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  1. Premios | Facultad de Filosofía y Letras

    Premio Noman Sverdlin Distinción a las mejores tesis de filosofía.
    www.filos.unam.mx/premios - En caché - Similares
  2. Premio Nobel - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

    Los Premios Kyoto, que concede la Fundación Inamori, se otorgan en tres categorías: Tecnologías Avanzadas, Ciencias Básicas, y Arte y Filosofía. ...
    es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premio_Nobel - En caché - Similares
  3. Categoría:Premio Rolf Schock de Lógica y Filosofía - Wikipedia, la ...

    Artículos en la categoría «Premio Rolf Schock de Lógica y Filosofía». Esta ...
    es.wikipedia.org/.../Categoría:Premio_Rolf_Schock_de_Lógica_y_Filosofía - En caché - Similares
  4. Noticias sobre filosofia del premio


    elblaugrana.com
  5. Carles Folguera, director de La Masía: “Es el premio a una filosofía
    hace 5 horas
    ... estamos muy contentos porque no se premia a un jugador determinado sino a una filosofía. Todos los aficionados al buen fútbol nos sentimos contentos”. ...
    sportYou (blog) - 1401 artículos relacionados

  6. Papeles mojados.: Olimpiada de filosofía.Segundo premio por la ...

    31 May 2010 ... Olimpiada de filosofía.Segundo premio por la Sociedad asturiana de filosofía. EL AMOR Y LA METADONA “El héroe se enamora de la heroína” ...
    laramuslera.blogspot.com/.../olimpiada-de-filosofiasegundo-premio.html - En caché
  7. com: Congreso alemán de filosofía y premio de filosofía del Goethe ...

    28 Nov 2010 ... Rebeca Castellano acerca de la convocatoria al Premio de filosofía del Goethe-Institut que se concederá por primera vez en el marco del ...
    www.fenomenologiayfilosofiaprimera.com/.../congreso-aleman-de-filosofia-y-premio.html - En caché
  8. Filosofía del Premio VISS | Facebook

    1 Ago 2010 ... Bienvenido a Facebook en Español! Facebook es una herramienta social que pone en contacto a personas con sus amigos y otras personas que ...
    es-la.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=144742372218465 - En caché
  9. José María Ortíz Ibarz, Doctor en Filosofía, con Premio ...

    Decano de la Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas, Sociales y Empresariales de la Universidad Francisco de Vitoria. Doctor en Filosofía, con Premio Extraordinario ...
    www.toptenms.com/Jose_Maria_Ortiz_Ibarz.aspx - En caché - Similares
  10. Premio ESFERA AL INTELECTO Y LA FILOSOFIA | La Yijad en Eurabia

    14 Sep 2008 ... Me lo ha concedido Derecha Social (ESFERA AL INTELECTO Y LA FILOSOFIA), cuya bitácora he conocido de esa manera.
    layijadeneurabia.com/.../premio-esfera-al-intelecto-y-la-filosofia/ - En caché - Similares
  11. Un sevillano, catedrático de Filosofía, gana el Premio Nacional de ...

    10 Oct 2010 ... Sevilla está de fiesta. Un habitante de su región se ha alzado con el premio Nacional de Literatura infantil. Hasta ahí, todo bien.
    salonesarte.es/.../un-sevillano-catedratico-de-filosofia-gana-el-premio-nacional-de-literatura-infantil - En caché
  12. Un catedrático de Filosofía gana el Premio Nacional de Literatura ...

    22 Oct 2010 ... Eliacer Cansino ha sido galardonado con el Premio Nacional de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil correspondiente a 2010 por su obra 'Una ...
    fenareta.org/.../un-catedratico-de-filosofia-gana-el-premio-nacional-de-literatura-infantil/ - En caché
estan TERIOR ERA: FILOSOFIA DEL PREMIO

prize (n.1) Look up prize at Dictionary.com
"reward," 1590s, alteration of M.E. prise (c.1300 in this sense; see price). Prize-fighter is from 1703; prize-fight from 1824. Prized "highly esteemed" is from 1530s.
prize (n.2) Look up prize at Dictionary.com
"something taken by force," late 14c., from O.Fr. prise "a taking, seizing, holding," prop. fem. pp. of prendre "to take, seize," from L. prendere, contraction of prehendere (see prehensile). Especially of ships captured at sea (1510s).
prize (v.) Look up prize at Dictionary.com
"to estimate," 1580s, alteration of M.E. prisen "to prize, value," from stem of O.Fr. preisier (see praise). Related: Prized; prizing.
estaNTERIOR ERA ETIMOLOGY OF PRIZE sensu estriktu


prize (n.1) Look up prize at Dictionary.com
"reward," 1590s, alteration of M.E. prise (c.1300 in this sense; see price). Prize-fighter is from 1703; prize-fight from 1824. Prized "highly esteemed" is from 1530s.
prize (v.) Look up prize at Dictionary.com
"to estimate," 1580s, alteration of M.E. prisen "to prize, value," from stem of O.Fr. preisier (see praise). Related: Prized; prizing.
prize (n.2) Look up prize at Dictionary.com
"something taken by force," late 14c., from O.Fr. prise "a taking, seizing, holding," prop. fem. pp. of prendre "to take, seize," from L. prendere, contraction of prehendere (see prehensile). Especially of ships captured at sea (1510s).
price Look up price at Dictionary.com
early 13c., pris, from O.Fr. pris "price, value, wages, reward," also "honor, praise, prize" (Fr. prix), from L.L. precium, from L. pretium "reward, prize, value, worth," from PIE *preti- "back," on notion of "recompense" (cf. Skt. aprata "without recompense, gratuitously," Gk. protei "toward, to, upon," Lett. pret "opposite," O.C.S. protivu "in opposition to, against"). Praise, price, and prize began to diverge in O.Fr., with praise emerging in M.E. by early 14c. and prize being evident by late 1500s with the rise of the -z- spelling. Having shed the extra O.Fr. and M.E. senses, the word now again has the base sense of the L. original. The verb meaning "to set the price of" is attested from late 14c. Price-tag is recorded from 1881.
pry (2) Look up pry at Dictionary.com
"raise by force," 1823 (originally also a noun, "an instrument for prying, a crowbar"), alteration of prize (as though it were a plural) in obsolete sense of "lever" (c.1300), from O.Fr. prise "a taking hold, grasp" (see prize (n.2)).
athlete Look up athlete at Dictionary.com
1520s, from L. athleta, from Gk. athletes "contestant in the games," agent noun from athlein "to contest for a prize," rel. to athlos "a contest" and athlon "a prize," of unknown origin. Before 1750, always in Latin form. In this sense, O.E. had plegmann. Athlete's foot first recorded 1928, for an ailment that has been around much longer.
cakewalk Look up cakewalk at Dictionary.com
1863, Amer.Eng., from cake (n.) + walk, probably in ref. to the cake given as a prize for the fanciest steps in a procession in a Southern black custom (explained by Richard H. Thornton, 1912, as, "A walking competition among negroes," in which the prize cake goes to "the couple who put on most style"). Its figurative meaning of "something easy" (1863) is recorded before the literal one (1879). As a verb, from 1909. This may also be the source of the phrase to take the cake (1847). Piece of cake "something easy" is from 1936.
barney Look up barney at Dictionary.com
1859, British slang, "lark, spree, rough enjoyment," of uncertain origin. Later also "a fixed prize-fight."
jackpot Look up jackpot at Dictionary.com
"big prize," 1944, from obsolete poker sense (1881) of progressive antes that begin when no player has a pair of jacks or better. Earlier, in criminal slang, it meant "trouble," especially "an arrest" (1902).
decathlon Look up decathlon at Dictionary.com
1912, from deca "ten" + Gk. athlon "contest, prize." A modern Olympic event consisting of 10 challenges.
grand prix Look up grand prix at Dictionary.com
1863, from Fr., lit. "great prize," originally in ref. to the Grand Prix de Paris, international horse race for three-year-olds, run every June at Longchamps beginning in 1863.
saved Look up saved at Dictionary.com
“delivered from damnation,” c.1300, pp. adj. from save. Saved by the bell (1932) is from prize fighting.
sweepstakes Look up sweepstakes at Dictionary.com
"prize won in a race or contest," 1773, from M.E. swepestake "one who sweeps or wins all the stakes in a game" (1495, as the name of one of the King's ships), from swepen "sweep" + stake (v).
Nobel Look up Nobel at Dictionary.com
1900, in reference to five prizes (in physics, chemistry, medicine, literature, and peace) established in the will of Alfred Nobel (1833-1896), Swedish chemist and engineer, inventor of dynamite. A sixth prize, in economics, was added in 1969. Related: Nobelist.
cracker-jack Look up cracker-jack at Dictionary.com
also crackerjack, "something excellent," 1895, U.S. colloquialism, apparently a fanciful construction. The caramel-coated popcorn-and-peanuts confection was said to have been introduced at the World's Columbian Exposition (1893). Supposedly a salesman gave it the name when he tasted some and said, "That's a cracker-jack," using the then-popular expression. The name was trademarked 1896. The "Prize in Every Box" was introduced 1912.
hologram Look up hologram at Dictionary.com
1949, coined by Hungarian-born British scientist Dennis Gabor (Gábor Dénes), 1971 Nobel prize winner in physics for his work in holography; from Gk. holos "whole" (in sense of three-dimensional; see safe (adj.)) + -gram.
pentathlon Look up pentathlon at Dictionary.com
1852, from Gk. pentathlon, from pente "five" + athlon "prize, contest," of uncertain origin. Earlier in L. form pentathlum (1706). The Gk. version consisted of jumping, sprinting, discus and spear throwing, and wrestling. The modern version (1912) consists of horseback riding, fencing, shooting, swimming, and cross-country running.
antagonist Look up antagonist at Dictionary.com
c.1600, from L. antagonista, from Gk. antagonistes "competitor, opponent, rival," from antagonizesthai "to struggle against," from anti- "against" + agonizesthai "to contend for a prize," from agon "contest" (see agony). Originally in battle or sport, extended 1620s to any sphere of human activity. Related: Antagonistic (1630s).
laureate Look up laureate at Dictionary.com
late 14c., from L. laureatus "crowned with laurels," from laurea "laurel crown" (emblematic of victory or distinction in poetry), from fem. of laureus "of laurel," from laurus "laurel." Laureat poete first found in "Canterbury Tales;" the first official one was probably Ben Jonson (1638), though the first recorded one was Dryden (1668). Extended to Nobel prize winners, 1947.
booby Look up booby at Dictionary.com
1590s, from Sp. bobo "stupid person, slow bird" (used of various ungainly seabirds), probably from L. balbus "stammering" (like barbarian, from an imitative root, cf. Czech blblati "to stammer," Skt. balbala-karoti "he stammers"). Booby prize is 1889, an object of little value given to the loser of a game; booby trap is 1850, originally a schoolboy prank; the more lethal sense developed during World War I.
sixty Look up sixty at Dictionary.com
O.E. sixtig, from siex (see six) + -tig (see -ty (1)). Phrase sixty-four dollar question is 1942, from radio quiz show where that was the top prize. Sixty-nine in sexual sense is first attested 1888, as a translation of Fr. faire soixante neuf, lit. "to do 69."
consolation Look up consolation at Dictionary.com
late 14c., "act of consoling," from O.Fr. consolacion (11c., Mod.Fr. consolation) "solace, comfort; delight, pleasure," from L. consolationem (nom. consolatio-) "consoling, comforting," noun of action from consolat-, pp. stem of consolari (see console (v.)). Consolation prize is recorded from 1886.
prison Look up prison at Dictionary.com
early 12c., from O.Fr. prisoun "prison, imprisonment" (11c.), altered (by influence of pris "taken;" see prize (2)) from earlier preson, from L. prensionem (nom. prensio), shortening of prehensionem (nom. *prehensio) "a taking," noun of action from pp. stem of prehendere "to take" (see prehensile).
Yankee Doodle Look up Yankee Doodle at Dictionary.com
popular tune of the Amer. Revolution, apparently written c.1755 by British Army surgeon Dr. Richard Schuckburgh while campaigning with Amherst's force in upper New York during the French and Indian War. The original verses mocked the colonial troops serving alongside the regulars, and the Doodle element just may have been, or hinted at, the 18c. slang term for "penis." The song naturally was popular with British troops in the colonies, but after the colonials began to win skirmishes with them in 1775, they took the tune as a patriotic prize and re-worked the lyrics. The current version seems to have been written in 1776 by Edward Bangs, a Harvard sophomore who also was a Minuteman.
fancy (n.) Look up fancy at Dictionary.com
mid-15c., contraction of fantasy, it took the older and longer word's sense of "inclination, whim, desire." Meaning "fans of an amusement or sport, collectively" is attested by 1735, especially (though not originally) of the prize ring. The modern verb meaning "take a liking to" (1540s) is a contraction of fantasien "to fantasize (about)." Meaning "to imagine" is from 1550s. Related: Fancied; fancies; fancying. Colloquial use in fancy that, etc. is recorded by 1813. The adjective is recorded from mid-18c.
scofflaw Look up scofflaw at Dictionary.com
1924, from scoff (q.v.) + law. The winning entry in a national contest during Prohibition to coin a word to characterize a person who drinks illegally, chosen from more than 25,000 entries; the $200 winning prize was split between two contestants who sent in the word separately, Henry Irving Dale and Miss Kate L. Butler. Other similar attempts did not stick, cf. pitilacker (1926), winning entry in Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals contest to establish a scolding word for one who is cruel to animals (submitted by Mrs. M. McIlvaine Bready of Mickleton, N.J.).
hat Look up hat at Dictionary.com
O.E. hæt "hat, head covering," from P.Gmc. *khattuz "hood, cowl" (cf. O.N. hattr), from PIE base *kadh- "cover, protect" (cf. Lith. kudas "tuft or crest of a bird," L. cassis "helmet"). Now, "head covering with a more or less horizontal brim." To throw one's hat in the ring was originally (1847) to take up a challenge in prize-fighting. To eat one's hat was originally To eat Old Rowley's [Charles II's] hat.
trophy Look up trophy at Dictionary.com
1510s, "a spoil or prize of war," from M.Fr. trophée (15c.) from L. trophaeum "a sign of victory, monument," originally tropaeum, from Gk. tropaion "monument of an enemy's defeat," from neut. of adj. tropaios "of defeat," from trope "a rout," originally "a turning" (of the enemy); see trope. Figurative extension to any token or memorial of victory is first recorded 1560s. Trophy wife attested by 1984.
distance Look up distance at Dictionary.com
late 13c., "quarrel, estrangement," from O.Fr. destance (13c.), from L. distantia "a standing apart," from distantem (nom. distans) "standing apart, separate, distant," prp. of distare "stand apart," from dis- "apart, off" (see dis-) + stare "to stand" (see stet). Meaning "remoteness" is late 14c. The figurative sense of "aloofness" is the same as in stand-offish. As a verb, from 1570s (trans.); 1640s (intrans.). Phrase go the distance (1930s) seems to be originally from the prize ring, where the word meant "scheduled length of a bout."
tragedy Look up tragedy at Dictionary.com
late 14c., "play or other serious literary work with an unhappy ending," from O.Fr. tragedie (14c.), from L. tragedia "a tragedy," from Gk. tragodia "a dramatic poem or play in formal language and having an unhappy resolution," apparently lit. "goat song," from tragos "goat" + oide "song." The connection may be via satyric drama, from which tragedy later developed, in which actors or singers were dressed in goatskins to represent satyrs. But many other theories have been made (including "singer who competes for a goat as a prize"), and even the "goat" connection is at times questioned. Meaning "any unhappy event, disaster" is from c.1500.
rough (adj.) Look up rough at Dictionary.com
O.E. ruh "rough, untrimmed, uncultivated," from W.Gmc. *rukhwaz "shaggy, hairy, rough" (cf. M.Du. ruuch, Du. ruig, O.H.G. ruher, Ger. rauh), from P.Gmc. *rukhaz. The original -gh- sound was guttural, as in Scottish loch. Sense of "approximate" is first recorded c.1600. The noun meaning "broken ground" is from late 15c. (phrase in the rough first recorded 1823); specific sense in golf is from 1901. Noun meaning "a rowdy" is first attested 1837. Rough draft is from 1699. Rough-and-ready is from 1810, originally military; rough-and-tumble (1810) is from the prize ring.
wake (v.) Look up wake at Dictionary.com
"to become awake," O.E. wacan "to become awake," also from wacian "to be or remain awake," both from P.Gmc. *waken (cf. O.S. wakon, O.N. vaka, Dan. vaage, O.Fris. waka, Du. waken, O.H.G. wahhen, Ger. wachen "to be awake," Goth. wakan "to watch"), from PIE base *weg- "to be strong, be lively" (cf. Skt. vajah "force, swiftness, race, prize," vajayati "drives on;" L. vegere, vigere "to be live, be active, quicken," vigil "awake, wakeful," vigor "liveliness, activity"). Causative sense "to rouse from sleep" is attested from c.1300. Phrase wake-up call is attested from 1976, originally a call one received from the hotel desk in the morning.
purse (n.) Look up purse at Dictionary.com
O.E. pursa "little bag made of leather," from M.L. bursa "purse" (cf. O.Fr. borse, 12c., Fr. bourse), from L.L., variant of byrsa "hide," from Gk. byrsa "hide, leather." Change of b- to p- perhaps by infl. of O.E. pusa, O.N. posi "bag." Meaning "woman's handbag" is attested from 1955. Meaning "sum of money collected as a prize in a race, etc.," is from 1640s. The verb, "draw together and wrinkle" (as the strings of a money bag) is first recorded c.1600. Related: Pursed; pursing. Purse-strings, figurative for "control of money," is from early 15c. Purse-snatcher first attested 1902 (earlier purse-picker, 1540s). The notion of "drawn together by a thong" is also behind purse-net (c.1400).
money Look up money at Dictionary.com
late 13c., "coinage, metal currency," from O.Fr. moneie, from L. moneta "mint, coinage," from Moneta, a title of the Roman goddess Juno, in or near whose temple money was coined; perhaps from monere "advise, warn" (see monitor), with the sense of "admonishing goddess," which is sensible, but the etymology is difficult. Extended early 19c. to include paper money. To make money "earn pay" is first attested mid-15c. Highwayman's threat your money or your life first attested 1841. Phrase in the money (1902) originally meant "one who finishes among the prize-winners" (in a horse race, etc.). The challenge to put (one's) money where (one's) mouth is is first recorded 1942. Moneybags "rich person" is from 1818; money-grub "one who is sordidly intent on amassing money" is from 1768.
I am not interested in money but in the things of which money is the symbol. [Henry Ford]
ring (n.) Look up ring at Dictionary.com
O.E. hring "circular band," from P.Gmc. *khrengaz (cf. O.N. hringr, O.Fris. hring, Ger. Ring), lit. "something curved," from PIE base *(s)ker- "to turn, bend" (cf. L. curvus "bent, curved," crispus "curly;" O.C.S. kragu "circle," and perhaps Gk. kirkos "ring," koronos "curved"). Meaning "place for prize fight and wrestling bouts" (early 14c.) is from the space in a circle of bystanders in which such contests were once held (ringside is attested from 1866). Meaning "combination of interested persons" is from 1829. The verb meaning "to make a circle around" is O.E. ymbhringan. The circus ringmaster is recorded from 1873. Tree ring is from 1670s; fairy ring is from 1620s. Nursery rhyme ring a ring a rosie, is attested in an American form (with a different ending) from c.1790. "The belief that the rhyme originated with the Great Plague is now almost universal, but has no evidence to support it and is almost certainly nonsense" ["Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore"]. This connection only dates to the 1960s.
ESTAN TERIOR ERA: ETYMOLOGY DE PRIZE, sensu latu


premiar es amasar y estrechar la tripa del poder


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  1. Ciencias del Lenguaje-37 - RAÍCES Y RADICALES -INDOEUROPEOS-

    ar(a)to- estrechar, apretar, artar ar(a)tu- articulación, artejo, artículo ..... ghorad- tripa; cuerda musical ghorg- membrana intestinal, piel, corión ..... mag- amasar; amoldar, machacar magh- tener poder, tener valor .... nem-2 distribuir, coger, dirimir, premiar nembh- nube de lluvia, nubarrón, nimbo, limeta ...
    www.diccionariosdigitales.net/.../ciencias%20del%20lenguaje-37-raices%20y%20radicales-indoeuropeos-.htm - En caché - Similares
  2. [PDF]

    Descargar libro - Untitled

    Formato de archivo: PDF/Adobe Acrobat
    era el de un mundo sin élites de poder, no sin seres humanos. El autobús había franqueado ...... desleído y tripa de hojas plastificadas no parecía, en modo ...
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  3. Verbs addüamkülen, estar resuelto addungun, hablar correctamente y ...

    ... aprobar, aceptar kümtun teñir oscuro künaf estrechar el vientre kunarken, ... agradecer, compensar, premiar mañumtun, agradecer, compensar, premiar mañumün agradecer, ... tener derecho sobre un terreno* masan amasar matetun tomar mate matukelün, .... guiar, enviar, despedir ngüyün limpiar tripa (como)* nguyün, ...
    www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/.../msverbs.txt - En caché
  4. Diccionario Mapuche - Español

    Itró tripa meu: en frente. Itrólle ka: sí, así es. ..... Lemn: poder levantar cargas pesadas. Lëpi: penas plumas mayores de las aves. .... Mañumtun: premiar, recompensar, agradecer. .... Nguëtraftrapëmn: estrechar firmemente. Nguëtralün: aplastar, comprimir ..... Ülërün. Ilürn: sobar, amasar, masajear (enfermo). ...
    www.educar.org/diccionarios/mapucheespanol.asp - En caché
  5. Cuéntame un cuento - Cuentos de Poldy Bird

    No es importante el que detenta el poder de desentrañar los sentimientos más ... Es tu aplauso, tu mano estrechando su mano, el paso que das hacia él el que lo .... Cuando tu vida se apagó, el miedo y la soledad hicieron nudos con mis tripas. .... aglutinado, amasado sin grumos, procesado, unificado en el sentido ...
    blogs.diariovasco.com/.../cuentameuncuento?...1... - En caché
  6. Glosario mapuche - viaje por inversiones

    Itró tripa meu: en frente. Itrólle ka: sí, así es. ..... Lemn: poder levantar cargas pesadas. Lëpi: penas plumas mayores de las aves. .... Nguëtraftrapëmn: estrechar firmemente. Nguëtralün: aplastar, comprimir, romper. Nguëtrarn. Nguëtrarün. .... Shangukuln: amasar. Shañwe: cerdo. Shawe: quinoa. Shikon: picotear. ...
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  7. 100'000 Chilean Spanish words (frequency list) - Time-saving ...

    haber estar tener hacer poder Chile decir deber Santiago entre primero ..... cargar característica atlético teléfono adentro premiar cerveza cívico conferir ...
    www.artwinauto.com/files/chilean-spanish.../wordlist.txt - En caché
  8. Diccionario Mapuche Español

    19 Mar 2010 ... epu tripa che, gente de dos tipos epumari, veinte ...... Hola, que bueno es poder contar con estas paginas de foro idiomático... y así salir ...
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  9. Uncategorized « Nf23′s Weblog

    2 May 2008 ... Itró tripa meu: en frente. Itrólle ka: sí, así es. Iwëlkuq: sortija, anillo. ..... Lemn: poder levantar cargas pesadas. .... Mañumtun: premiar, recompensar, agradecer. .... Nguëtraftrapëmn: estrechar firmemente. Nguëtralün: aplastar, comprimir ..... Ülërün. Ilürn: sobar, amasar, masajear (enfermo). ...
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  10. Blog de Bariloche 2010®: 1/03/08 - 1/04/08

    epu tripa che, gente de dos tipos epumari, veinte epuñpele, mutuamente ..... mañumen, mañumtun, agradecer, compensar, premiar mapu, 1. tierra, suelo; 2. país, patria; 3. región, territorio .... nengümün, 1. mover algo (materialmente); 2. usar, ejercer un poder ... ngetraftrapemen, estrechar firmemente, apretar ...
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filosofia del culto a la personalidad


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  1. Culto a la personalidad en el Diccionario soviético de filosofía ...

    Culto a la personalidad: versión digital del artículo publicado en el Diccionario filosófico dirigido por MM Rosental y PF Iudin / 1965.
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  2. Autoridad en el Diccionario soviético de filosofía / 1965

    Diccionario soviético de filosofía. Ediciones Pueblos Unidos, Montevideo ...
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  3. Soviético - Diccionario soviético de filosofía / 1965

    Versión digital de articulos publicados en el Diccionario filosófico, ...
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  4. Historia del Culto a la Personalidad - SimBioDiversidad

    El culto a la personalidad de Hugo Chávez Lázaro Rosa Viernes, 7 de agosto de 2009 *-Licenciado en Filosofía e Historia Ex-profesor de Historia del Mundo . ...
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  5. 20 caracteristicas de un culto o una secta religiosa

    2 entradas - 1 autor - Última entrada: 18 Sep 2009
    Esto anestesia el mecanismo de defensa de la persona y hace el control mucho más fácil. 8 – Relaciones asignadas: En muchos cultos, el líder ...
    www.malianteocristiano.com/.../20-caracteristicas-de-culto-o-secta-religiosa-21955/ - En caché
  6. [PDF]

    Filosofia marxista soviética

    Formato de archivo: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Vista rápida
    de la filosofia soviética, lo mismo que el de otras ciencias sociales, se vio seriamente obstaculizado durante los afios del culto a la personalidad de ...
    www.sintraintevep.org.ve/.../docs/Filosofia%20marxista%20sovietica.pdf
  7. Filosofía de la filosofía e historia de la filosofía - Resultado de la Búsqueda de libros de Google

    José Gaos, Fernando Salmerón - 1987 - Philosophy - 374 páginas
    O ser propiamente "hombre" consistiría exclusivamente en los actos propios del culto y urbano, y de la personalidad histórica, o el solo urbano culto, ...
    books.google.es/books?isbn=9683600123...
  8. Filosofía china - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

    Se denomina filosofía china a las diferentes escuelas de pensamiento filosófico ..... han establecido cultos a la personalidad, tales como el Stalinismo, ...
    es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filosofía_china - En caché - Similares
  9. IdeoLab: Laboratorio Ideológico - Diccionario soviético de ...

    2 entradas - 1 autor
    La base teórica del culto a la personalidad radica en la concepción .... Entre los representantes de la filosofía materialista del período indicado, ...
    teoriapolitica.mforos.com/.../1617144-diccionario-sovietico-de-filosofia-1965-algunos-terminos/ - En caché - Similares
  10. Líderes e imagen pública en Venezuela: elementos para el estudio ... - Resultado de la Búsqueda de libros de Google

    Iván Abreu Sojo, Universidad Central de Venezuela. Fondo Editorial de Humanidades y Educación - 1998 - Political Science - 247 páginas
    Hay un segundo tipo de culto a la personalidad, el otorgado a personas vivas. ... Era presentado como creador de una filosofía evangélica con escritura ...
    books.google.es/books?isbn=9800013938...


premio vs culto personalidad


Aproximadamente 81.600 resultados (0,23 segundos)

Resultados de la búsqueda

  1. Historia del Culto a la Personalidad - SimBioDiversidad

    revolucion-versus-culto-personalidad-chavez-dictamenes-fuera-contexto - En caché - ...... Vivir a base de premios y castigos es la esencia del cristianismo. ...
    simbiodiversidad.blogspot.com/.../historia-del-culto-la-personalidad.html - Similares
  2. Enrique Bunbury - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

    ... donde se convertirían en un grupo de culto, siendo allí tan famosos como en España. ... donde Héroes del Silencio mostró su personalidad y carácter sobre el .... Pop Masculina, premio que a la postre fue a parar a manos de Fito Páez, ..... Vegas: El tiempo de las cerezas (2006); Bizarros Vs. Flamingos(2004) ...
    es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enrique_Bunbury - En caché - Similares
  3. Libro culturas hibridas lo moderno vs lo tradicional, lo culto vs ...

    31 May 2010 ... Libro culturas hibridas lo moderno vs lo tradicional, lo culto vs lo popular ? ... Comentario de la persona que pregunta: gracias por tu respuesta !! ;) ... ¿estas deacuerdo que mario vargas llosa haya recibido su premio ...
    ar.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid... - Argentina - En caché
  4. Pastor Premio Nobel de la Paz y la ordenación de pastores homosexuales

    15 entradas - 7 autores - Última entrada: 5 Jun 2009
    El Arzobispo Anglicano y premio Nobel de la Paz Desmond Tutu acaba de expresar ... Amén (Vs. 25)Después sigue Pablo diciendo que por eso (por la ... también sociales: El culto a la personalidad construye líderes y gurúes ...
    forocristiano.iglesia.net/.../38193-Pastor-Premio-Nobel-de-la-Paz-y-la-ordenación-de-pastores-homosexuales - En caché
  5. La Ariosofia Gnostica Luciferina vs El Culto Del Demiurgo. Por ...

    El Gran Hermano es un simbolismo de Stalin y el culto a la personalidad que ..... entregó un premio por “libertad de expresión” al pornógrafo Larry Flint. ...
    www.scribd.com/.../La-Ariosofia-Gnostica-Luciferina-vs-El-Culto-Del-Demiurgo-Por-Matt-Marshall - En caché
  6. 'Scott Pilgrim contra el mundo': Un film de culto instantáneo - El ...

    11 Nov 2010 ... No obstante no deja de ser un film de culto, o bien lo será en unos ... 17/06/2010 - Tráiler internacional de 'Scott Pilgrim vs. the World' ...
    www.elseptimoarte.net/-scott-pilgrim-contra-el-mundo--un-film-de-culto-instantaneo-9579.html - En caché
  7. Maradona atemperó la reacción argentina tras la eliminación - ESPN ...

    6 Jul 2010 ... Argentina v Alemania AP Diego sufre: es al mismo tiempo causa de la desdicha y ... En el culto a su personalidad. Lo que hizo por ellos lo deja excento de reclamos. .... Habrá premios generales (ver bases y condiciones). ...
    espndeportes.espn.go.com/futbol/copa-mundial/nota?id... - En caché
  8. El Espirítu de la Madre Naturaleza

    Read the rest of Ahijado vs Padrino (2ª Parte) ... La unganga como eje central del culto Mayombe, resume en un todo la “personalidad ... con personalidad singular que dominan en su saber diferentes energías. ... En el libro Los Ñáñigos del escritor cubano Enrique Sosa Rodríguez (premio Casa de las América 1982), ...
    www.kansikiese.com/ - En caché
  9. INÉS DE CUEVAS: CULTO A LA PERSONALIDAD

    21 Feb 2010 ... Es llamada culto a la personalidad (también culto a la persona) la ..... Hoy se presentaron los Jurados de los Premios Bitacoras.com .... AlbertoRavell: Hoy Eveling vs Guanipa.Mañana Pablo Perez vs Henrique Capriles? ...
    inesdecuevas.blogspot.com/2010/.../culto-la-personalidad.html - En caché
  10. Clan DLAN > Objetos mágicos en las partidas, carisma vs loteo

    11 entradas - 4 autores - Última entrada: 7 Jun
    Una anillo mágico que identificaba al portador con un culto a la .... premios ante ciertos encargos... a mí nunca me ha gustado la idea de ...
    www.clandlan.net/foros/lofiversion/index.php/t58042.html - En caché