4,248 research outputs found
Negative Epistemic Exemplars
In this chapter, we address the roles that exemplars might play in a comprehensive response to epistemic injustice. Fricker defines epistemic injustices as harms people suffer specifically in their capacity as (potential) knowers. We focus on testimonial epistemic injustice, which occurs when someone’s assertoric speech acts are systematically met with either too little or too much credence by a biased audience. Fricker recommends a virtueÂtheoretic response: people who do not suffer from biases should try to maintain their disposition towards naive testimonial justice, and those who find themselves already biased should cultivate corrective testimonial justice by systematically adjusting their credence in testimony up or down depending on whether they are hearing from someone whom they may be biased against or in favor of. We doubt that the prominent admirationÂemulation model of exemplarism will be much use in this connection, so we propose two ways of learning from negative exemplars to better conduct one’s epistemic affairs. In the admirationÂemulation model, both the identification of what a virtue is and the cultivation of virtues identified thusly proceed through the admiration of virtuous exemplars. We show that this model has serious flaws and argue for two alternatives: the envyÂagonism model and the ambivalenceÂavoidance model
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Latin America: Terrorism Issues
[Excerpt] For most countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, threats emanating from terrorism are low. Terrorism in the region is largely perpetrated by groups in Colombia and by the remnants of radical leftist Andean groups. According to the Department of State, most governments in the region have good records of cooperation with the United States on anti-terrorism issues, although progress in the region on improving counterterrorism capabilities is limited by several factors, including corruption, weak governmental institutions, weak or non-existent legislation, and reluctance to allocate sufficient resources. Both Cuba and Venezuela are on the State Department’s list of countries determined to be not cooperating fully with U.S. antiterrorism efforts, and Cuba has remained on the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism since 1982. U.S. officials and some Members of Congress have expressed concern over the past several years about Venezuela’s relations with Iran, with concerns centered on efforts by Iran to circumvent U.N. and U.S. sanctions and on Iran’s ties to Hezbollah, alleged to be linked to two bombings in Argentina in the 1990s. There is disagreement, however, over the extent and significance of Iran’s activities in Latin America. The State Department maintains that there are no known operational cells of either Al Qaeda or Hezbollah-related groups in the hemisphere, although it notes that ideological sympathizers continue to provide financial and moral support to these and other terrorist groups in the Middle East and South Asia
The CFHTLS Deep Catalog of Interacting Galaxies I. Merger Rate Evolution to z=1.2
We present the rest-frame optical galaxy merger fraction between 0.2<z<1.2,
as a function of stellar mass and optical luminosity, as observed by the
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Deep Survey (CFHTLS-Deep). We developed a
new classification scheme to identify major galaxy-galaxy mergers based on the
presence of tidal tails and bridges. These morphological features are signposts
of recent and ongoing merger activity. Through the visual classification of all
galaxies, down to i_vega<22.2 (~27,000 galaxies) over 2 square degrees, we have
compiled the CFHTLS Deep Catalog of Interacting Galaxies, with ~1600 merging
galaxies. We find the merger fraction to be 4.3% +/-0.3% at z~0.3 and 19.0%
+/-2.5% at z~1, implying evolution of the merger fraction going as (1+z)^m,
with m=2.25 +/-0.24. This result is inconsistent with a mild or non-evolving
(m4sigma level of confidence. A mild trend, where massive
galaxies with M>10^10.7 M_sun are undergoing fewer mergers than less massive
systems M~10^10 M_sun), consistent with the expectations of galaxy assembly
downsizing is observed. Our results also show that interacting galaxies have on
average SFRs double that found in non-interacting field galaxies. We conclude
that (1) the optical galaxy merger fraction does evolve with redshift, (2) the
merger fraction depends mildly on stellar mass, with lower mass galaxies having
higher merger fractions at z<1, and (3) star formation is triggered at all
phases of a merger, with larger enhancements at later stages, consistent with
N-body simulations.Comment: e.g.: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The Maya Origin Of A Mexican God: The Iconographic Primacy Of Tezcatlipoca At Chichen Itza, Yucatan Over Tula, Hidalgo; And Its Possible Derivation From God K-k\u27awil
Two long-held views in Mesoamerican research, the Mexican origin of the god Tezcatlipoca and the insinuation of Toltec iconography into the artistic format of Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico, emanating from Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico conditioned this research. Considering Tezcatlipoca to be a Mexican god imparts both a foreign origin for and the preexistence of that god in Central Mexico prior to its manifestation in the sculptural repertoire of Chichen Itza, a Maya city. However, this thesis demonstrates that no conclusive evidence of a Mexican origin for Tezcatlipoca exists. This work rejects the near dogmatic assumption of that godas Mexican pedigree, and asserts the iconographic primacy of Tezcatlipoca imagery at the Maya city of Chichen Itza, Yucatan over the Toltec city of Tula, Hidalgo. It also suggests the possible derivation of Tezcatlipoca from the Maya God K - K\u27awil
MLGPA News (February 2002)
https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/mlgpa_news/1043/thumbnail.jp
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