84,868 research outputs found
Phenomenology of Philosophy of Science: OPERA data
I observe that, as the physics side of the OPERA-anomaly story is apparently
unfolding, there can still be motivation for philosophy of science to analyze
the six months of madness physicists spent chasing the dream of a new
fundamental-physics revolution. I here mainly report data on studies of the
OPERA anomaly that could be relevant for analyses from the perspective of
phenomenology of philosophy of science. Most of what I report is an insider's
perspective on the debate that evolved from the original announcement by the
OPERA collaboration of evidence of superluminal neutrinos. I also sketch out,
from a broader perspective, some of the objectives I view as achievable for the
phenomenology of philosophy of science.Comment: 13 pages, LaTe
Vietnam Inbound M&A Activity: the Role of Government Policy and Regulatory Environment
With a robust recent history of reform and opening, joining of the World Trade Organization, and negotiating a myriad of regional and global trade agreements, Vietnam has emerged as a promising destination for foreign direct investment(FDI) and cross-border mergers and acquisitions (M&A). In this paper, we providean overview of Vietnam’s inbound mergers and acquisitions and review the twomain driving forces of inbound M&A, which are the legal framework reformprocess and the equitization of State-owned enterprises. We close by providingdirections for future research in the area of cross-border M&As
Indexing nature: Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) and his fact-gathering strategies
Early modern naturalists were faced with what has been termed the âfirst bio-information crisisâ. A key figure in resolving this crisis was the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus (1707-1788). This paper will focus on Linnaeusâs day-to-day working routines on the basis of manuscript material held at the Linnean Society(London). What this material shows is that Linnaeus had to manage a conflict between the need to bring factual information into a fixed order for purposes of retrieval, and the need to integrate new information into that order. A way out of this dilemma was to keep information on particular subjects on separate sheets, which could be reshuffled and complemented by additional sheets. It is only very late in his life, however, that Linnaeus realized the full potential of this technique, by inventing what look like index cards. What we thus hope to show in this paper is that one of the main cognitive advantages commonly assigned to writing â the possibility to abstract words and statements from their context and rearrange them freely in lists,tables and filing systems â had to prevail over considerable practical and psychological obstacles. What seems an obvious thing to do in hindsight, e.g. to work with something like index cards, had to be learned through an incessant, painstaking process of experimentation, fact-gathering, and reorganization
Volusia County School Board and Council 79,American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO, Local 850 (2003) (MOA)
Workpiece positioning vise
A pair of jaw assemblies simultaneously driven in opposed reciprocation by a single shaft has oppositely threaded sections to automatically center delicate or brittle workpieces such as lithium fluoride crystal beneath the blade of a crystal cleaving machine. Both jaw assemblies are suspended above the vise bed by a pair of parallel guide shafts attached to the vise bed. Linear rolling bearings, fitted around the guide shafts and firmly held by opposite ends of the jaw assemblies, provide rolling friction between the guide shafts and the jaw assemblies. A belleville washer at one end of the drive shaft and thrust bearings at both drive shaft ends hold the shaft in compression between the vise bed, thereby preventing wobble of the jaw assemblies due to wear between the shaft and vise bed
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