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James Samuel Coleman

James Samuel Coleman (May 12, 1926 – March 25, 1995) was an American sociologist, theorist, and empirical researcher, based chiefly at the University of Chicago.

James Samuel Coleman
Born(1926-05-12)May 12, 1926
Bedford, Indiana, United States
DiedMarch 25, 1995(1995-03-25) (aged 68)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPurdue University
Columbia University
Scientific career
FieldsSociological theory, Mathematical sociology
Doctoral advisorPaul Lazarsfeld
Doctoral studentsRonald S. Burt
InfluencesRobert K. Merton and James Burnham

He was elected president of the American Sociological Association in 1991. He studied the sociology of education and public policy, and was one of the earliest users of the term social capital. He may be considered one of the original neoconservatives in sociology. His work Foundations of Social Theory (1990) influenced countless sociological theories, and his works The Adolescent Society (1961) and "Coleman Report" (Equality of Educational Opportunity, 1966) were two of the most cited books in educational sociology. The landmark Coleman Report helped transform educational theory, reshape national education policies, and it influenced public and scholarly opinion regarding the role of schooling in determining equality and productivity in the United States.[1]

Early life

As the son of James and Maurine Coleman, he spent his early childhood in Bedford, Indiana, he then moved to Louisville, Kentucky. After graduating in 1944, he enrolled in a small school in Virginia, but left to enlist in the US Navy during World War II. After he was discharged from the US Navy in 1946, he enrolled in Indiana University. Eventually he transferred schools, and Coleman received his bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from Purdue University in 1949. He began working at Eastman Kodak until 1952.[2] He became interested in sociology and pursued his degree at Columbia University. During his time there, he spent two years as a research assistant with the Bureau of Applied Social Research, and published a chapter in Mathematical Thinking in the Social Sciences, which was edited by Paul Lazarsfeld. He went on to receive his doctorate from Columbia University in 1955.[2]

He is best known today for his work on the massive study that produced "Equality of Educational Opportunity" (EEO), or the Coleman Report, Coleman's intellectual appetite was prodigious. [3]

Career

Coleman achieved renown success with two studies on problem solving: An Introduction to Mathematical Sociology (1964) and Mathematics of Collective Action (1973). He taught at Stanford University and the University of Chicago. In 1959, he moved to Johns Hopkins University, where he taught as an associate professor and founded the Sociology department. In 1965 he became involved in Project Camelot, an academic research project funded by the United States military through the Special Operations Research Office to train in counter-insurgency techniques. He eventually became a full-time professor in social relations until 1973, when he returned to Chicago to teach at the University of Chicago again.[2]

During the mid-1960s and early 1970s, Coleman was an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the United States National Academy of Sciences.[4][5][6] Proceeding on the assumption that the study of human society can become a true science, the author examines the contribution that various mathematical techniques might make to systematic conceptual elaboration of social behavior. He notes that it is only when the logical structure of mathematics is possible, and claims that in this way mathematics will ultimately become useful in sociology. [7]

Upon his return, he became the professor and senior study director at the National Opinion Research Center. In 1991, Coleman was elected as the eighty-third President of the American Sociological Association.[8] In 2001, Coleman was named among the top 100 American intellectuals, as measured by academic citations, in Richard Posner's book, Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline.[9] Over his lifetime he wrote 30 books, and numerous other articles, which contributed to the understanding of education in the United States.

He was influenced by James Burnham and Paul Lazarsfeld, both who interested Coleman in mathematical sociology, and Robert Merton, who introduced Coleman to Émile Durkheim. [2] Coleman is associated with adolescence, corporate action and rational choice. He shares common ground with sociologists Peter Blau, Daniel Bell, and Seymour Martin Lipset, with whom Coleman first did research after obtaining his PhD. [10]

Major contributions

Coleman Report

Coleman is widely cited in the field of sociology of education. In the 1960s, during his time teaching at Johns Hopkins University, Coleman and several other scholars were commissioned by the National Center for Education Statistics[2] to write a report on educational equality in the US. It was one of the largest studies in history, with more than 650,000 students in the sample. The result was a massive report of over 700 pages. The 1966 report, titled Equality of Educational Opportunity (otherwise known as the "Coleman Report"), fueled debates about "school effects" that are still relevant today.[11] The report is commonly presented as evidence that school funding has little effect on student achievement, a key finding of the report and subsequent research.[12][13][1] It was found as for physical facilities, formal curricula, and other measurable criteria, there was little difference between black and white schools. Also, a significant gap in the achievement scores between black and white children already existed in the first grade. Despite the similar conditions of black and white schools, the gap became even wider by the end of elementary school. The only consistent variable explaining the differences in score within each racial group or ethnic group was the educational and economic attainment of the parents.[14] Therefore, student background and socioeconomic status were found to be more important in determining educational outcomes of a student. Specifically, the key factors were the attitudes toward education of parents and caregivers at home and peers at school. Differences in the quality of schools and teachers did have a small impact on student outcomes.[12][13][1]

Eric Hanushek criticized the focus on the statistical methodology and the estimation of the impacts of various factors on achievement which took attention away from the achievement comparisons in the Coleman Report. The study had tested students around the country, and the differences in achievement by race and region were enormous. The average black twelfth grade student in the rural South was achieving at the level of a seventh grade white in the urban Northeast. At the fiftieth anniversary of the report's publication, Eric Hanushek assessed the closure in the black-white achievement gap. He found that achievement differences had narrowed, largely from improvements in the South, but that at the pace of the previous half-century, it would take two-and-a-half centuries to close the math achievement gap.[15][16]

Social capital

In Foundations of Social Theory (1990), Coleman discusses his theory of social capital, the set of resources found in family relations and in a community's social organization.[17] Coleman believed that social capital is useful for the cognitive or social development of a child or young person. He discusses three main types of capital: human, physical, and social.

Human capital is an individual's skills, knowledge, and experience, which determine their value in society. Physical capital, being completely tangible and generally a private good, originates from the creation of tools to facilitate production. In addition to social capital, the three types of investments create the three main aspects of society's exchange of capital.

According to Coleman, social capital and human capital are often complementary. By having certain skill sets, experiences, and knowledge, an individual can gain social status and so receive more social capital.[17]

Legacy

Coleman was a pioneer in the construction of mathematical models in sociology with his book, Introduction to Mathematical Sociology (1964). His later treatise, Foundations of Social Theory (1990), made major contributions toward a more rigorous form of theorizing in sociology based on rational choice.[18][19] Coleman wrote more than thirty books and published numerous articles. He also created an educational corporation that developed and marketed "mental games" aimed at improving the abilities of disadvantaged students. Coleman made it a practice to send his most controversial research findings "to his worst critics" prior to their publication, calling it "the best way to ensure validity."

At the time of his death, he was engaged in a long-term study titled the High School and Beyond, which examined the lives and careers of 75,000 people who had been high school juniors and seniors in 1980.

Coleman published lasting theories of education, which helped shape the field. With his focus on the allocation of rights, one can understand the conflict between rights. Towards the end of his life, Coleman questioned how to make the education systems more accountable, which caused educators to question their use and interpretation of standardized testing.

Coleman's publication of the "Coleman Report" included greatly influential findings that pioneered aspects of the desegregation of American public schools. His theories of integration also contributed. He also raised the issue of narrowing the educational gap between those who had money and others. By creating a well-rounded student body, a student's educational experience can be greatly benefited.

Selected works

  • Community Conflict (1955)
  • Union Democracy: The Internal Politics of the International Typographical Union (1956, with Seymour Martin Lipset and Martin Trow)
  • The Adolescent Society: The Social Life on the Teenager and its Impact on Education (1961)
  • Introduction to Mathematical Sociology (1964)
  • Models of Change and Response Uncertainty (1964)
  • Adolescents and the Schools (1965)
  • Equality of Educational Opportunity (1966)
  • Macrosociology: Research and Theory (1970)
  • Resources for Social Change: Race in the United States (1971)
  • Youth: Transition to Adulthood (1974)
  • High School Achievement (1982)
  • The Asymmetrical Society (1982)
  • Individual Interests and Collective Action (1986)
  • "Social Theory, Social Research, and a Theory of Action", article in American Journal of Sociology 91: 1309–35 (1986).
  • 'Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital", article in American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 94, Supplement: Organizations and Institutions: Sociological and Economic Approaches to the Analysis of Social Structure, pp. S95–120 (1988)
  • The Foundations of Social Theory. Cambridge, MA: Belknap of Harvard University Press.
  • Equality and Achievement in Education (1990)
  • Redesigning American Education (1997, with Barbara Schneider, Stephen Plank, Kathryn S. Schiller, Roger Shouse, & Huayin Wang)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Martin, Kacy (2016). "Reflecting on Progress since the Coleman Report, 50 Years Later". Michigan State University.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dictionary of cultural theorists. Cashmore, Ellis., Rojek, Chris. London: Arnold. 1999. ISBN 978-0-340-64549-9. OCLC 41061704.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ Kilgore, Sally. "The life and times of James S. Coleman: hero and villain of school policy research". The life and times of James S. Coleman: hero and villain of school policy research. Gale. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  4. ^ "James Samuel Coleman". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  5. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  6. ^ "James S. Coleman". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  7. ^ "How to access research remotely".
  8. ^ "James S. Coleman". American Sociological Association. 2009-06-04. Retrieved 2019-02-27.
  9. ^ Posner, Richard (2001). Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00633-1.
  10. ^ Ritzer, George (2011). Sociological theory (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 446. ISBN 978-0-07-811167-9.
  11. ^ Coleman, James S. (1966). Equality of Educational Opportunity (PDF) (Report). U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare/U.S. Office of Education/U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  12. ^ a b Alexander, Karl; Morgan, Stephen (2017). "The Coleman Report at Fifty: Its Legacy and Implications for Future Research on Equality of Opportunity". RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences. School of Education, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore: Russell Sage Foundation. 2 (5): 1. doi:10.7758/RSF.2016.2.5.01.
  13. ^ a b Kain, John; Singleton, Kraig (1996). "Equality of Education Opportunity Revisited" (PDF). Department of Economics and Afro-American Studies, Harvard University, Boston: New England Economic Review.
  14. ^ Bell, Daniel (1973). The Coming of Post-Industrial Society. New York: Basic Books. p. 430. ISBN 978-0-465-01281-7.
  15. ^ Hanushek, Eric A. (Spring 2016). "What Matters for Achievement: Updating Coleman on the Influence of Families and Schools" (PDF). Education Next. 16 (2): 22–30.
  16. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and John F. Kain,(1972), "On the value of 'equality of educational opportunity' as a guide to public policy." In On equality of educational opportunity, edited by Frederick Mosteller and Daniel P. Moynihan. New York: Random House: 116–145
  17. ^ a b Coleman, James S. The Foundations of Social Theory. Cambridge, MA, 1990: Belknap of Harvard UP. pp. 300–318.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  18. ^ Gibbs, Jack P. (1990). "Review of "Foundations of Social Theory," by James S. Coleman". Social Forces. 69 (2): 625–33. ISSN 0037-7732.
  19. ^ Frank, Robert H. (1992). "Melding Sociology and Economics: James Coleman's Foundations of Social Theory". Journal of Economic Literature. 30 (1): 147–170. ISSN 0022-0515. JSTOR 2727881.

External links

  • "Obituary:James Samuel Coleman". University of Chicago Chronicle. 14 (14). March 30, 1995.
  • American National Biography Online
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • The Rational Reconstruction of Society (1992 Presidential Address)

Social Capital

(https://books.google.com/bookshl=en&lr=&id=fAdR6ufr8NsC&oi=fnd&pg=PR5&dq=social+capital+&ots=P01iImsZjj&sig=vCtmwZ98dVTUesXQuRgVNP7JxzQ#v=onepage&q=social%20capital&f=false)

james, samuel, coleman, 1926, march, 1995, american, sociologist, theorist, empirical, researcher, based, chiefly, university, chicago, born, 1926, 1926bedford, indiana, united, statesdiedmarch, 1995, 1995, aged, chicago, illinois, united, statesnationalityame. James Samuel Coleman May 12 1926 March 25 1995 was an American sociologist theorist and empirical researcher based chiefly at the University of Chicago James Samuel ColemanBorn 1926 05 12 May 12 1926Bedford Indiana United StatesDiedMarch 25 1995 1995 03 25 aged 68 Chicago Illinois United StatesNationalityAmericanAlma materPurdue UniversityColumbia UniversityScientific careerFieldsSociological theory Mathematical sociologyDoctoral advisorPaul LazarsfeldDoctoral studentsRonald S BurtInfluencesRobert K Merton and James BurnhamHe was elected president of the American Sociological Association in 1991 He studied the sociology of education and public policy and was one of the earliest users of the term social capital He may be considered one of the original neoconservatives in sociology His work Foundations of Social Theory 1990 influenced countless sociological theories and his works The Adolescent Society 1961 and Coleman Report Equality of Educational Opportunity 1966 were two of the most cited books in educational sociology The landmark Coleman Report helped transform educational theory reshape national education policies and it influenced public and scholarly opinion regarding the role of schooling in determining equality and productivity in the United States 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Major contributions 3 1 Coleman Report 3 2 Social capital 4 Legacy 5 Selected works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksEarly life EditAs the son of James and Maurine Coleman he spent his early childhood in Bedford Indiana he then moved to Louisville Kentucky After graduating in 1944 he enrolled in a small school in Virginia but left to enlist in the US Navy during World War II After he was discharged from the US Navy in 1946 he enrolled in Indiana University Eventually he transferred schools and Coleman received his bachelor s degree in chemical engineering from Purdue University in 1949 He began working at Eastman Kodak until 1952 2 He became interested in sociology and pursued his degree at Columbia University During his time there he spent two years as a research assistant with the Bureau of Applied Social Research and published a chapter in Mathematical Thinking in the Social Sciences which was edited by Paul Lazarsfeld He went on to receive his doctorate from Columbia University in 1955 2 He is best known today for his work on the massive study that produced Equality of Educational Opportunity EEO or the Coleman Report Coleman s intellectual appetite was prodigious 3 Career EditColeman achieved renown success with two studies on problem solving An Introduction to Mathematical Sociology 1964 and Mathematics of Collective Action 1973 He taught at Stanford University and the University of Chicago In 1959 he moved to Johns Hopkins University where he taught as an associate professor and founded the Sociology department In 1965 he became involved in Project Camelot an academic research project funded by the United States military through the Special Operations Research Office to train in counter insurgency techniques He eventually became a full time professor in social relations until 1973 when he returned to Chicago to teach at the University of Chicago again 2 During the mid 1960s and early 1970s Coleman was an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the American Philosophical Society and the United States National Academy of Sciences 4 5 6 Proceeding on the assumption that the study of human society can become a true science the author examines the contribution that various mathematical techniques might make to systematic conceptual elaboration of social behavior He notes that it is only when the logical structure of mathematics is possible and claims that in this way mathematics will ultimately become useful in sociology 7 Upon his return he became the professor and senior study director at the National Opinion Research Center In 1991 Coleman was elected as the eighty third President of the American Sociological Association 8 In 2001 Coleman was named among the top 100 American intellectuals as measured by academic citations in Richard Posner s book Public Intellectuals A Study of Decline 9 Over his lifetime he wrote 30 books and numerous other articles which contributed to the understanding of education in the United States He was influenced by James Burnham and Paul Lazarsfeld both who interested Coleman in mathematical sociology and Robert Merton who introduced Coleman to Emile Durkheim 2 Coleman is associated with adolescence corporate action and rational choice He shares common ground with sociologists Peter Blau Daniel Bell and Seymour Martin Lipset with whom Coleman first did research after obtaining his PhD 10 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources James Samuel Coleman news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Major contributions EditColeman Report Edit Coleman is widely cited in the field of sociology of education In the 1960s during his time teaching at Johns Hopkins University Coleman and several other scholars were commissioned by the National Center for Education Statistics 2 to write a report on educational equality in the US It was one of the largest studies in history with more than 650 000 students in the sample The result was a massive report of over 700 pages The 1966 report titled Equality of Educational Opportunity otherwise known as the Coleman Report fueled debates about school effects that are still relevant today 11 The report is commonly presented as evidence that school funding has little effect on student achievement a key finding of the report and subsequent research 12 13 1 It was found as for physical facilities formal curricula and other measurable criteria there was little difference between black and white schools Also a significant gap in the achievement scores between black and white children already existed in the first grade Despite the similar conditions of black and white schools the gap became even wider by the end of elementary school The only consistent variable explaining the differences in score within each racial group or ethnic group was the educational and economic attainment of the parents 14 Therefore student background and socioeconomic status were found to be more important in determining educational outcomes of a student Specifically the key factors were the attitudes toward education of parents and caregivers at home and peers at school Differences in the quality of schools and teachers did have a small impact on student outcomes 12 13 1 Eric Hanushek criticized the focus on the statistical methodology and the estimation of the impacts of various factors on achievement which took attention away from the achievement comparisons in the Coleman Report The study had tested students around the country and the differences in achievement by race and region were enormous The average black twelfth grade student in the rural South was achieving at the level of a seventh grade white in the urban Northeast At the fiftieth anniversary of the report s publication Eric Hanushek assessed the closure in the black white achievement gap He found that achievement differences had narrowed largely from improvements in the South but that at the pace of the previous half century it would take two and a half centuries to close the math achievement gap 15 16 Social capital Edit In Foundations of Social Theory 1990 Coleman discusses his theory of social capital the set of resources found in family relations and in a community s social organization 17 Coleman believed that social capital is useful for the cognitive or social development of a child or young person He discusses three main types of capital human physical and social Human capital is an individual s skills knowledge and experience which determine their value in society Physical capital being completely tangible and generally a private good originates from the creation of tools to facilitate production In addition to social capital the three types of investments create the three main aspects of society s exchange of capital According to Coleman social capital and human capital are often complementary By having certain skill sets experiences and knowledge an individual can gain social status and so receive more social capital 17 Legacy EditColeman was a pioneer in the construction of mathematical models in sociology with his book Introduction to Mathematical Sociology 1964 His later treatise Foundations of Social Theory 1990 made major contributions toward a more rigorous form of theorizing in sociology based on rational choice 18 19 Coleman wrote more than thirty books and published numerous articles He also created an educational corporation that developed and marketed mental games aimed at improving the abilities of disadvantaged students Coleman made it a practice to send his most controversial research findings to his worst critics prior to their publication calling it the best way to ensure validity At the time of his death he was engaged in a long term study titled the High School and Beyond which examined the lives and careers of 75 000 people who had been high school juniors and seniors in 1980 Coleman published lasting theories of education which helped shape the field With his focus on the allocation of rights one can understand the conflict between rights Towards the end of his life Coleman questioned how to make the education systems more accountable which caused educators to question their use and interpretation of standardized testing Coleman s publication of the Coleman Report included greatly influential findings that pioneered aspects of the desegregation of American public schools His theories of integration also contributed He also raised the issue of narrowing the educational gap between those who had money and others By creating a well rounded student body a student s educational experience can be greatly benefited Selected works EditCommunity Conflict 1955 Union Democracy The Internal Politics of the International Typographical Union 1956 with Seymour Martin Lipset and Martin Trow The Adolescent Society The Social Life on the Teenager and its Impact on Education 1961 Introduction to Mathematical Sociology 1964 Models of Change and Response Uncertainty 1964 Adolescents and the Schools 1965 Equality of Educational Opportunity 1966 Macrosociology Research and Theory 1970 Resources for Social Change Race in the United States 1971 Youth Transition to Adulthood 1974 High School Achievement 1982 The Asymmetrical Society 1982 Individual Interests and Collective Action 1986 Social Theory Social Research and a Theory of Action article in American Journal of Sociology 91 1309 35 1986 Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital article in American Journal of Sociology Vol 94 Supplement Organizations and Institutions Sociological and Economic Approaches to the Analysis of Social Structure pp S95 120 1988 The Foundations of Social Theory Cambridge MA Belknap of Harvard University Press Equality and Achievement in Education 1990 Redesigning American Education 1997 with Barbara Schneider Stephen Plank Kathryn S Schiller Roger Shouse amp Huayin Wang See also Edit Biography portal Society portalEconomic sociology Rational choice theory Effective schoolsNotes Edit a b c Martin Kacy 2016 Reflecting on Progress since the Coleman Report 50 Years Later Michigan State University a b c d e Dictionary of cultural theorists Cashmore Ellis Rojek Chris London Arnold 1999 ISBN 978 0 340 64549 9 OCLC 41061704 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Kilgore Sally The life and times of James S Coleman hero and villain of school policy research The life and times of James S Coleman hero and villain of school policy research Gale Retrieved 1 March 2022 James Samuel Coleman American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 2022 09 12 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2022 09 12 James S Coleman www nasonline org Retrieved 2022 09 12 How to access research remotely James S Coleman American Sociological Association 2009 06 04 Retrieved 2019 02 27 Posner Richard 2001 Public Intellectuals A Study of Decline Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00633 1 Ritzer George 2011 Sociological theory 8th ed New York McGraw Hill p 446 ISBN 978 0 07 811167 9 Coleman James S 1966 Equality of Educational Opportunity PDF Report U S Department of Health Education and Welfare U S Office of Education U S Government Printing Office Retrieved August 30 2022 a b Alexander Karl Morgan Stephen 2017 The Coleman Report at Fifty Its Legacy and Implications for Future Research on Equality of Opportunity RSF The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences School of Education Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Russell Sage Foundation 2 5 1 doi 10 7758 RSF 2016 2 5 01 a b Kain John Singleton Kraig 1996 Equality of Education Opportunity Revisited PDF Department of Economics and Afro American Studies Harvard University Boston New England Economic Review Bell Daniel 1973 The Coming of Post Industrial Society New York Basic Books p 430 ISBN 978 0 465 01281 7 Hanushek Eric A Spring 2016 What Matters for Achievement Updating Coleman on the Influence of Families and Schools PDF Education Next 16 2 22 30 Eric A Hanushek and John F Kain 1972 On the value of equality of educational opportunity as a guide to public policy In On equality of educational opportunity edited by Frederick Mosteller and Daniel P Moynihan New York Random House 116 145 a b Coleman James S The Foundations of Social Theory Cambridge MA 1990 Belknap of Harvard UP pp 300 318 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Gibbs Jack P 1990 Review of Foundations of Social Theory by James S Coleman Social Forces 69 2 625 33 ISSN 0037 7732 Frank Robert H 1992 Melding Sociology and Economics James Coleman s Foundations of Social Theory Journal of Economic Literature 30 1 147 170 ISSN 0022 0515 JSTOR 2727881 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to James Samuel Coleman Obituary James Samuel Coleman University of Chicago Chronicle 14 14 March 30 1995 American National Biography Online Photo of James Coleman Appearances on C SPAN The Rational Reconstruction of Society 1992 Presidential Address Social Capital https books google com bookshl en amp lr amp id fAdR6ufr8NsC amp oi fnd amp pg PR5 amp dq social capital amp ots P01iImsZjj amp sig vCtmwZ98dVTUesXQuRgVNP7JxzQ v onepage amp q social 20capital amp f false Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Samuel Coleman amp oldid 1115059744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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