282,703 research outputs found

    The nomenclature of the lycophyte species Phlegmariurus mingcheensis Ching (Huperziaceae)

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    In 1982, Ren Chang Ching twice described the same lycophyte species under the names Lycopodium mingcheense (published in April; the original "minchegense" spelling being a correctable error) and Phlegmariurus mingcheensis Ching (published in May). Phlegmariurus mingcheensis cannot be taken as a combination based on Lycopodium mingcheense because in the original publication a different holotype was indicated and the name Lycopodium mingcheense was not mentioned. The correct names for this species in Huperzia, Lycopodium, and Phlegmariurus are Huperzia mingcheensis (Ching) Holub (basionym: Phlegmariurus mingcheensis), Lycopodium mingcheense Ching, and Phlegmariurus mingcheensis Ching, respectively. The recent lectotypification of the name Lycopodium mingcheense using P.S. Chiu 2069 (PE) was redundant since this specimen was clearly indicated as the holotype in Ching's original publication. The recent new name Phlegmariurus mingjoui X.C. Zhang is an illegitimate superfluous name

    Lamnostoma taiwanense Chiu, Huang & Shao in Chiu, Huang, Shao & Chen 2018

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    * Lamnostoma taiwanense Chiu, Huang & Shao, this volume Lamnostoma taiwanense Chiu, Huang & Shao in Chiu, Huang, Shao & Chen, 2018: this volume (type locality: Juan-wei, Yilan, northeastern Taiwan). Remarks. Newly described in Taiwan by Chiu et al. (2018); only found in river mouths of northeastern Taiwan.Published as part of Ho, Hsuan-Ching, Smith, David G., Tighe, Kenneth A., Hibino, Yusuke & Mccosker, John E., 2018, Checklist of eels of Taiwan (orders Anguilliformes and Saccopharyngiformes): An update, pp. 5-17 in Zootaxa 4454 (1) on page 14, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4454.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/144668

    Chiu Productions

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    For my culminating experience, I put together Chiu Productionshttps://remix.berklee.edu/graduate-studies-global-entertainment-business/1057/thumbnail.jp

    A study of the Hong Kong dollar money market funds and their impacts on Hong Kong's financial system.

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    by Chiu Ching-On Paul, Wong Lit-Chor Alexis.Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1987.Bibliography: leaves 140-141

    Resume of Ching-Sang Chiu, 1989

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    Naval Postgraduate School Faculty Resum

    The <i>I Ching</i> as a Potential Jungian Application: History and Practice

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    AbstractSwiss psychiatrist Carl Jung had a lifelong interest in the I Ching after discovering it in 1919. Jung’s interest in the I Ching is arguably more practical than purely theoretical or intellectual, and references to I Ching divination appear frequently in his various publications, seminars, letters and clinical practice records. After a few observations on the history of the study of the I Ching in China, the author categorizes Jung’s three uses of the I Ching as physical use (to preview future potentials of outer reality), psychological use (to reveal one’s psychological state), and psychical approach (to engage with the divine through “神”[“shen”, spiritual agencies]). Finally, the author discusses the current Jungian engagement by demonstrating clinical cases in contemporary times. Some Jungian analysts practise I Ching divination to obtain insights into the physical and psychological state of therapeutic relationships and for personal development. This paper is a historical and critical engagement of the Jungian practice of I Ching divination.</jats:p

    The Image of the Change: From the I Ching to the Evolution of Chaos

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    This article is dedicated to artistic explorations of change, with the I Ching (The Book of Changes) as a stepping stone. The author uses modern mathematics to identify the basic types of change in the I Ching codes and to build a bottom-up I Ching systemization with an associated aesthetic principle. Moreover, the author introduces other (chaotic) types of change to sparsely fill the gap between the basic I Ching orders and the ultimate Change, allowing artistic speculation reflecting the evolution of many types of change by means of digital simulations, 3D volumetric display, etc

    The Relationship Between Pretend Play and Playfulness in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder

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    Abstract Date Presented 3/30/2017 This study explored the relationship between pretend play and playfulness in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Our findings suggest that it is important to assist children with ASD to engage in pretend play, for doing so could promote their internal experience of playfulness. Primary Author and Speaker: Hsiu-Man Chiu Additional Authors and Speakers: Kuan-Lin Chen Contributing Authors: Ya-Chen Lee, Cheng-Te Chen, Chien-Ho Lin, Yu-Ching Lin</jats:p

    Tuhu (杜甫) and the Kuan Wu Liang Shou Ching (観無量壽經)

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    In his Study on Tuhu (『杜甫の研究』) Kurokawa Yoichi stressed that Tuhu, the great Chinese poet, was a religious person and had been seeking after the Buddhist truth from the early stage of his life. Kurokawa also showed that it was in Tuhu's Chiu jin kuei fu yung huai i pai yun (秋日・虁布詠懐・一百韻) that Tuhu showed his highest desire to seek the truth. This work revealed the close connection between Tuhu and the Zen sect of Buddhism. Before composing the Chiu jin kuei fu yung huai I pai yun, Tuhu in his stay at Pieh li pi shu shiu hsing sou so chu created a verse entitled 別李秘書始興寺別居, which includes the phrase 「重ねて聞く西方の観経」. In other texts he calls the Kuan ching in different ways such as 止観経 and 正観経, while the text 『杜工部集』 from the Song 宋 period has 之観経. Observing this difference, the author regards 之観経 to be the original expression and shows that 之観経 is the abbreviated form of 仏説観無量寿経. The Kuan ching greatly influenced the spread of Pure Land Buddhism and was well known at that time. Tuhu's religious attitude has often been understood from the standpoint of Zen Buddhism. The author, however, tried to show in this article that Tuhu had a keen religious interest in the Kuan ching which manifests itself in Pure Land thought
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