191,338 research outputs found
Godwin, G P, 401845
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/387935Surname: GODWIN. Given Name(s) or Initials: G P. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 401845. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 51528.210705
Item: [2016.0049.20228] "Godwin, G P, 401845
Program and Data for 'Cat and Mouse Search' paper
Hillstrom, Anne P., Segabinazi, Joice D., Godwin, Hayward J., Liversedge, Simon P. and Benson, Valerie (2017) Cat and mouse search: the influence of scene and object analysis on eye movements when targets change locations during search. Philosophical Transactions of The Royal Society B Biological Sciences, 372, (1714), 1-9. (doi:10.1098/rstb.2016.0106 ). (PMID:28044017). The programme was written using Experiment Builder, software from SR-Research Ltd.</span
The Godwinian psychology of hope and its legacy in the work of Percy Shelley and Mary Shelley
This thesis examines the work of William Godwin in terms of a conjunction between secular Enlightenment optimism and the psychology of Christian hope. This conjunction produced his particular inflection of human perfectibility, where the idea of liberal improvement in society becomes a semi-fictional narrative of faith. This political philosophy is developed alongside a Dissenting literary theory that
understands literature as discussion, locating the means of improvement in the written text's influence over the mind of the reader. Godwin's interest in altering the mindset
of his readership as a means of political improvement sees him emphasise the idea of hope in his novels, seeking to sustain the progressive project through literature in the
face of the rise of anti-Jacobinism and Malthusian political economy in the late 1790s.
Percy Shelley defined his literary project as an attempt to revive liberal hope in the wake of the `failure' of the French Revolution, a definition initiated by his reading of
Godwin. His reaction against Wordsworthian conservatism is framed in the terms of Godwinian psychology. Percy Shelley's theories on the poet as `legislator' emerge
from his encounter with Godwin's ideas on reader-response as the vehicle of improvement. However, there is also a reaction against Godwinian hope, which sees Percy Shelley explore a countervailing anti-humanist disappointment.
A key theme of Mary Shelley's novels is the persistence of Godwinian hope. She discusses Godwinian ideas on benevolence and the absence of innate disposition to
crime as a means of reviving the progressive project. While Mary Shelley explores the collapse of liberal optimism, she makes a paradoxical attempt to sustain Godwinian hope through a disappointed lament for its demise.
The thesis contends that the work of these authors constituted a coherent debate on the liberal Enlightenment, forming an important presence in British literary culture
from 1793 up to the verge of the first Reform Bill in 1832
John Godwin, Reading Catullus, 2008
Tordeur Pol. John Godwin, Reading Catullus, 2008. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 78, 2009. p. 322
Landouria Godwin-Austen 1918
<i>Landouria</i> Godwin-Austen, 1918 <p> <b>Type species.</b> <i>Helix huttonii</i> L. Pfeiffer, 1842, by original designation.</p>Published as part of <i>Páll-Gergely, Barna, Hunyadi, András & Hausdorf, Bernhard, 2020, A new species of Landouria Godwin-Austen, 1918 (Gastropoda: Stylommatophora: Camaenidae) from Myanmar, pp. 379-386 in Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 68</i> on page 380, DOI: 10.26107/RBZ-2020-0054, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5344486">http://zenodo.org/record/5344486</a>
Javelin probe, "P-ALPHA" experiment featuring Bob Eather (Post-Doc) and Jim Godwin (engineer, looking left)
Black and white photograph of Bob Eather and Jim Godwin (looking left) working on the Javelin probe (also called Argo D-4), "P-ALPHA" experiment
Simplified model of value change based on Bardi & Godwin.
Simplified model of value change based on Bardi & Godwin.</p
Pseudopomatias siyomensis Godwin-Austen 1917
Pseudopomatias siyomensis Godwin-Austen, 1917 Fig. 10 C Pseudopomatias siyomensis Godwin-Austen, 1917: p. 578, Figs 5 a, 6 c. Pseudopomatias siyomensis — Gude 1921, pp 160–161. Diagnosis. A large species with strong, widely-spaced ribs and well-developed peristome consisting of two readily distinguishable circles. Description. The only known shell is corroded, the shell colour and the sculpture of the protoconch could not be observed; shell slender turriform; whorls 9 in number and they are moderately bulging, separated by rather deep suture; teleoconch finely, regularly ribbed even behind the aperture, where the spaces between the ribs are wider than on the previous whorls; ribs seem to be stronger behind the aperture; aperture rounded with not angled columellar-parietal transition and slightly angled parietal-palatal transition; peristome very much thickened and slightly reflexed; it consists of a slimmer, protruding inner and a wider outer circle. Measurements (in mm). H: 12.2, D: 4.9 (n= 1). Differential diagnosis. P. siyomensis is larger than P. himalayae, P. abletti n. sp. and P. harl i n. sp. Moreover, P. himalayae has a wider shell and more bulging whorls, and its aperture is oblique in lateral view; P. abletti n. sp. has "reversed oblique", rather triangular aperture; P. ha r l i n. sp. has turriform shell shape, lower ribs and a thinner apertural lip, which is not divided into two separated circles. P. rei schuetzi n. sp. is slightly more slender, has a thinner apertural rim and almost smooth neck area (last half of whorl). Type material. Siyom, Abor Hills, leg. Captain Oakes, coll. Godwin-Austen, NHMUK 3406.03. 7.1. (holotype). Distribution. P. siyomensis is known from the type locality only. See also Fig. 2 and Table 3.Published as part of Páll-Gergely, Barna, Fehér, Zoltán, Hunyadi, András & Asami, Takahiro, 2015, Revision of the genus Pseudopomatias and its relatives (Gastropoda: Cyclophoroidea: Pupinidae), pp. 1-49 in Zootaxa 3937 (1) on pages 28-29, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3937.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23713
Nuestro clima futuro
Mensaje oficial del Secretario General de la O.M.M., profesor Godwin O.P. Obasi, con motivo del Día Meteorológico Mundial de 200
- …
