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1

Guest, Ann Hutchinson. Spatial variations. London: Dance Books, 2002.

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2

Tanton, Robert, and Kimberley Edwards, eds. Spatial Microsimulation: A Reference Guide for Users. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4623-7.

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3

Murray, J. D. Mathematical biology: Spatial models and biomedical applications. 3rd ed. New York: Springer, 2003.

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4

León, Lourdes de. Space games in Tzotzil: Creating a context for spatial reference. Nijmegen: Max Planck Research Group for Cognitive Anthropology, 1991.

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5

The spatial language of time: Metaphor, metonymym, and frames of reference. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2014.

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6

J, Stimson R., ed. Spatial behavior: A geographic perspective. New York: Guilford Press, 1997.

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7

Merrill, Elizabeth, ed. Creating Place in Early Modern European Architecture. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463728027.

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The importance of place—as a unique spatial identity—has been recognized since antiquity. Ancient references to the ‘genius loci’, or spirit of place, evoked not only the location of a distinct atmosphere or environment, but also the protection of this location, and implicitly, its making and construction. This volume examines the concept of place as it relates to architectural production and building knowledge in early modern Europe (1400-1800). The places explored in the book’s ten essays take various forms, from an individual dwelling to a cohesive urban development to an extensive political territory. Within the scope of each study, the authors draw on primary source documents and original research to demonstrate the distinctive features of a given architectural place, and how these are related to a geographic location, social circumstances, and the contributions of individual practitioners. The essays underscore the distinct techniques, practices and organizational structures by which physical places were made in the early modern period.
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8

Nijkamp, Peter. A synthesis between macro and micro models in spatial interaction analysis: With special reference to dynamics. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit, Faculteit der Economische Wetenschappen, 1986.

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9

Shivute, Vaino P. A study of plant spatial arrangements in intercropping with particular reference to the maize/beans combination. Norwich: University of East Anglia, 1990.

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10

Sisouphanthong, Bountavy. Atlas of Laos: Spatial structures of the economic and social development of the Lao people's democratic republic. Copenhagen: NIAS, 2000.

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11

Williams-Gunn, Simon. Architecture of the imagination: A study of the cultural phenomenon of spatial perception in particular reference to the emerging virtual representations of space. [London]: Middlesex University, 1994.

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12

Centre, Great Lakes Forestry. The derivation of spatially referenced ecological databases for ecosystem mapping and modeling in the Rinker Lake research area, Northwestern Ontario. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont: Great Lakes Forestry Centre, 1998.

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13

Vossos, S. J. Evaluation of a three-dimensional maximum probability atlas based on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) with reference to human frontal, parietal, and occipital lobes and a practical application on the spatial distribution of amygdala. London: Roehampton University, 2004.

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14

Standardization, International Organization for. Space data and information transfer systems--: Open archival information system-- reference model = Syst`emes de transfert des informations et données spatiales-- système ouvert d'archivage de l'information-- modèle de référence. Geneva: ISO, 2003.

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15

Jackson, Peter Jonathan. An investigation into the prehistoric cup and ring engravings of the British Isles, with reference to Galicia: An approach to the study of prehistoric rock engravings through archaeology, anthropological analogy, sociology, experiment, spatial analysis, and aspects of semiology. [Enfield]: Middlesex Polytechnic, School of Education, 1989.

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16

Institute, Environmental Systems Research, ed. ARC/INFO user's guide: 6.0. : spatial database management and LIBRARIAN command references. Redlands,CA: ESRI, 1992.

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17

Spatial Microsimulation A Reference Guide For Users. Springer, 2012.

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18

Edwards, Kimberley, and Robert Tanton. Spatial Microsimulation: A Reference Guide for Users. Springer, 2014.

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19

Forum on NOAA's National Spatial Reference System. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.17226/9082.

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20

Attiwill, Suzie. Framing – ?interior. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474429344.003.0004.

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This chapter presents a series of exhibition and curatorial projects situated in the discipline of interior design that experimented with questions of interior and interiority, subject and object relations, spatial and temporal conditions. Deleuze’s critique of interior and interiority as isolated, pre-existing entities provokes a thinking and doing otherwise where space and subjectivity, interior and exterior are unquestioned givens. Thinking through practising with Deleuze, the technique of framing is re-posed as a technique of interiorization where interior and interiority are productions in exteriority; the frame as a fold of an outside that involves processes of selection and arrangement. Deleuze’s book Foucault and the ‘Outside-interior’ and Elizabeth Grosz’s Chaos, Territory, Art. Deleuze and the Framing of the Earth are key references. The chapter poses ‘?interior’ – with reference to Deleuze’s ?-being – as a problematic to be addressed through designing interior – each time anew.
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21

Andresen, Martin. GIS and Spatial Analysis. Edited by Gerben J. N. Bruinsma and Shane D. Johnson. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190279707.013.33.

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The importance of spatial-temporal dimension(s) within environmental criminology has made the use and applications of geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial analysis rather widespread. This chapter covers some of the principles and advancements in the use of crime mapping and spatial analysis to study the spatial distribution of crime, primarily through the lens of environmental criminology. Crime mapping is defined as the spatial representation of crime (in the context of criminal events) on a map. Consequently, in order to do so, one must have geographic coordinates for each criminal event to place it on a map. There are three primary ways in which spatially referenced data can be presented: points, lines, and areas. Most often, criminal event data are represented as points (dot maps) or areas (census tracts or neighborhoods, for example), but maps considering lines (street segments) are becoming more commonplace.
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22

Phillips, Lynne. Genders, Spaces, Places. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.193.

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The concepts of gender, space, and place have significant social and political implications for the kind of world that people inhabit and the kinds of lives we can lead. That there has been a transformation in thinking about these concepts is indicated in references today to pluralized (and polymorphic) spaces, to the waxing, and waning of distinctions between space and place, and to the idea that gender, space, and place are something produced rather than simply lived in, or ventured into. These subtle shifts hint at a complex history of ideas about what constitutes gender, space, and/or place and how we might understand the connections and disjunctures between and among them. The theoretical roots of space act as the starting point for discussion, since these have a longer historical record than work which also explicitly includes gender. Western conceptions of space have drawn primarily from early Greek philosophers and mathematicians, and these conceptions indicate an early distinction between a philosophy of space and a pre-scientific notion of space. From here, the development of feminist methods has become essential for revealing how spatial thinking informs ideas about gender. These methods include deconstructing canons, asking the profoundly spatial question of “Where are the women?” and “ungendering” space. These methodological strategies reveal the extent to which the central concerns of feminism today have spatial and place-based dimensions.
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23

Stimson, Robert J., and Reginald G. Golledge. Spatial Behavior: A Geographic Perspective. The Guilford Press, 1996.

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24

Stimson, Robert J., and Reginald G. Golledge. Spatial Behavior: A Geographic Perspective. The Guilford Press, 1996.

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25

Champollion, Lucas. Aspect and space. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198755128.003.0006.

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This chapter models the relation between temporal aspect (run for an hour vs. *run all the way to the store for an hour) and spatial aspect (meander for a mile vs. *end for a mile) previously discussed by Gawron (2009). The chapter shows that for-adverbials impose analogous conditions on the spatial domain and on the temporal domain, and that an event may satisfy stratified reference with respect to one of the domains without satisfying it with respect to the other one as well. This provides the means to extend the telic-atelic opposition to the spatial domain. The chapter argues in some detail that stratified reference is in this respect empirically superior to an alternative view of telicity based on divisive reference (Krifka 1998).
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26

Rahier, Jean Muteba. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037511.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter begins with a brief discussion of the Ecadorians of African descent in the province of Esmeraldas. It then sets out the book's purpose, which is to examine playful African diasporic performative representations of racial and gender identities in the Afro-Esmeraldian Festival of the Kings, locally called La Fiesta de los Reyes, La Fiesta de los Santos Reyes, and also El Juego de los Cucuruchos (the Play of the Cowls), as it has been celebrated from January 6 to 8 in two different villages of the northern sector of Esmeraldas, Santo Domingo de Ónzole and La Tola. References to the particularities of the two village contexts considered here explain the originality of the representations of racial and gender identities and of the Ecuadorian racial-spatial order in each village. An overview of the subsequent chapters is also presented.
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27

Kolff, Joujke, and Ann Hutchinson Guest. Spatial Variations: Advanced Labanotation, Issue 9 (The Advanced Labanotation Series). Princeton Book Co Pub, 2003.

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28

C, Gatrell Anthony, and North West Regional Research Laboratory., eds. Tests for spatial clustering in epidemiology: With special reference to Motor Neurone disease. Lancaster: North West Regional Research Laboratory, 1991.

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29

executive, Health and safety. Spatially Referenced Population Data for Land Use Planning Advice. Health and Safety Executive (HSE), 1998.

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30

Mapping in the Uk: Maps and Spatial Data for the 1990's. Bowker-Saur, 1993.

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31

Martin, Andresen A. Science of Crime Measurement: Issues for Spatially-Referenced Crime Data. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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32

Fitzgerald, William, and Efrossini Spentzou. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198768098.003.0001.

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Part One of the introduction places the book within the framework of the recent spatial turn in the Humanities, engaging with key psychogeographical notions. It contextualizes the volume with reference to relevant studies on both Greek and Latin literature that have engaged with such perspectives. This part also explores how Roman writers themselves spatialize their narratives and maps how different contributors engage with the spatial element of the various narratives. Part Two engages with aspects of modern political philosophy, utilizing it in order to appreciate the ideological disputes inherent in space’s capacity to both represent and construct. This Part engages with various spatial theorists who attempt to write about space while avoiding polarized categorizations. Part Three provides an extensive and intertwined interpretation of all contributions, linking the varied discussions into a consideration of the qualities and potential of the written spaces.
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33

Bailey, Doug. Cutting Absolute Worlds. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190611873.003.0011.

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This chapter presents the work of cultural anthropologist Tim Ingold (on grounded and ungrounded being) and of linguistic anthropologist Stephen Levinson (on spatial frames of reference). Both authors provide the reader with new ways to think about the object being cut at Măgura: the ground. Discussion of Ingold’s work examines his thinking on the shift from a groundless existence in modernity (imposed by shoes, roads, cars, etc., which separate us form the ground), and comment on Levinson’s investigation of the distinction among three ways that people understand where they are in the world (relative, intrinsic, and absolute frames of spatial referencing). The chapter concludes with a proposal that the reader will benefit from thinking about the Măgura pit-houses in terms of an absolute grounded existence.
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34

Gibson, Brett. Establishing Frames of Reference for Finding Hidden GoalsThe Use of Multiple Spatial Cues by Nonhuman Animals and People. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195392661.013.0008.

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35

Gimblett, H. Randy. Integrating Geographic Information Systems and Agent-Based Modeling Techniques for Understanding Social and Ecological Processes. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195143362.001.0001.

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This volume presents a set of coherent, cross-referenced perspectives on incorporating the spatial representation and analytical power of GIS with agent-based modelling of evolutionary and non-linear processes and phenomena. Many recent advances in software algorithms for incorporating geographic data in modeling social and ecological behaviors, and successes in applying such algorithms, had not been adequately reported in the literature. This book seeks to serve as the standard guide to this broad area.
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36

and, Bruno. Spaces. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198725022.003.0007.

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To our introspection, space appears as a unitary, continuous, and uniform container for objects and events. In this chapter, we show that behind this impression are in fact multiple representations of space tied to multisensory and motor processes. Information about space is coded in profoundly different ways within visual, auditory, and somatosensory channels, yielding a multitude of spatial maps in the brain with completely different frames of reference. These maps need to be coordinated and brought into register within and across sensory channels to yield separate representations for personal, peripersonal, and distant space. The boundaries of these spatial representations are plastic, and can be modified by multisensory and sensorimotor processes and by the use of tools. Data from psychophysics, neurophysiology, and neurological patients are now beginning to identify the brain mechanisms behind these fascinating perceptual mechanisms at the subcortical and cortical levels.
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37

Biernacki, Richard. Rationalization Processes inside Cultural Sociology. Edited by Jeffrey C. Alexander, Ronald N. Jacobs, and Philip Smith. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195377767.013.3.

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This article examines the use of analytic continua with spatial scaling and with potentially similar reifying effects to rationalize social meaning rather than just sound or sight in cultural sociology. It considers the use of the figure of spatial scaling as a point of entry to elucidate the basic logic by which many sociologists interpret the relation between what is culturally meaningful and what lies “outside” culture (or our concept of culture). Four case studies that illustrate how cultural practices generate meanings and reference in social life are presented: one relating to the creation of distinct color categories from the spectrum of hues in the rainbow as a paradigm for cultural analysis, and the other three relating to the views of Pierre Bourdieu, Randall Collins, and Philip Gorski. These four exemplars suggest that cultural sociology would benefit from dialogue with skeptical counter-principles for establishing—and questioning—our objects of explanation.
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38

Pavlovic, Nada Jovana. Utility of spatially congruent and incongruent auditory cues for tasks involving multiple reference frames. 2006.

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39

Kainz, Wolfgang, Xinming Tang, Yaolin Liu, and Jixian Zhang. Advances in Spatio-Temporal Analysis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2007.

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40

Kainz, Wolfgang, Xinming Tang, Yaolin Liu, and Jixian Zhang. Advances in Spatio-Temporal Analysis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2007.

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41

Kainz, Wolfgang, Xinming Tang, Yaolin Liu, and Jixian Zhang. Advances in Spatio-Temporal Analysis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2007.

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42

Kainz, Wolfgang, Xinming Tang, Yaolin Liu, and Jixian Zhang. Advances in Spatio-Temporal Analysis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2007.

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43

Xinming, Tang, ed. Advances in spatio-temporal analysis. London: Taylor & Francis, 2008.

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44

1953-, Moore Richard B., Geological Survey (U.S.), New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission., and United States. Environmental Protection Agency., eds. Estimation of total nitrogen and phosphorus in New England streams using spatially referenced regression models. Pembroke, N.H: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 2004.

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45

Cloud, Dana L., ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Communication and Critical Cultural Studies. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acref/9780190459611.001.0001.

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106 scholarly articles This is a compendium of touchstone articles by prominent communication, rhetorical, and cultural studies scholars about topics of interest to scholars and critics of popular and political culture. Articles provide authoritative surveys of concepts such as rhetorical construction of bodies, Marxist, feminist, and poststructuralist traditions, materialisms, social movements, race and anti-racist critique, whiteness, surveillance and security, visual communication, globalization, social media and digital communication/cyberculture, performance studies, the “post-human” turn, critical organizational communication, public memory, gaming, cultural industries, colonialism and postcolonialism, The Birmingham and Frankfurt Schools, commodity culture, critical health culture studies, nation and identity, public spheres, psychoanalytic theory and methods, affect theory, anti-Semitism, queer studies, critical argumentation studies, diaspora, development, intersectionality, Islamophobia, subaltern studies, spatial studies, rhetoric and cultural studies, neoliberalism, critical pedagogy, urban studies, deconstruction, audience studies, labor, war, age studies, motherhood studies, popular culture, communication in the Global South, and more. The work also surveys critical thinkers for cultural studies including Stuart Hall, Antonio Gramsci, Jesus Martin Barbero, Angela Davis, Ernesto Laclau, Raymond Williams, Giles Deleuze, Jurgen Habermas, Frantz Fanon, Chandra Mohanty, Gayatri Spivak, Michel Foucault, Louis Althusser, Juan Carlos Rodriguez, Gloria Anzaldua, Paolo Freire, Donna Haraway, Georgio Agamben, Slavoj Zizek, W.E.B. DuBois, Sara Ahmed, Paul Gilroy, Enrique Dussel, Michael Warner, Lauren Berlant, Judith Butler, Jean Baudrillard, Walter Mignolo, Edward Said, Alain Badiou, Homi Bhabha, among others. Each entry is distinguished by lists of key references and suggestions for further reading. The collection is sure to be a vital resource for faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates seeking authoritative overviews of key concepts and people in communication and critical cultural studies.
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46

(Editor), Xinming Tang, Yaolin Liu (Editor), Jixian Zhang (Editor), and Wolfgang Kainz (Editor), eds. Advances in Spatio-Temporal Analysis (International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing). CRC, 2007.

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47

Sisouphanthong, Bounthavy, and Christian Taillard. Atlas of Laos: The Spatial Structures of Economic and Social Development of the Lao People's Democratic Republic. Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2001.

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48

Roncato, Sergio, Sandro Bettella, and Clara Casco. The Chinese Lantern Illusion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199794607.003.0058.

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This chapter discusses a distortion in the perception of straightness not with reference to a line but to a contour formed by a sequence of aligned angles, such as those forming the borders of Chinese lanterns. An outline contour may appear to deviate from straightness when the contrast sign along the contour inverts. These local distortions may be observed with a jagged contour as well. This chapter provides some demonstrations in which regular rectangles contoured by a sawtooth borders appear to periodically contract/expand in synch with the phases of luminance variation of surfaces or borders. To explain these phenomena, we need to call into cause a large spatial range of interpolation of the local distortions along the contour.
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49

Mercati, Flavio. Shape Dynamics. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789475.001.0001.

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Shape Dynamics is a new theory of gravity that is based on fewer and more fundamental first principles than General Relativity. The most important feature of this theory is the replacement of relativity of simultaneity with a more tractable gauge symmetry, namely invariance under spatial conformal transformations. This book contains both a quick introduction for readers curious about Shape Dynamics and a detailed walk-through of the historical and conceptual motivations for the theory, its logical development from first principles and an in-depth description of its present status. The book is sufficiently self-contained for an undergrad student with some basic background in General Relativity and Lagrangian/Hamiltonian mechanics. It is intended both as a reference text for students approaching the subject and as a review for researchers interested in the theory.
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50

El-Sharif, Ahmad. The Muslim Prophetic Tradition. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190636647.003.0011.

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This chapter surveys the major conceptual metaphorical source domains in the Prophet Muhammad’s Tradition and their mappings with reference to Conceptual Metaphor Theory. The Prophetic discourse makes great use of metaphors whose source domains vary considerably. These metaphors are systematically classified in particular spatial domains. In addition, the Prophetic metaphors show considerable discrepancy in terms of their degree of generality and specificity: many metaphoric schemas are generic in their mapping, while a large number are very specific in their mapping. Furthermore, the majority of the Prophetic metaphors are common, due to the ontological and structural functions of most of the Prophetic metaphors. This can be attributed to the fact that Islamic religious discourse is packed with abstract notions, and metaphorical language is the most accessible method of conceptualising and facilitating the understanding of such religious abstraction.
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