01323nam 2200325Ia 450 99638716510331620221108045607.0(CKB)1000000000631944(EEBO)2240951710(OCoLC)12387058(EXLCZ)99100000000063194419850815d1688 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|An answer to the representer's reflections upon the state and view of the controversy[electronic resource] with a reply to the vindicator's full answer, shewing, that the vindicator has utterly ruined the new design of expounding and representing poperyLondon Printed for Ric. Chiswell ...1688[11], 130 [i.e. 128] pAttributed by Wing to William Clagett; identified by some sources as being written by Nicolas Clagett. Cf. Halkett & Laing (2nd ed.).Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.eebo-0113Clagett William1646-1688.1001721Clagett Nicholas1654-1727.1001811EAAEAAm/cWaOLNBOOK996387165103316An answer to the representer's reflections upon the state and view of the controversy2339131UNISA03015nam 2200469z- 450 991022005130332120210212(CKB)3800000000216264(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/59232(oapen)doab59232(EXLCZ)99380000000021626420202102d2016 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSensory Hair Cell Death and RegenerationFrontiers Media SA20161 online resource (266 p.)Frontiers Research Topics2-88945-000-7 Sensory hair cells are the specialized mechanosensory receptors found in vertebrate auditory, vestibular, and lateral line organs that transduce vibratory and acoustic stimuli into the sensations of hearing and balance. Hair cells can be damaged due to such factors as aging, ototoxic chemicals, acoustic trauma, infection, or genetic factors. Loss of these hair cells lead to deficits in hearing and balance, and in mammals, such deficits are permanent. In contrast, non-mammalian vertebrates exhibit the capability to regenerate missing hair cells. Researchers have been examining the process of hair cell death and regeneration in animal models in an attempt to find ways of either preventing hair cell loss or stimulating the production of new hair cells in mammals, with the ultimate goal of finding new therapeutics for human sensorineural hearing and balance deficits. This has led to a wide array of research on sensory hair cells- such as understanding the factors that cause hair cell loss and finding agents that protect them from damage, elucidating the cell signaling pathways activated during hair cell death, examining the genes and cellular pathways that are regulated during the process of hair cell death and regeneration, and characterizing the functional sensory loss and recovery following acoustic or ototoxic insults to the inner ear. This research has involved cell and developmental biologists, physiologists, geneticists, bioinformaticians, and otolaryngologists. In this Research Topic, we have collated reviews of the past progress of hair cell death and regeneration studies and original research articles advancing sensory hair cell death and regeneration research into the future.NeurosciencesbicsscauditoryCell DeathCochleaHair cellsHearing LossNeuromastOtic developmentOtoprotectionototoxicityRegenerationNeurosciencesMichael E. Smithauth1284055Allison B. CoffinauthAndrew K. GrovesauthBOOK9910220051303321Sensory Hair Cell Death and Regeneration3019241UNINA04542nam 2201105z- 450 991058594120332120220812(CKB)5600000000483070(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/91138(oapen)doab91138(EXLCZ)99560000000048307020202208d2022 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierFreedom of Religious Institutions in SocietyBaselMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20221 online resource (252 p.)3-0365-2434-7 3-0365-2435-5 The Religious Freedom Institute's FORIS project, an initiative made possible by funding from the John Templeton Foundation, proudly presents, with the assistance of MDPI, this Special Issue of Religions with a focus on the "Freedom of Religious Institutions in Society." Its strengths lie in its global perspective, the acumen of its authors, and the wide range of subjects and complex factors addressed. This Special Issue volume consists of a series of articles written by leading religious freedom scholars and advocates, including Jonathan Fox, Roger Finke, Paul Marshall, Chad Bauman, Byron Johnson, Timothy Shah, Robert Hefner, Lihui Zhang, Rebecca Supriya Shah, Dane Mataic, Mariz Tadros, and Akram Habib. It contributes to the overall scholarship revolving around religious freedom by placing greater and well-deserved attention upon the crucial nature of institutional religious freedom and its key capacity to enable the enjoyment of religious freedom and human rights in general. Religious liberty is not an individual right alone, but rather includes the right of religious communities to gather in synagogues, churches, mosques, temples, and other houses of worship. Freedom of religion also includes the right of faith communities to establish religious institutions such as schools, hospitals, ministries to the poor, universities, and countless others that seek to embody the teachings of their respective religious traditions. Institutional religious freedom encompasses this full range of congregational and organizational expressions of religious faith.Religion & beliefsbicsscChristianchurch autonomychurchescitizenshipCoptic movementsCoptsCOVID-19crimeculturedesistancediscriminaitoneconomyeducationEgyptequal citizenshipErastianismfor profitfreedomfreedom of the churchHinduHindu nationalismHinduismhuman flourishinghuman rightsidentity transformationIndiaIndonesiainstitutional religious freedominstitutional religious restrictionsinstitutionsinternational human rights organizationsJawaharlal Nehrujurisdictionlawlegalmajorityminoritiesminoritymosquesorganizationspandemicpositive criminologyprosocialregulationrehabilitationreligionreligion in lawreligion institutionreligious autonomyreligious freedomReligious freedomreligious institutionsreligious libertyreligious organizationsreligious restrictionsrestrictionrightssecularismtemplesvocationvolunteerismW. Cole Durham, Jr.Religion & beliefsShah Timothyedt1302226Berkeley Nathan AedtShah TimothyothBerkeley Nathan AothBOOK9910585941203321Freedom of Religious Institutions in Society3026272UNINA