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Topic: Eighth Cambridge Survey


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
 The Free Expression Policy Project
A Discussion and Survey of Studies on New Commons and the Internet." Presented at "Constituting the Commons: Crafting Sustainable Commons in the New Millenium", the Eighth Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Bloomington, Indiana, USA, May 31-June 4, 2000.
"Electronic Information as a Commons: The Issue of Access." Presented at "Constituting the Commons: Crafting Sustainable Commons in the New Millenium", the Eighth Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Bloomington, Indiana, USA, May 31-June 4.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard U. Berkman Center Conference on Building a Digital Commons, May 20, 1999.
www.fepproject.org /infocommons/biblio.html   (1337 words)

  
 8C - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Eighth Cambridge Survey (8C) is an astronomical catalogue of celestial radio sources as measured at 38-MHz.
It was published in 1990 by the Radio Astronomy Group of the University of Cambridge.
Sources are labelled 8C HHMM+DDd where HHMM is the Right Ascension in hours and minutes, and DDd is the Declination in degrees and tenths of a degree, e.g.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/8C   (1337 words)

  
 01.011- Hoyland, Seeing Islam
Seeing Islam as Others Saw it is an extensive survey and consideration of the non-Muslim sources for the history of early Islam a long with an evaluation of the utility of these sources for a better understanding of the Near East in the seventh and eighth centuries of the Common Era.
[3] Crone and Hinds, God's Caliph (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987) is a prime example of such a work that bases a theory on essentially one alleged report from around fifty years after the Prophet's traditional death date.
It is an exercise in replication, or worse, as Crone in one piece suggests,[5] mere translation and mastery of the Arabic language!
www.cjcr.cam.ac.uk /publications/reviews/rev/01011.html   (2208 words)

  
 'Abbasid Belles Lettres - Cambridge University Press
This volume of The Cambridge History of Arabic Literature covers artistic prose and poetry produced in the heartland and provinces of the 'Abbasid empire during the second great period of Arabic literature, from the mid-eighth to the thirteenth centuries AD.
It concludes with the first comprehensive survey of the relatively unknown literature of the Yemen to appear in a European language since the manuscript discoveries of recent years.
‘Abbasid literature was characterised by the emergence of many new genres and of a scholarly and sophisticated critical consciousness.
www.cambridge.org /catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521240166   (328 words)

  
 Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
Take part in our survey and you could win a personal subscription to British Journal of Political Science plus £150 worth of Cambridge politics books.
This international journal is devoted to the history of the Arabic sciences, mathematics, and philosophy in the world of Islam between the eighth and the eighteenth centuries in a cross-cultural context.
Home > Journals > Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
www.cambridge.org /uk/journals/journal_catalogue.asp?mnemonic=asp   (328 words)

  
 Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
Take part in our survey and you could win a personal subscription to British Journal of Political Science plus £150 worth of Cambridge politics books.
This international journal is devoted to the history of the Arabic sciences, mathematics, and philosophy in the world of Islam between the eighth and the eighteenth centuries in a cross-cultural context.
Home > Journals > Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
www.cambridge.org /uk/journals/journal_catalogue.asp?mnemonic=asp   (328 words)

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