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Journal articles on the topic "Reprinted from"

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Habib, Irfan. "Book review: Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks." Studies in People's History 8, no. 2 (November 16, 2021): 267. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23484489211040983.

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Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks, ed. & tr. Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, Indian reprint of original English ed., London, 1971, now reprinted in India by Orient BlackSwan Private Ltd., Hyderabad, 2021, Paperback, 483 pp., ₹695.
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Mendenhall, Emily. "INSIGHTS FROM THE AUTHOR: EMILY MENDENHALL." Practicing Anthropology 44, no. 1 (January 1, 2022): 16–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/0888-4552.44.1.16.

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How an Iowa Summer Resort Region Became a Covid-19 Hot Spot was first published on Vox.com and is reprinted here with permission from the authors, Vox.com, and Vox Media, LLC. The original article (with additional links) can be accessed at URL:<https://www.vox.com/2020/8/8/21357625/covid-19-iowa-lakes-okoboji-kim-reynolds-masks>. Photos by David Thoreson were added for this reprint and were not included in the original publication.
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Abdulali, Sohaila. "Why Toilets Are About Class and Gender Wars with Introduction." Radical Teacher 107 (February 2, 2017): 52–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/rt.2017.361.

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Reprint of “Why Toilets are About Class and Gender Wars” by Sohaila Abdulali with introduction by Radical Teacher editor Michael Bennett.Sohaila Abdulali’s article, “Why Toilets are About Class and Gender Wars” has been reprinted with permission from the publisher, HT Media Ltd and can be found in it’s original format at http://www.livemint.com/Leisure/38Jqn3MImrOPK04C1Uw5hN/How-toilets-are-a-flashpoint-for-gender-wars.html. The reprinted article on pages 55-56 is copyrighted to HT Media Ltd and they reserve all rights. The introduction to this article by Michael Bennett is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.Reprinted with permission by HT Media Ltd, all rights reserved.
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Hitchcock, H. Wiley. "Ives's "114 [+ 15] Songs" and What He Thought of Them." Journal of the American Musicological Society 52, no. 1 (1999): 97–144. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/832025.

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This essay reflects work toward a critical edition of 129 Ives songs (all those in whose publication he was directly involved)-mainly 114 Songs (1922) and the New Music issues of Thirty-Four Songs (1933) and Nineteen Songs (1935). It explores his value judgments of them, and also of 50 Songs (1923), containing unaltered reprints from 114. 114 Songs is eclectic and inclusive, a retrospective exhibition of various song types, including ones drastically foreign to conventional notions of a song. In 50 Songs, Ives responded to adverse reactions to 114 Songs and sought to reprint songs of "more general interest." For the New Music collections, he revised many songs, especially those initially arranged from pre-114 chamber-ensemble works. To the latter he typically restored material from the "parent pieces," increasing the songs' dissonance (not, however, to falsify their modernity). He also reprinted conservative songs, as well as adding nine previously unpublished ones, and in both collections chose the songs' order carefully.
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Vaughan, L. C. "The history of canine cruciate ligament surgery from 1952 – 2005." Veterinary and Comparative Orthopaedics and Traumatology 23, no. 06 (2010): 379–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1617480.

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This article is reprinted by kind permission of Veterinary History where it first appeared in Vol. 14, No. 2 (2008), pgs. 119–136. The paper is the text of an invited lecture that was given by the late Professor Leslie Vaughan. It has not been peer-reviewed, but is reprinted for readers of VCOT. An obituary to Professor Vaughan was published in VCOT 2009 22(3): IX-X.
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Burgess, Michael J. "A Message From the Director." Care Management Journals 10, no. 1 (March 2009): 21–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/1521-0987.10.1.21.

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Buck, Paul. "MYRMECOCHORY - Reprinted from Gaillardia, Fall 1999." Oklahoma Native Plant Record 18, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 52–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.22488/okstate.19.100006.

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Expert Committee, SARS. "Extract from SARS in Hong Kong: From Experience to Action." Australian Health Review 26, no. 3 (2003): 22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah030022.

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This extract is reprinted from the report of the SARS Expert Committee (pp 159 - 164) with permission. Thefull report is available on the Committee's website at www.sarsexpertcom.gov.hk. The summary report is alsoavailable on the Royal Australasian College of Medical Administrators website at www.racma.org.auH
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Stieglitz, Alfred. "Some uncollected writings reprinted from early publications." History of Photography 15, no. 2 (June 1991): 84–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03087298.1991.10443139.

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Longuet-Higgins, H. C., and J. H. van der Waals. "Reprinted from Volume 1, Issue 1, 1958." Molecular Physics 106, no. 16-18 (August 20, 2008): 1961. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00268970802506577.

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Books on the topic "Reprinted from"

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Campaign, Defeat Depression, Royal College of Psychiatrists, and Royal College of General Practitioners., eds. Defeat depression: Articles reprinted from Geriatric medicine : 1991-1996. London: Defeat Depression Campaign, 1996.

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Kuehl, Gertrude. Crochet designs: Fashions & accessories, reprinted from Victorian and Edwardian sources. London: The Guild, 1990.

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Vermont. Vermont highway laws: Reprinted from Title 19, Vermont statutes annotated. Orford, N.H: Equity Pub. Corp., 1986.

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1938-, Kuehl Gertrude, and Knitting and Crochet Guild, eds. Crochet designs: Fashions & accessories : reprinted from Victorian and Edwardian sources. London: Knitting and Crochet Guild, 1990.

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1940-, Hatcher Robert D., Thomas William A. 1946-, and Geological Society of America, eds. Centennial articles: Reprinted from volume 100, Geological Society of America bulletin. Boulder, Colo: The Society, 1990.

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Reutersw"ard, Patrik. The forgotten symbols of God: Five essays reprinted from Konsthistorisk Tidskrift. Uppsala: Almqvist &Wiksell, 1987.

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Baker, John Hamilton. An Inner Temple miscellany: Papers reprinted from the Inner Temple yearbook. [London?]: Masters of the Bench of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, 2004.

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Mill, John Stuart. Utilitarianism: Reprinted from 'fraser's Magazine'. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Chapters on English (reprinted From. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2023.

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Mill, John Stuart. Utilitarianism: Reprinted from 'fraser's Magazine'. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "Reprinted from"

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Smith, Kendric C. "Experiments Reprinted from The Science of Photobiology, First Edition." In Photobiological Techniques, 347–61. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-3840-0_21.

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Benz, A. O., E. Furst, and A. L. Kiplinger. "First Detection of Radio Emission from a Dwarf Nova (Reprinted from Nature)." In Cataclysmic Variables and Low-Mass X-Ray Binaries, 331–35. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-5319-2_39.

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Wasowicz, Laura. "Chapter 9. From Michaelmas-Day to Thanksgiving." In Children’s Literature, Culture, and Cognition, 198–223. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/clcc.15.09was.

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This chapter explores the appropriation, adaptation, and translation of the picturebook Grandmamma Easy’s Michaelmas Day, or The Fate of Poor Molly Goosey. Originally issued by London publisher Dean & Company c. 1843, it was reprinted three years later in Philadelphia by George S. Appleton. In about 1850, the text was Americanized and issued by Boston publisher Wier & White under the title Thanksgiving Day. Around 1870, New York publisher D. Appleton & Company translated the picturebook into Spanish and issued it as La Historia de La Gansa Amorosa (The Story of the Loving Goose) for sale in an emerging Hispanic book market, enlisting picturebook manufacturer McLoughlin Brothers. Tracing the transnational, translingual history of Molly, this study illuminates the use of recognized public holidays to reach new markets.
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Chilton, Mary-Dell. "Agrobacterium. A Memoir (In Part Reprinted from Plant Physiology Vol. 125, 2001)." In Women in Sustainable Agriculture and Food Biotechnology, 21–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-52201-2_2.

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Desmond, Adrian. "3. From Eternity to Here." In Reign of the Beast, 77–116. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0393.03.

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Being so little known, Saull and his trajectory towards Owenite evolution and mankind’s monkey-ancestry has to be tackled by following the money. We look at his bailing and funding of dissidents, leasing of venues, and the company he kept. First among the latter was the notorious Richard Carlile. By exploiting police spy reports, and by identifying an anonymous letter on fossils in Carlile’s Republican as Saull’s, we can see him already embedded in this circle by the mid-1820s. The anti-clerical Carlile re-cycled radical Enlightenment works for British dissidents, but what interests us is his response to evangelical taunts that only the Bible could explain human origins. Initially, following George Toulmin, whose books he reprinted, Carlile was to argue that the universe and humanity were eternal. This was eroded, however, by the knowledge, percolating down to street level, of Baron Cuvier’s unearthing of a progression of fossil animals, which implied origins. We examine what sources the dissidents trusted, what books they were reviving (including the much-maligned Telliamed), and why ‘blasphemous’ texts were favoured. Among the latter were the pirated books of the castigated surgeon William Lawrence and Lord Byron, which were churned out cheaply on back-street hand presses. With self-organizing matter (an idea spreading from republican France), and power lying inside nature, rather than in God’s hands to be dispensed through his priesthood, Saull’s anti-clericals had the justification for their attacks on financially-crippling tithes and intellectually-crippling priestly power.
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King, Andrew, and John Plunkett. "Woodcut street ballads reprinted from John Ashton, Modern Street Ballads (London, Chatto and Windus, 1888." In Popular Print Media: 1820-1900, 13–16. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003141075-5.

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Bjørkøy, Aasta Marie Bjorvand, and Janicke S. Kaasa. "Chapter 7. The journey of “Lille Alvilde”." In Children’s Literature, Culture, and Cognition, 157–75. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/clcc.15.07bjo.

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Maurits Hansen’s short story “Lille Alvilde” (Little Alvilde, 1829), about a small girl’s idyllic encounter with a bear, is considered a Norwegian classic. Since it was first published, it has been reprinted numerous times in several Norwegian publications. Its extensive publishing history made it available to a large readership and ensured its canonization. Moreover, Hansen’s story was distributed abroad, and translated versions were printed in England and the United States. In this chapter, we present the journey of “Lille Alvilde”, from Norway to England and the United States, and back again. By tracing the transnational publishing and translation history of the original text into the different English versions, we unpack the distribution, translation, and transformation of Hansen’s canonized story.
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Badolato, Nicola. "Armidoro, Oristeo e altri principi giardinieri sulle scene dell’opera veneziana nel Seicento." In Studi e saggi, 301–25. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-150-1.19.

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The subject of aprince dressing as a gardener to approach his beloved is dear to the European theatrical tradition: the model of Don Duardos by Gil Vicente (1562), reprinted in El rincipe viñador by Luis Vélez de Guevara (1668), is also used in French theatre, which proposes a variation in Le Prince déguisé by Georges de Scudery (1636), partly based on the novel Grisel y Mirabella by Juan de Flores (1524). This subject was later integrated into 17th century Italian theatre, starting with Venetian opera. This essay analyses in particular some works produced in Venice in the middle of the century, starting with Il prencipe giardiniero by Benedetto Ferrari (1644), whose subject anticipates first L’Oristeo (1651) by Giovanni Faustini and Francesco Cavalli, and Laurindo by Gio. Andrea Moniglia, written in 1657 and printed as Il principe giardiniere under the name of Giacinto Andrea Cicognini starting from 1664.
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Kaplan, Sidney. "Terms from the Oxford English Dictionary." In Interracialism, 211–65. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195128567.003.0011.

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Abstract 1864 (title) Miscegenation: The Theory of the Blending of the Races, applied to the American White Man and Negro. Reprinted from the New York Edition. 1878 Stanley Dark Cont. I. 44 By this process of miscegenation, the Arabs are already rapidly losing their rich colour.
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Breen, Jennifer. "Women Poets of the Romantic Period." In Literature of the Romantic Period, 181–91. Oxford University PressOxford, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198711209.003.0009.

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Abstract The cultural status and aesthetic merit of a few women poets in the Romantic period have been discussed in a variety of ways, depending on each critic ‘s theoretical viewpoint as well as on the availability of each woman author ‘s texts. Most of the women ‘s poetry that was published between 1785 and 1832 was available only in specialist libraries until the publication of Roger Lonsdale ‘s Eighteenth-Century Women Poets: An Oxford Anthology in 1989. Lonsdale reprinted a wide-ranging selection of women ‘s poetry published up to 1800. My subsequent Women Romantic Poets, 1785-1832: An Anthology reprints an innovative selection from the work of twenty-five competent and interesting women poets from the entire Romantic period. My anthology contains biographical and historical notes as well as a useful ‘Introduction ‘. Andrew Ashfield ‘s Romantic Women Poets extends the Romantic period from 1770 to 1838. He provides annotated selections that represent his version of ‘Romanticism ‘ from thirtyfour women poets, but he has reprinted only excerpts from most of his chosen longer poems.
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Conference papers on the topic "Reprinted from"

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Verma, Rajeev, Domitilla Del Vecchio, and Hosam K. Fathy. "Longitudinal Vehicle Dynamics Scaling and Implementation on a HIL Setup." In ASME 2008 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/dscc2008-2236.

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This paper presents the application of Buckingham’s π theorem to scale the powertrain of a High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) by deriving non dimensional ratios called π parameters. A Hardware In the Loop (HIL) setup is constructed and the resulting longitudinal dynamics of the scaled vehicle are validated against those of a full scale vehicle model. This is performed with the ultimate goal of testing cooperative collision avoidance algorithms on a testbed comprising a number of these scaled vehicles. This paper is based on “Development of a scaled vehicle with Longitudinal dynamics of a HMMWV for ITS testbed”, by Verma, R., Domitilla Del Vecchio, and Hosam K. Fathy which appeared in IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics, February 2008 and is being reprinted with permission from IEEE.
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Felecan, Nicolae. "Anthroponymy as an indicator of multiculturalism. Case study: the Latin-Catholic gymnasium in Bistriţa (1729–1779)." In International Conference on Onomastics “Name and Naming”. Editura Mega, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.30816/iconn5/2019/7.

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This paper dwells on the first names of Romanian students who attended the Latin-Catholic gymnasium in Bistriţa between the years 1729 and 1779. The onomastic data were collected from the records published by Virgil Şotropa in the newspaper Tribuna (1901, year XXXII, issues 1: 3 sqq.) and reprinted in the journal Arhiva Someşană (1940, issue 48: 47–63). The research does not deal with family names, as these are almost always replaced with the names of the students’ settlement or area of origin: Besenyö, Bistriciensis, Budatelek, Burgoiensis, Crajoviensis, Dobociensis, Kaczkiensis, Kajla, Nagy-Banya, Naszod, Naszodiensis, Radnensis, Somkuta, Tohatiensis, Tordensis, Transilvanus etc. The names analysed attest to the multicultural nature of anthroponymy since the early days of the existence of Confessional Records, Land Registries, Students’ Records etc.
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Colella, Whitney G. "Optimizal Design and Control Strategies for Novel Combined Heat and Power (CHP) Fuel Cell Systems: Part II of II—Case Study Results." In ASME 2010 8th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fuelcell2010-33147.

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Innovative energy system optimization models are deployed to evaluate novel fuel cell system (FCS) operating strategies, not typically pursued by commercial industry. Most FCS today are installed according to a “business-as-usual” approach: 1) stand-alone (unconnected to district heating networks and low-voltage electricity distribution lines), 2) not load following (not producing output equivalent to the instantaneous electrical or thermal demand of surrounding buildings), 3) employing a fairly fixed heat-to-power ratio (producing heat and electricity in a relatively constant ratio to each other), and 4) producing only electricity and no recoverable heat. By contrast, models discussed here consider novel approaches as well. Novel approaches include 1) networking (connecting FCSs to electrical and/or thermal networks), 2) load following (having FCSs produce only the instantaneous electricity or heat demanded by surrounding buildings), 3) employing a variable heat-to-power ratio (such that FCS can vary the ratio of heat and electricity they produce), 4) co-generation (combining the production of electricity and recoverable heat), 5) permutations of these together, and 6) permutations of these combined with more “business-as-usual” approaches. (The detailed assumptions and methods behind these models are described in Part I of this article pair. Reprinted from Part 1, TABLE 1 below summarizes twelve novel operating strategies investigated by the models.
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Martynov, Dmitry. "LIU RENHANG AND HERBERT G. WELLS." In 9th International Conference ISSUES OF FAR EASTERN LITERATURES. St. Petersburg State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/9785288062049.30.

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Liu Renhang (1885–1938) was known as a Shanghai publicist and propagandist of Buddhism, vegetarianism and non-violence. Having been educated in Japan, he could not establish relations with Zhang Xun and Yan Xishan. He made a long journey to India and Indochina, talked with Rabindranath Tagore. In the 1920s and 1930s, Liu Renhang published over 30 books, mostly translated from Japanese and English. He published translations of L. N. Tolstoy’s short stories, books on hydrotherapy and yoga, and founded the Institute for the Cultivation of Joy in Shanghai (乐天 修养 馆). The main work of his life was Dongfang Datong Xuean in 6 juan, the creation of which was carried out in 1918–1924. The treatise was fully published in Shanghai in 1926, and was reprinted in 1991 and 2014. Its main content was to consider the classical ideals of Xiaokang and Datong, and the possibility of combining ideals with the realities of the modern world. Liu Renhang believed that the ideal of Datong Confucius and Kang Yuwei is fully compatible with Buddhist teachings. During the fifth session of the Central Election Commission of the Kuomintang of the fourth convocation (1934), he tried to announce at the meeting a petition on the introduction of the principle of Great Unity in international relations. In 1938, he created the utopian commune Datong in his native village, and tried to interest Zhou Enlai and Dong Biu with his theories. In the Dongfang Datong Xuean treatise, Liu Renhang introduced the “history of the future”, which was influenced by H. G. Wells’ globalist and Fabian ideas. Liu Renhang directly referred to his novel The War in the Air in conclusion to his own treatise. Like Wells, Liu looked with pessimism on the prospects of modern mankind, and called for the emergence of a “modern Genghis Khan”, who would ruin the world, on the ashes of which the sprout of a new Great Unity would rise.
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Court, Kenneth E. "Extended Cruising The Second Time Around." In SNAME 7th Chesapeake Sailing Yacht Symposium. SNAME, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.5957/csys-1985-005.

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Some years ago, in 1975, I presented a paper and a slide show at an earlier sailing yacht symposium in Annapolis. The subject was a four-year, 28,000 mile cruise I had made in the years 1965 - 1968 most of the way around the world: Hawaii and the South Pacific, New Zealand, Australia's Barrier Reef, the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, the Mediterranean, including the Greek Islands, an Atlantic crossing to Barbados from the Canary Islands, the Caribbean, and home to the Chesapeake. The paper I wrote then was entitled "Extended Cruising: An Overview" and contained sketches and data from my logs. It was same 55 pages long and talked about many facets of cruising from my vantage point, primarily as seen from the decks of Mamari, the 28 foot ketch I had bought in New Zealand. Lest Mamari 's size appear too small, which perhaps would make me seen heroic, recognize that in displacement and accomodations Mamari was the equivalent of a 33 foot boat. To dispel one other misconception, be advised that I normally sailed with a crew of two, sometimes more, and only sailed two legs single-handed, of about 500 miles each, one from Tonga to Fiji in the Pacific, the other in the Gulf of Suez and from Port Said to the Greek Islands. The 1975 paper reflected my background as a naval architect, combined with my experience as a sailor. I told of things I learned from others. I analyzed log data, presented photographs, drawings and tables, and wrote a series of "yarns" such as sailors spin about their travels. The paper is touched with a flavor of the sea, a flavor of talk over run or coffee in a snug anchorage or on a shared night watch. That 1975 paper makes good reading, and much of the information is still valid. It could be reprinted and if there is enough interest l will do so (contact me). This present paper is a brief look at my experiences on a series of sailing trips, but in particular a one year voyage in a 37 foot yawl from Turkey to the Chesapeake via the West Indies in 1980-81. The paper answers the question posed at the 1975 symposium, would I do the trip again? Then, I thought so, but could not be sure, now my reply is, "of course."
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Martin, Holger. "Reynolds, Maxwell, and the Radiometer, Revisited." In 2010 14th International Heat Transfer Conference. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ihtc14-22023.

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In 1969, S. G. Brush and C. W. F. Everitt published a historical review, that was reprinted as subchapter 5.5 Maxwell, Osborne Reynolds, and the radiometer, in Stephen G. Brush’s famous book The Kind of Motion We Call Heat. This review covers the history of the explanation of the forces acting on the vanes of Crookes radiometer up to the end of the 19th century. The forces moving the vanes in Crookes radiometer (which are not due to radiation pressure, as initially believed by Crookes and Maxwell) have been recognized as thermal effects of the remaining gas by Reynolds — from his experimental and theoretical work on Thermal Transpiration and Impulsion, in 1879 — and by the development of the differential equations describing Thermal Creeping Flow, induced by tangential stresses due to a temperature gradient on a solid surface by Maxwell, earlier in the same year, 1879. These fundamental physical laws have not yet made their way into the majority of textbooks of heat transfer and fluid mechanics so far. A literature research about the terms of Thermal Transpiration and Thermal Creeping Flow, in connection with the radiometer forces, resulted in a large number of interesting papers; not only the original ones as mentioned in subchapter 5.5 of Brush’s book, but many more in the earlier twentieth century, by Martin Knudsen, Wilhelm Westphal, Albert Einstein, Theodor Sexl, Paul Epstein and others. The forces as calculated from free molecular flow (by Knudsen), increase linearly with pressure, while the forces from Maxwell’s Thermal Creeping Flow decrease with pressure. In an intermediate range of pressures, depending on the characteristic geometrical dimensions of flow channels or radiometer vanes, an appropriate interpolation between these two kinds of forces, as suggested by Wilhelm Westphal and later by G. Hettner, goes through a maximum. Albert Einstein’s approximate solution of the problem happens to give the order of magnitude of the forces in the maximum range. A comprehensive formula and a graph of the these forces versus pressure combines all the relevant theories by Knudsen (1910), Einstein (1924), Maxwell (1879) (and Hettner (1926), Sexl (1928), and Epstein (1929) who found mathematical solutions for Maxwells creeping flow equations for non-isothermal spheres and circular discs, which are important for thermophoresis and for the radiometer). The mechanism of Thermal Creeping Flow will become of increasing interest in micro- and submicro-channels in various new applications, so it ought to be known to every graduate student of heat transfer in the future. That’s one of the reasons why some authors have recently questioned the validity of the classical Navier-Stokes, Fourier, and Fick equations: Dieter Straub (1996) published a book on an Alternative Mathematical Theory of Non-equilibrium Phenomena. Howard Brenner (since 2005) wrote a number of papers, like Navier-Stokes, revisited, and Bi-velocity hydrodynamics, explicitly pointing to the forces acting on the vanes of the lightmill, to thermophoresis and related phenomena. Franz Durst (since 2006) also developed modifications of the classical Navier-Stokes equations. So, Reynolds, Maxwell, and the radiometer may finally have initiated a revision of the fundamental equations of thermofluiddynamics and heat- and mass transfer.
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Bonacina, Ilario, Maria Luisa Bonet, and Jordi Levy. "Weighted, Circular and Semi-Algebraic Proofs (Abstract Reprint)." In Thirty-Third International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-24}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2024/947.

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In recent years there has been an increasing interest in studying proof systems stronger than Resolution, with the aim of building more efficient SAT solvers based on them. In defining these proof systems, we try to find a balance between the power of the proof system (the size of the proofs required to refute a formula) and the difficulty of finding the proofs. In this paper we consider the proof systems circular Resolution, Sherali-Adams, Nullstellensatz and Weighted Resolution and we study their relative power from a theoretical perspective. We prove that circular Resolution, Sherali-Adams and Weighted Resolution are polynomially equivalent proof systems. We also prove that Nullstellensatz is polynomially equivalent to a restricted version of Weighted Resolution. The equivalences carry on also for versions of the systems where the coefficients/weights are expressed in unary. The practical interest in these systems comes from the fact that they admit efficient algorithms to find proofs in case these have small width/degree.
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McFadden, Zari, and Lauren Alvarez. "Performative Ethics From Within the Ivory Tower: How CSPractitioners Uphold Systems of Oppression (Abstract Reprint)." In Thirty-Third International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-24}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2024/955.

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This paper analyzes where Artificial Intelligence (AI) Ethics research fails and breaks down the dangers of well-intentioned, but ultimately performative ethics research. A large majority of AI ethics research is critiqued for lacking a comprehensive analysis of how AI is interconnected with sociological systems of oppression and power. Our work contributes to the handful of research that presents intersectional, Western systems of oppression and power as a framework for examining AI ethics work and the complexities of building less harmful technology; directly connecting technology to named systems such as capitalism and classism, colonialism, racism and white supremacy, patriarchy, and ableism. We then explore current AI ethics rhetoric's effect on the AI ethics domain and AI regulation. In conclusion, we provide an applied example to contextualize intersectional systems of oppression and AI interventions in the U.S. justice system and present actionable steps for AI practitioners to participate in a less performative, critical analysis of AI.
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Cao, Yang, Ye Zhu, Kai Ming Ting, Flora D. Salim, Hong Xian Li, Luxing Yang, and Gang Li. "Detecting Change Intervalswith Isolation Distributional Kernel (Abstract Reprint)." In Thirty-Third International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-24}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2024/948.

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Detecting abrupt changes in data distribution is one of the most significant tasks in streaming data analysis. Although many unsupervised Change-Point Detection (CPD) methods have been proposed recently to identify those changes, they still suffer from missing subtle changes, poor scalability, or/and sensitivity to outliers. To meet these challenges, we are the first to generalise the CPD problem as a special case of the Change-Interval Detection (CID) problem. Then we propose a CID method, named iCID, based on a recent Isolation Distributional Kernel (IDK). iCID identifies the change interval if there is a high dissimilarity score between two non-homogeneous temporal adjacent intervals. The data-dependent property and finite feature map of IDK enabled iCID to efficiently identify various types of change-points in data streams with the tolerance of outliers. Moreover, the proposed online and offline versions of iCID have the ability to optimise key parameter settings. The effectiveness and efficiency of iCID have been systematically verified on both synthetic and real-world datasets.
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Struppek, Lukas, Dominik Hintersdorf, Felix Friedrich, Manuel Brack, Patrick Schramowski, and Kristian Kersting. "Exploiting Cultural Biases via Homoglyphs inText-to-Image Synthesis (Abstract Reprint)." In Thirty-Third International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-24}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2024/958.

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Models for text-to-image synthesis, such as DALL-E 2 and Stable Diffusion, have recently drawn a lot of interest from academia and the general public. These models are capable of producing high-quality images that depict a variety of concepts and styles when conditioned on textual descriptions. However, these models adopt cultural characteristics associated with specific Unicode scripts from their vast amount of training data, which may not be immediately apparent. We show that by simply inserting single non-Latin characters in the textual description, common models reflect cultural biases in their generated images. We analyze this behavior both qualitatively and quantitatively and identify a model’s text encoder as the root cause of the phenomenon. Such behavior can be interpreted as a model feature, offering users a simple way to customize the image generation and reflect their own cultural background. Yet, malicious users or service providers may also try to intentionally bias the image generation. One goal might be to create racist stereotypes by replacing Latin characters with similarly-looking characters from non-Latin scripts, so-called homoglyphs. To mitigate such unnoticed script attacks, we propose a novel homoglyph unlearning method to fine-tune a text encoder, making it robust against homoglyph manipulations.
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Reports on the topic "Reprinted from"

1

Radousky, H., G. Rennie, and A. Henke. A Collection of Articles Reprinted from Science & Technology Review on University Relations Program. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), August 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/907857.

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Kud, A. A. Figures and Tables. Reprinted from “Comprehensive сlassification of virtual assets”, A. A. Kud, 2021, International Journal of Education and Science, 4(1), 52–75. KRPOCH, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26697/reprint.ijes.2021.1.6.a.kud.

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Figure. Distributed Ledger Token Accounting System. Figure. Subjects of Social Relations Based on the Decentralized Information Platform. Figure. Derivativeness of a Digital Asset. Figure. Semantic Features of the Concept of a “Digital Asset” in Economic and Legal Aspects. Figure. Derivativeness of Polyassets and Monoassets. Figure. Types of Tokenized Assets Derived from Property. Figure. Visual Representation of the Methods of Financial and Management Accounting of Property Using Various Types of Tokenized Assets. Figure. Visual Representation of the Classification of Virtual Assets Based on the Complexity of Their Nature. Table. Comparison of Properties of Various Types of Virtual Assets of the Distributed Ledger Derivative of the Original Asset. Table. Main Properties and Parameters of Types of Tokenized Assets. Table. Classification of Virtual Assets as Tools for Implementing the Methods of Financial and Management Accounting of Property.
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Templeton, Todd R. in Proceedings of Third International Symposium on 3D Data Processing, Visualization and Transmission, 2006. Permission was obtained from the publisher for limited distribution. However, for mass distribution, these reprinted portions have been marked and removed; please refer to the original paper. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada637136.

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Allen, Jonathan, and Daniel Kleppner. Reprints from RLE Progress Report Number 135. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, June 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada267471.

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PCI Standard Design Practice Ref ACI-318-11. Precast/Prestressed Concrete institute, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15554/sdp-318-11.

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PCI Standard Design Practice Ref ACI-318-11 Precast and prestressed concrete structures have provided decades of satisfactory performance. This performance is the result of the practices reported herein, conformance with ACI 318-11 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete and Commentary, incorporation of industry specific research programs and a plant certification program that provides an industrywide quality control system beyond that found in on-site construction. Section 1.4 of the ACI 318-11 specifically allows variances when the adequacy of which has been shown by successful use or by analysis or test. Suggested changes to code provisions resulting from experience, analysis or testing can provide a point for discussion with building officials for acceptance of revised provisions within the guidance and scope of Section 1.4 of ACI 318-11. This list of provisions is based on ACI 318-11, and the numbers refer to sections in that document and are presented in numerical order. For notation used within this document refer to the notation used in Chapter 2 of ACI 318-11. Excerpts from ACI 318-11 are reprinted here with permission by the American Concrete Institute, Farmington Hills, Michigan.
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