1,664 research outputs found

    Keith Allen Interview

    Get PDF
    An interview of Keith Allen over his time working at Northwestern College with Dr. Theora Englandhttps://nwcommons.nwciowa.edu/theorareflections/1030/thumbnail.jp

    Redness, Reality, and Relationalism: Reply to Gert and Allen

    Get PDF
    In this paper I reply to two sets of criticismsā€”a first from Joshua Gert, and a second from Keith Allenā€”of the relationalist view of color developed and defended in my book, The Red and the Real: An Essay on Color Ontology

    Making a Mess with Paper

    Get PDF
    What exactly is a paper-engineer - and how do they do what they do? Keith Allen, paper engineer and professional greeting card artist, lets us into his creative process and the secrets of working with paper. Heā€™ll share his insights on the wonders and challenges of bringing a pop-up book to life

    Making a Mess with Paper

    Get PDF
    What exactly is a paper-engineer - and how do they do what they do? Keith Allen, paper engineer and professional greeting card artist, lets us into his creative process and the secrets of working with paper. Heā€™ll share his insights on the wonders and challenges of bringing a pop-up book to life

    The Unintended Consequences of Flexicurity : The Health Consequences of Flexible Employment

    Get PDF
    Publisher PD

    Economic Fluctuations and Crime : Temporary and Persistent Effects

    Get PDF
    Publisher PD

    Aging phenomena in ferrous martensites

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Sc.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering, 1985.MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND SCIENCE.Vita.Includes bibliographical references.by Keith Allen Taylor.Sc.D

    Inter-species variation in colour perception

    Get PDF
    Inter-species variation in colour perception poses a serious problem for the view that colours are mind-independent properties. Given that colour perception varies so drastically across species, which species perceives colours as they really are? In this paper, I argue that all do. Specifically, I argue that members of different species perceive properties that are determinates of different, mutually compatible, determinables. This is an instance of a general selectionist strategy for dealing with cases of perceptual variation. According to selectionist views, objects simultaneously instantiate a plurality of colours, all of them genuinely mind-independent, and subjects select from amongst this plurality which colours they perceive. I contrast selectionist views with relationalist views that deny the mind-independence of colour, and consider some general objections to this strategy

    Cost Evaluation of Municipal Water Hardness Reduction and Private Softening for the City of Brookings, South Dakota

    Get PDF
    Nature of the Project The City of Brookings, South Dakota, is a university town with a total estimated population of 13,000, including a campus enrollment of 6,000. On March 3; 1970, Brookings\u27 voters passed a bond issue to expand the present water treatment facilities by increasing both production and storage. The new treatment plant will have a maximum daily production capacity of 4 million gallons, storage for 3 million gallons and will supplement the supply being treated by the existing plant. The new plant will consist of aeration to remove iron and manganese, lime and alum treatment to partially soften the water and to assist in the precipitation of the iron and manganese, an upflow basin for sludge sedimentation, a rapid sand filtration unit, chlorination and fluoridation. The lime and sludge will be pumped to a lagoon for dewatering prior to final disposal. The cost of the plant including construction costs for additional water storage has been estimated at $631,000. Brookings, located in a hard water area, has an average raw water hardness of 643 mg/1 and a finished water hardness of 485 mg/1. The primary objective of this project was to assess the economic feasibility of incorporating additional water hardness reduction capabilities into the new municipal plant. Brookings\u27 residents Ā·presently obtain soft water by using the ion-exchange process, either by subscribing to home-serviced softening provided by companies or by operating home-owned softening units. It was desired to determine whether softened water could be obtained in the most economical manner by a combination of improved municipal hardness reduction in conjunction with home softening. The specific objectives of the study were: 1. to determine the percentage of the water used in Brookings that was softened and the cost to the residents per unit volume of soft water, 2. to determine the extent to which the water could be economically softened, 3. to determine the combination of softening practices that would be most economical to the water user, and 4. to evaluate the economic feasibility of installing additional softening capabilities in the new municipal water treatment plant. If the reduction of the water hardness by municipal treatment would prove economical then it would appear desirable to incorporate additional softening into the new plant. In this manner, the users would be provided with a softened water supply at a cost that would be less than they have paid to soften only a portion of their water supply

    Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.: A Victory for Consumer Welfare Under the Robinson-Patman Act

    Get PDF
    The preservation of competition among business entities is vital to the success of any economy. Recognizing the importance of competition, the United States Congress has passed antitrust laws that seek to enhance productivity and protect consumers. Although the antitrust laws, like all statutes, are vulnerable to a variety of different interpretations, [t]he language of the antitrust statutes, their legislative histories, the major structural features of the antitrust law, and considerations of the scope, nature, consistency, and ease of administration of the law all indicate that the law should be guided solely by the criterion of consumer welfare. The antitrust laws are intended to prohibit monopolization, predatory pricing, and other behaviors that adversely affect competition and ultimately consumer welfare. In the consumer-driven, capitalist economy of the United States, competition is the foundation of economic success. Price discrimination, when used to undermine competition and destroy consumer welfare, violates the purpose of the antitrust laws
    • ā€¦
    corecore