2,017 research outputs found

    Peter Damerow (1939–2011)

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    Survey: The Place of Local Knowledge in the Global Community

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    Preface: The globalization of knowledge in the ancient Near East

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    Dental Pathology in Selected Carnivores from Arkansas

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    The occurrence and kinds of dental pathology in wild carnivore populations in Arkansas were investigated through examination of 1295 skulls of bobcat (Felis rufus), river otter (Lutra canadensis), gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), coyote (Canis latrans), and raccoon (Procyon lotor). Pulpitis or abscesses in broken or otherwise exposed teeth were noted in all species, but bobcats had the fewest exposures while otter and gray foxhad the most. Osteomyelitis occurred in all species except the bobcat. Caries were noted in the coyote, raccoon, and gray fox. Otter and coyote had alveolar thinning, and coyote had enamel dysplasia and maxillary sinusitis

    Nontrivial fixed points and screening in the hierarchical two-dimensional Coulomb gas.

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    We show the existence and asymptotic stability of two fixed points of the renormalization group transformation for the hierarchical two-dimensional Coulomb gas in the sine-Gordon representation and temperatures slightly greater than the critical one. We prove also that the correlations at the fixed points decay as in the hierarchical massive scalar free field theory, that is as dxy−4d_{xy}^{-4}. We argue that this is the natural definition of screening in the hierarchical approximation

    Introduction

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    Two encounters

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    Toward an Epistemic Web

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    In the beginning knowledge was local. With the development of more complex forms of economic organization knowledge began to travel. The Library of Alexandria was the fulfillment - however partial and transitory - of a vision to bring together all the knowledge of the world. But to obtain the knowledge one had to go to Alexandria. Today the World Wide Web promises to make universally accessible the knowledge of a world grown larger. To be sure, much work remains to be done: many documents need to be made available (i.e. digitized if they are not already, and freed from restrictive access controls); and various biases (economic, legal, linguistic, social, technological) need to be overcome. But what do we do with this knowledge? Is it enough to create a digital library of Alexandria, with (perhaps) improved finding aids? We propose that the crucial question is how to structure knowledge on the Web to facilitate the construction of new knowledge, knowledge that will be critical in addressing the challenges of the emerging global society. We begin by asking three questions about the Web and its future. In the remainder of the paper we explore the possibility of an Epistemic Web in the context of a more general discussion of knowledge representation technologies, technologies used for storing, manipulating and spreading knowledge
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