15,992 research outputs found
On Nietzsche’s Criticism Towards Common Sense Realism in Human, All Too Human I, 11
The paper explores Nietzsche's observations on language in Human, All Too Human I, 11; reflects on the anti-realist position that Nietzsche defends in that aphorism; and focuses on the role she plays in his later investigation on Western culture and its anthropology. As will be argued, Nietzsche's criticism towards common sense realism is consistent with some pragmatist epistemologies developed during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century. This treat of " timeliness " does not limit Nietzsche's originality on the topic. In fact, the idea that philosophy can contrast the metaphysical commitment of common sense can be seen as the theoretical tool that allows Nietzsche to operate on the development of European culture and society
The CMS High Level Trigger
The CMS experiment has been designed with a 2-level trigger system: the Level
1 Trigger, implemented on custom-designed electronics, and the High Level
Trigger (HLT), a streamlined version of the CMS offline reconstruction software
running on a computer farm. A software trigger system requires a tradeoff
between the complexity of the algorithms running on the available computing
power, the sustainable output rate, and the selection efficiency. Here we will
present the performance of the main triggers used during the 2012 data taking,
ranging from simpler single-object selections to more complex algorithms
combining different objects, and applying analysis-level reconstruction and
selection. We will discuss the optimisation of the triggers and the specific
techniques to cope with the increasing LHC pile-up, reducing its impact on the
physics performance.Comment: PIC2013 conferenc
Pragmatism, Perspectivism, Anthropology. A Consistent Triad
The paper defends the idea that Jamesian pragmatism, Nietzschean perspectivism, and philosophical anthropology represent a consistent triad, for the similarities and connections between the first two positions rest in their engagement with the anthropological question.
As will be argued, a) pragmatism is concerned with anthropology and that it deals with a fundamental issue of Nietzsche’s late thought; b) the problem of the type of man (der Typus Mensch) is involved in Nietzsche’s questioning the value of truth, and perspectivism is an alternative view to Platonic and Christian metaphysics which arises
from the same phenomenalist conception of knowledge defended by James ; c) Nietzsche’s interest in developing a philosophy that affirms the perspectival character of existence is primarily anthropological, and this is in fact the pragmatic criterion of validity that one can attribute to Nietzschean perspectivism
What Does it Mean to Orient Oneself in Science? On Ernst Mach’s Pragmatic Epistemology
The paper aims to investigate some aspects of Ernst Mach’s epistemology in the light of the problem of human orientation in relation to the world (Weltorientierung), which is a main topic of Western philosophy since Kant. As will be argued, Mach has been concerned with that problem, insofar as he developed an original pragmatist epistemology. In order to support my argument, I firstly investigate whether Mach defended a nominalist or a realist account of knowledge and compare his view to those elaborated by other pragmatist thinkers, such as W. James, H. Vaihinger and H. Poincaré. Secondly, the question of what does it mean, for Mach, to orient ourselves in science is addressed. Finally, it will be argued that, although Mach tried to keep his epistemology restricted to a mere operational and economical account of science, that question involves the wider plane of practical philosophy
Performance of the online track reconstruction and impact on hadronic triggers at the CMS High Level Trigger
The trigger systems of the LHC detectors play a crucial role in determining
the physics capabilities of the experiments. A reduction of several orders of
magnitude of the event rate is needed to reach values compatible with the
detector readout, offline storage and analysis capabilities. The CMS experiment
has been designed with a two-level trigger system: the Level 1 (L1) Trigger,
implemented on custom-designed electronics, and the High Level Trigger (HLT), a
streamlined version of the CMS reconstruction and analysis software running on
a computer farm. The software-base HLT requires a trade-off between the
complexity of the algorithms, the sustainable output rate, and the selection
efficiency. This is going to be even more challenging during Run II, with a
higher centre-of-mass energy, a higher instantaneous luminosity and pileup, and
the impact of out-of-time pileup due to the 25 ns bunch spacing. The online
algorithms need to be optimised for such a complex environment in order to keep
the output rate under control without impacting the physics efficiency of the
online selection. Tracking, for instance, will play an even more important role
in the event reconstruction. In this poster we will present the performance of
the online track and vertex reconstruction algorithms, and their impact on the
hadronic triggers that make use of b-tagging and of jets reconstructed with the
Particle Flow technique. We will show the impact of these triggers on physics
performance of the experiment, and the latest plans for improvements in view of
the Run II data taking in 2015.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1403.150
A note on the moment map on compact K\"ahler manifolds
We consider compact K\"ahler manifolds acted on by a connected compact Lie
group of isometries in Hamiltonian fashion. We prove that the squared
moment map is constant if and only if the manifold is
biholomorphically and -equivariantly isometric to a product of a flag
manifold and a compact K\"ahler manifold which is acted on trivially by .
The authors do not know whether the compactness of is essential in the main
theorem; more generally it would be interesting to have a similar result for
(compact) symplectic manifolds.Comment: 4 page
On the reversal bias of the Minimax social choice correspondence
We introduce three different qualifications of the reversal bias in the
framework of social choice correspondences. For each of them, we prove that the
Minimax social choice correspondence is immune to it if and only if the number
of voters and the number of alternatives satisfy suitable arithmetical
conditions. We prove those facts thanks to a new characterization of the
Minimax social choice correspondence and using a graph theory approach. We
discuss the same issue for the Borda and Copeland social choice
correspondences
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