393 research outputs found

    Security Risk Management - Approaches and Methodology

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    In today’s economic context, organizations are looking for ways to improve their business, to keep head of the competition and grow revenue. To stay competitive and consolidate their position on the market, the companies must use all the information they have and process their information for better support of their missions. For this reason managers have to take into consideration risks that can affect the organization and they have to minimize their impact on the organization. Risk management helps managers to better control the business practices and improve the business process.Risk Management, Security, Methodology

    THE ROLE OF XML IN THE MODELING PROCESS OF A VIRTUAL BUSINESS

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    The aim of this paper is to describe the XML stack of languages used in the implementation process of a web application. This application is based on a three tier architecture named XRX. In this type of architecture there is no need for data model transformations between the tiers of the architecture like in the classical architecture. So the applications developed according XRX architecture become more flexible, efficient and simple.XML, XPath, XQuery, XSLT, XForms, XRX, UBL

    Anne conway’s exceptional vitalism:Material spirits and active matter

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    Anne Conway’s philosophy has been categorized as “vitalism,” “vital monism,” “spiri-tualism,” “monistic spiritualism,” “immaterial vitalism,” and “antimaterialism.” While there is no doubt that she is a monist and a vitalist, problems arise with the categories of “spir-itualism,” “immaterial vitalism,” and “antimaterialism.” Conway conceives of created substances as gross and fixed spirit, or rarefied and volatile matter. While interpreters agree that Conway’s “spirit” shares characteristics traditionally attributed to matter (e.g., extension, divisibility, impenetrability), and that she is critical of Henry More’s immaterial spirit, Conway’s spirit is still conceived as an immaterial soul-like or mind-like entity. I argue that Conway’s vitalism is material, and is best understood in the tradition of Renaissance vital naturalism. First, Conway does not criticize materialism per se, only mechanical materialism, which characterizes matter as lifeless. Her vitalism has to be materialistic in some sense, since only God is an immaterial substance. Second, Conway’s conceptions of matter and spirit, the language she uses, and the fact that she attributes thinking to extended, divisible, and impenetrable substances all place her within the tradition of Renaissance vital naturalism, wherein Bernardino Telesio, Tommaso Campanella, and Francis Bacon used “spirit” to account for all natural processes.</p
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