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Si le vêtement occupe une place centrale dans cette enquête, l?histoire des apparences ne s?y réduit pas. Traits physiques et de caractère, tenue extérieure et nudité étudiée, parures et coiffures, odeurs et attitudes, constituent un large ensemble de significations, celui du « vêtement total ». Moyens de catégorisation et d?évaluation morale, modes d?intervention délibérée dans le champ des interactions sociales, les manières de s?habiller et de se déshabiller témoignent d?un contrôle visuel quasi permanent exercé sur les corps depuis les mondes archaïques grec et étrusque jusqu?à la Rome impériale. Varia : Une série d?articles suit ce dossier thématique et aborde des sujets très variés : parmi d?autres, le mythe des Lemniennes, la question du statut des Muses, celle de la discorde (éris) dans les récits de fondation, l?implication du stratège athénien Timothée dans une guerre civile à Zakinthos au ive siècle, la représentation divine en Nabatène, la procédure de la description des ?uvres d?art ? ekphrasis ? chez Philostrate, ou encore, dans une perspective méthodologique et historiographique, la pratique de la méthode comparative par les historiens anthropologues de la Grèce ancienne. 517 $aDossier 606 $aHistory & Archaeology 606 $aAnthropology 606 $aidentité 606 $avêtement 606 $aparfum 606 $aGrèce ancienne 606 $asaleté 606 $asordes 606 $anudité 606 $acorps 606 $asport 606 $aacte de parole 606 $alemniennes 606 $amuse 606 $aThéogonie 606 $aDiodore de Sicile 606 $aÉris 606 $asyncrétismes religieux 606 $aphilosophie présocratique 606 $amythe 606 $aPhilostrate 606 $apolythéisme 606 $acomparatisme 606 $aAncient Greece 606 $aathlete 606 $abody 606 $apolytheism 606 $acomparison 606 $aPhilostratus 606 $amyth 606 $aTheogony 606 $aDiodorus Siculus 606 $aclothing 606 $aidentity 606 $anudity 610 $aDiodore de Sicile 610 $aidentité 610 $apolythéisme 610 $amuse 610 $aGrèce ancienne 610 $aThéogonie 610 $acorps 610 $aÉris 610 $acomparatisme 610 $avêtement 610 $asordes 610 $aphilosophie présocratique 610 $aPhilostrate 610 $anudité 610 $aparfum 610 $aacte de parole 610 $asyncrétismes religieux 610 $asaleté 610 $alemniennes 610 $asport 610 $amythe 615 4$aHistory & Archaeology 615 4$aAnthropology 615 4$aidentité 615 4$avêtement 615 4$aparfum 615 4$aGrèce ancienne 615 4$asaleté 615 4$asordes 615 4$anudité 615 4$acorps 615 4$asport 615 4$aacte de parole 615 4$alemniennes 615 4$amuse 615 4$aThéogonie 615 4$aDiodore de Sicile 615 4$aÉris 615 4$asyncrétismes religieux 615 4$aphilosophie présocratique 615 4$amythe 615 4$aPhilostrate 615 4$apolythéisme 615 4$acomparatisme 615 4$aAncient Greece 615 4$aathlete 615 4$abody 615 4$apolytheism 615 4$acomparison 615 4$aPhilostratus 615 4$amyth 615 4$aTheogony 615 4$aDiodorus Siculus 615 4$aclothing 615 4$aidentity 615 4$anudity 700 $aBettini$b Maurizio$0144443 701 $aBlonski$b Michel$01287415 701 $aBodiou$b Lydie$0732251 701 $aCherchanoc$b Florence$01287416 701 $aDarthou$b Sonia$01287417 701 $aHuet$b Valérie$0553782 701 $aHugot$b Laurent$01277038 701 $aIribarren$b Leopoldo$01287418 701 $aMataranga$b Kalomira$01287419 701 $aMehl$b Véronique$01286004 701 $aMurray$b Penelope$0223554 701 $aPache$b Corinne$01287420 701 $aPiettre$b Renée Koch$01287421 701 $aSauge$b André$0663869 701 $aSchwentzel$b Christian-Georges$01287422 701 $aThein$b Karel$01280159 701 $aWilgaux$b Jérôme$01283344 801 0$bFR-FrMaCLE 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910214948103321 996 $aDossier : S'habiller, se déshabiller dans les mondes anciens$93020162 997 $aUNINA LEADER 05278nam 2200613 450 001 9910797243303321 005 20230120002224.0 010 $a0-12-419956-9 035 $a(CKB)3710000000431000 035 $a(EBL)2071156 035 $a(SSID)ssj0001538344 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11878742 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001538344 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)11526032 035 $a(PQKB)10895351 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC2071156 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL2071156 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebr11066327 035 $a(CaONFJC)MIL801324 035 $a(OCoLC)911179264 035 $a(EXLCZ)993710000000431000 100 $a20150628h20152015 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aur|n|---||||| 181 $ctxt 182 $cc 183 $acr 200 10$aInterpreting biomedical science $eexperiment, evidence, and belief /$fU?lo Maiva?li 210 1$aLondon, England ;$aSan Diego, California :$cAcademic Press, an imprint of Elsevier,$d2015. 210 4$d©2015 215 $a1 online resource (416 p.) 300 $aDescription based upon print version of record. 311 $a0-12-418689-0 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $aFront Cover; Interpreting Biomedical Science: Experiment, Evidence, and Belief; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Science Made Easy; Did the Greeks Get their Math Right but their Science Wrong?; The Scientific Revolution; Deduction and Induction as Two Approaches to Scientific Inference; References; I. What Is at Stake: The Skeptical Argument; 1 Do We Need a Science of Science?; 1.1 Are We Living in the Golden Age of Science?; 1.2 R&D and the Cost of Medicine; 1.3 The Efficiency of Drug Discovery; 1.4 Factors that Endanger the Quality of Medical Evidence 327 $a1.5 The Stability of Evidence-Based Medical Practices1.6 Reproducibility of Basic Biomedical Science; 1.6.1 Genome-Wide Association Studies; 1.6.2 Microarray Studies; 1.6.3 Proteomics; 1.6.4 Small Science; 1.7 Is Reproducibility a Good Criterion of Quality of Research?; 1.8 Is Biomedical Science Self-Correcting?; 1.9 Do We Need a Science of Science?; References; 2 The Basis of Knowledge: Causality and Truth; 2.1 Scientific Realism and Truth; 2.2 Hume's Gambit; 2.3 Kant's Solution; 2.4 Why Induction Is Poor Deduction; 2.5 Popper's Solution; 2.6 Why Deduction Is Poor Induction 327 $a2.7 Does Lung Cancer Cause Smoking?2.8 Correlation, Concordance, and Regression; 2.8.1 Correlation; 2.8.2 Concordance; 2.8.3 Regression; 2.9 From Correlation to Causation; 2.10 From Experiment to Causation; 2.11 Is Causality a Scientific Concept?; References; II. The Method; 3 Study Design; 3.1 Why Do Experiments?; 3.2 Population and Sample; 3.3 Regression to the Mean; 3.4 Why Repeat an Experiment?; 3.5 Technical Versus Biological Replication of Experiments; 3.6 Experimental Controls; 3.6.1 Example 1. Negative Controls; 3.6.2 Example 2. Normalization Controls 327 $a3.6.3 Example 3. Controlling the Controls3.7 Multiplicities; 3.8 Conclusion: How to Design an Experiment; References; 4 Data and Evidence; 4.1 Looking at Data; 4.2 Modeling Data; 4.3 What Is Probability?; 4.3.1 Bayesian Probability; 4.3.2 Frequentist Probability; 4.3.3 Propensity Theory of Probability; 4.4 Assumptions Behind Frequentist Statistical Tests; 4.5 The Null Hypothesis; 4.6 The P value; 4.6.1 What the P Value Is Not; 4.7 Neyman-Pearson Hypothesis Testing; 4.8 Multiple Testing in the Context of NPHT; 4.9 P Value as a Measure of Evidence; 4.10 The "Error Bars" 327 $a4.11 Likelihood as an Unbiased Measure of Evidence4.12 Conclusion: Ideologies Behind Some Methods of Statistical Inference; References; 5 Truth and Belief; 5.1 From Long-Run Error Probabilities to Degrees of Belief; 5.2 Bayes Theorem: What Makes a Rational Being?; 5.3 Testing in the Infinite Hypothesis Space: Bayesian Parameter Estimation; 5.4 All Against All: Bayesianism Versus Frequentism Versus Likelihoodism; 5.5 Bayesianism as a Philosophy; 5.6 Bayesianism and the Progress of Science; 5.7 Conclusion to Part II; References; III. The Big Picture; 6 Interpretation 327 $a6.1 Hypothesis Testing at Small Samples 330 $a Interpreting Biomedical Science: Experiment, Evidence, and Belief discusses what can go wrong in biological science, providing an unbiased view and cohesive understanding of scientific methods, statistics, data interpretation, and scientific ethics that are illustrated with practical examples and real-life applications. Casting a wide net, the reader is exposed to scientific problems and solutions through informed perspectives from history, philosophy, sociology, and the social psychology of science. The book shows the differences and similarities between disciplines and different eras 606 $aMedicine$xResearch$xMethodology 606 $aMedical sciences$xResearch 615 0$aMedicine$xResearch$xMethodology. 615 0$aMedical sciences$xResearch. 676 $a610.72 700 $aMaiva?li$b U?lo$01484050 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910797243303321 996 $aInterpreting biomedical science$93702555 997 $aUNINA