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Found 25 text references:
1.
" Of greater interest, however, may be his curious essay "Instinct vs. Reason--A Black Cat," in which he discusses the mysterious line between the seeming instinct of an animal and the reason of a human."
Source:
Stark, Joseph. "Motive and meaning: the mystery of the Will in Poe's "The Black Cat""
Mississippi Quarterly
57.2 Mar. 22 2004: 255-264
2.
" Institutionalists began with the instinct/habit psychology of William James and William McDougall, but as instinct theory declined this became a liability, and institutionalists became divided over attitudes to behaviorism."
Source:
Rutherford, Malcolm. "Institutionalism Between the Wars"
Journal of Economic Issues
34.2 June 1 2000: 291
3.
" Those studying behavioral systems still examine the basic instincts that humans appear to possess (Diamond, 2001; Killeen, 2001), as do evolutionary psychologists (Cervone, 2000; Rode & Wang, 2000; Rozin, 2000) and some sociobiologists (Wilson, 1975)."
Source:
Humphreys, John H.,Einstein, Walter O. "Leadership and temperament congruence: extending the expectancy model of work motivation"
Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies
10.4 Mar. 22 2004: 58-80
4.
" He views assault, murder, rape and warfare through the now-familiar lens of evolutionary psychology and concludes, essentially, that the mess can be laid at the feet of reproductive instincts."
Source:
Wolf Shenk, Joshua. "Guns and Roses"
Nation
268.22 June 14 1999: 14
5.
" To really understand the secret of Brown's success with women, we have to look for explanations beyond evolutionary psychology and beyond the lustiness and baser instincts of today's sexually assertive young women."
Source:
Wilkinson, Helen. "How Gordon wields his"
New Statesman (1996)
4456.128 Sept. 27 1999: 36
6.
" Then, staying with his aunt Charmian in Scotland for the holidays, James becomes aware of the mysterious disappearance of a boy close to a nearby castle..."
Source:
Page, Benedicte. "The name's Bond, young master Bond: in the third preview of the forthcoming spring season, Benedicte Page interviews five high-profile children's writers"
Bookseller
.5158 Dec. 10 2004: 27-28
7.
" James was a slightly mysterious figure, lodging in Hampstead with the cartoonist Nicholas Garland, and with a somewhat complex private life."
Source:
Walker, Alan Gordon. "James Hale"
Bookseller
.5093 Sept. 5 2003: 9-10
8.
"... date [ldots] found a convincing reason why our Pleistocene ancestors would have needed such an instinct." Given his frustration with evolutionary biology, this article approaches the problem from a different point of view."
Source:
Bever, Edward. "Witchcraft Fears and Psychosocial Factors in Disease"
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
30.4 Mar. 22 2000: 573
9.
" Patterson begins by tracing the ecumenical and irenic instincts of King James, starting with his work as a reconciler of violently disparate interests in Scotland during that country's turbulent post-Reformation period."
Source:
Farrell, Lori Anne. "James VI and I and the Reunion of Christendom"
Church History
68.4 Dec. 1 1999: 1020
10.
"... entered into her blood and her bone, the sound of her voice and the carriage of her head; she understood it by instinct and loved it with passion" (James 1908, 1:60)."
Source:
Markels, Julian. "Socialism-Anxiety: The Princess Casamassima and Its New York Critics"
College Literature
27.2 Mar. 22 2000: 37
11.
" Indeed, throughout the whole of Henry Jekyll's narrative, the "I" shifts silently between participant roles: sometimes it appears to be the mysterious third person who views both Jekyll and Hyde objectively (even expressing..."
Source:
Mills, Kevin. "The stain on the mirror: Pauline reflections in The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"
Christianity and Literature
53.3 Mar. 22 2004: 337-349
12.
" Throughout the late '80s and early '90s, the Maleeva sisters set all kinds of records but lacked the championship instincts of the Williams sisters."
Source:
Young, Josh. "Williams sisters gain momentum by spreading act around"
Washington Times
Mar. 17 1999: 3
13.
" At least 10 senior members of Congress recently sent Defense Secretary William Cohen a stern letter about the Pentagon's failure to take seriously a newly discovered bio-marker that may help explain the mysterious illness known as gulf-war syndrome, or GWS."
Source:
Rodriguez, Paul M. "Gulf War Illness Update"
Insight on the News
16.8 Feb. 28 2000: 7
14.
" Steel's appreciation of research may appear mysterious to those less familiar with the rather doctrinaire approach of many British planners to quantitative methodology."
Source:
Burns, Neal M. "Truth, Lies and Advertising"
Journal of Advertising
27.4 Dec. 22 1998: 87-89
15.
" At James Cohan Gallery, another, larger young stag, its antlers fully bared and covered in simulated ice, was positioned again in isolation and under similarly mysterious circumstances."
Source:
Dailey, Meghan. "Erick Swenson: James Cohan Gallery"
Artforum International
43.1 Sept. 1 2004: 269-271
16.
"... war and postwar experiences of Garth Wilkinson and Robertson James along with Henry's mysterious injury (probably sustained while helping to fight a fire in Newport, Rhode Island) are treated in detail in Edel Volume I. See in particular 167-190."
Source:
GREIFF, LOUIS K. "In the Name of the Brother: Larry Heinemann's Paco's Story and Male America"
CRITIQUE: Studies in Contemporary Fiction
41.4 June 22 2000: 381
17.
" Pinker, S., The Language Instinct, New York: William Morrow 1994."
Source:
West, Joel,Graham, John L. "A linguistic-based measure of cultural distance and its relationship to managerial values"
Management International Review
44.3 July 1 2004: 239-261
18.
" There was a sermon at court every Tuesday, a weekly commemoration of the mysterious 'Gowrie Conspiracy', and this institution alone accounts for the fact that James heard more sermons in twenty years than his predecessors in 200, or so it was claimed."
Source:
COLLINSON, PATRICK. "Sermons at court. Politics and religion in Elizabethan andJacobean preaching"
Journal of Ecclesiastical History
50.4 Oct. 1 1999: 797
19.
" We can thus affirm with Heidegger, albeit on more concrete historical grounds, that existential questions of purpose and meaning run deeper in human nature than supposed animal instincts and cannot be tweaked by DNA sequencing."
Source:
Zimmermann, Jens. "Quo vadis?: literary theory beyond postmodernism"
Christianity and Literature
53.4 June 22 2004: 495-520
20.
" These works have an obsessive, hypnotic feel and a mysterious luminosity that recalls paintings by artists ranging from Yayoi Kusama to William Wood."
Source:
Ebony, David. "Ross Bleckner at Mary Boone and Lehmann Maupin"
Art in America
87.4 Apr. 1 1999: 139-140
21.
" He called paleontologists' efforts to make such connections "fanciful at best." But the Chengjian fossils, all Westerners agree, are far more exquisitely preserved -- and 15 .million years closer to the beginning of the mysterious evolutionary explosion."
Source:
Heeren, Fred. "Paleontologic Agitprop?"
Insight on the News
16.27 July 24 2000: 24
22.
" Anna dreams of a more fulfilling relationship, and when she meets the young Turk Hikmet Ayverdi, it appears she may have found it. Hikmet's mysterious disappearance launches Anna's desire to learn more about her Turkish fellow citizens and Turkish culture."
Source:
. "Die Schrift des Freundes"
World Literature Today
74.1 Jan. 1 2000: 138
23.
"... "The Mysterious William Shakespeare," by Charlton Ogburn, raised eyebrows for arguing that Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, actually penned the great Shakespeare dramas."
Source:
Butters, Patrick. "Small publishers go by the book: Long hours, tight deadlines get author's work off presses"
Washington Times
Nov. 17 1999: 4
24.
" Evangelicals associated spontaneity of feeling with true faith. [17] Thus spontaneous emotions in heterosexual love, although treated cautiously, were no longer discredited; now they were regarded as a sure, though mysterious, sign of Providence."
Source:
Berend, Zsuzsa. ""THE BEST OR NONE!" SPINSTERHOOD IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NEW ENGLAND"
Journal of Social History
33.4 June 22 2000: 935
25.
" STRANGE LIES "We have a president who has a problem: he lies when he doesn't really have to," writes New York Times columnist William Safire. "This mysterious compulsion is not to be confused with the rational falsehood."
Source:
Pierce, Greg. "INSIDE POLITICS"
Washington Times
May 25 1999: 6
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