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         Proclus Diadochus:     more books (21)
  1. Essays and Fragments of Proclus (Thomas Taylor) by Diadochus Proclus, 1999-09
  2. The Philosophical And Mathematical Commentaries Of Proclus On The First Book Of Euclid's Elements V1 by Diadochus Proclus, 2007-07-25
  3. Proclus on Baptism in Constantinople (Joint Liturgical Studies) by Diadochus Proclus, Juliette Day, 2005-07-01
  4. Elements of Theology by Diadochus Proclus, 1963-12
  5. Proclus Diadochus: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  6. The first book of Euclid's elements, with a commentary based principally upon that of Proclus Diadochus by Euclid, 1905
  7. Proclus Commentary on the " Timaeus " of Plato Vol 2 by Diadochus Proclus, 1998-04
  8. PROCLUS(412485): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Carlos Steel, 2006
  9. In Platonis Cratylum Commentaria (Bibliotheca scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana) by Proclus Diadochus, 1998-07
  10. Procli Diadochi in Platonis Rem Publican Commentarii (Proclus Diadochus's Commentary on Plato's Republic), Vol I. by Wilhelm (Ed.) Proclus Diadochus; Kroll, 1899
  11. In Platonis Rem Publicam Commentarii (Commentary on Plato's Republic), Vol. II by Wilhelm (ed.) Proclus Diadochus; Kroll, 1901
  12. Proclus Diadochus: Commentary on the First Alcibiades of Plato. by L.G. Westerink, 1954
  13. Proclus Diadochus: Commentary on the first Alcibiades of Plato by Proclus, 1954
  14. Proclus: Procli Philosophi Platonici, Commentarius in Platonis Parmenidem, Part 3 / III, (PLATO, PARMENIDES, COMMENTARY) by Victor Cousin, Editor), Procli Proclus Diadochus, 2002

41. Ancient Greeks On The Moon
PROCLUS crater 16.1N – 46.8E 28 km diameter proclus diadochus (410485)ADMathematician, Astronomer, Philosopher. PROTAGORAS crater 21 km diameter
http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Moon1.htm
Ancient Greeks on the Moon Apollo Belvedere on an Apollo 17 mission patch of the last and most successful mission to the Moon in December 1972 Craters on the moon named after ancient Greeks. The area of these craters combined is larger than that of the area of Modern Greece!!
PHILOLAUS crater
70 km diameter
3400 mt height walls
North west lunar field Philolaus of Croton ( c. 470 - c. 385 ) BC Mathematician, Astronomer v PLATO crater
109 km diameter
2000 mt height walls
Northern of Imbrium sea to west of the Alpes mounts (428-347)BC, Philosopher http://thierrylambert.free.fr/lune/formations/platon.html POSIDONIUS crater
km diameter
1800 mt height walls
East lunar field, on east margin of the Serenitatis sea Posidonius of Apamea (?135-?51)BC Geographer PROCLUS crater
km diameter Proclus Diadochus (410-485)AD Mathematician, Astronomer, Philosopher PROTAGORAS crater 21 km diameter 2100 mt height walls Northern margin of the Frigoris sea Philosopher (?481-?411) BC

42. Timeline Related To Greek Astronomy
proclus diadochus (?) (410485)AD Mathematician, Astronomer, Philosopher.http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/index.html
http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/TLAstronomy.htm
Timeline related to Greek Astronomy 6 April 648 BC Archilochus Nothing there is beyond hope
nothing can be sworn impossible
nothing wonderful.
Since Zeus father of Olympians
made night from mid-day
hiding the light of the shinning-sun
and sore fear upon man.
Poem in Greek and German translation In Honor: Asteroid or Minor Planet 5873 Archilochos 1989 SB3, discovered 1989 September 26 by E. W. Elst at La Silla. About 600 BC Pythagoras , performed astronomical measurements with a heliotropion device in the island of Syros. (Herodotus describes later that the Greeks learned to use the Gnomon and Polos from the Egyptians and also the division of the day in 12 parts.) Thales of Miletus Thales of Miletus (636-546) BC predicts a solar eclipse ( (28.5. 585 BC, Julian Calendar or 22. 5. 584 BC Gregorian Calendar Famous Eclipse
About 560 BC? Anaximander of Miletus The moon, he said, had a borrowed light, and borrowed it from the sun; and the sun he affirmed to be not less than the earth, and the purest possible fire D. Laertius Anaximander's Cosmos author of the first geometrical model of the world...

43. Neoplatonism Resources At Erratic Impact's Philosophy Research Base
proclus diadochus On the Sacred Art. Translated by Stephen Ronan. This textExplains the theurgic proclus diadochus On the Signs of Divine Possession
http://www.erraticimpact.com/~ancient/html/neoplatonism.htm

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... Plotinus by Lloyd P. Gerson The Neoplatonists by John Gregory
Neoplatonism
Texts: Neoplatonism Texts: Plotinus Texts: Porphry Texts: Amelius ... Plotinus Page of resources on the PRB. Plotinus: The Six Enneads This is the full text online. There is also a .txt version available for download Also: Several comments have been posted about The Six Enneads. Read them or add your own Proclus Diadochus: On the Sacred Art Proclus Diadochus: ... On the Signs of Divine Possession Translated by Stephen Ronan. This text Explains how the ancients understood the phenomena of trance and possession. Porphyry of Tyre Letter to Anebo and Iamblichus of Chalcis On the Mysteries Letter to Anebo Epistula ad Anebonem On the Mysteries De mysteriis ) are two of the most important religious and philosophical documents of Late Antiquity. Porphyry and Iamblichus were both highly esteemed and influential Pagan Neoplatonic philosophers whose views, especially their religious views, have not tended to receive a fair and unprejudiced treatment, and this is true of Iamblichus most of all. Oddly enough, despite the reputations of these documents, a careful analysis will show that neither of them are primarily concerned with magic. What they are concerned with is traditional Pagan religion, its apparent contradictions, and its relationship to philosophy.

44. The Present Article Was Originally Given As A Paper On November 6th, 1999, At Th
the close of the 19th century demonstrated his incontestable fondness for thethought of Iamblichus of Chalcis and, especially, proclus diadochus (1).
http://www.marquette.edu/maqom/Corrective
The present article was originally given as a paper on November 6th, 1999, at the Second International Conference on St. Gregory Palamas, Limassol, Cyprus, and published under the title, "Ho Dionysios ho Areopagites sta erga tou hagiou Gregoriou tou Palama", in St Vladimir's Theology Quarterly. DIONYSIUS AREOPAGITES IN THE WORKS OF SAINT GREGORY PALAMAS: ON THE QUESTION OF A "CHRISTOLOGICAL CORRECTIVE" AND RELATED MATTERS I. Dionysius Areopagites, Gregory Palama: Scholarly Controversy and "Christological Correctives" The works of Dionysius Areopagites have been controversial ever since Martin Luther's dismissal of him as plus platonizans quam christianizans The question of Dionysius' specific relationship to the thought of St. Gregory marks another arena of scholarly contention. That there was a relationship is undeniable. Significant sections of, particularly, St. Gregory's Triads are devoted to his debate with Barlaam the Calabrian over the proper interpretation of the Corpus Areopagiticum (4). What is at issue in the contemporary debate, however, are two closely related questions: first, was St. Gregory a faithful and accurate interpreter of Dionysius; and, second, what does the answer to that question say about either Dionysius, or Gregory, or both? For several Western scholars, Palamas was indeed a faithful disciple of the

45. Proclus --  Encyclopædia Britannica
proclus diadochus University of St. Andrews, Scotland Short biography of thisthe last major Greek philosopher, who was influential in helping Neoplatonic
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9061472
Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Introduction Additional Reading Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Proclus
 Encyclopædia Britannica Article Page 1 of 2 born c. 410, Constantinople [now Istanbul]
died 485, Athens
the last major Greek philosopher. He was influential in helping Neoplatonic ideas to spread throughout the Byzantine, Islamic, and Roman worlds.
Proclus... (75 of 397 words) var mm = [["Jan.","January"],["Feb.","February"],["Mar.","March"],["Apr.","April"],["May","May"],["June","June"],["July","July"],["Aug.","August"],["Sept.","September"],["Oct.","October"],["Nov.","November"],["Dec.","December"]]; To cite this page: MLA style: "Proclus."

46. The Mystery Of The Trinity-Part 6
of the same name he is known as proclus diadochus, the “successor”). Proclus wrotecommentaries and an exegetical work (Platonic Theology) on Plato,
http://www.cbcg.org/mystery_trinity6.htm
Christian Biblical Church of God Biblical Truth Ministries “…the truth shall set you free.” Order Books Oline Website Index
Victorinus Circa 281/291-370 A.D.
The Bridge Between Greek and Latin Neoplatonism
A Trinitarian Syncretist
“In Rome, Victorinus (d.c. A.D. 370), an African by birth and a teacher of rhetoric, translated some of the works of the earlier Neoplatonists into Latin, then at last moved from Neoplatonism into Christianity (Jerome, Illustrious Men 101). Augustine (A.D. 354-430) read the translations of Victorinus and was deeply influenced by Neoplatonism as he likewise moved on (baptized in 387) into the Christian faith ( Confessions 8.2). He later declared that of all other philosophers “none come nearer to us than the Platonists” ( City of God 8.5). Likewise the Roman Christian theologian Boethius (c.A.D. 470-525), who wrote commentaries on works of Porphyry and translated Porphyry’s Isagoge, reflects Neoplatonism in his own major work On the Consolation of Philosophy . Together Augustine and Boethius were mainly responsible for the introduction of Neoplatonic ideas into Latin Christianity. Nevertheless Roman Neoplatonism as a school was at end by the latter part of the sixth century” (Finegan

47. Euclid@Everything2.com
proclus diadochus (AD 412485), the authority for most of our information regardingEuclid, states in his commentary on the first book of the Elements that
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node=Euclid

48. List Of Craters On The Moon, O-S: Information From Answers.com
Proclus, 28 km, proclus diadochus. Proctor, 52 km, Mary Proctor. Protagoras,21 km, Protagoras Ptolemaeus, 164 km, Ptolemy
http://www.answers.com/topic/list-of-craters-on-the-moon-o-s
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping List of craters on the Moon, O-S Wikipedia List of craters on the Moon, O-S This is a subset of the list of craters on the Moon . Where a crater formation has associated satellite craters, these are detailed on the main crater description pages.
Craters on the Moon A-B C-F G-K L-N O-S T-Z
O
Crater Diameter Eponym Oberth 60 km Hermann Oberth Obruchev 71 km Vladimir Afanasyevich Obruchev O'Day 71 km Marcus O'Day Oenopides 67 km Oenopides of Chios Oersted 42 km Hans Christian ˜rsted Ohm 64 km Georg Simon Ohm Oken 71 km Lorenz Oken Olbers 74 km Heinrich Wilhelm Matth¤us Olbers Olcott 81 km William Tyler Olcott Olivier 69 km Charles Pollard Olivier Omar Khayyam 70 km Omar Khayyam Onizuka 29 km Ellison Onizuka Opelt 48 km Friedrich Wilhelm Opelt Oppenheimer 208 km J. Robert Oppenheimer Oppolzer 40 km Theodor von Oppolzen Oresme 76 km Nicolaus von Oresme Orlov 81 km Aleksandr Iakovlevich Orlov Sergei Vladimirovich Orlov Orontius 105 km Oronce Fin© Osama 0.5 km

49. Geometry Quotes. Geometry Step By Step From The Land Of The Incas - Antonio Guti
Commentary on Euclid s Elements I. proclus diadochus. 410 485. proclus diadochus.411 - 485. On Euclid According to most accounts, geometry was first
http://agutie.homestead.com/files/Quotes_B.htm
Geometry Quotes: See also: Quotes Quiz
Alexander, Jane. Chairman, National Endowment for the Arts (1993-1997) "When we teach a child to sing or play the flute, we teach her how to listen. When we teach her to draw, we teach her to see. When we teach a child to dance, we teach him about his body and about space, and when he acts on a stage, he learns about character and motivation. When we teach a child design , we reveal the geometry of the world. When we teach children about the folk and traditional arts and the great masterpieces of the world, we teach them to celebrate their roots and find their own place in history." Alger, William R. 1823-1905. U.S. minister, writer. The line of life is a ragged diagonal between duty and desire Archimedes. 287-212 BC. Greek mathematician, engineer, and physicist. Soldier, stand away from my diagram Supposedly spoken by Archimedes to the Roman soldier who killed him. Perhaps the best indication of what Archimedes truly loved most is his request that his tombstone include a cylinder circumscribing a sphere , accompanied by the inscription of his amazing theorem that the sphere is exactly two-thirds of the circumscribing cylinder in both surface area and volume!"

50. Virtual Matenadaran - The Heritage - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY In Details
Aristotle, Philo of Alexandria, Porphyry the Phoenician, proclus diadochus,Nemesius of Emessa, PseudoDionysius the Areopagite, John of Damascus,
http://www.matenadaran.am/en/heritage/philosophy/

51. Matenadaran - The Heritage
Secudius (2nd century AD), Porphyrius (232 303), proclus diadochus (412 -485), Olympiodorus the Junior (6th century), etc.
http://www.matenadaran.am/en/heritage/philosophy.html

52. Saturn And The Deluge
proclus diadochus, In Timaeo 32b. In his commentary to Euclid’s Geometry (I.402. 21), Proclus ascribes a similar conception to the preSocratic
http://www.varchive.org/itb/satdel.htm
Saturn and the Deluge
Following the rabbinical sources which declare that the Deluge was caused by two comets ejected by the planet Khima, and our interpretation of the planet Khima as Saturn, we begin to understand the astrological texts, such as certain passages in the Tetrabiblos of Ptolemy, which attribute to the planet Saturn floods and all catastrophes caused by high water. as is attested, among others, by the first-century Roman author Lucan. Many of the ancient astrologers were in agreement on this point. In a work entitled Speculum astrologiae, Cuneiform texts contain prophecies of a deluge taking place when a comet assumes a direction with its head towards the Earth. and, somewhat later, Plato. The elder Pliny wrote in his Natural History that it is well known that heavy rains follow transitions of Saturn. We recognize that the astrological connection between Saturn and catastrophes created by high water has a very ancient origin. References
  • Tetrabiblos II. 8. 84. Similar statements may be found in Hephaestion I. 20.
  • 53. Khima
    proclus diadochus, In Timaeo Vol. IV, p. 92 “The Stars” iii.1. “Saturn and Marsare the extremes and in opposition to one another . . . one being the
    http://www.varchive.org/itb/khima.htm
    Khima
    In the Tractate Brakhot of the Babylonian Talmud it is said that the Deluge was caused by two stars that fell from Khima toward the earth. The statement reads: When the Holy One . . . wanted to bring a flood upon the world, He took two stars from Khima and brought a flood upon the world. I have already mentioned that Rashi, the medieval exegete whose authority is unsurpassed among the rabbis, says that in the quoted sentence Khima means a star with a tail, or a comet. This explanation found its way into the works of several gentile theologians. Should it be understood so that two large meteorites fell from a comet and falling on Earth caused tidal waves? Instances when meteorites fell while a comet was glowing in the sky are known, and the classic case is found in Aristotle. Should a meteorite equal in mass to the one which by its impact formed the Arizona crater fall into the ocean, tidal waves of a wide spread would result, possibly circling the globe. Then are we to understand the Deluge as a huge tidal wave rushing across the continents? This picture differs widely from the story in Genesis, according to which water was falling for a long period from the sky and the waters of the depths rose, covering the surface of the earth. Mazzaroth is left untranslated.

    54. Nbspcatherine Larrère - New And Used Books
    proclus diadochus G Pasquali De Nbsp Diadochus Proclus - Aristote CleantheProclus - Proclus Thomas M Johnson - Euclid proclus diadochus
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    55. EUCLIDES
    Translate this page És evident que Proclus no tenia proves directes de la vida d´Euclides però el sitúa with a commentary based principally upon that of proclus diadochus.
    http://www.euclides.org/menu/elements_cat/euclides.htm
    ELS ELEMENTS D´EUCLIDES I - II - III - IV - V - VI - VII - VIII - IX - X - XI - XII - XIII EUCLIDES Poc és el que sabem de la vida real d´Euclides. Vivia a Alexandria pels voltants de l´any 300 ac. Aquesta data es basa en els passatges del llibre de Proclus Comentaris del I Llibre dels Elements d´Euclides . De fet moltes de les dades que tenim es basen en conjetures i opinions de Proclus. Després d´anomenar a dos estudiants de Plató, Proclus escriu :
    • Totes les històries que s´han escrit referents a aquest punt cauen en la compte del desenvolupament d´aquesta ciència. No massa temps després de l´arribada d´Euclides, va reunir en els Elements la sistematització dels Teoremes de Theatetus i afegint les irrefutables demostracions de les proposicions que els seus precursors no havien establert. Ell va viure a l´època de Tolomeu I ja que Arquímedes que va viure després ja mencionava a Euclides. Es diu que Tolomeu I una vegada va preguntar a Euclides si hi havia un camí més curt per aprendre geometria que no fós a través dels Elements i Euclides va replicar que no hi havia una camí real cap a la geometria. Euclides per tant és posterior al grup de Plató i anterior a Eratosthenes i Arquímedes que eren contemporanis tal i com Eratosthenes diu en alguna ocasió. Euclides es va rendir a la persuació de Plató i seguint la seva filosofia va concebre els

    56. EUCLIDES
    Translate this page Es evidente que Proclus no tenía pruebas directas de la vida de Euclides pero lo with a commentary based principally upon that of proclus diadochus.
    http://www.euclides.org/menu/elements_esp/euclidescastellano.htm
    LOS ELEMENTOS DE EUCLIDES I - II - III - IV - V - VI - VII - VIII - IX - X - XI - XII - XIII EUCLIDES Poco sabemos de la vida real de Euclides. Vivía en Alejandría alrededor del año 300 ac. Esta fecha ses basa en los pasajes del libro de Proclus Comentaris del I Libro de los Elementos de Euclides . De hecho muchas de las fechas que tenemos se basan en conjeturas y opiniones de Proclus. Después de nombrar a dos estudiantes de Platón, Proclus escribe :
    • Todas las historias que se han escrito referentes a este punto caen en la cuenta del desarrollo de esta ciencia. No mucho tiempo después de la llegada de Euclides, reunió en los Elementos la sistematización de los Teoremas de Theatetus y añadiendo las irrefutables demostraciones de las proposiciones que sus precursores no habían establecido. Él vivió en la época de Tolomeo I ya que Arquímedes que vivió después ya mencionaba a Euclides. Se dice que Tolomeo I una vez preguntó a Euclides si había un camino más corto para aprender geometría que no fuera a través de los Elementos y Euclides replicó que no había un camino real hacia la geometría. Euclides por lo tanto es posterior al grupo de Platón y anterior a Eratosthenes y Arquímedes que eran contemporáneos tal y como Eratosthenes dice en alguna ocasión. Euclides se rindió a la persuación de Platón y siguiendo su filosofía concibió los

    57. Plato Transformed - Proclus: Biography
    Plato Transformed proclus diadochus biography After the latter’s deathProclus succeeded him as ‘Diadochus’, Successor of Plato, or head of the
    http://www.hiw.kuleuven.be/dwmc/plato/proclus/probio.htm
    Home About Lectures and events Proclus ... Institute of Philosophy Plato Transformed - Proclus Diadochus: biography Chaldaean Oracles Elements of Theology , the exposition of his metaphysical system by means of a priori deductions, and his ethical treatises about Providence and Evil opus magnum , the Platonic Theology Phaedo commentary on the Timaeus , was completed by the age of 27. Chaldaean Oracles De causis Elements of Theology Further reading Rosan, J., The Philosophy of Proclus. The Final Phase of Ancient Thought , New York: Cosmos, 1949. XXIII, 1. Stuttgart: Druckenmuller, 1957, col. 186-247. Beierwaltes, W., (Philosophische Abhandlungen 24), Frankfurt a. M.: Klostermann, 1965. Siorvanes, L., Proclus: Neoplatonic philosophy and science , New Haven (Conn.): Yale University Press, 1997. here For recent articles and monographs on Proclus, see here Sources XXIII, 1. Stuttgart: Druckenmuller, 1957, col. 186-247. Marinus, Life of Proclus or On Blessedness On Proclus and his Influence in Medieval Philosophy , Leiden: Brill, 1992, 35-50 [repr. in H. D. Saffrey

    58. Lista Di Autorità (autori Persone) N-Z
    Translate this page proclus diadochus, Vedi, proclus diadochus 410-ca.485. proclus diadochus 410-ca.485 .. Pseudo-Aristotele, Vedi, Aristoteles
    http://biblio.adm.unipi.it/AF_persNZ.html
    L
    A-F G-M N-Z
    Legenda
    In grassetto le forme accettate
    In corsivo le qualificazioni da inserire nel sottocampo " c " dei campi del 7xx, ad eccezione delle date per gli autori personali
    Tra <uncinate> le date per gli autori personali che vanno inserite nel sottocampo " f " Lista completa Rinvii Natoli, Luigi Necker, Anne Louise Germaine Vedi: Staël-Holstein, Anne Louise Germaine baro nne de Nepos, Cornelius  Vedi: Cornelius Nepos Neste, Évelyne van den  Vedi: Van^den^Neste, Évelyne Niccolò Cusano Vedi: Nicolaus Cusanus Niccolò Cusano Vedi: Nicolaus Cusanus Nicola Cusano Vedi: Nicolaus Cusanus Nicolai de Cusa Vedi: Nicolaus Cusanus Nicolaus Cusanus   Nilsen, Anthon Bernhard Elias Vedi: Kraemmer, Elias Nkintsmpournk, Natalia  Vedi: Ginzburg, Natalia  Noas, Andrés Rogelio Quintián Vedi: Quintián Noas, Andrés Notabene, Nicolaus  Vedi: Kierkegaard, Sören Aabye  Novalis O’Brien, Flann  Obrazcov, Sergej Vedi: Obrazcov, Sergej Vladimirovic Obrazcov, Sergej Vladimirovic Obraztov, Sergej Vedi: Obrazcov, Sergej Vladimirovic Occam, Guglielmo

    59. Fields Of Mathematics
    proclus diadochus (412 485) Scholium to Book X of Euclid V. perfect. Perfectnumbers like perfect men are very rare. Rene Descartes, (1596-1650) In H.
    http://www.chemistrycoach.com/fields_of_mathematics.htm
    Fields of Mathematics
    Number
    uses of numbers
    The Answer to the Great Question of...Life, the Universe and Everything ... (is) Forty-two. Douglas Adams numbers for symbols What Einstein calls a physical quantity is simply a number, and if it does correspond to a physical reality, that quantity alone yields no suggestion of what that reality might be... it is a measure not of nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of detection. Alan Wallace, Choosing Reality Numbers are symbols for things; the number and the thing are not the same. G. O. Ashley Numbers are tools, not rules. G. O. Ashley The concept of number is the obvious distinction between the beast and man. Thanks to number, the cry becomes a song, noise acquires rhythm, the spring is transformed into a dance, force becomes dynamic, and outlines figures. Joseph Marie de Maistre (1753 - 1821) numbers for counting "Can you do addition?" the White Queen asked. "What's one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one?" "I don't know," said Alice. "I lost count." Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass. Whenever you can, count. [Sir] Francis Galton (1822-1911) In J. R. Newman (ed.) The World of Mathematics, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1956.

    60. Böcker Skrivna Av Författaren Proclus Diadochus - Bokkap.se
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