1,216 research outputs found
On the Geometry of the Liapunov-Schmidt Procedure
The lectures presented by the author are not reproduced here since that material is available in J. Marsden, Qualitative Methods in Bifurcation Theory, Bull. Am. Math. Soc. 84 (1978), 1125–1148, R. Abraham and J. Marsden, Foundations of Mechanics, Second Edition, Addison Wesley (1978), and in J. Marsden and M. McCracken, The Hopf Bifurcation and its Application
(Why) Are Open Research Practices the Future for the Study of Language Learning?
Preprint and Supplementary Appendix S1 for Marsden & Morgan-Short (2023). (Why) Are Open Research Practices the Future for the Study of Language Learning
Community, equity, and cultural change in open research: A response to open peer commentaries
We thank our esteemed colleagues who provided insightful commentaries on our feature article “(Why) are open research practices the future for the study of Language Learning?” (Marsden & Morgan-Short). Their responses very usefully illustrated and amplified points in our review, provided nuance and extension to some of our ideas, and pushed us to make stronger statements and deeper considerations of some of the facets and consequences of open research practices. Three common and prominent themes seemed to emerge from the responses, which we identify as: Community; Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion; and Changing Culture, and we organize our own response around these themes. We note that some of the issues raised by our generous commentators were addressed in arguments that had originally been included in our submitted manuscript (Marsden & Morgan-Short) but, due to length considerations, had to be moved to its Appendix. That Appendix can be found in the online Supporting Information for the Marsden & Morgan-Short article and is also held on the Open Science Framework (OSF) at https://osf.io/ru5n4. We refer to some of those arguments in our response here
Grammar of the Malayan language, with an introduction and praxis / by William Marsden, F.R.S. author of The Malayan dictionary, and of The history of Sumatra.
Malay (Jawi) script on title page.; Author's signature on half title page.; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2009.Marsdens Malayan gramma
Dora Marsden
Dora MarsdenFeminist, publisher, and author. Marsden trained as a teacher. Her commitment to the suffrage movement led to her founding of The Freewoman in 1911. With its title change to The Egoist in 1914, the review devoted itself more to literature. Under Marsden's editorship, it published A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man in 1914 and 1915, and several episodes from Ulysses in 1919 as well as articles on JJ by Ezra Pound and others. In the 1920s, Marsden became a recluse, devoting herself to writing philosophical works, and in later decades was institutionalized with severe depression. William Brockman</p
sj-docx-1-aas-10.1177_00953997241237531 – Supplemental material for Tightly Bound, Loosely Interpreted: Meta-Governance and Local Institutional Adaptation in the Implementation of the Smart Cities Mission India
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-aas-10.1177_00953997241237531 for Tightly Bound, Loosely Interpreted: Meta-Governance and Local Institutional Adaptation in the Implementation of the Smart Cities Mission India by Greg Marsden, Louise Reardon, Morgan Campbell, Sanjay Gupta and Ashish Verma in Administration & Society</p
Portraits of Mina Loy, Marsden Hartley, and Gertrude Stein, from New York Tribune, November 4, 1923
Caricature portraits of Mina Loy, Marsden Hartley, and Gertrude Stein, by Djuna Barnes, from "Book News and Reviews," New York Tribune, circa November 4, 1923. Caption reads: "Three American literary expatriates in Paris-- Mina Loy, the poet author of 'Luna Benamur'; Marsden Hartley, author of 'Ventures in the Arts' and 'Baltasar Fernande'; and Gertrude Stein, spiritual mother of all the modernists, author of 'Tender Buttons,' 'Geography and Plays,' etc. Caricatures by Djuna Barnes, done in Paris.
William Marsden, The Scholar Behind The History of Sumatra
William Marsden, author of The History of Sumatra was above all, a philologist and his linguistic theses were the lynchpin of all his work, including the History. In his 1782 ‘Remarks on Sumatran and cognate Languages’ paper Marsden made the first scholarly identification of the Malayo-Polynesian language family based on sound linguistic principles. It was the first correct identification of any language family still recognised today. Yet, from the mid19th century Marsden’s linguistic achievements have been ignored, underrated, or misappropriated. This is largely because of discontinuities in the transmission of the history of linguistics. Many advances in the field of philology have been misattributed and while Schlegel, Grimm and Bopp have been seen as the ‘fathers of the new philology’, knowledge of British linguistic scholars, especially Marsden, slipped from the West’s communal memory. Despite moves in recent years to reinstate Britain in the received history of philological knowledge, Marsden is still overlooked or damned with faint praise
Spirobranchus giganteus (serpulidae, polychaeta, annelida): neurosecretion, regeneration, larvae rearing, ecology
Spirobranchus sisanteus is a tropical serpulid (Annelida, Polychaeta, Serpulidae, sub-family Serpulines) (Grasse, 1959), of common occurrence throughout the British West Indies. The species has been reported from the Caribbean by Ehlers (1887) and Hullin (1923) and recently vas collected in Jamaica and Barbados by Marsden and desoribed by her in some detail (Marsden, 1900). The author became interested in two aspects of Spirobranchus giganteus: neurosecretion, and the eoological diversity shown by the Barbados population of the serpulid. Neurosecretion in the invertebrates is a relatively new field of research, of which polychaete neurosecretory investigation is a thriving branch. However, there was found in the literature only one reference to neurosecretion in serpulids. Studies to determine whether Spirobranohus sisanteus exhibits neurosecretory activity therefore held great interest for the author.f
Jonathan Edwards a life
"Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) is a towering figure in American history. A controversial theologian and the author of the famous sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, he ignited the momentous Great Awakening of the eighteenth century." "In this biography, Jonathan Edwards emerges as both a great American and a brilliant Christian. George M. Marsden evokes the world of colonial New England in which Edwards was reared - a frontier civilization at the center of a conflict between Native Americans, French Catholics, and English Protestants. Drawing on newly available sources, Marsden demonstrates how these cultural and religious battles shaped Edwards' life and thought. Marsden reveals Edwards as a complex thinker and human being who struggled to reconcile his Puritan heritage with the secular, modern world emerging out of the Enlightenment. In this, Edwards' life anticipated the deep contradictions of our American culture."--BOOK JACKET
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