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In today's digital world our social interactions often take place
in the form of written comments. We chat, disagree, worship, vent,
confess, and even attack in written form in public digital spaces.
Drawing on scholarly literature from media and cultural studies,
psychology and sociology, Uncovering Commenting Culture charts this
commenting territory and outlines why we behave in these ways
online. In this timely book, Renee Barnes provides a participatory
model for understanding commenting culture that is based on the
premise that our behaviours online-including those that cause us
most the concern-are not so much an internet problem as a social
problem. By looking at a wide variety of online commenting
habitats, from the comment threads following news stories, through
to specialist forums and social media platforms, the volume
provides a comprehensive understanding of the role of online
commenting in society and provides suggestions for how we might
mitigate bad behaviours.
In today's digital world our social interactions often take place
in the form of written comments. We chat, disagree, worship, vent,
confess, and even attack in written form in public digital spaces.
Drawing on scholarly literature from media and cultural studies,
psychology and sociology, Uncovering Commenting Culture charts this
commenting territory and outlines why we behave in these ways
online. In this timely book, Renee Barnes provides a participatory
model for understanding commenting culture that is based on the
premise that our behaviours online-including those that cause us
most the concern-are not so much an internet problem as a social
problem. By looking at a wide variety of online commenting
habitats, from the comment threads following news stories, through
to specialist forums and social media platforms, the volume
provides a comprehensive understanding of the role of online
commenting in society and provides suggestions for how we might
mitigate bad behaviours.
Biological, psychological, sociological and ecological features of
life contribute and interact simultaneously in the development of
an individual's oral health. The chapters in this book review the
effects of periodontal disease and its treatment on OHRQoL (Oral
Health-Related Quality of Life); the consequences of periodontal
disease and patient perceptions of the impact of their
gingival/periodontal health on their everyday lives; the link
between nutritional factors and periodontal disease; a review of
Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease (CMTD), the most common sensitive and
motor peripheral neuropathy; the influence of improved oral health
literacy considering the circumstances in which a person has been
born, lives and works, the microbiological mechanisms, and the
public's influence to improve oral health; the complexities related
to oral care of people who experience mental disorders and the
implications this may hold for their quality of life, practice,
research and policy; determinants of oral health in schizophrenic
patients; and an assessment of the PIDAQ (Psychosocial Impact of
Dental Aesthetic Questionnaire), the only available tool designed
specifically to assess malocculsions.
This book takes an innovative fan studies approach to investigating
one of the most pressing issues of contemporary times:
polarization. Drawing on three years of observational data from
Facebook political discussions, as well as interviews and survey
responses from those heavily engaged in online political debate,
Barnes argues a fan-like investment in a political perspective
initiates and drives polarization. She calls on us to move beyond
the traditional Habermasian approach to political discussion, which
privileges the rational and deliberative, and instead focus on how
we perform the self. How we behave in these online debates is part
of a performance, a performance of self, in which an affective
investment in a particular political perspective drives a need to
contribute, refute and 'other' those opposing. Because this
performance stems from an emotional basis, judgments and
contributions are often not rational or factual, but rather a form
of establishing and defending an identity.
Gregory of Nyssa is widely regarded as the most substantial thinker
and theologian among the three Cappadocians and is often used as
the representative of Greek trinitarian theology. Through a fresh
examination of Gregory's trinitarian theology in its historical
context, Michel Rene Barnes reveals the special importance of the
concept of ""power""--dynamis. The book also brings to light the
way in which ""power"" served as a fundamental concept in all
stages of patristic trinitarian theology and shows the origins of
the concept in Greek philosophy and medicine. The most important
senses of ""power"" have little to do with political or physical
power. Since the time of the pre-Socratics, Greek philosophy and
medicine used the term to refer to the capacity of anything to be a
cause. It is this sense of ""power"" that figures so substantially
in the development of the doctrine of the Trinity in the patristic
period. Indeed, what is recognized as the definitive form of Nicene
trinitarian theology--normative for all Christians--was established
in the second half of the fourth century using arguments based on
an understanding of God as a cause--God as a ""power."" Nowhere is
the importance of ""power"" for supporting a Nicene trinitarian
theology as great and as closely argued as it is in the theology of
Gregory of Nyssa. This study will be useful for those who study the
development of the doctrine of the Trinity, as well as those who
are interested in the role of scriptural and philosophical
resources in Christian theology. Finally, the in-depth account of
the importance of the philosophical use of ""power"" will be of use
to scholars of ancient and hellenistic Greek philosophy.
Abuse, abandonment, and a broken heart engage your-self in one
woman s quest to find love in the right place, but tragically
ending up in all the wrong places. Embrace and join her journey
through a story of heartache, heartbreak, and finally a place of
healing .
Synopsis: Ralph del Colle was born in New York City on October 3,
1954 and was raised in Mineola, Long Island. He attended Xavier
High School in Chelsea and received a BA in History and Literature
of Religions from New York University, and MDiv, MPhil, and PhD
degrees from Union Theological Seminary. Ralph taught for 17 years
in the Marquette University Theology Department; prior to that he
taught at Barry University, Miami Shores, Florida and at St. Anselm
College, Manchester, New Hampshire. Ralph's lively Christian faith
and interest in church unity led to his participation in ecumenical
dialogues. He served as a representative to the International
Catholic-Pentecostal Dialogue for the Pontifical Council on
Christian Unity for 12 years and also served on the
Catholic-Reformed Dialogue and Catholic-Evangelical Dialogue, both
for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. He was invited by the
Pontifical Council to serve as a representative to the World
Council of Churches Assembly in Harare, Zimbabwe in 1998. In
2002-2003, he served as the President of the Society for
Pentecostal Studies and in 2003 Ralph received the Archbishop's
Vatican II Award. Ralph's scholarly work, especially his work on
the Holy Spirit, made significant contributions to the field of
Systematic Theology. Ralph died in July of 2012, slightly more than
four weeks after he was diagnosed with a rare form of liver cancer.
He was fifty-seven. Author Biography: Michel Rene Barnes is
Associate Professor for Patristics at Marquette University. He has
written extensively on the trinitarian theologies of Augustine and
Gregory of Nyssa. His most recent publication, "Ebion at the
Barricades: Moral Narrative and Post-Christian Catholic Theology,"
is a radical critique of Catholic Systematic theology as it has
been practiced since Vatican Two. CONTRIBUTORS: Michel Rene Barnes,
Richard J. Barry, Peter J. Casarella, David M. Coffey, D. Lyle
Dabney, The Reverend Andrew Grosso, Paul R. Hinlicky, D. Thomas
Hughson, Ulrich L. Lehner, Matthew Levering, D. Stephen Long, Bruce
D. Marshall, Mickey L. Mattox, Rodrigo J. Morales, Joseph G.
Mueller, S.J., C. C. Pecknold, R. R. Reno, Philip J. Rossi, S.J,
James K. A. Smith, Geoffrey Wainwright, John Webster, Thomas G.
Weinandy, O.F.M.
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