339 research outputs found
Write, and Write Well - Speak, and Speak Well: The Gospel According to Halmos and Rota
Writing/speaking wellâwith real intent, focus and clarityâhas always been an issue of the utmost importance to some of those working in academia generally, within which mathematicians are no exception. We give consideration to the conventional literature survey and other expository pieces as useful centres of an initial discussion, and develop the broader theme as referenced to two of our very best past communicators and popularisers of mathematics across
both facets of disseminationâP.R. Halmos and G.-C. Rota, de facto grand seigneurs of the early modern day period
On 'Two Cultures' and Tackling the 'Writing Versus Mathematics' Dichotomy
While for many it is a timeless norm with no hope of resolution, not everyone accepts that mathematics and writing appear to have an unbridgeable gulf between them
Managing marine environments and decision-making requires better application of the physical sedimentary sciences
Effective management of marine environments requires a sound understanding of the relevant physical sedimentary sciences. Environmental impact assessment (EIA) is a key management and decision-making tool employed in Australia for coastal and marine developments. This article examines the veracity of the application of the marine physical sciences within the EIA process, using turbidity measurement and sediment transport pathways as examples. A review of EIA guidance reveals deficiencies in regulation. Turbidity measurement is poorly understood and performed in current practice, while a focus on protecting marine habitats largely ignores those physical sedimentary processes, such as long-term bed-sediment transport pathways, that create and maintain these habitats. Thus evaluations of impacts of offshore activities such as channel dredging and spoil emplacement at sea are fundamentally flawed. An extensive body of scientific knowledge is already available on marine physical processes, and equivalent information for assessments of terrestrial development is routinely taken into consideration. Perhaps practice for the marine environment lags behind that for terrestrial settings or is it a case of âout of sight â out of mindâ? We call on environmental management professionals to increase engagement with the physical processes that determine the quality of marine environments
Operation Moshtarak and the manufacture of credible, âheroicâ warfare
Richard Lance Keeble argues that Fleet Streetâs coverage of the Afghan conflict has served largely to promote the interests of the military/industrial/media complex â and marginalise the views of the public who have consistently appealed in polls for the troops to be brought back hom
- âŠ