247 research outputs found
Kafka’s “Die Verwandlung” And Its Natural Model: An Alternative Reading
Perhaps no twentieth-century literary work from German-speaking Europe has attracted more attention worldwide than Franz Kafka\u27s Die Verwandlung. Since it was first published in 1912, this bizaare tale of the traveling salesman who awakes one morning to discover he has been transformed into a huge bug has consistently elicited powerful responses from its readers. Some have judged it disgusting and perverse, while others have regarded it as profound, prophetic, or puzzling. Virtually all, however, have found it provocative. As a result, its readership has steadily grown until today it belongs to the expected reading of the so-called educated person, not only in German-speaking Europe, but in much of the Western world
Artificial Intelligence Regulation: A Meta-Framework for Formulation and Governance
This article presents a meta-framework for Artificial Intelligence (AI) regulation that encompasses all stages of international public policy-making, from formulation to sustainable governance. Based on a vast systematic review of the literature on Artificial Intelligence Regulation (AIR) published between 2009 and 2019, a dispersed body of knowledge organized under the label “framework” was identified, containing 15 unique frameworks and several different theories that created a complex scientific scenario for research and practice. Theories and principles as diverse as Agile and Ethics were found. Thus, a structured analytical method was followed to integrate this bulk of knowledge into a cohesive, synthetic, and generic theoretical tool. The resulting “AIR framework” provides a trustworthy lens for societies to think collectively and make informed policy decisions related to what, when, and how the uses and applications of AI should be regulated. Moreover, the novel framework organizes the latest developments in the area in a format that allows future research to be framed in and added to the published literature. The (potential) impacts of AI on society are immense, and therefore the discourses, social negotiations, and applications of this technology should be guided by common grounds in terms of terminology, governance, and social values
The Montana Kaimin, March 14, 1919
Student newspaper of the University of Montana, Missoula.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/1511/thumbnail.jp
Bridgton Reporter : Vol.1, No. 29 May 27,1859
https://digitalmaine.com/bridgton_reporter/1025/thumbnail.jp
Stag - Vol. 06, No. 02 - October 7, 1954
The Stag, the official student newspaper of Fairfield University, was published weekly during the academic year (September - June) and ran from September 23, 1949 (Vol. 1, No. 1) to May 6, 1970 (Vol. 21, No. 20).https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/archives-stag/1074/thumbnail.jp
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