4,645 research outputs found
What Is It Like To Become a Bat? Heterogeneities in an Age of Extinction
In his celebrated 1974 essay “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?,” Thomas Nagel stages a human-bat encounter to illustrate and support his claim that “subjective experience” is irreducible to “objective fact”: because Nagel cannot experience the world as a bat does, he will never know what it is like to be one. In Nagel’s account, heterogeneity is figured negatively—as a failure or lack of resemblance—and functions to constrain his knowledge of bats. Today, as white-nose syndrome threatens bat populations across North America, might figuring heterogeneity positively, as a condition of creativity, open up new modes of receptivity and responsiveness to species extinctions? This essay turns to philosophies of becoming and to recent research in the biological sciences to explore this possibility. I suggest that attending to the heterogeneity of experience alerts us to more public dimensions of our being and may thereby work against the tendency to understand and experience ourselves as self-contained and closed off from one another and the world we share in common. This may in turn enhance our sense of entanglement with the events, bodies, and forces on the “outside” of experience, including bats and the white-nose syndrome with which they are afflicted today. Such an affirmation of heterogeneity as a condition of creativity holds the greatest promise for multispecies ethics today, I propose, when it is joined to an affirmation of incompatibilities within and between things as a real force of suffering and destruction in a heterogeneous world
A Result About the Density of Iterated Line Intersections in the Plane
Let be a finite set of points in the plane and let be
the set of intersection points between pairs of lines passing through any two
points in . We characterize all configurations of points such that
iteration of the above operation produces a dense set. We also discuss partial
results on the characterization of those finite point-sets with rational
coordinates that generate all of through iteration of
.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures (low-res for the arXiv), Computational Geometry:
Theory and Application
Configuration management issues and objectives for a real-time research flight test support facility
Presented are some of the critical issues and objectives pertaining to configuration management for the NASA Western Aeronautical Test Range (WATR) of Ames Research Center. The primary mission of the WATR is to provide a capability for the conduct of aeronautical research flight test through real-time processing and display, tracking, and communications systems. In providing this capability, the WATR must maintain and enforce a configuration management plan which is independent of, but complimentary to, various research flight test project configuration management systems. A primary WATR objective is the continued development of generic research flight test project support capability, wherein the reliability of WATR support provided to all project users is a constant priority. Therefore, the processing of configuration change requests for specific research flight test project requirements must be evaluated within a perspective that maintains this primary objective
Equations solvable by radicals in a uniquely divisible group
We study equations in groups G with unique m-th roots for each positive
integer m. A word equation in two letters is an expression of the form w(X,A) =
B, where w is a finite word in the alphabet {X,A}. We think of A,B in G as
fixed coefficients, and X in G as the unknown. Certain word equations, such as
XAXAX=B, have solutions in terms of radicals, while others such as XXAX = B do
not. We obtain the first known infinite families of word equations not solvable
by radicals, and conjecture a complete classification. To a word w we associate
a polynomial P_w in Z[x,y] in two commuting variables, which factors whenever w
is a composition of smaller words. We prove that if P_w(x^2,y^2) has an
absolutely irreducible factor in Z[x,y], then the equation w(X,A)=B is not
solvable in terms of radicals.Comment: 18 pages, added Lemma 5.2. To appear in Bull. Lon. Math. So
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