Academic literature on the topic 'Stewart, Harold'

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Journal articles on the topic "Stewart, Harold"

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Rollin, Henry. "Harold Stewart." Psychiatric Bulletin 29, no. 12 (December 2005): 479. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.29.12.479.

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Charbet, T. "Capper, Garon and Harold Stewart (Amer. J. Das. Child. 44, pp. 798-805)." Kazan medical journal 29, no. 8-9 (January 12, 2022): 746. http://dx.doi.org/10.17816/kazmj89859.

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Capper, Garon and Harold Stewart report (Amer. J. Das. Child. 44, pp. 798-805) of a case of primary myocardial tuberculosis with an unaffected pericardium. The case refers to a 3 year old. a black woman without a tuberculous history. With progressive emaciation and anemia, transient meningism and terminal seizures, the disease ended fatally in two months. On the section: caseous masses and cavities in the left lung, caseous decay of the mammary and abdominal lymph glands.
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Locklin, Reid B. "Book Review: Can Only One Religion Be True? Paul Knitter and Harold Netland in Dialogue. Edited by Robert B. Stewart." Theological Studies 75, no. 2 (May 20, 2014): 461–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0040563914528089m.

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Temple, Luke. "Book Review: Paul Whiteley, Harold D Clarke, David Sanders and Marianne C Stewart, Affluence, Austerity and Electoral Change in Britain." Political Studies Review 14, no. 3 (July 9, 2016): 474–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1478929916656548.

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Closson James, William. "Dancing on the Shore: A Celebration of Life at Annapolis Basin Harold Horwood Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1987. 224 p." Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 17, no. 3 (September 1988): 387. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000842988801700340.

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Murphy, Tom. "Psychic Experience and the Problems of Technique. By Harold Stewart and Pearl King. London: Tavistock/Routledge. 1992. 151 pp. £14.99." British Journal of Psychiatry 162, no. 2 (February 1993): 288–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s0007125000180584.

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Vinessa, Vina, and Suherman Kusniadji. "Proses Komunikasi Melalui Kegiatan Event Adopt Don’t Shop Guna Mengkampanyekan Kesadaran Masyarakat agar Menyayangi Binatang." Prologia 2, no. 2 (April 26, 2019): 538. http://dx.doi.org/10.24912/pr.v2i2.3742.

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Penelitian ini berjudul Proses Komunikasi Melalui Kegiatan Event Adopt Don’t Shop Guna Mengkampanyekan Kesadaran Masyarakat Agar Meyayangi Binatang (Studi Kasus Pada Yayasan Animal Defenders Indonesia). Tujuan penelitian adalah untuk mengetahui bagaimana proses komunikasi melalui kegiatan event Adopt Don’t Shop guna menyadarkan masyarakat agar menyayangi binatang. Penelitian ini menggunakan metode deskriptif dengan pendekatan kualitatif. Penelitian akan menggunakan wawancara semi terstruktur dan observasi terhadap tiga informan yang berhubungan dengan penelitian ini. Data penelitian yang diperoleh bersumber dari wawancara, observasi, dokumentasi dan studi pustaka. Penelitian ini dimaksudkan untuk mengetahui proses komunikasi yang terjadi dalam kegiatan event adopt don’t shop. Teori yang digunakan dalam penelitian adalah proses komunikasi dari Laswell. Stewart L.Tubbs dan Sylvia Moss, Kotler (Kurniawati), John Vivian, Harold Laswell, Collin dan Ivanovic, Goldblatt, Muyasaroh, Ardianto, dan Yaverbaum yakni komunikasi public, komunikasi social, komunikasi massa, proses komunikasi, event pameran, event manajemen, kampanye komunikasi, new media, special event. Kesimpulan dari penelitian ini adalah kegiatan event merupakan media yang efektif yang dapat menyadarkan masyarakat untuk menyayangi binatang karena adanya proses komunikasi dan event yang baik.
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Green, Jane. "Performance Politics and the British Voter. By Harold D. Clarke, David Sanders, Marianne C. Stewart and Paul F. Whiteley. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009. 388p. $107.00." Perspectives on Politics 10, no. 2 (May 25, 2012): 511–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592712000151.

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George-Tvrtković, Rita. "Can Only One Religion Be True? Paul Knitter and Harold Netland in Dialogue. Edited by Robert B. Stewart. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2013. ix + 215 pages. $24.00 (paper)." Horizons 41, no. 1 (May 22, 2014): 198–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/hor.2014.21.

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Hellwig, Timothy. "Critical Dialogue - Affluence, Austerity, and Electoral Change in Britain. By Paul Whiteley, Harold D. Clarke, David Sanders, and Marianne C. Stewart. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013. 332p. $95.00 cloth, $36.99 paper." Perspectives on Politics 14, no. 1 (March 2016): 196–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592715003862.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Stewart, Harold"

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Meyer, Therese-Marie. "Where fiction ends four scandals of literary identity construction." Würzburg Königshausen und Neumann, 2006. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=2803752&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm.

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Dowse, Richard J. "The Laie Hawaii Temple: A History from Its Conception to Completion." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2012. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3352.

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The Laie Hawaii Temple majestically overlooks the beaches of Oahu and has stood as an emblem of the Latter-day Saint faith to the world since 1919. Although the structure is iconic and highly significant to Latter-day Saints, a comprehensive history of the Laie Hawaii Temple has never been published. This thesis provides such a history from the conception of the temple until its dedication. The history of this particular temple is important for several reasons. At its dedication, the temple in Laie became the fifth operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It was the first dedicated temple outside of the state of Utah (following the exodus) and outside of North America. It was also the first temple built in one of the missions of the Church. It was a pioneering temple as one of the first that catered to a large number of patrons from different cultures speaking different languages. Its multi-cultural, multi-lingual integration is something that would not be seen in other temples for several decades. Over the years, the temple and the attractions built around it have drawn millions of other visitors as well. Its location has made it an internationally recognized edifice and a valuable tool for the Church to introduce its message to the world. This history is also compelling because of what the temple in Laie, Hawaii represents in terms of the Latter-day Saint conception of the doctrine of the "gathering." As the first temple built outside of the traditional centers of Mormon colonization, this temple became an early prototype of a method of gathering that does not appear to begin taking hold Church-wide until the mid-twentieth century. Ahead of its time in other ways, the temple was built in a place where, according to the thinking of the time, Church membership was not yet sizable enough to warrant a temple. This thesis explains why the temple was built in Hawaii. These aspects of the temple's history produced ramifications that continue to impact the Church today, nearly 100 years later. As with many temples, a folk history of oral tradition has developed around the story of the Laie Hawaii Temple. This thesis will also provide a review of the historical record and offer clarity in sorting through that tradition.
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Books on the topic "Stewart, Harold"

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Damaged men: The precarious lives of James McAuley and Harold Stewart. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2001.

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Stray dogs. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1997.

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York Minster: the consecration of the venerable Nicholas Stewart Reade...to be Bishop of Blackburn and Canon James Harold Bell...to be Bishop of Knaresborough by the most Reverend and Right Honourable Dr David Hope...2nd March 2004.... 2004.

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Bussel, Robert. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039492.003.0001.

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This book examines Teamsters Local 688's community stewards program, a nationally acclaimed initiative launched by Harold Gibbons and Ernest Calloway in St. Louis to advance their advocacy of working-class citizenship and total person unionism. Through the community stewards program, Gibbons and Calloway sought to develop new kinds of unionists whose workplace and civic lives were seamlessly integrated. In addressing the needs of the worker as a “total person,” the two men looked beyond the shop floor and attempted to influence political decisions “affect[ing] the common economic, social, and civic well-being” of the union member. Local 688's community stewards mounted a series of highly visible campaigns to improve the quality of life in St. Louis. These efforts included ballot initiatives, legal action, and direct worker engagement with city officials. This book explores how Gibbons and Calloway, despite their quite different personalities, forged a dynamic political alliance as they sought to claim the identity of “citizen” for themselves and the workers they represented.
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Bussel, Robert. “The Other Sixteen Hours”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039492.003.0008.

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This chapter examines Teamsters Local 688's community stewards program, Harold Gibbons and Ernest Calloway's ambitious initiative to promote the exercise of working-class citizenship and the practice of total person unionism. Early in the 1950s, an internal Teamsters Local 688 memo discussed what it called “the wide view and the narrow view” of the union movement's mission. “The narrow view” “would train stewards to do the job in the shop and nothing else,” while the “wide view” states that “[the union member] is willing to assume his or her responsibility in the maintenance of a democratic union and a democratic society.” This chapter considers how the Teamsters's “wide view” of member responsibility led Gibbons and Calloway to establish a community stewards program that mobilized Local 688 members to address issues affecting their lives during the “other sixteen hours” they spent off the job. It also explores how Calloway's leadership role within the St. Louis NAACP created new possibilities for the labor and civil rights movements to shape social policy in St. Louis after World War II.
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Buhr, Daniel, Rolf Frankenberger, Wolfgang Schroeder, and Udo Zolleis, eds. Innovation im Wohlfahrtsstaat. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748925507.

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Societies are constantly changing—and with them people’s needs. Politics has the task of accompanying and steering change. This volume brings together contributions from research on innovation and the welfare state, political parties and associations as well as policy advice, thus providing an overview of current developments in this field. In doing so, it provides an insight into the complexity of policy area analysis in research, transfer and consultancy. At the same time, the volume pays tribute to Josef Schmid, a scholar whose work has linked, advanced and significantly shaped theory and practice, consultancy and teaching in policy analysis and political economy. With contributions by Reinhard Bahnmüller, Nils C. Bandelow, Rasmus C. Beck, Susanne Blancke, Mathias Bucksteeg, Daniel Buhr, Roland Czada, Christoph Deutschmann, Charlotte Fechter, Rolf Frankenberger, Stewart Gold, Anke Hassel, Rolf G. Heinze, Sven Hilgers, Steffen Jenner, Markus Jox, Ricard Bellera Kirchhof, Ralf Kleinfeld, Harald Kohler, Wilhelm Kohler, Norbert Kreuzkamp, Chris Kühn, Susanne Lütz, Erika Mezger, Philipp Rehm, Manfred G. Schmidt, Werner Schmidt, Sebastian Schneider, Wolfgang Schroeder, Werner Sesselmeier, Ulrike Single, Christian Steffen, Volquart Stoy, Roland Sturm, Ansgar Thiel, Heinrich Tiemann, Ingeborg Tömmel, Ulrich von Alemann, Hans-Georg Wehling, Rosemarie Wehling, Dorian R. Woods and Udo Zolleis.
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Hegland, Frode, ed. The Future of Text. Future Text Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.48197/fot2020a.

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This book is the first anthology of perspectives on the future of text, one of our most important mediums for thinking and communicating, with a Foreword by the co-inventor of the Internet, Vint. Cerf and a Postscript by the founder of the modern Library of Alexandria, Ismail Serageldin. In a time with astounding developments in computer special effects in movies and the emergence of powerful AI, text has developed little beyond spellcheck and blue links. In this work we look at myriads of perspectives to inspire a rich future of text through contributions from academia, the arts, business and technology. We hope you will be as inspired as we are as to the potential power of text truly unleashed. Contributions by Adam Cheyer • Adam Kampff • Alan Kay • Alessio Antonini • Alex Holcombe • Amaranth Borsuk • Amira Hanafi • Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. • Anastasia Salter • Andy Matuschak & Michael Nielsen • Ann Bessemans & María Pérez Mena • Andries Van Dam • Anne-Laure Le Cunff • Anthon Botha • Azlen Ezla • Barbara Beeton • Belinda Barnet • Ben Shneiderman • Bernard Vatant • Bob Frankston • Bob Horn • Bob Stein • Catherine C. Marshall • Charles Bernstein • Chris Gebhardt • Chris Messina • Christian Bök • Christopher Gutteridge • Claus Atzenbeck • Daniel Russel • Danila Medvedev • Danny Snelson • Daveed Benjamin • Dave King • Dave Winer • David De Roure • David Jablonowski • David Johnson • David Lebow • David M. Durant • David Millard • David Owen Norris • David Price • David Weinberger • Dene Grigar • Denise Schmandt-Besserat • Derek Beaulieu • Doc Searls • Don Norman • Douglas Crockford • Duke Crawford • Ed Leahy • Elaine Treharne • Élika Ortega • Esther Dyson • Esther Wojcicki • Ewan Clayton • Fiona Ross • Fred Benenson & Tyler Shoemaker • Galfromdownunder, aka Lynette Chiang • Garrett Stewart • Gyuri Lajos • Harold Thimbleby • Howard Oakley • Howard Rheingold • Ian Cooke • Iian Neil • Jack Park • Jakob Voß • James Baker • James O’Sullivan • Jamie Blustein • Jane Yellowlees Douglas • Jay David Bolter • Jeremy Helm • Jesse Grosjean • Jessica Rubart • Joe Corneli • Joel Swanson • Johanna Drucker • Johannah Rodgers • John Armstrong • John Cayle • John-Paul Davidson • Joris J. van Zundert • Judy Malloy • Kari Kraus & Matthew Kirschenbaum • Katie Baynes • Keith Houston • Keith Martin • Kenny Hemphill • Ken Perlin • Leigh Nash • Leslie Carr • Lesia Tkacz • Leslie Lamport • Livia Polanyi • Lori Emerson • Luc Beaudoin & Daniel Jomphe • Lynette Chiang • Manuela González • Marc-Antoine Parent • Marc Canter • Mark Anderson • Mark Baker • Mark Bernstein • Martin Kemp • Martin Tiefenthaler • Maryanne Wolf • Matt Mullenweg • Michael Joyce • Mike Zender • Naomi S. Baron • Nasser Hussain • Neil Jefferies • Niels Ole Finnemann • Nick Montfort • Panda Mery • Patrick Lichty • Paul Smart • Peter Cho • Peter Flynn • Peter Jenson & Melissa Morocco • Peter J. Wasilko • Phil Gooch • Pip Willcox • Rafael Nepô • Raine Revere • Richard A. Carter • Richard Price • Richard Saul Wurman • Rollo Carpenter • Sage Jenson & Kit Kuksenok • Shane Gibson • Simon J. Buckingham Shum • Sam Brooker • Sarah Walton • Scott Rettberg • Sofie Beier • Sonja Knecht • Stephan Kreutzer • Stephanie Strickland • Stephen Lekson • Stevan Harnad • Steve Newcomb • Stuart Moulthrop • Ted Nelson • Teodora Petkova • Tiago Forte • Timothy Donaldson • Tim Ingold • Timur Schukin & Irina Antonova • Todd A. Carpenter • Tom Butler-Bowdon • Tom Standage • Tor Nørretranders • Valentina Moressa • Ward Cunningham • Dame Wendy Hall • Zuzana Husárová. Student Competition Winner Niko A. Grupen, and competition runner ups Catherine Brislane, Corrie Kim, Mesut Yilmaz, Elizabeth Train-Brown, Thomas John Moore, Zakaria Aden, Yahye Aden, Ibrahim Yahie, Arushi Jain, Shuby Deshpande, Aishwarya Mudaliar, Finbarr Condon-English, Charlotte Gray, Aditeya Das, Wesley Finck, Jordan Morrison, Duncan Reid, Emma Brodey, Gage Nott, Aditeya Das and Kamil Przespolewski. Edited by Frode Hegland.
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Book chapters on the topic "Stewart, Harold"

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Silber, Norman I. "Justice Black." In Outside In, 261—C11.N42. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197635124.003.0012.

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Abstract This chapter relates Guido’s experience as a clerk to Justice Hugo Lafayette Black. Black joined the Supreme Court in August 1937, as the first appointee of Franklin D. Roosevelt. As a Senator from Alabama, Black had taken a leadership role supporting New Deal measures, including FDR’s court-packing proposal. Roosevelt named seven more allies as vacancies occurred: Stanley Reed, Felix Frankfurter, William O. Douglas, Frank Murphy, James [“Jimmy”] Byrnes, Robert Jackson, and Wiley Rutledge. The New Deal justices were initially all deferential to FDR’s executive and legislative programs, but incursions on civil liberties and assertions of executive power exposed sharp divisions among them. Twenty years after Black took his seat, Guido joined Justice Black’s chambers for the 1958–1959 term of the Court. By then only three New Dealers remained—Black, Douglas, and Frankfurter. There were two Truman appointees—Harold Burton and Tom Clark; and four Eisenhower appointees—Earl Warren (the “Chief”), John Marshall Harlan, William J. Brennan, Jr., and Charles Whittaker. Potter Stewart replaced Harold Burton during the term.
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Ellenzweig, Allen. "The Great Barrington Boy II." In George Platt Lynes, 450–64. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190219666.003.0030.

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George Platt Lynes’s photographer friend Harold Griffith, acting as Russell’s agent, purchases George’s equipment at auction, which George “borrows” back from Russell. The sale satisfies the IRS claim. George declares bankruptcy, thus avoiding payment on the disputed Hollywood decorating bill. By summer 1952, local crime convinces George to leave Hell’s Kitchen for Russell’s. Young “Buddy” McCarthy visits from Boston to model and share George’s bed. George invites Buddy to live with him, but Buddy demurs. Sam Steward recommends a “Negro” youth, Johnny Leaphart, as a model and sexual prospect. George poses him and Buddy for sensual nude images together, producing a classic Lynes picture, “Man in His Element.” George moves to East 61st Street. His finances remain shaky. George shoots a studio series of a lithe blond stripped to the waist; his looming shadow is thrown upon the rear wall. One is entitled “The Great Barrington Boy”—nearly a doppelganger for Lynes in his youth.
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Gross, Alan G., and Joseph E. Harmon. "The Internet Scientific Article." In The Internet Revolution in the Sciences and Humanities. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190465926.003.0007.

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Do the changes in the scientific article incident on Internet publication constitute a revolution in representation and communication? John Stewart MacKenzie Owen insists that they do not. In The Scientific Article in the Age of Digitization, he argues that contrary to claims about the impact of digitization on scientific communication, “the journal article as a communicative form for reporting on research and disseminating scientific knowledge does not seem to have been transformed by … [the Internet]: it remains a digital copy of the printed form.” Owen views the current situation as preserving and extending “existing functions and values rather than as an innovation that radically transforms a communicative practice that has evolved over the centuries.” The conclusion Owen draws cannot be faulted. We do not doubt that the articles and journals in his sample are, on average, to quote Stevan Harnad, “mere clones of paper journals, ghosts in another medium.” We do, however, question Owen’s sample of online scientific journals. While he includes such journals as the Brazilian Electronic Journal of Economics, Internet Journal of Chemistry, and Journal of Cotton Science (all three now defunct), he excludes the most highly cited scientific journals producing printed and electronic issues, like Nature, Physical Review, Journal of the American Chemical Society, or such highly successful open-access journals as those of the Public Library of Science. It is the latter set that contains the journals we need to scrutinize if we are to discover what innovations, if any, have surfaced and are likely to be widely adopted in the future. These journals have the robust readership, the prestige, the financial resources, and the technical capacity necessary to introduce web-based innovations on a large scale. It is in these that the Internet revolution is now most visible. Still, among all scientific journals today, whether print or electronic, there remains a conservative core at this revolution’s center, a still point in the turning world of knowledge generation and communication.
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Hoyt, Douglas V., and Kenneth H. Shatten. "Cyclomania." In The Role of the Sun in Climate Change. Oxford University Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195094138.003.0013.

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In his 1874 book Contributions to Solar Physics, Sir Norman Lockyer writes the following: . . . Surely in meteorology, as in astronomy, the thing to hunt down is a cycle, and if that is not to be found in the temperate zone, then go to frigid zones, or the torrid zones and look for it, and if found, then above all things, and in whatever manner, lay hold of, study it, record it, and see what it means. If there is no cycle, then despair for a time if you will, but yet plant firmly your science on a physical basis, as Dr. Balfour Stewart long ago suggested, before, to the infinite detriment of English science, he left the Meteorological Observatory at Kew; and having got such a basis as this, wait for results. In the absence of these methods, statements of what is happening to a blackened bulb in vacuo, or its companion exposed to the sky, is, for research purposes, work of the tenth order of importance. . . . As Lockyer notes, looking for cycles is certainly an attractive prospect. If found, a cycle will help with predictions, and successful predictions are a central goal of scientific studies. Cycle hunting is also a relatively straightforward procedure, with several well-developed techniques. Cycle hunting has become even easier with the advent of computers. By feeding a stream of data into an algorithm to detect cycles, one is likely to find cycles even in a series of random numbers. Hence the danger that a cycle, if detected, may prove to be only a random fluctuation. Will the cycle persist with more data, or will it simply disappear? For ardent cycle hunters, and the sun/climate field has attracted its fair share, these questions are hardly a deterrent. The lure seems to be finding something of seeming importance with minimal effort. From a practical point of view, a cycle may be considered important only if it can be plotted. If sophisticated analyses are required to detect the cycle, the cycle probably has only secondary importance. While these criteria are not the usual mathematical criteria for significance, they are a practical, down-to-earth guide to what is important.
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"realities they name. Though corrupt, they remain dictions, fissures, discord, repressions, aporias, etc. divinely given and the poet’s burden is to purify the Inasmuch as their response is a product of their language of his own tribe. Words have been ‘wrested time, so is mine for I remain caught up in a vision of from their true calling’, and the poet attempts to the poem I had during my graduate years at the wrest them back in order to recreate that natural lan-University of Cambridge when I began seriously to guage in which the word and its reality again merge. read it. What I had anticipated to be an obscure alleg-Like Adam, he gives names to his creatures which ory that could be understood only by an extended express their natures. His word-play is a sustained study of its background became more clear the more and serious effort to plant true words as seeds in the I read it until I had the sense of standing at the reader’s imagination. In Jonson’s phrase, he ‘makes centre of a whirling universe of words each in its pro-their minds like the thing he writes’ (1925– per order and related to all the others, its meanings 52:8.588). He shares Bacon’s faith that the true end constantly unfolding from within until the poem is of knowledge is ‘a restitution and reinvesting (in seen to contain all literature, and all knowledge great part) of man to the sovereignty and power (for needed to guide one’s personal and social life. In the whensoever he shall be able to call the creatures by intervening years, especially as a result of increasing their true names he shall again command them) awareness of Spenser’s and his poem’s involvement which he had in his first state of creation’ (Valerius in Ireland, as indicated by the bibliographies com-Terminus). Although his poem remains largely piled by Maley in 1991 and 1996a, and such later unfinished, he has restored at least those words that studies as McLeod 1999:32–62, but best shown in are capable of fashioning his reader in virtuous and Hadfield 1997, I have come to realize also the pro-gentle discipline. What is chiefly needed to under-found truth of Walter Benjamin’s observation that stand the allegory of The Faerie Queene fully is to ‘there is no document of civilization that is not at the understand all the words. That hypothesis is the basis same time a document of barbarism’. The greatness of my annotation. of The Faerie Queene consists in being both: while it My larger goal is to help readers understand ostensibly focuses on Elizabeth’s court, it is impos-why Spenser was honoured in his day as ‘England’s sible even to imagine it being written there, or at any Arch-Poët’, why he became Milton’s ‘Original’ and place other than Ireland, being indeed ‘wilde fruit, the ‘poet’s poet’ for the Romantics (see ‘poet’s poet’ which saluage soyl hath bred’ (DS 7.2). in the SEnc), and why today Harold Bloom 1986: If Spenser is to continue as a classic, criticism must 2 may claim that he ‘possessed [mythopoeic power] continue to recreate the poem by holding it up as a . . . in greater measure than any poet in English mirror that first of all reflects our own anxieties and except for Blake’, and why Greenblatt 1990b:229 concerns. It may not be possible, or even desirable, may judge him to be ‘among the most exuberant, to seek a perspective on the poem ‘uncontaminated generous, and creative literary imaginations in our by late twentieth century interests and beliefs’, as language’. Stewart 1997:87 urges, and I would only ask with As I write in a year that marks a half century of my him that we need to be aware of ‘historical voices engagement with the poem, I have come to realize other than our own, including Spenser’s’. As far as the profound truth of Wallace Stevens’s claim that possible criticism should serve also as a transparent ‘Anyone who has read a long poem day after day glass through which to see what Spenser intended as, for example, The Faerie Queene, knows how the and what he accomplished in ‘Fashioning XII Morall poem comes to possess the reader and how it nat-vertues’. Of course, we cannot assume that under-uralizes him in its own imagination and liberates standing his intention as it is fulfilled in the poem him there’ (1951:50). It has been so for me though, necessarily provides a sufficient reading, but it may I also recognize, not for many critics today whose provide a focus for understanding it. Contemporary engagement with the poem I respect. With Mon-psychological interpretation of the poem’s characters trose 1996:121–22, I am aware that ‘the cultural reads the poem out of focus, and the commendable politics that are currently ascendant within the aca-effort to see the poem embedded in its immediate demic discipline of literary studies call forth condem-sociopolitical context, chiefly Spenser’s relation to nations of Spenser for his racist / misogynist / elitist the Queen, fails to allow that he wrote it ‘to liue with." In Spenser: The Faerie Queene, 40. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315834696-38.

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Conference papers on the topic "Stewart, Harold"

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Proctor, Frederick M., and William P. Shackleford. "Embedded Real-Time Linux for Cable Robot Control." In ASME 2002 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2002/cie-34506.

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Linux is a version of the Unix operating system distributed according to the open source model. Programmers are free to adapt the source code for their purposes, but are required to make their modifications or enhancements available as open source software as well. This model has fostered the widespread adoption of Linux for typical Unix server and workstation roles, and also in more arcane applications such as embedded or real-time computing. Embedded applications typically run in small physical and computing footprints, usually without fragile peripherals like hard disk drives. Special configurations are required to support these limited environments. Real-time applications require guarantees that tasks will execute within their deadlines, something not possible in general with the normal Linux scheduler. Real-time extensions to Linux enable deterministic scheduling, at task periods at tens of microseconds. This paper describes embedded and real-time Linux, and an application for distributed control of a Stewart Platform cable robot. Special Linux configuration requirements are detailed, and the architecture for teleoperated control of the cable robot is presented, with emphasis on the resolved-rate control of the suspended platform.
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