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- By 紀慧文
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- Commercializing new technologies (2)
- getting from mind to market
- By Vijay K. Jolly
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- The Conflict of the Faculties (2)
- (Der Streit Der Fakultaten)
- By Immanuel Kant
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Finished in Aug 2003





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- Distinction (69)
- A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste
- By Richard Nice, Pierre Bourdieu
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Finished in Oct 2005





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- Einstein on Politics (1)
- His Private Thoughts and Public Stands on Nationalism, Zionism, War, Peace, and the Bomb
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- Fields of Knowledge (2)
- French Academic Culture in Comparative Perspective, 1890-1920
- By Fritz Ringer
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- Georg Simmel
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- Georg Simmel (5)
- On Women, Sexuality, and Love
- By Georg Simmel
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Reading since Feb 7, 2009





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- Historical Ontology (9)
- By Ian Hacking
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Reading since Jun 17, 2005





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- Homo Academicus (9)
- By Pierre Bourdieu
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Started on Jul 14, 2003





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Humour in Societ-
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- Humour in Society (2)
- Resistance and Control
- By Chris Powell
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Started on Sep 2, 2003





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Humour in Societ-
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- The Internet Galaxy (22)
- Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society
- By Castells, Manuel, Manuel Castells
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- Locating Bourdieu (2)
- (New Anthropologies of Europe)
- By Deborah Reed-Danahay
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Finished in Jun 2008





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- The Logic of Practice (24)
- By Pierre Bourdieu
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Reading since Nov 1, 2008





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Logoma-
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- Logomachia (1)
- the conflict of the faculties
- By Richard Rand
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Started on Nov 2, 2006





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Logoma-
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- Mad Travelers (3)
- Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illnesses
- By Ian Hacking
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Humour in Society
Laughter is the most ambivalent emotional action in the society. There are many binary opposition in laughter and humour, which cause many theorists being curious regarding this implicit topic.
There are many different dimensions which include ridicule, irony and other categories of laughter ... (continue)
Laughter is the most ambivalent emotional action in the society. There are many binary opposition in laughter and humour, which cause many theorists being curious regarding this implicit topic.
There are many different dimensions which include ridicule, irony and other categories of laughter in this edited book. Although events and examples in this book are a little bit old today, but it is still worth of reading to establish the basic concept to understand and interpret human laughter.
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