43 research outputs found
SOME COMMENTS ON EDUCATION FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Author stresses the increasing role of education for entrepreneurship within the formal system of education, as well as the importance of individual’s socialization. In formal education technical, economical and legal disciplines are more important, while other forms of socialization should develop courage, innovative attitude, risk acceptance and creativity. Several dimensions of entrepreneurships, defined in theory, are discussed: economic, managerial, innovative and ethical. For each dimensions there are specific forms of education. While some authors suggest that ethical dimension turns into specific form of social entrepreneurship, there is a need for further education in this field too.dimensions of entrepreneurship, formal education, socialization, social entrepreneurship
The implications of Semantic Web technologies for support of the e-Science process
The vision of e-Science is progressively being realized as diverse computational resources are being used to collect, store, process and integrate scientific data and to execute the scientific method in silico. The myGrid project, which operates in the bioinformatics domain, has so far delivered the basic middleware for second generation in silico biology, which previously was undertaken via adhoc integration of web based resources. The Semantic Web (SW) vision on the other hand is a promise to enable increased mechanization by giving information a well-defined meaning. In myGrid we have applied certain SW technologies for two activities, namely resource discovery and provenance. Here we discuss our experiences in these two cases. We believe that our findings on utility of SW technology to bioinformatics can be generalized to the larger context Life Sciences and even e-Scienc
The implications of Semantic Web technologies for support of the e-Science process
The vision of e-Science is progressively being realized as diverse computational resources are being used to collect, store, process and integrate scientific data and to execute the scientific method in silico. The myGrid project, which operates in the bioinformatics domain, has so far delivered the basic middleware for second generation in silico biology, which previously was undertaken via adhoc integration of web based resources. The Semantic Web (SW) vision on the other hand is a promise to enable increased mechanization by giving information a well-defined meaning. In myGrid we have applied certain SW technologies for two activities, namely resource discovery and provenance. Here we discuss our experiences in these two cases. We believe that our findings on utility of SW technology to bioinformatics can be generalized to the larger context Life Sciences and even e-Scienc
The implications of Semantic Web technologies for support of the e-Science process
The vision of e-Science is progressively being realized as diverse computational resources are being used to collect, store, process and integrate scientific data and to execute the scientific method in silico. The myGrid project, which operates in the bioinformatics domain, has so far delivered the basic middleware for second generation in silico biology, which previously was undertaken via adhoc integration of web based resources. The Semantic Web (SW) vision on the other hand is a promise to enable increased mechanization by giving information a well-defined meaning. In myGrid we have applied certain SW technologies for two activities, namely resource discovery and provenance. Here we discuss our experiences in these two cases. We believe that our findings on utility of SW technology to bioinformatics can be generalized to the larger context Life Sciences and even e-Scienc
The implications of Semantic Web technologies for support of the e-Science process
The vision of e-Science is progressively being realized as diverse computational resources are being used to collect, store, process and integrate scientific data and to execute the scientific method in silico. The myGrid project, which operates in the bioinformatics domain, has so far delivered the basic middleware for second generation in silico biology, which previously was undertaken via adhoc integration of web based resources. The Semantic Web (SW) vision on the other hand is a promise to enable increased mechanization by giving information a well-defined meaning. In myGrid we have applied certain SW technologies for two activities, namely resource discovery and provenance. Here we discuss our experiences in these two cases. We believe that our findings on utility of SW technology to bioinformatics can be generalized to the larger context Life Sciences and even e-Scienc
Pertanggungjawaban Direksi Atas Tindak Pidana Korporasi
Companies are legal entities (rechtspersoon) which are legal subjects other than humans. Just like humans, companies can also be subject to rights and obligations, and like humans too, companies can be held accountable if they are proven to have made mistakes and caused losses, including liability for criminal acts. The company in its business activities certainly does not operate alone. There is a management who becomes the "captain" for the company to carry out its business activities. One of the managements is the Board of Directors. The author tries to discuss the meaning of corporate crime, the responsibility of the directors in the Limited Liability Company Law for an action in running the company and, after that, the author will discuss the responsibility of the directors for a criminal act committed by the company, commonly referred to as a corporate crime
Communication, Communion and Conflict in the Theologies of Gregory Baum and Patrick Granfield
Degree Awarded: Ph.D. Systematic Theology. The Catholic University of AmericaCommunion, communication, and conflict are interrelated realities of great importance for the life and mission of the church. These realities themselves and the relationships between them are in need of theological refinement and assessment, because conflict necessarily affects the church's ability to communicate the message of salvation, and to experience communion.Within a North American and Roman Catholic context, Canadian theologian Gregory Baum (b.1923) and U.S. theologian Patrick Granfield (1930-2014) present ways of perceiving the relationships between these three realities. Through an analysis of the salient dimensions of their respective theologies, this dissertation explores their respective understandings of the church, and identifies ways in which their approaches complement each other, with particular attention paid to the themes of communion, communication and conflict.Baum reflected on these three realities with respect to the church's life and mission to the world, articulating an ecclesial spirituality. Granfield did so primarily with respect to the church's institutional life. Considering their works together offers a means to deepen the church's experience of the mystery of communion via a renewed approach to its communication of the divine promise, while acknowledging conflict as a force which need not be destructive, but which can be harnessed for creative growth.The works of both men show that the implementation of an ecclesiology of communion in the church today requires an awareness that communion is more than simply a theological notion of union with God, that communication in the church is more than speech alone, and that conflict in the church need not be divisive or destructive. Rather, communion in the church must always be concretely expressed in order to be experienced, communication is the sharing of the whole person, and conflict can be attended to in a way which strengthens communion and does not undermine it. By their attention to these three realities in the church, both Baum and Granfield have provided important reflections, not only on how the church lives and functions, but on how it can remain faithful to its divine calling and mission in a continually challenging and complex era
Christoph Demantius - Tympanum militare 1600 a 1615. Edition and analysis
Diploma thesis focuses its attention on life and work composer, poet, music theorist Christoper Demantius and his two collections compositions Tympanum militare (1600, 1615). First part of diploma thesis brings on updated composers biography, evaluation his creation and detection of all contexts with bohemian music culture in age before the Battle of White mountain. In the second part author makes thorough text and music analysis of both collections Tympanum militare. The obtained results includes into wider music-historical context. The part of this thesis is edition of collection from 1600
Assessing cumulative impacts of forest development on the abundance and distribution of furbearers.
Furbearer populations across the central-interior of British Columbia, Canada, are exposed to the cumulative impacts of landscape change, particularly as a result of forest harvesting. I elicited knowledge from furbearer experts to develop habitat models for three furbearer species: fisher (Pekania pennanti), Canada lynx (Lynx Canadensis), and American marten (Martes americana), and applied the models to reference landscapes to quantify changes in habitat availability and quality from 1990 to 2013. Where forest harvesting was extensive, the models predicted substantial declines in habitat for each focal species. I used trapping records and negative binomial count models to investigate the relationship between habitat change and population abundance of lynx and marten. The top-ranked count models identified combinations of trapping effort, trapline area, and habitat availability and quality as having significantly positive effects on capture success. These results demonstrate the utility of expert knowledge for studying cumulative impacts of landscape change on furbearers. --Leaf ii.The original print copy of this thesis may be available here: http://wizard.unbc.ca/record=b200685
