790 research outputs found

    Speech Acts: The Contemporary Theoretical Landscape

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    What makes it the case that an utterance constitutes an illocutionary act of a given kind? This is the central question of speech-act theory. Answers to it—i.e., theories of speech acts—have proliferated. Our main goal in this chapter is to clarify the logical space into which these different theories fit. We begin, in Section 1, by dividing theories of speech acts into five families, each distinguished from the others by its account of the key ingredients in illocutionary acts. Are speech acts fundamentally a matter of convention or intention? Or should we instead think of them in terms of the psychological states they express, in terms of the effects that it is their function to produce, or in terms of the norms that govern them? In Section 2, we take up the highly influential idea that speech acts can be understood in terms of their effects on a conversation’s context or “score”. Part of why this idea has been so useful is that it allows speech-act theorists from the five families to engage at a level of abstraction that elides their foundational disagreements. In Section 3, we investigate some of the motivations for the traditional distinction between propositional content and illocutionary force, and some of the ways in which this distinction has been undermined by recent work. In Section 4, we survey some of the ways in which speech-act theory has been applied to issues outside semantics and pragmatics, narrowly construed

    Return of the Diver

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    This music clip is from the LP entitled Montreux Magic. The band, directed by Dr. Robert Washut, performed the music at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland on July 5, 1985.https://scholarworks.uni.edu/jazzband/1097/thumbnail.jp

    Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) Version 2.2 User Manual

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    The Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) is a computer model that simulates many soil and vegetation processes. This document describes how to run version 2.2 of JULES. It primarily describes the format of the input and output files, and does not include detailed descriptions of the science and representation of the processes in the model. The first version of JULES was based on the Met Office Surface Exchange System (MOSES), the land surface model used in the Unified Model (UM) of the UK Met Office. After that initial split, the MOSES and JULES code bases evolved separately, but with JULES2.1 these differences were reconciled, so that all versions since v2.1 have had identical code in both the standalone version (as described here) and in the UM

    S21RS SGR No. 29 (Atkinson Desks)

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    A Resolution To Urge and Request the LSU Administration to prioritize and strongly consider new desks for Atkinson Hal

    Modelling of vorticity, sound and their interaction in two-dimensional superfluids

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    Vorticity in two-dimensional superfluids is subject to intense research efforts due to its role in quantum turbulence, dissipation and the BKT phase transition. Interaction of sound and vortices is of broad importance in Bose-Einstein condensates and superfluid helium [1-4]. However, both the modelling of the vortex flow field and of its interaction with sound are complicated hydrodynamic problems, with analytic solutions only available in special cases. In this work, we develop methods to compute both the vortex and sound flow fields in an arbitrary two-dimensional domain. Further, we analyse the dispersive interaction of vortices with sound modes in a two-dimensional superfluid and develop a model that quantifies this interaction for any vortex distribution on any two-dimensional bounded domain, possibly non-simply connected, exploiting analogies with fluid dynamics of an ideal gas and electrostatics. As an example application we use this technique to propose an experiment that should be able to unambiguously detect single circulation quanta in a helium thin film.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure

    Drilled by the jet? XMM-Newton discovers a Compton-thick AGN in the GPS galaxy Mkn668

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    We report the XMM-Newton discovery of the first Compton-thick obscured AGN in a Broad Line Radio Galaxy, the Gigahertz Peaked-Spectrum source Mkn668 (OQ+208). The remarkably flat 2-10 keV X-ray spectrum (observed photon index, \Gamma ~ 0.7), alongside with a prominent iron K-alpha fluorescent emission line, is a clear signature of a Compton-reflection dominated spectrum. Mkn688 represents a remarkable example of discrepancy between X-ray spectral properties and optical classification, as its optical spectrum is characterized by broad and asymmetric Balmer lines. The obscuring matter is constrained to be located within the radio hotspots, in turn separated by about 10 pc. If the jets are piercing their way through a Compton-thick medium pervading the nuclear environment, one could be largely underestimating the radio activity dynamical age determined from the observed hotspot recession velocity. The soft X-ray spectrum is dominated by a much steeper component, which may be due to nuclear continuum electron scattering, or inverse Compton of the - remarkably large - far infrared emission. Soft X-rays are suppressed by a further Compton-thin (N_H ~ 10^21/cm/cm) absorbing system, that we identify with matter responsible for free-free absorption of the radio lobes.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, To appear in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    One VCU Art

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    Art and creativity are at the core of VCU’s identity and culture. ONE VCU Art envisions a vibrant and diverse public art landscape on the VCU campuses that equals VCU’s national reputation and enhances connections with our urban home of Richmond. VCU’s nationally ranked arts programs as well as its relationship with the city of Richmond allow for opportunity to revive efforts to enhance current and future public art on the two Richmond campuses. This is in conjunction with the goals and priorities set out by the VCU strategic plan, Quest 2025: Together We Transform

    Ram Essential

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    The underlying causes of food insecurity are complex and often intertwined with related issues that affect a student’s ability to meet even basic needs, such as housing, employment and health care, forcing them to choose between their well-being and their education. The latest Hunger in America report finds that about 10 percent of Feed America’s 46.5 million adult clients are college students. That equates to 2 million full-time college students. “Of those surveyed by the emergency food services network, roughly 30.5 percent of students reported that they were forced to choose between food and educational expenses at some point over the last year.”1 In response, colleges and universities, including VCU, have sprung into action, and the number of campus food pantries at higher educational institutions has risen from a handful in 2009 to more than 500 in 2017.2 But changing food insecurity to food security goes beyond providing just food. It involves a comprehensive approach to providing resources that address the causes and results of being food insecure. Ram Essentials is a holistic approach to addressing basic needs insecurity among VCU students by asking the question, What is essential for our students to be successful? The project focuses on raising the awareness of all existing VCU resources and disseminating them widely through a single user-friendly portal to enhance students’ experience, academic achievement and physical and mental well-being

    Kansas Provider Report of Adolescent Vaccinations in Their Practice

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    Introduction. Kansas falls consistently below average for adolescentvaccination of meningococcal (MCV), human papillomavirus(HPV), and influenza. Methods. For this study, the members of Kansas Chapter of theAmerican Academy of Pediatrics were emailed a confidential electronicsurvey soliciting their impressions of vaccination in theirpractice. Results. Of 137 providers emailed, 61 (45%) completed the survey.Thirteen providers were excluded as they did not see/vaccinate adolescentsor did not complete the survey. Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis(Tdap), and MCV vaccines were most commonly up to date with31 (65%) and 20 (42%) respondents reporting greater than 90%immunization rates, respectively. HPV (n = 42, 89%) and influenza(n = 40, 83%) vaccines had refusal rates greater than 25% in mostclinics. Most practices (n = 44, 92%) used internal electronic medicalrecords to track vaccinations, although 29 practices (60%) utilizedthe state immunization information system. Providers requestedvaccine-specific patient education tools, positive media coverage,staffing support, and best-practices workshops to support vaccinationefforts. Conclusion. Kansas providers may not be optimizing availableresources to enhance these rates, such as Web IZ tracking and immunizationreminders. Patient education supplies, specific to HPV andInfluenza vaccination, potentially could increase vaccination rates.KS J Med 2017;10(4):84-87
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