17,057 research outputs found
Wittgenstein's Paperwork. An Example from the "Big Typescript"
The edition of the Nachlass from the early thirties by Michael Nedo and the completion of the "Bergen Electronic Edition" (BEE) have provided Wittgenstein scholars with all the material required to investigate the author's philosophical development starting with his auto-criticism of the "Tractatus" and leading to his later views. Wittgenstein's strategy of dictating from his notebooks and cutting up the typescripts to rearrange paragraphs into sequences of remarks is well documented in Nedo's edition and the BEE provides convenient facsimile access to every page Wittgenstein wrote or edited throughout the process. Some researchers have begun to revise received opinions that were based upon the "books" previously published by the trustees. (Hrachovec 2002, 2004, Kientzler 1997, Nyiri 2002, Pichler 2004, Stern 2002) Yet, the scientific community has barely begun to discover the richness and density of the philosophical endeavor manifesting itself in this material. There has, understandably, been an interest to trace the origin of remarks, well-known from the "Philosophical Investigations", providing some background to Wittgenstein's most popular ideas. Various doctrines of what is becoming known as the "middle Wittgenstein" have been noticed, but they have themselves been perceived as more or less consolidated theories. Wittgenstein's editorial activity has been recognized as a hypertextual undertaking avant la lettre, yet there has been insufficient attention to the philosophical impact of these hypertextual strategies themselves. It is all too easy to be caught by someprovisional result captured on a printed page and to overlook the fact that some of its philosophical significance can only be recognized by considering its genesis
Know Your Audience: Middlebrow aesthetic and literary positioning in the fiction of P.G. Wodehouse
This essay strives to explain Wodehouseâs status as a popular writer, whose work is read with enjoyment by academics, critics and the general reader alike, as resulting from his particular positioning within the literary field, scrutinizing his relationship to both popular commercial fiction and avant-garde literary output. It argues that Wodehouse as a writer of enduring popularity and yet non-canonical status fits in with a range of critical discourses of the middlebrow, both modern and contemporary
MS-118: Letters Solicited by Jerold Wikoff for Gettysburg Alumni Magazine
This collection is comprised of letters written by Gettysburg College alumni to Mr. Jerold Wikoff concerning three distinct topics: World War II experiences, dinks, and alumni couple sweetheart stories. The alumni who contributed the letters that comprise this collection wrote in response to Mr. Wikoffâs various requests within the Gettysburg alumni magazine.
Special Collections and College Archives Finding Aids are discovery tools used to describe and provide access to our holdings. Finding aids include historical and biographical information about each collection in addition to inventories of their content. More information about our collections can be found on our website http://www.gettysburg.edu/special_collections/collections/.https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/findingaidsall/1107/thumbnail.jp
'Throttle College'? Ted Hughes's Cambridge Poetry
Ted Hughes often characterised his time at Cambridge as uninspiring and unproductive. Yet this article is the first scholarly study to examine the surviving work that Hughes produced while he was a student. I publish a student poem of Hughes's for the first time, and deploy highly innovative, original archival work from the Cambridge University Library and British Library to show that Hughes was reading voraciously and writing prolifically while he was at University. I demonstrate how early work by Hughes was remarkably prescient of his later, collected poems
In the Age of Web: Typed Functional-First Programming Revisited
Most programming languages were designed before the age of web. This matters
because the web changes many assumptions that typed functional language
designers take for granted. For example, programs do not run in a closed world,
but must instead interact with (changing and likely unreliable) services and
data sources, communication is often asynchronous or event-driven, and programs
need to interoperate with untyped environments.
In this paper, we present how the F# language and libraries face the
challenges posed by the web. Technically, this comprises using type providers
for integration with external information sources and for integration with
untyped programming environments, using lightweight meta-programming for
targeting JavaScript and computation expressions for writing asynchronous code.
In this inquiry, the holistic perspective is more important than each of the
features in isolation. We use a practical case study as a starting point and
look at how F# language and libraries approach the challenges posed by the web.
The specific lessons learned are perhaps less interesting than our attempt to
uncover hidden assumptions that no longer hold in the age of web.Comment: In Proceedings ML/OCaml 2014, arXiv:1512.0143
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