and James G. Crossley




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Jesus, skepticism & the problem of history : criteria & context in the study of Christian origins / Darrell L. Bock and J. Ed Komoszewski, editors ; foreword by N.T. Wright




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The Bible and feminism : remapping the field / edited by Yvonne Sherwood ; with the assistance of Anna Fisk




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The enchantments of Mammon : how capitalism became the religion of modernity / Eugene McCarraher

McCarraher, Eugene, author




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Fundamentalism or tradition : Christianity after secularism / Aristotle Papanikolaou and George E. Demacopoulo, editors




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Myths and mistakes in New Testament textual criticism / edited by Elijah Hixson and Peter J. Gurry ; foreword by Daniel B. Wallace




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Religion and politics under capitalism : a humanistic approach to the terminology / Stefan Arvidsson

Arvidsson, Stefan, 1968- author




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Enlightenment Reformation : Hutchinsonianism and religion in eighteenth-century Britain / Derya Gurses Tarbuck

Gurses Tarbuck, Derya, author




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Plant Nucleotide Metabolism: Biosynthesis, Degradation, and Alkaloid Formation


 

All organisms produce nucleobases, nucleosides, and nucleotides of purines and pyrimidines. However, while there have been a number of texts on nucleotide metabolism in microorganisms and humans, the presence of these phenomena in plant life has gone comparatively unexplored. This ground-breaking new book is the first to focus exclusively on the aspects of purine nucleotide metabolism and function that are particular to plants, making it a unique



Read More...




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Surface modification of a PES membrane by corona air plasma-assisted grafting of HB-PEG for separation of oil-in-water emulsions

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17143-17153
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02032J, Paper
Open Access
Hooman Adib, Ahmadreza Raisi
The main goal of this study is to modify a polyethersulfone (PES) membrane by grafting with hyperbranched polyethylene glycol (HB-PEG) using corona air plasma to intensify the anti-fouling properties of the prepared membrane.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Room-temperature synthesis and CO2-gas sensitivity of bismuth oxide nanosensors

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17217-17227
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA00801J, Paper
Open Access
Pritamkumar V. Shinde, Nanasaheb M. Shinde, Shoyebmohamad F. Shaikh, Damin Lee, Je Moon Yun, Lee Jung Woo, Abdullah M. Al-Enizi, Rajaram S. Mane, Kwang Ho Kim
Room-temperature (27 °C) synthesis and carbon dioxide (CO2)-gas-sensing applications of bismuth oxide (Bi2O3) nanosensors obtained via a direct and superfast chemical-bath-deposition method (CBD) with different surface areas and structures.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Cost-effective smart microfluidic device with immobilized silver nanoparticles and embedded UV-light sources for synergistic water disinfection effects

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17479-17485
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA00076K, Paper
Open Access
Amit Prabhakar, Mehul Agrawal, Neha Mishra, Nimisha Roy, Ankur Jaiswar, Amar Dhwaj, Deepti Verma
A novel microfluidic-device for water disinfection via diverse physiochemical effects has been demonstrated.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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One pot fabrication of fluorescein functionalized manganese dioxide for fluorescence “Turn OFF–ON” sensing of hydrogen peroxide in water and cosmetic samples

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17506-17514
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA01980A, Paper
Open Access
  This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Hassan Refat H. Ali, Ahmed I. Hassan, Yasser F. Hassan, Mohamed M. El-Wekil
The fluorometric nanoprobe was fabricated via doping of fluorescein dye in MnO2 nanosheets (FLS/MnO2 NS) via facile co-precipitation method. It was used for analysis of H2O2 in different matrices through liberation of FLS after reduction of MnO2 NS.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Animal virtues & choice fetishism

The following is an interesting extract from Straw Dogs by John Gray (pp. 109–116) discussing some of the differences between Western and Taoist philosophical traditions.

The fetish of choice

For us, nothing is more important than to live as we choose. This is not because we value freedom more than people did in earlier times. It is because we have identified the good life with the chosen life.

For the pre-Socratic Greeks, the fact that our lives are framed by limits was what makes us human. Being born a mortal, in a given place and time, strong or weak, swift or slow, brave or cowardly, beautiful or ugly, suffering tragedy or being spared it – these features of our lives are given to us, they cannot be chosen. If the Greeks could have imagined a life without them, they could not have recognised it as that of a human being.

The ancient Greeks were right. The ideal of the chosen life does not square with how we live. We are not authors of our lives; we are not even part-authors of the events that mark us most deeply. Nearly everything that is most important in our lives is unchosen. The time and place we are born, our parents, the first language we speak – these are chance, not choice. It is the casual drift of things that shapes our most fateful relationships. The life of each of us is a chapter of accidents.

Personal autonomy is the work of our imagination, not the way we live. Yet we have been thrown into a time in which everything is provisional. New technologies alter our lives daily. The traditions of the past cannot be retrieved. At the same time we have little idea of what the future will bring. We are forced to live as if we were free.

The cult of choice reflects the fact that we must improvise our lives. That we cannot do otherwise is a mark of our unfreedom. Choice has become a fetish; but the mark of a fetish is that it is unchosen.

Animal virtues

The dominant Western view…teaches that humans are unlike other animals, which simply respond to the situations in which they find themselves. We can scrutinise our motives and impulses; we can know why we act as we do. By becoming ever more self-aware, we can approach a point at which our actions are the results of our choices. When we are fully conscious, everything we do will be done for reasons we can know. At that point, we will be authors of our lives.

This may seem fantastical, and so it is. Yet it is what we are taught by Socrates, Aristotle and Plato, Descartes, Spinoza and Marx. For all of them, consciousness is our very essence, and the good life means living as a fully conscious individual.

Western thought is fixated on the gap between what is and what ought to be. But in everyday life we do not scan our options beforehand, then enact the one that is best. We simply deal with whatever is at hand. …Different people follow different customs; but in acting without intention, we are not simply following habit. Intentionless acts occur in all sorts of situations, including those we have never come across before.

Outside the Western tradition, the Taoists of ancient China saw no gap between is and ought. Right action was whatever comes from a clear view of the situation. They did not follow moralists – in their day, Confucians – in wanting to fetter human beings with rules or principles. For Taoists, the good life is only the natural life lived skillfully. It has no particular purpose. It has nothing to do with the will, and it does not consist in trying to realise any ideal. Everything we do can be done more or less well; but if we act well it is not because we translate our intentions into deeds. It is because we deal skillfully with whatever needs to be done. The good life means living according to our natures and circumstances. There is nothing that says that it is bound to be the same for everybody, or that it must conform with ‘morality’.

In Taoist thought, the good life comes spontaneously; but spontaneity is far from simply acting on the impulses that occur to us. In Western traditions such as Romanticism, spontaneity is linked with subjectively. In Taoism it means acting dispassionately, on the basis of an objective view of the situation at hand. The common man cannot see things objectively, because his mind is clouded by anxiety about achieving his goals. Seeing clearly means not projecting our goals into the world; acting spontaneously means acting according to the needs of the situation. Western moralists will ask what is the purpose of such action, but for Taoists the good life has no purpose. It is like swimming in a whirlpool, responding to the currents as they come and go. ‘I enter with the inflow, and emerge with the outflow, follow the Way of the water, and do not impose my selfishness upon it. This is how I stay afloat in it,’ says the Chuang-Tzu.

In this view, ethics is simply a practical skill, like fishing or swimming. The core of ethics is not choice or conscious awareness, but the knack of knowing what to do. It is a skill that comes with practice and an empty mind. A.C. Graham explains:

The Taoist relaxes the body, calms the mind, loosens the grip of categories made habitual by naming, frees the current of thought for more fluid differentiations and assimilations, and instead of pondering choices lets the problems solve themselves as inclination spontaneously finds its own direction. …He does not have to make decisions based on standards of good and bad because, granted only that enlightenment is better than ignorance, it is self-evident that among spontaneous inclinations the one prevailing in the greatest clarity of mind, other things being equal, will be best, the one in accord with the Way.

Few humans beings have the knack of living well. Observing this, the Taoists looked to other animals as their guides to the good life. Animals in the wild know how to live, they do not need to think or choose. It is only when they are fettered by humans that they cease to live naturally.

As the Chuang-Tzu puts it, horses, when they live wild, eat grass and drink water; when they are content, they entwine their necks and rub each other. When angry, they turn their backs on each other and kick out. This is what horses know. But if harnessed together and lined up under constraints, they know how to look sideways and to arch their necks, to career around and try to spit out the bit and rid themselves of the reins.

For people in thrall to ‘morality’ , the good life means perpetual striving. For Taoists it means living effortlessly, according to our natures. The freest human being is not the one who acts on reasons he has chosen for himself, but one who never has to choose. Rather than agonising over alternatives, he responds effortlessly to situations as they arise. He lives not as he chooses but as he must. Such a human has the perfect freedom of a wild animal – or a machine. As the Lieh-Tzu says: ‘The highest man at rest is as though dead, in movement is like a machine. He knows neither why he is at rest nor why he is not, why he is in movement nor why he is not.’

The idea that freedom means becoming like a wild animal or machine is offensive to Western religious and humanist prejudices, but it is consistent with the most advanced scientific knowledge. A.C. Graham explains:

Taoism coincides with the scientific worldview at just those points where the latter most disturbs westerners rooted in the Christian tradition – the littleness of man in a vast universe; the inhuman Tao which all things follow, without purpose and indifferent to human needs; the transience of life, the impossibility of knowing what comes after death; unending change in which the possibility of progress is not even conceived; the relativity of values; a fatalism very close to determinism; even a suggestion that the human organism operates like a machine.

Autonomy means acting on reasons I have chosen; but the lesson of cognitive science is that there is no self to do the choosing. We are far more like machines and wild animals than we imagine. But we cannot attain the amoral selflessness of wild animals, or the choiceless automatism of machines. Perhaps we can learn to live more lightly, less burdened by morality. We cannot return to a purely spontaneous existence.




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Crime Branch busts cigarette, tobacco smuggling racket

Material brought illegally in vehicles that had permission to carry fruits and vegetables




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Strategische personalentwicklung in der praxis [electronic resource] : instrumente, erfolgsmodelle, checklisten, praxisbeispiele. / Christine Wegerich

Wegerich, Christine, author




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The subjective well-being module of the American Time Use Survey [electronic resource] : assessment for its continuation / Panel on Measuring Subjective Well-Being in a Policy-Relevant Framework, Committee on National Statistics, Division of Behavioral an




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Sustainable Global Value Chains [electronic resource] / edited by Michael Schmidt, Daniele Giovannucci, Dmitry Palekhov, Berthold Hansmann




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The talent assessment and development pocket tool kit [electronic resource] : how to get the most out of your best people / Brenda Hampel and Anne Bruce

Hampel, Brenda




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Talent-Gespräche [electronic resource] : Worum es geht, weshalb sie wichtig sind, wie sie richtig geführt werden / Roland Smith und Michael Campbell

Smith, Roland, 1951- author




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Test-driven infrastructure with Chef [electronic resource] / Stephen Nelson-Smith

Nelson-Smith, Stephen




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Ein Weg zu Industrie 4.0 [electronic resource] : Geschäftsmodell für Produktion und After Sales / Myriam Jahn

Jahn, Myriam, author




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Windows Small Business Server 2011 [electronic resource] : administrator' pocket consultant / Craig Zacker

Zacker, Craig




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Wise money [electronic resource] : how the smart money invests using the endowment investment approach to minimize volatility and increase control / Daniel Wildermuth

Wildermuth, Daniel