T. Brice Pearce - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Utilizing my analytic and pedagogic skills to improve the customer interactions of the American consumer, in Training Management for a technology company.
Developing innovative and impactful leaders in the corporate world.
Supervisors: Gregory McMahon (UNH, MA), Albrecht Diem (SU, 1yr), and R. Scott Moore (IUP, BA)
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Papers by T. Brice Pearce
While no explicit discourse exists within medieval culture, many writers in the middle ages discu... more While no explicit discourse exists within medieval culture, many writers in the middle ages discussed orgasm while considering other matters. Commentators debated the purpose and function of orgasm in relation to procreation and overall bodily health in a teleological context, while moral and psychological health was a focus of philosophical discussion. In the early
T. Brice Pearce The culture and politics of the Etruscan city-states were predominant in Italy fr... more T. Brice Pearce The culture and politics of the Etruscan city-states were predominant in Italy from the end of the Iron Age Villanovan culture until the rise of Rome in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, although little is known about their formation and the relationships between them due to the lack of a large corpus of primary texts. Generally, Etruscan polities were structured as a large urban center that maintained individual control over its dependent region and was allied with other urban centers overall by cultural factors and, at times, by political arrangement. While debate has ranged over the origin of the Etruscans, there is little evidence to support a cultural break from the Villanovan civilization. The Etruscans did choose to found many of their regional urban centers on the site of well-established former Villanovan habitations. In the eighth century, a period of rapid growth caused by the increased demand in trade converted the villages into pre-urban centers, allowing for more social stratification and specialization. However, the regions of Etruscan civilization each developed at a slightly different pace, with various emphases on political and cultural themes until the end of the sixth century BCE. The major Etruscan cities were distributed between the Arno and Tiber rivers, focusing their population and wealth within central and southern Etruria. Northern Etruria-from the Arno to Ruins of the Etruscan city of Veii in present-day Italy seventh-sixth century BCE. (SEF/Art
While no explicit discourse exists within medieval culture, many writers in the middle ages discu... more While no explicit discourse exists within medieval culture, many writers in the middle ages discussed orgasm while considering other matters. Commentators debated the purpose and function of orgasm in relation to procreation and overall bodily health in a teleological context, while moral and psychological health was a focus of philosophical discussion. In the early
T. Brice Pearce The culture and politics of the Etruscan city-states were predominant in Italy fr... more T. Brice Pearce The culture and politics of the Etruscan city-states were predominant in Italy from the end of the Iron Age Villanovan culture until the rise of Rome in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, although little is known about their formation and the relationships between them due to the lack of a large corpus of primary texts. Generally, Etruscan polities were structured as a large urban center that maintained individual control over its dependent region and was allied with other urban centers overall by cultural factors and, at times, by political arrangement. While debate has ranged over the origin of the Etruscans, there is little evidence to support a cultural break from the Villanovan civilization. The Etruscans did choose to found many of their regional urban centers on the site of well-established former Villanovan habitations. In the eighth century, a period of rapid growth caused by the increased demand in trade converted the villages into pre-urban centers, allowing for more social stratification and specialization. However, the regions of Etruscan civilization each developed at a slightly different pace, with various emphases on political and cultural themes until the end of the sixth century BCE. The major Etruscan cities were distributed between the Arno and Tiber rivers, focusing their population and wealth within central and southern Etruria. Northern Etruria-from the Arno to Ruins of the Etruscan city of Veii in present-day Italy seventh-sixth century BCE. (SEF/Art