21,018 research outputs found

    The Lord\u27s Prayer

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    These notes describe the context, structure, and interpretation of the Lord\u27s Prayer. Special attention is given to the version of the prayer that appears in Matthew 6:9-13, with interpretive comments provided for each phrase

    A Philosophy Of Christian Librarianship

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    While a number of Christian librarians have explored the implications of the Christian world view for particular issues in library practice, few have attempted to develop a thoroughgoing philosophy of Christian librarians/zip. Those who have done so have generally failed to center their proposals around the Christian view of truth. The knowability, objectivity, unity, practicality, and spirituality of truth should impact the way librarians at Christian colleges carry out major library functions, including collection development, reference services, bibliographic instruction, research and publication, and management

    Academic Libraries in Transition: Current Trends, Future Prospects

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    Academic libraries are in transition because of changes in the context of higher education. Changes in the world of information are even more radical: the displacement of paper, the primacy of the search engine, the emergence of the digital lifestyle, and innovative patterns of scholarly communication. Decreasing reliance on local collections is transforming the library as a physical destination.Traditional measures of library success have begun to be replaced. Given the superiority of other information professionals’ data management skills, the role of academic librarians will shift toward the enablement of learning.This environment of upheaval will pose both opportunities and challenges for academic librarians

    Hidden Under a Bushel? Evangelical Journals in an Era of Web-Based Communications

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    Evangelicals face significant obstacles as they seek to make their publications accessible to potential readers. This study measures the extent to which evangelical scholarly journals have made their contents available in electronic form. Thirty-five journals – all active, refereed, evangelical in perspective, and published in English – were chosen for analysis. Two serials management tools and individual journal Web sites provided data regarding electronic accessibility. Twenty-six of the journals are available in some electronic form – most commonly in one or more aggregated databases. Evangelical information professionals could play a significant role in helping to make additional evangelical journal content available electronically

    The Core Virtue of Christian Librarianship

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    Christian librarians should derive their professional ethics from methodical exegesis of the Bible. The New Testament\u27s most salient ethical statements center on love-for God, neighbor, and fellow believers. Each of these has significant implications for library practice. Identifying love as the core virtue of librarianship represents a radical departure from secular approaches to library ethics. While the biblical and secular models converge on some significant points, they are fundamentally opposite. Where the two reach similar conclusions, the biblical model proves to be more philosophically consistent. The Scriptures speak with enduring relevance to the issues facing librarians

    The evaluation subgroup of a fibre inclusion

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    Given a fibration of simply connected CW complexes of finite type, we study the evaluation subgroup of the fibre inclusion as an invariant of fibre-homotopy type. For spherical fibrations, we show the evaluation subgroup may be expressed as an extension of the Gottlieb group of the fibre sphere provided the classifying map induces the trivial map on homotopy groups. We extend this result after rationalization: We show that the rationalized evaluation subgroup of the fibre inclusion decomposes as the direct sum of the rationalized Gottlieb group of the fibre and the rationalized homotopy group of the base if and only if the classifying map induces the trivial map on rational homotopy groups.Comment: 15 page

    Projective toric varieties as fine moduli spaces of quiver representations

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    This paper proves that every projective toric variety is the fine moduli space for stable representations of an appropriate bound quiver. To accomplish this, we study the quiver QQ with relations RR corresponding to the finite-dimensional algebra (i=0rLi)\bigl(\bigoplus_{i=0}^{r} L_i \bigr) where L:=(OX,L1,...c,Lr)\mathcal{L} := (\mathscr{O}_X,L_1, ...c, L_r) is a list of line bundles on a projective toric variety XX. The quiver QQ defines a smooth projective toric variety, called the multilinear series L|\mathcal{L}|, and a map XLX \to |\mathcal{L}|. We provide necessary and sufficient conditions for the induced map to be a closed embedding. As a consequence, we obtain a new geometric quotient construction of projective toric varieties. Under slightly stronger hypotheses on L\mathcal{L}, the closed embedding identifies XX with the fine moduli space of stable representations for the bound quiver (Q,R)(Q,R).Comment: revised version: improved exposition, corrected typos and other minor change
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