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Writing the dead : text and commemoration in Anglo-Saxon England / Jill Hamilton Clements -- From powerful agents to subordinate objects? : the restless dead in 13th- and 14th-century Iceland / Kirsi Kanerva -- Animated corpses and bodies with power in the scholastic age / Winston Black -- Women, dance, death, and lament in medieval Spain and the Mediterranean : Jewish, Christian, and Muslim examples / Cynthia Sautter -- Wills and testaments / Francine Michaud -- Spectacular death : capital punishment in medieval English towns / James Davis -- Ghostly knights : kings' funerals in 14th century Europe and the emergence of an international style / Mikhail A. Boytsov -- Death of clergymen : popes and cardinals' death rituals / Joelle Rollo-Koster -- A dead zone in the historiography of death in the Middle Ages : the sentiment of suspicious death / Franck Collard -- Registering deaths and causes of death in late medieval Milan / Ann G. Carmichael.
Blog: Crooked Timber
Billions of miles away at the edge of the Solar System, Voyager 1 has gone mad and has begun to die. Let's start with the "billions of miles". Voyager 1 was launched in early September 1977. Jimmy Carter was a hopeful new President. Yugoslavia and the USSR were going concerns, as were American Motors, Pan […]
Blog: croaking cassandra
Back in 2020 and 2021, in and around the straight economics and economic policy posts, there were quite a few on aspects of the Covid experience in New Zealand, particularly in a cross-country comparative light. More recently, you see from time to time suggestions that New Zealand’s experience may have been so good that in … Continue reading Deaths and excess deaths
In: Open Yale courses
In: The Open Yale Courses Ser.
Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Thinking about Death -- 2. Dualism versus Physicalism -- 3. Arguments for the Existence of the Soul -- 4. Descartes' Argument -- 5. Plato on the Immortality of the Soul -- 6. Personal Identity -- 7. Choosing between the Theories -- 8. The Nature of Death -- 9. Two Surprising Claims about Death -- 10. The Badness of Death -- 11. Immortality -- 12. The Value of Life -- 13. Other Aspects of Death -- 14. Living in the Face of Death -- 15. Suicide -- 16. Conclusion: An Invitation -- Notes -- Suggestions for Further Reading -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W.
In: Routledge library editions. Ethics volume 25
In: Contexts / American Sociological Association: understanding people in their social worlds, Band 4, Heft 4, S. 43-43
ISSN: 1537-6052
Death is an inevitable phenomenon, which implies the termination of the life of persons. All over the world, in a day, a large number of children are born, but unfortunately also a large number of people die because of illness, age, homicide, suicide or poverty. Death is not only a biological process, as at the same time it affects directly the legal capacity of a person. Therefore the natural death of the person is seen as a cause that brings legal consequences at its verification. Being considered as a natural phenomenon as well as legal, death is considered as a legal fact with which legislations bind the beginnings, changes or terminations of legal. Legal capacity of a person, as a condition to undertake rights and obligations, is the determining element to gain the quality of a natural person. This quality is gained with the birth and terminated with the death. There are special cases, under which it is difficult to verify the natural death of a person for reasons such as: absence of the cadaver or the uncertainty of the circumstances in which the person has been lost or absented. In order to guarantee the legal security and also the conservation of personal and property rights of the person, legislations have provided the declaration of the person dead, which may come as a result of natural disasters, accidents, military actions or as a consequence of declaring before the person missing. This paper aims to make a comparative analysis between the procedure of declaration of a natural death of the person and the procedure of declaring a person dead according to the Albanian legislation. For this reason it will be analyzed the persons who are entitled to make the request for the declaration of the person dead, the legal force of the decision of the court through which the person is declared dead and the necessary time limits for declaring a person dead. DOI:10.5901/mjss.2014.v5n22p320
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In: Emerald Studies in Death and Culture Ser.
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicates about attitudes related to dying, mourning and the afterlife. Focusing on American examples, topics are discussed alongside contemporary representations of death, as seen in celebrity death images and forensic photography.
Intro -- Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of tables -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Part I Social and material worlds -- 1 Experiencing and representing the body -- The social construction of bodies and minds -- Experiencing the body -- Attempted resolutions -- Narrative reconstruction -- Talk as ritual -- Conclusion -- 2 Death, embodiment and social structure -- The death of the body -- Social structure, the distribution of death and patternsof ageing -- The dying role -- Conclusion -- 3 The social aspect of death -- Death and social organisation -- Death and the problem of meaning -- Mortuary ritual -- Conclusion -- Part II Representing death -- 4 Medicine, modernity and the risks of life -- Locating death in the body -- Regulating the population -- The sacred body -- Conclusion and critique -- 5 The revival of death awareness -- Colonisation of the life-world by the psychologicalcomplex -- Awareness of dying -- Hospice and palliative care -- Conclusion -- 6 Reporting death -- Television and news media -- The research medium -- Qualitative research -- Conclusion -- Part III Experiencing death -- 7 Falling from culture -- Living alone towards the end of life -- Food, drink and dying -- Conclusion -- 8 Awareness and control of dying -- The social distribution of awareness -- Symbolic violence -- Euthanasia -- Conclusion -- 9 Grief and resurrective practices -- Survivor theories -- The social construction of grief -- Resurrection -- Accounting for living and dying alone -- Conclusion -- References -- Index
In: Philosophy & public affairs, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 144-153
ISSN: 0048-3915
A strictly biological definition of death as a specific event is both possible & socially desirable. Contrary to L. C. Becker (see SA 24:5/76I1544), brain-stem death, as defined by the Harvard Committee of 1968, provides a satisfactory definition of death, since it provides as equally valid a yardstick as the conventional criteria of cessation of respiration & of the heartbeats. The convergence of transplant surgery with extraordinary methods of resuscitation has led to considerable confusion concerning the boundaries of life & has placed the issue of an alternative biological criterion of death in the foreground of public interest. The concept of a biological definition of death is defended against proposals to redefine death in terms of social, economic, or morally relevant criteria. The criteria for diagnosing death, being strictly biological, must be distinguished from discussions concerning the quality of residual life & decisions as to when, if ever, the existence of a living being should be terminated. Following a survey of changing attitudes toward the traditional diagnosis of death within the medical profession, the actual criteria for the diagnosis of brain-stem death is examined & then defended against the accusation that any departure from criteria based on the cessation of the heart & respiratory organs must constitute an "artificial advancement of death." AA.