364 research outputs found
New York\u27s Expanding Empire in Tort Jurisdiction: Quo Vadis
In Miller v. Miller the New York Court of Appeals held that New York law applied in a case which had minimum contacts with the Empire State. In criticizing the decision, the author questions its constitutionality and suggests New York has gone too far in its total repudiation of the lex loci delicti rule
The Human Will is Free
The freedom of the will is one of the most important questions in philosophy. So much has been written on the subject that it hardly seems worth while to treat it in a thesis in which nothing can be said which has not already been said a number of times. The two opposing parties in the controversy have completed their respective cases; they have fully entrenched themselves behind volumes and volumes of weighty libraries and are now but waiting new recruits. As a matter of fact, though both sides of the debate seem to have exhausted their arguments, though they have used an misused logic and even created new logics for their purpose, yet neither have been able to convince the other. Today there are the two schools of thought as clearly distinct as there were fifty years ago and in the time of Luther. The arguments which we use today were known a thousand years ago. The only difference is that in one age a theological argument will be stressed. in another a scientific and in another a pragmatic. Different peoples dress the arguments in their favorite literary styles, but despite these quirks and furbelows which the discussion has now and then assumed, it has remained fundamentally on the same basis as ever. Perhaps in time to come experimental science will be able to dis close something more convincing concerning the human will, but we need not be too optimistic about that future. There is probably no phenomena of our interior life which is ore inaccessible than the will. However in this thesis we hope briefly to survey the present lay of the land. to clarify some of the fog obscuring the various issues, and in the mind of the writer, at any rate, to settle the question for once and always
Multiquasiparticle states in the neutron-rich nucleus 174 Tm
Deep inelastic and transfer reactions with an 820-MeV, 136Xe beam and various ytterbium and lutetium targets have been employed to study high-spin structures in the neutron-rich thulium isotopes beyond 171Tm. Results in the doubly odd nucleus, 174Tm, inc
High-spin structure, K isomers, and state mixing in the neutron-rich isotopes 173 Tm and 175 Tm
High-spin states in the odd-proton thulium isotopes 173Tm and 175Tm have been studied using deep-inelastic reactions and γ-ray spectroscopy. In 173Tm, the low-lying structure has been confirmed and numerous new states have been identified, including a t
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