8,770 research outputs found
The Moral Visions of the Epistle of James and Zhongyong
This dissertation is a cross-textual study, designed to compare the moral visions of the Epistle of James and Zhongyong. The Epistle of James is a book of the Christian New Testament. Zhongyong is one of the Four Books of Confucianism.
This introductory chapter will present the relevance and method of this study. First, the ongoing relevance of the present topic will be introduced in the section entitled China and Christianity. This section notes the impact of Christianity on China, the Chinese impact upon Christianity, and the consequent importance of investigating Chinese thought in order to understand Chinese interaction with Christianity. Mainstream Chinese Thought As Predominantly Confucian will then discuss the way in which Confucian thought has continually been affirmed as the mainstream in Chinese culture. Next, The History of Confucian and Christian Comparative Studies will express the relevance of this particular study as a continuity within the stream of a four hundred year old movement.
After discussing the relevance of this inquiry in the three sections noted above, the method of this dissertation will be presented in the following sections. Moral Vision: Point of Comparison defines moral vision and presents moral vision as the best point of comparison between Christian and Confucian thought. Cross-textual Study then introduces the method of comparative textual investigation used in this inquiry. This leads into the justification for the choice of each text: The Choice of Zhongyong and The Choice of The Epistle of James. Further refinement of the method of this cross-textual comparative study follows in From Exhortations to Metanarrative, which explains how the moral vision of each text will be presented in order to facilitate comparison. Then, Procedure of This Dissertation will describe the flow of presentation. Finally, Linguistic Matters will explain translation issues and the use of Chinese romanization and surnames in this dissertation
Probabilistic soil moisture projections to assess Great Britain's future clay-related subsidence hazard
Clay-related subsidence is Great Britain’s (GB) most damaging soil-related geohazard, costing the economy up to £500 million per annum. Soil-related geohazard models based on mineralogy and potential soil moisture deficit (PSMD) derived from historic weather data have been used in risk management since the 1990s. United Kingdom Climate Projections (UKCP09) suggest that regions of GB will experience hotter, drier summers and warmer, wetter winters through to 2050. As a result, PSMD fluctuations are expected to increase, exacerbating the shrinkage and swelling of clay soils. A forward-looking approach is now required to mitigate the impacts of future climate on GB’s built environment. We present a framework for incorporating probabilistic projections of PSMD, derived from a version of the UKCP09 stochastic weather generator, into a clay subsidence model. This provides a novel, national-scale thematic model of the likelihood of clay-related subsidence, related to the top 1-1.5m soil layer, for three time periods; baseline (1961-1990), 2030 (2020-2049) and 2050 (2040-2069). Results indicate that much of GB, with the exception of upland areas, will witness significantly higher PSMDs through to the 2050’s. As a result, areas with swelling clay soils will be subject to proportionately increased subsidence hazard. South-east England will likely incur the highest hazard exposure to clay-related subsidence through to 2050. Potential impacts include increased incidence of property foundation subsidence, alongside deterioration and increased failure rates of GB’s infrastructure networks. Future clay-subsidence hazard scenarios provide benefit to many sectors, including: finance, central and local government, residential property markets, utilities and infrastructure operators.EPSR
Soil geohazard mapping for improved asset management of UK local roads
Unclassified roads comprise 60% of the road network
in the United Kingdom (UK). The resilience of this locally
important network is declining. It is considered by the
Institution of Civil Engineers to be “at risk” and is ranked
26th in the world. Many factors contribute to the degradation
and ultimate failure of particular road sections. However,
several UK local authorities have identified that in drought
conditions, road sections founded upon shrink–swell susceptible
clay soils undergo significant deterioration compared
with sections on non-susceptible soils. This arises from the
local road network having little, if any, structural foundations.
Consequently, droughts in East Anglia have resulted
in millions of pounds of damage, leading authorities to seek
emergency governmental funding.
This paper assesses the use of soil-related geohazard assessments
in providing soil-informed maintenance strategies
for the asset management of the locally important road network
of the UK. A case study draws upon the UK administrative
county of Lincolnshire, where road assessment data have
been analysed against mapped clay-subsidence risk. This reveals
a statistically significant relationship between road condition
and susceptible clay soils. Furthermore, incorporation
of UKCP09 future climate projections within the geohazard
models has highlighted roads likely to be at future risk of
clay-related subsidence
Enhanced visualization of the flat landscape of the Cambridgeshire Fenlands
The Fenlands of East Anglia, England, represent a subtle landscape, where topographic highs rarely exceed 30 m above sea level. However, the fens represent an almost full sequence of Quaternary deposits which, together with islands of Cretaceous and Jurassic outcrops, make the area of geological importance. This feature discusses the advantages of using 3D visualization coupled with high-resolution topographical data, over traditional 2D techniques, when undertaking an analysis of the landscape. Conclusions suggest that the use of 3D visualization will result in a higher level of engagement, particularly when communicating geological information to a wider public
Novel Exploration Techniques (NETs) for Malaria Policy Interventions
The task of decision-making under uncertainty is daunting, especially for
problems which have significant complexity. Healthcare policy makers across the
globe are facing problems under challenging constraints, with limited tools to
help them make data driven decisions. In this work we frame the process of
finding an optimal malaria policy as a stochastic multi-armed bandit problem,
and implement three agent based strategies to explore the policy space. We
apply a Gaussian Process regression to the findings of each agent, both for
comparison and to account for stochastic results from simulating the spread of
malaria in a fixed population. The generated policy spaces are compared with
published results to give a direct reference with human expert decisions for
the same simulated population. Our novel approach provides a powerful resource
for policy makers, and a platform which can be readily extended to capture
future more nuanced policy spaces.Comment: Under-revie
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