50,345 research outputs found
Topping, Daniel Brian interview
Oral history interview of Dr. Daniel Topping. Interview conducted by Adam Rock at the University of Central Florida Medical School in Orlando, Florida on 03/07/2018
Dataset for Mapping the complete reaction coordinate of a complex chemical reaction
Data associated with paper:
Mapping the complete reaction path of a complex photochemical reaction. / Smith, Adam D.; Warne, Emily M.; Bellshaw, Darren; Horke, Daniel; Tudorovskya, Maria; Springate, Emma; Jones, Alfred; Cacho, Cephise; Chapman, Richard T.; Kirrander, Adam; Minns, Russell S.
In: Physical Review Letters, 120(18), 1-6. [183003].
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.183003</span
Competing models of socially constructed economic man : differentiating Defoe's Crusoe from the Robinson of neoclassical economics
Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe has seldom been read as an explicitly political text. When it has, it appears that the central character was designed to warn the early eighteenth-century reader against political challenges to the existing economic order. Insofar as Defoe’s Crusoe stands for "economic man", he is a reflection of historically-produced assumptions about the need for social conformity, not the embodiment of any genuinely essential economic characteristics. This insight is used to compare Defoe’s conception of economic man with that of the neoclassical Robinson Crusoe economy. On the most important of the ostensibly generic principles espoused by neoclassical theorists, their "Robinson" has no parallels with Defoe’s Crusoe. Despite the shared name, two quite distinct social constructions serve two equally distinct pedagogical purposes. Defoe’s Crusoe extols the virtues of passive middle-class sobriety for effective social organisation; the neoclassical Robinson champions the establishment of markets for the sake of productive efficiency
NA2745 Daniel Dixon, interviewed by Adam Lee Cilli
NA2745 Daniel Dixon, interviewed by Adam Lee Cilli, March 27, 2014, in his office in Alumni Hall at the University of Maine, Orono. Dixon talks about his experiences with the Climate Change Institute as a graduate student; conducting research in Antarctica; his role as Sustainability Coordinator at UMaine; and the contributions of the CCI, specifically the discovery of abrupt climate change.
Text: 14 pp. transcript
Recording: mfc_na2745_audio001 64 minutes
Photo provided by the Climate Change Institute.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf192/1004/thumbnail.jp
NA4007 Daniel Sandweiss, interviewed by Adam Lee Cilli
NA4007 Daniel Sandweiss, interviewed by Adam Lee Cilli, September 27, 2013, in his office in Stodder Hall at the University of Maine, Orono. Sandweiss talks about the beginnings of his career in archaeology; conducting research in South America; working with Thor Heyerdahl; his beginnings at UMaine and the Climate Change Institute; his work’s contribution to the CCI; changes in the CCI over the years; and his role as Dean of the Graduate School.
Text: 11 pp. transcript
Recording: mfc_na4007_audio001 68 minuteshttps://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf192/1029/thumbnail.jp
Violin Sonatas with Adam Chalabi
Mozart- Sonata for Piano and Violin in G, K.379 Vaughan Williams- The Lark Ascending Elgar- Violin Sonata op.8
Reynaud (Jean-Daniel) - Les syndicats en France
Adam Gérard. Reynaud (Jean-Daniel) - Les syndicats en France. In: Revue française de science politique, 14ᵉ année, n°6, 1964. pp. 1198-1199
Unfolding the Allegory behind Market Communication and Social Error and Correction
One aspect of the present paper is to draw out the Adam Smith in Friedrich Hayek. I suggest that common economic talk of market communication, market error and correction, and policy error and correction invokes a spectatorial being and appeals to our sympathy with such being. Behind such common economic talk, I suggest, are implicit allegories wherein an allegorical figure runs a system of superior knowledge, communication, and voluntary cooperation. Theoretical discussions of social error invoke the notion of agent error applied to the allegorical being. Similarly, theoretical talk of social correction invokes the notion of agent correction applied to the allegorical being. The allegory behind such talk is vital and necessary because without it the talk of social or market communication, error, and correction cannot be sustained. Unfolding the allegory clarifies the meaning, limitations, and value of such talk. Making what had been implicit explicit helps economists to avoid overstating their generalizations or making those generalizations sound more precise and accurate than they are. Meanwhile, scholars have pointed out that spectating impartially involves something of a paradox – distant-closeness, or cool-warmth. Concurring, I explore the connections between the features of the allegorical being and the doings of the economic agents. I suggest that the cogency of such theorizing depends on such correspondences, and that they are matters of culture, of both the context within which the theorizing is done and of the context theorized about.Market communication; price system; error; correction; coordination; Adam Smith; Friedrich Hayek; impartial spectator; invisible hand
Report on Meteorological Research March 1, 1935 (m-1)
The object of the report was to elucidate in detail the various features of the research program in meteorology being carried on at the Daniel Guggenheim Airship Institute in Akron, Ohio. Mr. L. J. Fangman, of the U.S. Weather Bureau, was collaborating with the author in carrying out work such as a study of autographic records of the various meteorological elements during frontal passages with a view to the possible prediction of the intensity of the accompanying disturbance as it may affect the operation of aircraft and a study of atmospheric gustiness with a view to finding the dependence between frequency end amplitude of velocity fluctuations and the vertical temperature and velocity gradients
Einige Nachrichten von der Lage und Nahmen, wie auch der hohen Obrigkeit der Stadt Chemnitz, welche in diesen Bogen gesammlet, und E. Hochedlen und Hochweisen Rathe der Churfürstl. Stadt Chemnitz, bey Deroselben erfreulichen Regimentswechsel, d. 8. April. 1742. als seinen Hochgeneigten Gönnern, und Fürnehmen Förderern, nebst einem aufrichtigen Glückwunsch, zu Bezeigung seiner Danckbarkeit, gehorsamst übergeben worden von Adam Daniel Richtern ...
EINIGE NACHRICHTEN VON DER LAGE UND NAHMEN, WIE AUCH DER HOHEN OBRIGKEIT DER STADT CHEMNITZ, WELCHE IN DIESEN BOGEN GESAMMLET, UND E. HOCHEDLEN UND HOCHWEISEN RATHE DER CHURFÜRSTL. STADT CHEMNITZ, BEY DEROSELBEN ERFREULICHEN REGIMENTSWECHSEL, D. 8. APRIL. 1742. ALS SEINEN HOCHGENEIGTEN GÖNNERN, UND FÜRNEHMEN FÖRDERERN, NEBST EINEM AUFRICHTIGEN GLÜCKWUNSCH, ZU BEZEIGUNG SEINER DANCKBARKEIT, GEHORSAMST ÜBERGEBEN WORDEN VON ADAM DANIEL RICHTERN ...
Einige Nachrichten von der Lage und Nahmen, wie auch der hohen Obrigkeit der Stadt Chemnitz, welche in diesen Bogen gesammlet, und E. Hochedlen und Hochweisen Rathe der Churfürstl. Stadt Chemnitz, bey Deroselben erfreulichen Regimentswechsel, d. 8. April. 1742. als seinen Hochgeneigten Gönnern, und Fürnehmen Förderern, nebst einem aufrichtigen Glückwunsch, zu Bezeigung seiner Danckbarkeit, gehorsamst übergeben worden von Adam Daniel Richtern ... (1)
Titelblatt (1)
Widmung (3)
Cap. I. Von dem Nahmen und Lage der Stadt (5)
Cap. II. Von der hohen Obrigkeit der Stadt (23)
Anhang (49
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