1,357,229 research outputs found

    Voorlichtingsrapportage in het arrondissement Assen

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    In dit rapport wordt verslag gedaan van een inventariserend onderzoek naar het functioneren van de voorlichtingsrapportage in het arrondissement Assen. Het materiaal is vooral verzameld in vraaggesprekken met een aantal reclasseringsmedewerkers, rechters, Officieren van Justitie en advocaten in het arrondissement

    Giudici's 'ontwerp tot vergrooting der stadt Assen'

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    In 1809 the village of Assen was granted the rank of town by king Louis Napoleon. The architect Jan Giudici (1746-1819) was commissioned to make an urban-development plan for Assen. All this was part of Louis's aspirations to give an economic incentive to the regions in the country which were lagging behind. Assen was to become a junction of roads and waterways. In the town plan designed by Giudici hardly anything of the old village of Assen was left. Important elements in the plan were the central square, on which major buildings were situated, the harbour and the royal palace which had been planned outside of the town. The greater part of the town was to be composed of a pattern of rectangular rows of houses, to be expanded if the building urge of the citizens should give rise to it. A few elements of Giudici's plan show similarities to the ideas of the French theoretician J.N.L. Durand, It is quite conceivable that Giudici knew Durand's books through the court architect of Louis Napoleon, J.T. Thibault (1757-1826). Giudici's ground plan of the royal palace reminds one of the designs by the Frenchman C.N. Ledoux (1736-1806). The plans for Assen were very ambitious and were never to be realized

    Assen Ignatov: The Theomachist and the God-Seeker

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    Assen Ignatov: The Theomachist and the God-Seeker This article aims to trace the evolution of Assen Ignatov’s attitude towards religion and to outline the main features of this change – from an intellectual whose worldview was initially Marxist to being a dissident philosopher known also for his respect for Christianity. The first part of the study is devoted to the early professional stages of Assen Ignatov’s life (as a lecturer at Sofia University), when he attacked the “Bourgeois” philosophy for its affinity to religion. Gradually, these initial attitudes were seriously shaken, partly because he was one of the very few erudite thinkers in Bulgaria during the “socialist” period who witnessed the dogmatism and narrow interests of the Party philosophers. In addition, his escape to Western Europe was a radical break with the past, specifically with regard to religion. Assen Ignatov interpreted communism as a pseudo-religion from the viewpoint of Christian personalism and existentialism. The author concludes that the radical change of Ignatov’s attitude towards religion shows the measure of his general change of worldview.   Asen Ignatow – w walce przeciw Bogu i w poszukiwaniu Boga Celem artykułu jest prześledzenie ewolucji stosunku do religii Asena Ignatowa: od intelektualisty, którego światopogląd był początkowo marksistowski, do filozofa-dysydenta, znanego również z jego szacunku dla chrześcijaństwa. W pierwszej części zaprezentowane są początkowe etapy w jego życiu zawodowym, kiedy jako wykładowca na Uniwersytecie w Sofii atakował filozofię burżuazyjną z powodu jej pokrewieństwa z religią. Stopniowo postawy te uległy poważnemu zachwianiu (również dlatego, że był on jednym z niewielu bardzo dobrze wykształconych myślicieli w Bułgarii okresu „socjalistycznego”, który obserwował dogmatyzm i wąskie interesy partyjnych filozofów), a jego ucieczka do Europy Zachodniej oznaczała zerwanie z przeszłością, szczególnie w odniesieniu do religii. Asen Ignatow interpretował komunizm jako pseudoreligię z punktu widzenia chrześcijańskiego personalizmu i egzystencjalizmu. Autorka konkluduje, że radykalny zwrot w postawie Ignatowa wobec religii jest wyrazem głębszych zmian o charakterze światopoglądowym

    Public Outreach in the Drents Museum in Assen (NL)

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    The author of this article works as a museum teacher at the educational department of the Drents Museum and is an active member of the living history group Byfrost. Part of my job as museum teacher at the Drents Museum in Assen is attending to the all the groups that visit our museum. This includes the great number of children, both elementary school and high school students, that visit our museum. A lot of children think of a museum as a boring place where there is nothing to do but look at old paintings. Many only go to the museum if their parents or teachers make them go

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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