9,160 research outputs found
Introduction
Jerry Fodor, by common agreement, is one of the world’s leading philosophers. At the
forefront of the cognitive revolution since the 1960s, his work has determined much of
the research agenda in the philosophy of mind and the philosophy of psychology for
well over 40 years. This special issue dedicated to his work is intended both as a tribute
to Fodor and as a contribution to the fruitful debates that his work has generated.
One philosophical thesis that has dominated Fodor’s work since the 1960s is realism
about the mental. Are there really mental states, events and processes? From his
first book, Psychological Explanation (1968), onwards, Fodor has always answered
this question with a resolute yes. From his early rejection of Wittgensteinian and
behaviourist conceptions of the mind, to his later disputes with philosophers of mind
of the elminativist ilk, he has always been opposed to views that try to explain
away mental phenomena. On his view, there are minds, and minds can change the
world
An Anomalous UV Extension in NGC6251
Deep U-band FOC images of the nuclear region of NGC6251 have revealed a
region of extended emission which is most probably radiation scattered from a
continuum source in the nucleus. This radiation lies interior to a dust ring,
is nearly perpendicular to the radio jet axis, and is seen primarily in the FOC
U and b filters. The extension has a low observed polarization(), and
is unlikely to arise from line emission. We know of no other examples similar
to what we have found in NGC 6251, and we offer some tentative explanations.
The nuclear morphology shows clear similarities to that seen in the nucleus of
NGC 4261 except for the extended U-band radiation.Comment: 14 pages AAStex format + 4 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
Development of Heterogeneous Photosensitized Transition Metal Oxide Water-Splitting Catalysts on Silica Support
The research presented in this manuscript describes the development of photosensitized inexpensive catalysts based on readily available materials. The investigation covers synthesis and characterization of photosensitizers based on porphyrins, mechanical and thermal coating of solid support with semiconducting transition metal oxides, photosensitization of the semiconducting layer, and characterization of the photoelectrochemical properties displayed by the new materials. The process of water oxidation is of primary interest here, with little emphasis put on reduction of protons to gaseous hydrogen. Photoelectrochemically produced protons serve as a probe of effectiveness of the catalysts. Several systems are described, and two catalysts are identified as the most efficient
Small amplitude lateral sloshing in a cylindrical tank with a hemispherical bottom under low gravitational conditions Summary report
Small amplitude lateral sloshing in cylindrical tank with hemispherical bottom under low gravitational condition
Classifying and monitoring water quality by use of satellite imagery
A technique in which LANDSAT measurements from very clear lakes are subtracted from measurements from other lakes in order to remove atmospheric and surface noise effects to obtain a residual signal dependent only on the material suspended in the water is described. This residual signal is used by the Multispectral Data Analysis System as a basis for producing color categorized imagery showing lakes by type and concentration of suspended material. Several hundred lakes in the Madison and Spooner, Wisconsin area were categorized for tannin or non-tannin waters and for the degree of algae, silt, weeds, and bottom effects
Test and evaluation of a multifunction keyboard and a dedicated keyboard for control of a flight management computer
A flight management computer (FMC) control display unit (CDU) test was conducted to compare two types of input devices: a fixed legend (dedicated) keyboard and a programmable legend (multifunction) keyboard. The task used for comparison was operation of the flight management computer for the Boeing 737-300. The same tasks were performed by twelve pilots on the FMC control display unit configured with a programmable legend keyboard and with the currently used B737-300 dedicated keyboard. Flight simulator work activity levels and input task complexity were varied during each pilot session. Half of the points tested were previously familiar with the B737-300 dedicated keyboard CDU and half had no prior experience with it. The data collected included simulator flight parameters, keystroke time and sequences, and pilot questionnaire responses. A timeline analysis was also used for evaluation of the two keyboard concepts
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