These texts and studies do not exhaust the various ways in which women were perceived, and
their roles commented upon, by writers of the early church, but they offer points of departure for a discussion on the contribution of women to the life and witness of the early church without forgetting that the «ancient sources and modern historians agree that primary conversion to Christianity was far more prevalent among females than among males» [13] in the time of the early church.
Not exact matches
In his earliest works, he experimented with different media on paper, mixing collage and drawing techniques to explore the
role of iconography in communication and to
comment upon socio - political situations in contemporary India.
In a 1943 radio broadcast of the WNYC program «Art in New York,» in which Gottlieb and Rothko discussed the
role of myth in their work, Rothko
commented on his and his peers» preoccupation with mythology that «if our titles recall the known myths of antiquity, we have used them again because they are the eternal symbols
upon which we must fall back to express basic psychological ideas.
Neither yourself, nor Zajko have
commented upon the fundamental
role that the autistic perspective plays in «philosophy».
These documents (together with the Court of Appeal
comments upon the appeal of Justice Campbell's ruling) make a significant package of materials suitable for any teaching situation concerned with professional responsibility and the limits of an advocate's
role.
This
Comment joins other work in arguing that the legitimacy of stare decisis depends
upon widespread publication.4 The doctrine of stare decisis itself emerged only with the consistent and reliable publication of court opinions, 5 and legal processes that do not result in the issuance of publicly available opinions, such as settlements and arbitrations, generally lack stare decisis norms altogether.6 Although previous scholarship has discussed the proper
role of stare decisis in the context of «unpublished» opinions, 7 which make up around eighty percent of all United States courts of appeals opinions8 (and are usually publicly available despite their name), 9 this
Comment provides the first examination of the tenability of stare decisis as applied to truly secret opinions like those of the FISC.