dispute$22098$ - translation to ελληνικό
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dispute$22098$ - translation to ελληνικό

1780S DEBATES ABOUT SPINOSA'S PANTHEISM
Pantheism dispute; Pantheism Dispute

dispute      
n. διαμάχη, διένεξη, φιλινικία, έριδα, συζήτηση, αμφισβητώ
legal case         
  • Canadian criminal cases
DISPUTE RESOLVED BY A COURT
Court case; Case (law); Legal dispute; Judicial proceeding; Court action; Judicial proceedings
δικαστική υπόθεση
go on strike         
  • Agitated workers face the factory owner in ''The Strike''. Painted by [[Robert Koehler]] in 1886.
  • 1934 strike]].
  • Strike breakers, ''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' strike, 1986, [[Chicago]], Illinois
  • [[2005 New York City transit strike]]
  • Display of demands during a strike in 2016 at [[Verisure]], a French security company
  • To bring public attention, a giant inflatable rat (named 'Scabby') is used in the U.S. at the site of a labor dispute. The rat represents strike-breaking replacement workers, otherwise known as 'scabs'.
  • Strike in [[Pas-de-Calais]] (1906)
  • Female tailors on strike, New York City, February 1910
  • Metal workers doing motorized strike in [[Hyvinkää]], Finland in March 1971
  • Strikebreaking driver and cart being stoned during sanitation worker strike. [[New York City]], 1911.
  • Victims of a clash between striking workers and the army in [[Prostějov]], Austria-Hungary, April 1917
  • ''The charge'' by [[Ramon Casas]] (1899)
  • ''Strike'', painting by [[Stanisław Lentz]]
  • Lenin Shipyard workers, Poland, on strike in August 1980, with the name of the state-controlled trade union crossed out in protest
  • A strike leader addressing strikers in [[Gary, Indiana]] in 1919
  • A [[general strike]] on 5 November 1905 in [[Tampere]], [[Finland]]
  • Strike action (1879), painting by [[Theodor Kittelsen]]
  • A rally of the trade union [[UNISON]] in [[Oxford]] during a strike on 28 March 2006
  • Ministry of Education]] building on 7 March 2012
WORK STOPPAGE CAUSED BY THE MASS REFUSAL OF EMPLOYEES TO WORK
Labor strike; Industrial Action; Work stoppage; Union flying squad; Labour strike; Wild cat (labour movement); Strike (labor); Strike breaking; Sickout; Union strike; Industrial dispute; Strike (action); Work strike; Recognition strike; Recognitional picketing; Right of strike; Right to strike; Striking workers; Striking worker; Workers strike; On strike; Go on strike; Strike actions; Strike (industrial action); Trade union strike; Workers' strike; Back to work legislation; Sick-out; Sick out; Red flu; Going on strike; Worker strike; Employee strike; Labour action; Labor action; Organization strike
απεργώ

Ορισμός

Dispute Settlement
This refers to the resolution of opposing aims often facilitated through the efforts of an intermediary. In the GATT context, dispute settlement provides opportunities for individual contracting parties to resolve trade problems through negotiated means or with the help of a GATT panel of experts which rules on GATT legal practices and recommends solutions.

Βικιπαίδεια

Pantheism controversy

The pantheism controversy (German: Pantheismusstreit), also known as Spinozismusstreit or Spinozastreit, refers to the 1780s debates in German intellectual life that discussed the merits of Spinoza's "pantheistic" conception of God. What became a wider cultural debate in German society started as a personal disagreement between Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi and Moses Mendelssohn over their understanding of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's Spinozist beliefs. The difference of opinion became a wider public controversy when, in 1785, Jacobi published his correspondence with Mendelssohn. This started a series of public discussions on the matter.

Benjamin Crowe of Boston University stated in a 2008 paper that: "The leading luminaries of late eighteenth and early-nineteenth German letters, people such as Herder, Goethe, Hegel, Schelling and Schleiermacher, all, in one way or another, were shaped by the ‘Pantheism Controversy’." And in Michael Forster's own words (2010), "During the last quarter or so of the eighteenth century and then well into the nineteenth century a wave of neo-Spinozism swept through German philosophy and literature: in addition to Lessing and Herder, further neo-Spinozists included Goethe, Schelling, Hegel, Schleiermacher, Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel. This wave was largely a result of Herder's embrace of neo-Spinozism in God: Some Conversations (and in Goethe's case, Herder's sympathy with Spinozism even before that work)."