35 research outputs found
Au sujet de la myoglobinurie paroxystique du cheval
Vicard André, Staron Th. Au sujet de la myoglobinurie paroxystique du cheval. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 127 n°1, 1974. pp. 25-28
Contribution à l'étude de la pathogénie et du traitement de la myoglobinurie paroxystique du cheval
Staron Th., Vicard André. Contribution à l'étude de la pathogénie et du traitement de la myoglobinurie paroxystique du cheval. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 111 n°7, 1958. pp. 323-324
L’Huile de Colza dans l’alimentation murine. Quelques considérations sur le métabolisme lipidique
Staron Th., Moreau J.-P., Estève C., Robino F., Kollmann A., Lampaert R. L’Huile de Colza dans l’alimentation murine. Quelques considérations sur le métabolisme lipidique. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 125 n°4, 1972. pp. 215-226
Action antifongique du thiabendazole. Son efficacité providentielle contre le pyphomyces chartaron, agent causal d'une dermite faciale enzootique du monde en Nouvelle-Zélande
Staron T., Vicard André. Action antifongique du thiabendazole. Son efficacité providentielle contre le pyphomyces chartaron, agent causal d'une dermite faciale enzootique du monde en Nouvelle-Zélande. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 121 n°7, 1968. pp. 309-310
Automated Sample Ratio Mismatch (SRM) Detection and Analysis
Background: Sample Ratio Mismatch (SRM) checks can help detect data quality issues in online experimentation [3]. Not all experimentation platforms provide these checks as part of their solution. Users of these platforms must therefore manually check for SRM, or rely on additional processes—such as checklists [2]—or automation. Objective: To ensure reliable and early detection of SRM, we wanted to automate the detection and analysis of SRM in experiments running on third-party experimentation platforms. Method: A set of Looker dashboards were built to facilitate self-serve SRM detection and root cause analysis. In addition, we added email and chat based alerting to pro-actively inform experimenters of SRM and guide them towards these dashboards when needed. Results: Several cases of SRM have been detected and experimenters have been warned. Bad decisions based on flawed data were avoided. We provide one such example as an illustration. Conclusions: SRM checks are relatively straightforward to automate and can be useful for data quality monitoring even for companies who rely on third-party experimentation platforms. Pro-active alerting—rather than passive reporting—can reduce time to detection and help non-experts avoid making decisions based on biased data.Software Engineerin
Rachilde, homme de lettres. Gender and exclusion
At a time when the voice of feminists is getting stronger and the number of women writers is increasing, Rachilde’s position seems ambiguous, if not paradoxical. A woman writer herself, an author of several novels appreciated by the public, a literary critic at the Mercure de France, she could become an important figure in the feminist movement. And yet she systematically flouts its claims; she also remains very critical of the women’s writing, of which she refuses to be a part. Hence, it seems interesting to look for the causes of such an attitude. The scope of the subject and, even more, the contradictory statements of Rachilde herself, will at most allow us to formulate some hypotheses. However, we shall examine more closely the problem of Rachilde’s belonging to one or more minorities
Foreword
This multi-author publication collects works of specialists from many scientific fields (including literary studies, cultural studies, sociology, history and more), representing various research centers (from Poland, France, Canada, the Czech Republic, and Saudi Arabia). Although this book’s main purpose isn’t to deal with myths regarding minorities in today’s society, it does provide a deeper understanding of minority-majority relations, based on solid historical and theoretical arguments
A personal perspective on organisations : head, heart and soul
Through a heuristics approach, the author began an exploration of the meaning, both intellectually and emotionally, of personal experiences in organisations. Change and learning was focused on, and how continual rounds of restructuring impacted on the writer as a participant/observer. The lack of spirituality in organisations, how we hide our hearts and souls and how we seek certainty using static models, theories and plans became underlying themes through the work. The findings of the research include outputs such as the development of an organisational model of complexity, but more so outcomes that were the intuitive insights that were gained during the research proces
Author may not have any open access publications deposited in the University of Lodz Repository. The list of publications associated with the author's ORCID profile can be viewed at: https://orcid.org/ or by clicking on the ORCID icon.
Deciphering the Gift of Love: Reading Augustine's De Trinitate through Jean-Luc Marion
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Systematic Theology. The Catholic University of AmericaThis dissertation can be viewed by CUA users only.The objective of this dissertation is to develop a new appreciation for how the gift of love traverses the distance between the intended signification of the Trinity and the impossibility--for us--of that very signification.Part I explores the promise of recent scholarship (e.g. that of L. Gioia, M. Hanby, P. Kolbet, L. Ayres) and interprets De Trinitate not as a metaphysical modeling of the Trinity in se, but as an rational study of the limits of theological signification. When read in light of Augustine's understanding of the relationship between hermeneutics and conversion, and emphasizing the missions of the Son and Spirit, De Trinitate offers an exposition of the soteriological transformation of the human person toward remembering, understanding, and loving God.Part II considers the gift of love in the phenomenology of Jean-Luc Marion. Supported by his concept of the saturated phenomenon, Marion offers a rigorous description of the gift of love as advancing according to its own reason and approaching not a conceptual abstraction, but a particular beloved. This gift divests the ego of its self-groundedness, inviting instead a understanding of the subject that is responsive to givenness and love, a subject that is gifted and devoted: the adonné. This rationality of love illuminates the key tension in Marion's work as one between the indetermination and limits of phenomenology and the particularity and excess demanded by the phenomenon of love.Part III is the site of the convergence of Marion's phenomneology with Augustine's own understanding of love's significance to trinitarian revelation. Marion's erotic reduction offers to De Trinitate an iconic description of the love by which God's self-revelation is mediated to us. The responsive love of the adonné sharpens Augustine's concept of the human being as made to the image of God and marks the revelation of the Trinity in the making possible what would otherwise be impossible for us: our advance in love. In turn, De Trinitate provides for Marion the revealed name by which God might be called upon in and through the particularity of love: the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.Made available in DSpace on 2013-06-25T14:59:15Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
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