Each of these factors has been shown by
decades of historical research to result in market - beating performance.
Not exact matches
(a) Philosophical preoccupation with the various types
of cultural activities on an idealistic basis (Johann Gottfried Herder, G. W. F. Hegel, Johann Gustav Droysen, Hermann Steinthal, Wilhelm Wundt); (b) legal studies (Aemilius Ludwig, Richter, Rudolf Sohm, Otto Gierke); (c) philology and archeology, both stimulated by the romantic movement
of the first
decades of the nineteenth century; (d) economic theory and history (Karl Marx, Lorenz von Stein, Heinrich von Treitschke, Wilhelm Roscher, Adolf Wagner, Gustav Schmoller, Ferdinand Tonnies); (e) ethnological
research (Friedrich Ratzel, Adolf Bastian, Rudolf Steinmetz, Johann Jakob Bachofen, Hermann Steinthal, Richard Thurnwald, Alfred Vierkandt, P. Wilhelm Schmidt), on the one hand; and
historical and systematical work in theology (church history, canonical law — Kirchenrecht), systematic theology (Schleiermacher, Richard Rothe), and philosophy
of religion, on the other, prepared the way during the nineteenth century for the following era to define the task
of a sociology
of religion and to organize the material gathered by these pursuits.7 The names
of Max Weber, Ernst Troeltsch, Werner Sombart, and Georg Simmel — all students
of the above - mentioned older scholars — stand out.
In addition to select artifacts from the 36,000 - object Fort Orange archaeology collection, the exhibition will include film footage from the 1970 excavation and information gleaned from four
decades of historical and archaeological
research, including renderings
of the fort by
historical artist Len Tantillo.
Previous
research has suggested a connection between coal - burning and the Sahel drought, but this was the first study that used
decades of historical observations to find that this drought was part
of a global shift in tropical rainfall, and then used multiple climate models to determine why.
In a contemporary review article, Gordon Chalmers (2004) argues that the
historical explanation
of autogenic and reciprocal inhibition is convenient, but
research in recent
decades denotes that a much more complex neuromuscular response is in play.
During
decades of research for my
historical novel Galway Bay, based on the life
of my great - great - grandmother Honora Kelly, I saw again and again how the Irish, driven to the edge
of extinction, somehow survived.
Nevertheless,
researches of recent
decades, studying factors affecting the
historical process, offer different versions, quite interesting, but they are not fully explain the observed catastrophic processes
of human life.
Ample empirical
research has demonstrated the superior
historical performance
of value investing in markets all around the world, although we certainly wouldn't know it based on the latest dismal
decade for value!
The game design lineages method is the most viable
historical research tool I've yet encountered for examining games and videogames, although it is only a part
of the wider
research project into player practices that I have been pursuing for much
of the last
decade.
Macuga's work interweaves two strands that have helped define contemporary art in the last
decade: artists» increasing tendency toward
historical and archival
research and their growing interest in strategies
of display and the dialogue between artistic and curatorial practice.
Macuga's practice is located at the intersection
of two strands that have done much to define the landscape
of contemporary art in the last
decade: on the one hand, an increasing interest in
research — specifically
of the archival,
historical kind — and on the other, a growing concern with strategies
of display and the blurring
of boundaries between art making and curating.
The whole series
of reanalyses makes for a nice
historical summary
of atmospheric
research improvements in the last 3
decades!
«In their intriguing analysis published in the Journal
of Atmospheric and Solar - Terrestrial Physics, the four - member
research team
of Rojo - Garibaldi et al. developed a new database
of historical hurricane occurrences in the Gulf
of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, spanning twenty - six
decades over the period 1749 to 2012.