RussellL. Ackoff, iconoclastic management authority, advocatesa ''systemic''approach to innovation RobertJ. Allio RussellL. Ackoff-an outspoken critic of many best-selling management books, business schools, their teaching practices, and many widely accepted business theories-isAnheuser Busch ...
A Summary of the Iconoclastic Controversy • The controversy occurred, officially, in two waves: 726-780 c.e. and 814-843 c.e. • The first wave began with the decree to abolish icons by Emperor Leo III in 726.
Alec MacLeod . 5324 Lawton Avenue . Oakland, California 94618 . amacleod@iconoclastic.net or amacleod@ciis.edu . http://www.iconoclastic.net/amacleod/
Bob Nunnally Savannah, GA 31401 912.238.4576 (Home) 757.272.2604 (Mobile) The Iconoclastic Controversy: What’s in a Picture? In the Byzantine Empire, religion was a very important part of society and icons—
Iconoclast, Iconoclastic, and Iconoclasm: Notes Towards a Genealogy Jan N. Bremmer Abstract This article aims to contribute to a better understanding of the genealogy of the terms 'iconoclast(ic)' and 'iconoclasm.'
Eikonomachia: The Afterlife of the "Iconoclastic Controversy" in Byzantium Eikonomachia: The Afterlife of the “Iconoclastic Controversy” in Byzantium
1 Vladimir Baranov, and Basil Lourié. “The Role of Christ’s Soul-Mediator in the Iconoclastic Christology.” In Origeniana Nona. Eds. Gy. Heidl, and R. Somos.
Regardless of extreme threats, the fate of art is to undergo a continuous process of iconoclastic interference with its original state, involving repairs, embellishments, restorations, and other alterations, including re-creations.
The Proclamation of the New Covenant : The Pre-Iconoclastic Altar Ciboria in Rome and Constantinople 1 Jelena Bogdanovi É The altar ciborium is the piece of the liturgical furniture placed in the Christian sanctuary over the holy table ({ƪ\Æ ÙæÆ﷿XÊÆ) where the bloodless sacrifice of ...
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