11,529,388 research outputs found
Numerical semigroups problem list
We propose a list of open problems in numerical semigroups.Comment: To appear in the CIM Bulletin, number 33. (http://www.cim.pt/) 13
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Motorcycle Potential Problems in Jakarta
After the economic crisis in 1997, motorcycles become a popular transport mode in Indonesian cities.However this condition leads to large number of violation and accident rate. This study tried to discuss howthis problem started and what possible measure can be taken to solve the problems, mainly based on literaturereview. The traffic data used were compiled from the data provided by PT Pamintori Cipta. Interview surveywas conducted to find people perception of motorcycles issues. The conclusion suggests that there is a needof further comprehensive study to find out what condition that makes motorcyclists voluntary return to usepublic transport and social engineering and intensive training program should be implemented for youngergeneration to improve traffic condition in Jakarta
Indonesia, Modernity and Some Problems of Religious Adaptation
This article discusses the challenges of adaptation for Indonesian religion. It describes the ways that the major Indonesian religions have changed to fit the requirements of being recognized religions, and focuses as an example on the ways that Balinese Hinduism has changed to become Agama Hindu Dharma Indonesia. It also examines the traditional theological problem of “faith and works” in the Indonesian context, and the concerns used to balance modernization and religious freedom
The problem with human equality: Towards a non-exclusive account of the moral value of creatures in the company of Martha Nussbaum
This is that author's pdf version of the book chapter.This book chapter discusses human equality
Problems with the "Problems" with psychophysical causation
In this essay, I defend a mind-body dualism, according to which human
minds are immaterial substances that exercise non-redundant causal powers
over bodies, against the notorious problem of psychophysical causation. I
explicate and reply to three formulations of the problem: (i) the claim that, on
dualism, psychophysical causation is inconsistent with physical causal closure,
(ii) the claim that psychophysical causation on the dualist view is intolerably
mysterious, and (iii) Jaegwon Kim’s claim that dualism fails to account for
causal pairings. Ultimately, I conclude that these objections fail and that
dualist interactionism is no more problematic or mysterious than
physical causation
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Articulating Problems and Markets: A Translation Analysis of Entrepreneurs’ Emergent Value Propositions
In this qualitative study, the authors apply Callon’s sociology of translation to examine how new technology entrepreneurs enact material arguments that involve the first two moments of translation—problematization (defining a market problem) and interessement (defining a market and the firm’s relationship to it) - which in turn are represented in a claim, the value proposition. That emergent claim can then be represented and further changed during pitches. If accepted, it can then lead to the second two moments of translation: enrollment and mobilization. Drawing on written materials, observations, and interviews, we trace how these value propositions were iterated along three paths to better problematize and interesse, articulating a problem and market on which a business could plausibly be built. We conclude by discussing implications for understanding value propositions in entrepreneurship and, more broadly, using the sociology of translation to analyze emergent, material, consequential arguments.
The study is based on data collected at the Austin Technology Incubator’s Student Entrepreneur Acceleration and Launch program (ATI SEAL) at The University of Texas at Austin.IC2 Institut
Some Pairs Problems
A common form of MapReduce application involves discovering relationships
between certain pairs of inputs. Similarity joins serve as a good example of
this type of problem, which we call a "some-pairs" problem. In the framework of
Afrati et al. (VLDB 2013), algorithms are measured by the tradeoff between
reducer size (maximum number of inputs a reducer can handle) and the
replication rate (average number of reducers to which an input must be sent.
There are two obvious approaches to solving some-pairs problems in general. We
show that no general-purpose MapReduce algorithm can beat both of these two
algorithms in the worst case. We then explore a recursive algorithm for solving
some-pairs problems and heuristics for beating the lower bound on common
instances of the some-pairs class of problems
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