2017
DOI: 10.18384/2310-7278-2017-2-108-115
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Visible and invisible world in the conception of American authors of the 17th - the beginning of the 18th centuries

Abstract: Аннотация. Статья посвящена одному из важных богословских и философских вопросов американского пуританизма -представлению о видимом и невидимом мире. В контексте американской литературы ���� -на�ала ����� вв. рассмотрены такие зна�ительные е� про� ���� -на�ала ����� вв. рассмотрены такие зна�ительные е� про� -на�ала ����� вв. рассмотрены такие зна�ительные е� про� ����� вв. рассмотрены такие зна�ительные е� про� вв. рассмотрены такие зна�ительные е� про� изведения, как «История поселения в Плимуте» У. Брэдфорд… Show more

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“…The literature casts doubt on whether Russian lawyers share a similar mind‐set (Kurkchiyan 2018). For example, Mishina () described them as “castes of warring factions,” suggesting that they are best understood in terms of their subgroups rather than as a whole. Others have pushed the argument further to question whether we can even speak of law students as a group (Solomon ; Bocharov and Moiseeva ), pointing to the differences between full‐time and correspondence students highlighted in Table as well as the lack of a shared educational experience to suggest that these two groups will inevitably and irrevocably be distinct.…”
Section: The Results Of Russian Legal Education: Being Socialized As mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The literature casts doubt on whether Russian lawyers share a similar mind‐set (Kurkchiyan 2018). For example, Mishina () described them as “castes of warring factions,” suggesting that they are best understood in terms of their subgroups rather than as a whole. Others have pushed the argument further to question whether we can even speak of law students as a group (Solomon ; Bocharov and Moiseeva ), pointing to the differences between full‐time and correspondence students highlighted in Table as well as the lack of a shared educational experience to suggest that these two groups will inevitably and irrevocably be distinct.…”
Section: The Results Of Russian Legal Education: Being Socialized As mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Close observers of the Russian scene question the quality of many of the new law fakul'tety , dismissing them as little more than diploma mills (Maggs, Schwartz, and Burnham ). But their abundance has ensured that almost anyone who wants to study law can find a place (Moiseeva ), which was not the case in the Soviet era when there were typically forty applicants for every opening (Mishina ). On the other hand, only about 20 percent of present‐day law students received stipends to cover their tuition (Moiseeva ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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