- Poseidonia (ancient city, Italy)
Paestum, ancient city in southern Italy near the west coast, 22 miles (35 km) southeast of modern Salerno and 5 miles (8 km) south of the Sele (ancient Silarus) River. Paestum is noted for its splendidly preserved Greek temples. Poseidonia was probably founded about 600 bce by Greek colonists from
- Poseidonius (Greek philosopher)
Poseidonius was a Greek philosopher, considered the most-learned man of his time and, possibly, of the entire Stoic school. Poseidonius, nicknamed “the Athlete,” was a native of Apamea in Syria and a pupil of the Greek Stoic philosopher Panaetius. He spent many years in travel and scientific
- Posen (Poland)
Poznań, city, capital of Wielkopolskie województwo (province), west-central Poland, located on the Warta River near its confluence with the Cybina. Beginning as a small stronghold in the 9th century, Poznań became the capital of Poland (with Gniezno) and the residence of Poland’s first two
- Posen, Zac (American fashion designer)
Zac Posen is an American fashion designer best known for his glamorous evening gowns and cocktail dresses. Posen was raised in the SoHo neighbourhood of Lower Manhattan. His father, Stephen Posen, was a painter, and his mother, Susan, was a corporate attorney. He showed an interest in fashion at an
- Posen, Zachary E. (American fashion designer)
Zac Posen is an American fashion designer best known for his glamorous evening gowns and cocktail dresses. Posen was raised in the SoHo neighbourhood of Lower Manhattan. His father, Stephen Posen, was a painter, and his mother, Susan, was a corporate attorney. He showed an interest in fashion at an
- Posener, Edith Claire (American costume designer)
Edith Head was an American motion-picture costume designer. Head was the daughter of a mining engineer, and she grew up in various towns and camps in Arizona, Nevada, and Mexico. She attended the University of California (B.A.) and Stanford University (M.A.). After a time as a schoolteacher and
- posey (floral decoration)
nosegay, small, hand-held bouquet popular in mid- 19th-century Victorian England as an accessory carried by fashionable ladies. Composed of mixed flowers and herbs and edged with a paper frill or greens, the arrangement was sometimes inserted into a silver filigree holder. When supplied by an
- Posh Spice (English singer and designer)
Victoria Beckham is an English singer and designer who gained stardom in the mid-1990s as a member of the pop band Spice Girls and later launched a successful line of clothing and accessories. At age 20, Adams was one of the five young women selected to create the music group Spice Girls. The media
- Poshchochina obshchestvennomu vkusu (Russian manifesto)
David Davidovich Burlyuk: …Futurism, Poshchochina obshchestvennomu vkusu (A Slap in the Face of Public Taste). In 1913–14 he took part in a “Futurist tour” of lectures and poetry readings throughout Russia with the poets Mayakovsky and Vasily Kamensky. It was because of his activity in all these fields that he was soon…
- Poshui Jie (Buddhist festival)
Songkran, splashy and water-filled New Year festival in Thailand, and, by other names, in Cambodia, Myanmar (Burma), and Laos as well as in parts of India and China. Songkran is celebrated approximately April 13–15 and marks the entrance of the sun into the astrological sign of Mesha (“ram,” or
- Posidonius (Greek philosopher)
Poseidonius was a Greek philosopher, considered the most-learned man of his time and, possibly, of the entire Stoic school. Poseidonius, nicknamed “the Athlete,” was a native of Apamea in Syria and a pupil of the Greek Stoic philosopher Panaetius. He spent many years in travel and scientific
- Posies of George Gascoigne, The (work by Gascoigne)
George Gascoigne: In The Posies of George Gascoigne (1575), an authorized revision of the earlier work, which had been published anonymously, he included also “Certayne notes of Instruction,” the first treatise on prosody in English. In The Steele Glas (1576), one of the earliest formal satires in English,…
- position (prosody)
position, in Greek or Latin prosody, the condition of having a short vowel followed by two consonants or a double consonant (such as -pp- in the Greek word hippos), which makes its syllable long. Such a syllable is said to be long by position, in contrast to a syllable having a long vowel or a
- position (trading)
In financial markets, whenever you initiate a transaction that places a security (e.g., a stock, bond, exchange-traded fund (ETF), or derivatives contract) into your account, the exposure you have to price fluctuation in that security is called a position, or trading position. A position is either
- position feedback control system (technology)
automation: Numerical control: A position feedback control system is used in most NC machines to verify that the coded instructions have been correctly performed.
- position finding (navigation)
surveying: Hydrography: Modern position-fixing techniques using radar have made the whole process much simpler, for the ship’s location is now known continuously with reference to fixed stations on shore or to satellite tracks. Another modern technique is the use of pictures taken from aircraft or satellites to indicate…
- position keeping (aviation)
formation flying: This is called “position keeping.” Any change in relative position between aircraft is considered movement by the wingmen.
- position vector (mechanics)
position vector, straight line having one end fixed to a body and the other end attached to a moving point and used to describe the position of the point relative to the body. As the point moves, the position vector will change in length or in direction or in both length and direction. If drawn to
- positional astronomy (astronomy)
star: Stellar positions: Accurate observations of stellar positions are essential to many problems of astronomy. Positions of the brighter stars can be measured very accurately in the equatorial system (the coordinates of which are called right ascension [α, or RA] and
- positional numeral system (mathematics)
Archimedes: His works: …effect, is to create a place-value system of notation, with a base of 100,000,000. (That was apparently a completely original idea, since he had no knowledge of the contemporary Babylonian place-value system with base 60.) The work is also of interest because it gives the most detailed surviving description of…
- positioning (business)
marketing: Positioning: A key step in marketing strategy, known as positioning, involves creating and communicating a message that clearly establishes the company or brand in relation to competitors. Thus, Volvo Aktiebolaget (Sweden) positioned its automobile as the “safest,” and Daimler AG (Germany), manufacturer of Mercedes-Benz vehicles,…
- Positions (album by Grande)
Ariana Grande: thank u, next and Positions: Her sixth studio album, Positions, appeared in 2020 and garnered two Grammy nominations. During this time, Grande also sang on other artists’ tracks, and her collaboration with Lady Gaga on “Rain on Me” (2020) resulted in her second Grammy Award, for best pop duo/group performance.
- positive acceleration stress (physiology)
acceleration stress: Positive acceleration stress: Positive acceleration stress occurs when the direction of acceleration is along the long axis of the body from head to foot. As acceleration increases the force exerted on the pilot from 1 g to 2 g, there is an awareness of increased…
- positive assortative mating (genetics)
assortative mating: Positive assortative mating, or homogamy, exists when people choose to mate with persons similar to themselves (e.g., when a tall person mates with a tall person); this type of selection is very common. Negative assortative mating is the opposite case, when people avoid mating with…
- positive beta decay
beta decay: In positron emission, also called positive beta decay (β+-decay), a proton in the parent nucleus decays into a neutron that remains in the daughter nucleus, and the nucleus emits a neutrino and a positron, which is a positive particle like an ordinary electron in mass but…
- positive beta-particle decay
beta decay: In positron emission, also called positive beta decay (β+-decay), a proton in the parent nucleus decays into a neutron that remains in the daughter nucleus, and the nucleus emits a neutrino and a positron, which is a positive particle like an ordinary electron in mass but…
- positive charge imbalance (solid-state physics)
hole, in condensed-matter physics, the name given to a missing electron in certain solids, especially semiconductors. Holes affect the electrical, optical, and thermal properties of the solid. Along with electrons, they play a critical role in modern digital technology when they are introduced into
- positive clutch (device)
clutch: Positive clutches are collars with jaws that interlock, one member being rigidly attached to its shaft while the other slides on its shaft.
- positive displacement pump
pump: Positive displacement pumps.: Positive displacement pumps, which lift a given volume for each cycle of operation, can be divided into two main classes, reciprocating and rotary. Reciprocating pumps include piston, plunger, and diaphragm types; rotary pumps include gear, lobe, screw, vane, and cam pumps.
- positive duty (ethics)
Trolley problem: …an approximate definition of a positive duty as a moral obligation to aid or benefit others in a given way in situations where they are in need of help. (Foot purposefully employed the notion of positive duty in a broad sense to encompass acts of charity that would ordinarily be…
- positive economics
economics: Methodological considerations in contemporary economics: …wont to distinguish between “positive economics” and “normative economics.” Positive economics seeks to establish facts: If butter producers are paid a subsidy, will the price of butter be lowered? Will a rise in wages in the automotive industry reduce the employment of automobile workers? Will the devaluation of currency…
- positive electron (subatomic particle)
positron, positively charged subatomic particle having the same mass and magnitude of charge as the electron and constituting the antiparticle of a negative electron. The first of the antiparticles to be detected, positrons were discovered by Carl David Anderson in cloud-chamber studies of the
- positive eugenics (genetics)
eugenics: Early history: …leading to terms such as positive eugenics, defined as promoting the proliferation of “good stock,” and negative eugenics, defined as prohibiting marriage and breeding between “defective stock.” For eugenicists, nature was far more contributory than nurture in shaping humanity.
- positive externality (economics)
positive externality, in economics, a benefit received or transferred to a party as an indirect effect of the transactions of another party. Positive externalities arise when one party, such as a business, makes another party better off but does not receive any compensation for doing so. Although
- positive feedback (electronics)
electronics: Oscillation: If feedback is positive, the feedback signal reinforces the original one, and an amplifier can be made to oscillate, or generate an AC signal. Such signals are needed for many purposes and are created in numerous kinds of oscillator circuits. In a tunable oscillator, such as that required…
- positive film (photography)
history of photography: Colour photography: With this reversal (slide) film, colour transparencies could be obtained that were suitable both for projection and for reproduction. A year later the Agfa Company of Germany developed the Agfacolor negative-positive process, but owing to World War II the film did not become available until 1949. Meanwhile,…
- positive freedom (philosophy)
philosophical anthropology: The idealism of Kant and Hegel: …the English-speaking world against the “positive” freedom that supposedly accrues to individual human beings through their identification with institutions and traditions of thought and practice. This kind of freedom is unfavourably contrasted with the “negative” freedom that is, in essence, the ability and the right to say “no,” and to…
- positive hole (solid-state physics)
hole, in condensed-matter physics, the name given to a missing electron in certain solids, especially semiconductors. Holes affect the electrical, optical, and thermal properties of the solid. Along with electrons, they play a critical role in modern digital technology when they are introduced into
- positive integer (mathematics)
natural number, any number in the set of positive integers {1, 2, 3…} and sometimes zero. The term natural likely refers to humanity’s innate understanding and use of positive discrete values. Sometimes called “counting numbers,” natural numbers predate recorded history, as it is believed that
- positive ion (chemistry)
cation, atom or group of atoms that bears a positive electric charge. See
- positive law (international law)
Cornelis van Bynkershoek: …helped develop international law along positivist lines.
- positive modulation (biochemistry)
metabolism: Positive modulation: Not all pacemaker enzymes are controlled by inhibition of their activity. Instead, some are subject to positive modulation—i.e., the effector is required for the efficient functioning of the enzyme. Such enzymes exhibit little activity in the absence of the appropriate allosteric effector. One…
- positive on glass (photography)
tintype: …essentially a variation on the ambrotype, which was a unique image made on glass, instead of metal. Just as the ambrotype was a negative whose silver images appeared grayish white and whose dark backing made the clear areas of shadows appear dark, so the tintype, actually negative in its chemical…
- positive organ (musical instrument)
positive organ, (from Latin ponere: “to place”), in Western music, small organ used in liturgical and, at times, in secular music from the 10th to the 17th century. It had short legs and was set on a table or the floor; two persons with a cart could move it. Two persons were also needed to operate
- Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte, The (work by Comte)
Auguste Comte: Life: …philosophy in a work entitled Cours de philosophie positive (1830–42; “Course of Positive Philosophy”; Eng. trans. The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte).
- positive political theory (political science and economics)
rational choice theory, school of thought based on the assumption that individuals choose a course of action that is most in line with their personal preferences. Rational choice theory is used to model human decision making, especially in the context of microeconomics, where it helps economists
- positive pressure ventilator (machine)
polio: Treatment and vaccination: …mechanical aids such as the positive pressure ventilator, which pumps air into the patient’s lungs through an endotracheal tube inserted into the windpipe. Ventilators have largely replaced the “iron lungs” that gave polio such a dreadful image during the 20th century. Formally known as tank respirators, iron lungs were large…
- positive ray (physics)
Eugen Goldstein: …what he termed Kanalstrahlen, or canal rays, also called positive rays; these are positively charged ions that are accelerated toward and through a perforated cathode in an evacuated tube. He also contributed greatly to the study of cathode rays; in 1876 he showed that these rays could cast sharp shadows,…
- positive sanction (social science)
economic statecraft: Forms and uses: …actual or threatened punishments, whereas positive sanctions are actual or promised rewards. Examples of negative sanctions include the following: refusing to export (embargoes), refusing to import (boycotts), covert refusals to trade (blacklists), purchases intended to keep goods out of the hands of target countries (preclusive buying), deprivation of ownership (expropriation),…
- Positive Sciences of the Ancient Hindus, The (work by Seal)
Indian philosophy: 19th- and 20th-century philosophy in India and Pakistan: Seal’s major published work is The Positive Sciences of the Ancient Hindus, which, besides being a work on the history of science, shows interrelations among the ancient Hindu philosophical concepts and their scientific theories. Soon, however, the German philosophers Immanuel Kant and Georg F.W. Hegel came to be the most-studied…
- Positive Slovenia (political party, Slovenia)
Slovenia: The postcommunist era: …December 2011, was won by Positive Slovenia, a new centre-left party led by Ljubljana Mayor Zoran Janković. Having secured 28 of the 90 seats in Slovenia’s parliament, Positive Slovenia lacked the numbers to form a government on its own, and Janković began coalition talks with various parties. Those efforts foundered,…
- positive strand (biochemistry)
virus: The nucleic acid: …genomic RNA is termed a positive strand because the genomic RNA acts as mRNA for direct synthesis (translation) of viral protein. Several large families of animal viruses, and one that includes both plant and animal viruses (the Rhabdoviridae), however, contain genomic single-stranded RNA, termed a negative strand, which is complementary…
- Positive Theory of Capital (work by Böhm-Bawerk)
capital and interest: The Austrian school: His Positive Theory of Capital (1889) set off a controversy that has not yet subsided. In the Austrian view the economic process consisted of the embodiment of “original factors of production” in capital goods of greater or lesser length of life that then yielded value or…
- positive transfer of training
transfer of training: Kinds of transfer: …kinds of transfer can occur: positive, negative, and zero. The following examples from hypothetical experiments, purposely uncomplicated by distracting detail, illustrate each. Suppose a group of students learn a task, B, in 10 practice sessions. Another group of equivalent students, who previously had learned another task, A, is found to…
- positive-displacement compressor (machine)
compressor: Positive displacement compressors are usually of the reciprocating piston type, in which the gas is drawn in during the suction stroke of the piston, compressed by decreasing the volume of the gas by moving the piston in the opposite direction, and, lastly, discharged when the…
- positive-historical Judaism (theology)
Zacharias Frankel: …a theology that he called positive-historical Judaism. It differed from Orthodoxy in its acceptance of scientific and historical research and in its willingness to make some liturgical changes. It differed from Reform Judaism in that it sought to maintain traditional customs and adhere to the national aspects of Judaism.
- positive-intrinsic-negative photodiode (electronics)
telecommunications media: Optoelectronic receivers: …for optical links are the positive-intrinsic-negative (PIN) photodiode and the avalanche photodiode (APD). These optical receivers extract the baseband signal from a modulated optical carrier signal by converting incident optical power into electric current. The PIN photodiode has low gain but very fast response; the APD has high gain but…
- positive-sum game (game theory)
positive-sum game, in game theory, a term that refers to situations in which the total of gains and losses is greater than zero. A positive sum occurs when resources are somehow increased and an approach is formulated in which the desires and needs of all concerned are satisfied. One example would
- Positively 4th Street (book by Hajdu)
Joan Baez: …is chronicled in David Hajdu’s Positively 4th Street [2001].) Two of the songs with which she is most identified are her 1971 cover of the Band’s “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” and her own “Diamonds and Rust,” which she recorded on her acclaimed album of the same name,…
- Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom, The (television film by Ritchie [1993])
Michael Ritchie: Later work: …with the well-received black comedy The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom (1993), a TV movie made for HBO. Holly Hunter portrayed a homicidally overprotective mother, and Beau Bridges and Swoosie Kurtz also submitted strong performances.
- Positives (work by Gunn)
Thom Gunn: Positives (1966) is a group of poems about Londoners, with photographs by the poet’s brother Ander Gunn. In the 1970s Gunn began to explore themes of homosexuality and drugs, and notable collections came to include Moly (1971), Jack Straw’s Castle (1976), and The Man with…
- positivism (philosophy)
positivism, in Western philosophy, generally, any system that confines itself to the data of experience and excludes a priori or metaphysical speculations. More narrowly, the term designates the thought of the French philosopher Auguste Comte (1798–1857). As a philosophical ideology and movement,
- positron (subatomic particle)
positron, positively charged subatomic particle having the same mass and magnitude of charge as the electron and constituting the antiparticle of a negative electron. The first of the antiparticles to be detected, positrons were discovered by Carl David Anderson in cloud-chamber studies of the
- positron emission
beta decay: In positron emission, also called positive beta decay (β+-decay), a proton in the parent nucleus decays into a neutron that remains in the daughter nucleus, and the nucleus emits a neutrino and a positron, which is a positive particle like an ordinary electron in mass but…
- positron emission tomography (imaging technique)
positron emission tomography (PET), imaging technique used in diagnosis and biomedical research. It has proved particularly useful for studying brain and heart functions and certain biochemical processes involving these organs (e.g., glucose metabolism and oxygen uptake). In PET a chemical compound
- Positron-Electron Project (collider)
particle accelerator: Electron storage rings: In the PEP-II storage rings at Stanford University and in the KEK-B facility at the National Laboratory for High Energy Physics (KEK) in Tsukuba, electrons and positrons are stored at different energies so that they have different values of momentum. When they annihilate, the net momentum is…
- Positron-Electron Tandem Ring Accelerator (collider)
DESY: …DESY completed construction of the Positron-Electron Tandem Ring Accelerator (PETRA), a larger collider capable of reaching 19 GeV per beam. In 1979 experiments with PETRA yielded the first direct evidence for the existence of gluons, the messenger particles of the strong force that bind quarks together within protons and
- positronium (physics)
positronium, short-lived hydrogen-like atom composed of an electron and a positron (rather than an electron and a proton) arising as a positron is slowed down in matter and captured by an electron. Two forms are known. Parapositronium, in which the spins of the positron and electron are oppositely
- Poson, Battle of (Byzantine history)
Battle of Poson, (863), attack launched by Byzantine forces against the Arab armies of ʿUmar, the emir of Melitene (now Malatya, Tur.), ending with an Arab defeat and paving the way for Byzantine conquests in the late 10th century. ʿUmar marched his army up the Black Sea coast to the Byzantine port
- Posse (film by Douglas [1975])
Kirk Douglas: …and the cynical western adventure Posse (1975), which became a cult favourite.
- posse comitatus (legal institution)
posse comitatus, ancient English institution consisting of the shire’s force of able-bodied private citizens summoned to assist in maintaining public order. Originally raised and commanded by the sheriff, the posse comitatus became a purely civil instrument as the office of sheriff later lost its
- Posse Comitatus Act (United States [1878])
posse comitatus: …the United States was the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which was passed at the end of Reconstruction (1865–77) in order to prevent the use of the U.S. military for the enforcement of domestic law in the occupied South. The same act was invoked in the 1980s to prevent military…
- Possessed (film by Bernhardt [1947])
Curtis Bernhardt: Early years in Hollywood: In 1947 Bernhardt directed Possessed, featuring Joan Crawford in an Academy Award-nominated turn as a mentally unstable woman.
- Possessed (film by Brown [1931])
Clarence Brown: The 1930s: …last film from 1931 was Possessed, which centres on a wealthy lawyer (Gable) whose political ambitions are threatened by his mistress (Joan Crawford).
- Possessed, The (novel by Dostoyevsky)
The Possessed, novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, published in Russian in 1872 as Besy. The book, also known in English as The Devils and The Demons, is a reflection of Dostoyevsky’s belief that revolutionists possessed the soul of Russia and that, unless exorcised by a renewed faith in Orthodox
- Possessed, The (play by Camus)
Albert Camus: Camus’s literary career: …nonne; 1956) and Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed (Les Possédés; 1959).
- Possession (novel by Markandaya)
Kamala Markandaya: Literary career: She examined this dichotomy in Possession (1963), in which an Indian shepherd, Valmiki, is inspired by a swami (sage) to pursue his calling as an artist. Valmiki is taken to England by Caroline Bell, an aristocratic British woman, who views him as an exotic find. The novel has a tripartite…
- Possession (film by LaBute [2002])
A.S. Byatt: …time, Byatt wrote Possession (1990; film 2002), which is part mystery and part romance; in it Byatt developed two related stories, one set in the 19th century and one in the 20th century. Considered a brilliant example of postmodernist fiction, it was a popular success and was awarded the Booker…
- possession (property law)
possession, in law, the acquisition of either a considerable degree of physical control over a physical thing, such as land or chattel, or the legal right to control intangible property, such as a credit—with the definite intention of ownership. With respect to land and chattel, possession may well
- possession (religion)
possession, in religious and folk traditions, condition characterized by unusual behaviour and a personality change that is interpreted as evidence that the person is under the direct control of an external supernatural power. Symptoms of spirit possession include violent unusual movements,
- Possession (novel by Byatt)
A.S. Byatt: During this time, Byatt wrote Possession (1990; film 2002), which is part mystery and part romance; in it Byatt developed two related stories, one set in the 19th century and one in the 20th century. Considered a brilliant example of postmodernist fiction, it was a popular success and was awarded…
- Possession (work by Burgin)
Western painting: Politics, commerce, and abjection in 1980s art: …piece of pseudo-advertising—a poster (Possession, 1976) that appeared on billboards throughout Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, showing a couple embracing (as in ads for deodorant or jewelry), with the words “What does possession mean to you?” placed above them and the deadpan rejoinder “7% of our population own 84% of our wealth”…
- possessive adjective (grammar)
adjective: Types of adjectives: Possessive adjectives (my, your, her, his, its, our, their, and whose) are placed before a noun to show who or what owns or possesses it (her guitar, our house). Coordinate adjectives are two or more adjectives that modify the same noun in a sentence to…
- possessive case (grammar)
Indigenous North American languages: Grammar: In nouns, possession is widely expressed by prefixes or suffixes indicating the person of the possessor. Thus, Karuk has nani-ávaha ‘my food,’ mu-ávaha ‘his food,’ and so on. (compare ávaha ‘food’). When the possessor is a noun, as in ‘man’s food,’ a construction like ávansa mu-ávaha ‘man…
- Possessors (Russian religious faction)
Saint Joseph of Volokolamsk: …earned them the nickname “the Possessors.”
- possessory action (law)
United Kingdom: Government of England: …were introduced, notably the so-called possessory assizes, which determined who had the right to immediate possession of land, not who had the best fundamental right. That could be decided by the grand assize, by means of which a jury of 12 knights would decide the case. The use of standardized…
- possessory assize (law)
United Kingdom: Government of England: …were introduced, notably the so-called possessory assizes, which determined who had the right to immediate possession of land, not who had the best fundamental right. That could be decided by the grand assize, by means of which a jury of 12 knights would decide the case. The use of standardized…
- possessory lien (property law)
lien: …law early recognized the creditor’s possessory lien, a right of a creditor to retain possession of a debtor’s goods until the satisfaction of the debt, generally the payment of the purchase price. In time, the common law developed two kinds of possessory liens: specific liens and general liens. The specific…
- possibilia (philosophy)
universal: Possibilia: Imperfect-community problems can be solved by denying that resemblance is, most fundamentally, a relation between pairs of actually existing things. The American philosopher Eli Hirsch has provided an elegant definition of “natural class,” using a resemblance relation holding among trios—one thing’s being more similar…
- possibilism (anthropology)
anthropology: Environmental and ecological studies in anthropology: …latter view, known as “possibilism,” is still dominant in anthropology and many other social sciences and humanities, but possibilism itself has limitations. First, historical, archaeological, and ethnographic evidence indicates that the patterned associations between environmental features and sociocultural ones cannot be viewed in possibilist terms; for example, agriculture was…
- Possibilité d’une île, La (novel by Houellebecq)
Michel Houellebecq: Writing career and books: …La Possibilité d’une île (2005; The Possibility of an Island, film 2008, directed by the author), a bleak futuristic tale about the implications and possibilities of reproduction by cloning. In 2008 Ennemis publics (Public Enemies) documented an exchange of opinions—via e-mail—between Houellebecq and French public intellectual Bernard-Henri Lévy on a…
- possibility (philosophy and logic)
possibility, in logic and metaphysics, one of the fundamental modalities involved in the explication of the opposition between necessity and contingency. In logic, possibility implies the absence of a contradiction. Such definitions as “The possible is that which either is or will be true” and
- Possibility of Altruism, The (work by Nagel)
ethics: Ethics and reasons for action: In The Possibility of Altruism (1969), he argued that, if Hume’s thesis is true, then the ordinary idea of prudence—i.e., the idea that one’s future pains and pleasures are just as capable of motivating one to act (and to act now) as are one’s present pains…
- Possibility of an Island, The (novel by Houellebecq)
Michel Houellebecq: Writing career and books: …La Possibilité d’une île (2005; The Possibility of an Island, film 2008, directed by the author), a bleak futuristic tale about the implications and possibilities of reproduction by cloning. In 2008 Ennemis publics (Public Enemies) documented an exchange of opinions—via e-mail—between Houellebecq and French public intellectual Bernard-Henri Lévy on a…
- possible world (logic and philosophy)
possible world, Conception of a total way the universe might have been. It is often contrasted with the way things actually are. In his Theodicy (1710), G.W. Leibniz used the concept of a possible world in his proposed solution to the theological problem of the existence of evil, arguing that an
- Possidius, Saint (Christian saint)
Guelma: Possidius, biographer and student of St. Augustine. Among the town’s Roman ruins are baths and a theatre, and 5 miles (8 km) west, at el-Announa, are the remains of Thibilis. Parts of the Byzantine walls still encircle the town, and the museum and the public…
- possum (marsupial)
phalanger, any of several species of Australasian marsupial mammals. They are called possums in Australia and Tasmania. True phalangers are of the family Phalangeridae, which includes the cuscus. They are tree-dwelling animals: the clawless innermost hind digit and, sometimes, the first and second
- possum (marsupial, Didelphidae family)
marsupial: Classification: Family Didelphidae (American opossums)70 or more species in 12 genera. Order Paucituberculata (shrew, or rat, opossums)5 species in 1 family.Family Caenolestidae5 species in 3 genera.
- possum haw (plant, Ilex decidua)
holly: Major species: Possum haw (I. decidua), also deciduous, bears red fruits on a shrub growing to 10 metres (33 feet).
- possum haw (plant, Viburnum nudum)
Dipsacales: Adoxaceae: Possumhaw (V. nudum) is largely limited to swamps of the eastern and southern coastal plains of the United States. In contrast, rusty blackhaw (V. rufidulum) and softleaf arrowwood (V. molle) prefer dry rocky woods or hills. Viburnum is also an important horticultural genus; some of…