1,725,932 research outputs found

    Poems and lyric poetry by Pavel Vasilyev

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    The author of the article gives a sketch of the livelihood of Pavel Vasilyev and locates his position in the poetical art in the context of literature situation of 1920-1930s, examines the artistic peculiarity of the poetic system. He also pays considerable attention to poem as one of the leading genres of P. Vasilyev

    Poems and lyric poetry by Pavel Vasilyev

    No full text
    The author of the article gives a sketch of the livelihood of Pavel Vasilyev and locates his position in the poetical art in the context of literature situation of 1920-1930s, examines the artistic peculiarity of the poetic system. He also pays considerable attention to poem as one of the leading genres of P. Vasilyev

    Universal scaling functions of critical Casimir forces obtained by Monte Carlo simulations

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    Effective Casimir forces induced by thermal fluctuations in the vicinity of bulk critical points are studied by means of Monte Carlo simulations in three-dimensional systems for film geometries and within the experimentally relevant Ising and XY universality classes. Several surface universality classes of the confining surfaces are considered, some of which are relevant for recent experiments. An approach introduced previously [O. Vasilyev , EPL 80, 60009 (2007)], based inter alia on an integration scheme of free-energy differences, is utilized to compute the universal scaling functions of the critical Casimir forces in the critical range of temperatures above and below the bulk critical temperature. The resulting predictions are compared with corresponding experimental data for wetting films of fluids and with available theoretical results

    Master of philosophy, Vasiliy Vasilyev, and his mission to Beijing (1840-1850)

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    The major developments in the life of Vasiliy P. Vasilyev (Wassiljew) (1818-1900), a Russian academician-sinologist, as well as his works are quite familiar. However, further efforts need to be taken to research new archival documents concerning obscure pages of his life. In keeping with this, the authors of the article describe, for the first time in Russian historiography, Vasilyev's stint in Beijing from 1840 to 1850. He arrived there as a scholar of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission. This part of Vasilyev's life and scholarly work was covered due to some newly found documents in the National Archives of Tatarstan. After he defended his dissertation on the Philosophy of Mongolian Buddhism in 1840, Vasilyev, Master of Philosophy, was invited to work at an opening Chair of the Tibetan language, Kazan University. Aiming to implement its intention, the Kazan University sent him to Beijing, with the support from the Ministry of Public Education and Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Apart from studying Tibetan and Sanskrit, he was charged with the difficult task to purchase books for the Academy of Sciences and the Kazan University, including Chinese and Manchurian works in history and geography. His work in Beijing was made harder due to a number of circumstances, particularly, the opposition between the clerical and secular members of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Beijing. The conflict involving Vasilyev lasted throughout 1842-1844, which made him insist on returning to Russia. Vasilyev's detailed reports and other documents which possess certain assessments of his activities allow to judge how differently the top officials from the Ministry of Public Education and his own senior colleagues, academics from the Kazan University, appraised the scholarly outcome of his mission. The academic and research plans set before Vasilyev were fulfilled and overfulfilled by the young researcher. Among other things, he gathered a large collection of resources on the history of Buddhism in Central Asia and Far East

    Master of philosophy, Vasiliy Vasilyev, and his mission to Beijing (1840-1850)

    No full text
    The major developments in the life of Vasiliy P. Vasilyev (Wassiljew) (1818-1900), a Russian academician-sinologist, as well as his works are quite familiar. However, further efforts need to be taken to research new archival documents concerning obscure pages of his life. In keeping with this, the authors of the article describe, for the first time in Russian historiography, Vasilyev's stint in Beijing from 1840 to 1850. He arrived there as a scholar of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission. This part of Vasilyev's life and scholarly work was covered due to some newly found documents in the National Archives of Tatarstan. After he defended his dissertation on the Philosophy of Mongolian Buddhism in 1840, Vasilyev, Master of Philosophy, was invited to work at an opening Chair of the Tibetan language, Kazan University. Aiming to implement its intention, the Kazan University sent him to Beijing, with the support from the Ministry of Public Education and Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Apart from studying Tibetan and Sanskrit, he was charged with the difficult task to purchase books for the Academy of Sciences and the Kazan University, including Chinese and Manchurian works in history and geography. His work in Beijing was made harder due to a number of circumstances, particularly, the opposition between the clerical and secular members of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Beijing. The conflict involving Vasilyev lasted throughout 1842-1844, which made him insist on returning to Russia. Vasilyev's detailed reports and other documents which possess certain assessments of his activities allow to judge how differently the top officials from the Ministry of Public Education and his own senior colleagues, academics from the Kazan University, appraised the scholarly outcome of his mission. The academic and research plans set before Vasilyev were fulfilled and overfulfilled by the young researcher. Among other things, he gathered a large collection of resources on the history of Buddhism in Central Asia and Far East

    «Diamonds and Mirages»

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    Vadim Valeryevich Vasilyev is Doctor of Philosophy Sciences, Professor, Corresponding Member of Russian Academy of Sciences, and cofounder and member of the Academic Council of the Moscow Center for Consciousness Research at the Philosophy Department of the Lomonosov Moscow State University. The talk is dedicated to the specifics of analytic philosophy in Russia

    Poetic Syntax as a Means of Writer’s Idiostyle (by the example of S.S. Vasilyev-Borogonsky works)

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    The article is devoted to the study of writer’s individual style. It is carried out using linguostylistic analysis of the linguistic as well as stylistic and textual features typical for his works. In total, over 200 poems by Sergei Vasilyev-Borogonsky were analyzed, including verses and poems. Linguistic and stylistic as well as textual facts are based on 500 lines of poetry. As a result of the study, it was revealed that the idiostyle of the writer is mainly manifested at the syntactic level. At this level, the syntactic and semantic-syntactic means are distinguished, represented by stylistic figures and syntactic constructions. The most common syntactic means are the types of repetitions that create the rhythmic organization of the poetic text (anaphora, epiphora) and some syntactic constructions that testify to folklorism and high pathos of the stylistics of works (syntactic parallelism, rhetorical questions, addresses and exclamations). Both semantic and syntactic means are found in the continuous connection of repetitions structure with their semantics (antitheses, gradations and refrains). By means of poetic syntax, S.S. Vasilyev-Borogonsky creates artistic images, reveals the themes and ideological intentions of his works, and creates author’s lyrical digressions. They also serve as a means of creating the composition and rhythm of a poetic text. The novelty of this study results from the fact that the language and style of the Yakut poet and publicist, Sergei Vasilyev-Borogonsky, has not yet become an object of special study

    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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