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Philosophy Reviewed
Unpublished Reviews Philosophy Reviewed Wednesday, July 11, 2018 Minds and Machines on Causality and the Brain June 2018, Volume 28, Issue 2, This volume of Minds and Machines is the product of a conference, which seems largely to have determined the contributions. Although purportedly about science, the essays are often principally directed at those philosophers of science who do not understand the banalities of the sciences they write about or are interested in. (Scientists tend to like this kind of stuff, because it is people saying what the scientists know or think. Everyone likes cheerleading.) Only one of the essays, Romeijin and Williamson's, makes any contribution a brain scientist could conceivably use. Romeijin and Williamson, Intervention and Identification in Latent Variable Modeling The authors actually do something. They show that if X, Y, L are binary, and L is the common cause of X, Y, and X, Y are measured and L is unmeasured and there and there are no other causal relations between X and Y, then an exogenous perturbation of the distribution of L allows identification of p(X | L) and p(Y | L) (and of course, p(X,Y | L) for all values of L, without knowledge of the distributions of L before and after perturbation except that the distributions are different. Of course, it isn't true if the relation between X, Y and L is linear, or if besides the common cause, X influences Y, or if L has more than two values, etc. The authors give no empirical example that realizes their result. -
Declared Entries/ Rank Lists
C.F.P.I. Timing & Data - Contractor License Hy-Tek's MEET MANAGER Page 1 NCAA Division I 2011 Outdoor Track & Field Championships -East Preliminary Indiana University - 5/26/2011 to 5/28/2011 Performance List 45 393 Chasidee Lewis-Baker SR Louisiana Tech 11.66 Event 21 Women 100 Meter Dash Prelims 46 637 Ashley Woodford SO Pittsburgh 11.67 Thursday 5/26/2011 - 5:30 PM 47 632 Cambrya Jones JR Pittsburgh 11.67 6 Heats. Advance top 3 from each heat plus next 6 times to qtr. 48 340 Courtney Prentiss SR Jackson State 11.67 Advance top 3 from each qtr. plus next best 3 times to Drake. World: 10.49 7/16/1988 Florence Griffith-Joyner Event 22 Women 200 Meter Dash Prelims American: 10.49 7/16/1988 Florence Griffith Joyner Friday 5/27/2011 - 7:30 PM College Best: 10.78 6/3/1989 Dawn Sowell 6 Heats. Advance top 3 from each heat plus next 6 times to qtr. NCAA Meet: 10.78 6/3/1989 Dawn Sowell Advance top 3 from each qtr. plus next best 3 times to Drake. Facility: 11.04 6/7/1997 Sevatheda Fynes World: 21.34 9/29/1988 Florence Griffith-Joyner NameYr School Seed Time American: 21.34 9/29/1988 Florence Griffith Joyner 1 414 Semoy Hackett JR LSU 10.98 College Best: 22.04 6/2/1989 Dawn Sowell 2 689 Lakya Brookins SR South Carolina 11.02 NCAA Meet: 22.04 6/2/1989 Dawn Sowell 3 413 Kimberlyn Duncan SO LSU 11.02 Facility: 22.61 6/7/1997 Sevatheda Fynes 4 431 Kenyanna Wilson SR LSU 11.11 NameYr School Seed Time 5 715 Chastity Riggien SR Southern Miss. -
Hoosier Geologic Cord
./ Indiana University College of Arts and Sciences-Graduate School HOOSIER GEOLOGIC CORD Vol. II, No. 1 Alumni Newsletter of the Department of Geology Summer 1982 WHAT'S NEW IN THE DEPARTMENT?. INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES Currently,. faculty members of the De From February 19 81 until March 1982., partment of Geology are engaged in more Cornelis Klein had a visiting research international professional activity than associate in Bloomington from Tsukuba ever before in the Department's history. University, Japan. Dr. Takashi Miyano and Abhijit Basu, curator of petrology, pre Dr. Klein did joint research on theoretical sented two invited lectures in India at the aspects of metamorphic iron silicates and Presidency College am Lady Brabourne on diagenetic riebeckite. Abstracts on these College of Calcutta University. He also subjects were given at the GSA annual presented a paper at the annual meeting of meetings in Cincinnati. the Meteoritical Society in Bernt' Switzer In the summer of 1982 Professors Cornelis land, during August 1981. Klein and John Hayes along with Howard Jeremy D. Dunning, assistant professor, Gest (of Biology) will participate in a geo presented two papers at the NATO Advanced logic field excursion in western Australia. Study Institute on Adsorption and Surface Others who will also be part of this trip are: Mobility held in Les Arcs, France, during Professors J. William Schopf of UCLA, September 19 81. ( Continued on next page) A MESSAGE FROM THE ACTING CHAIRMAN To I. U. Geology Alumni and Friends: larger society. Although we think we are During the past year Haydn Murray has performing well, we are never satisfied. -
31 Days of Oscar® 2010 Schedule
31 DAYS OF OSCAR® 2010 SCHEDULE Monday, February 1 6:00 AM Only When I Laugh (’81) (Kevin Bacon, James Coco) 8:15 AM Man of La Mancha (’72) (James Coco, Harry Andrews) 10:30 AM 55 Days at Peking (’63) (Harry Andrews, Flora Robson) 1:30 PM Saratoga Trunk (’45) (Flora Robson, Jerry Austin) 4:00 PM The Adventures of Don Juan (’48) (Jerry Austin, Viveca Lindfors) 6:00 PM The Way We Were (’73) (Viveca Lindfors, Barbra Streisand) 8:00 PM Funny Girl (’68) (Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif) 11:00 PM Lawrence of Arabia (’62) (Omar Sharif, Peter O’Toole) 3:00 AM Becket (’64) (Peter O’Toole, Martita Hunt) 5:30 AM Great Expectations (’46) (Martita Hunt, John Mills) Tuesday, February 2 7:30 AM Tunes of Glory (’60) (John Mills, John Fraser) 9:30 AM The Dam Busters (’55) (John Fraser, Laurence Naismith) 11:30 AM Mogambo (’53) (Laurence Naismith, Clark Gable) 1:30 PM Test Pilot (’38) (Clark Gable, Mary Howard) 3:30 PM Billy the Kid (’41) (Mary Howard, Henry O’Neill) 5:15 PM Mr. Dodd Takes the Air (’37) (Henry O’Neill, Frank McHugh) 6:45 PM One Way Passage (’32) (Frank McHugh, William Powell) 8:00 PM The Thin Man (’34) (William Powell, Myrna Loy) 10:00 PM The Best Years of Our Lives (’46) (Myrna Loy, Fredric March) 1:00 AM Inherit the Wind (’60) (Fredric March, Noah Beery, Jr.) 3:15 AM Sergeant York (’41) (Noah Beery, Jr., Walter Brennan) 5:30 AM These Three (’36) (Walter Brennan, Marcia Mae Jones) Wednesday, February 3 7:15 AM The Champ (’31) (Marcia Mae Jones, Walter Beery) 8:45 AM Viva Villa! (’34) (Walter Beery, Donald Cook) 10:45 AM The Pubic Enemy -
Crime, Law Enforcement, and Punishment
Shirley Papers 48 Research Materials, Crime Series Inventory Box Folder Folder Title Research Materials Crime, Law Enforcement, and Punishment Capital Punishment 152 1 Newspaper clippings, 1951-1988 2 Newspaper clippings, 1891-1938 3 Newspaper clippings, 1990-1993 4 Newspaper clippings, 1994 5 Newspaper clippings, 1995 6 Newspaper clippings, 1996 7 Newspaper clippings, 1997 153 1 Newspaper clippings, 1998 2 Newspaper clippings, 1999 3 Newspaper clippings, 2000 4 Newspaper clippings, 2001-2002 Crime Cases Arizona 154 1 Cochise County 2 Coconino County 3 Gila County 4 Graham County 5-7 Maricopa County 8 Mohave County 9 Navajo County 10 Pima County 11 Pinal County 12 Santa Cruz County 13 Yavapai County 14 Yuma County Arkansas 155 1 Arkansas County 2 Ashley County 3 Baxter County 4 Benton County 5 Boone County 6 Calhoun County 7 Carroll County 8 Clark County 9 Clay County 10 Cleveland County 11 Columbia County 12 Conway County 13 Craighead County 14 Crawford County 15 Crittendon County 16 Cross County 17 Dallas County 18 Faulkner County 19 Franklin County Shirley Papers 49 Research Materials, Crime Series Inventory Box Folder Folder Title 20 Fulton County 21 Garland County 22 Grant County 23 Greene County 24 Hot Springs County 25 Howard County 26 Independence County 27 Izard County 28 Jackson County 29 Jefferson County 30 Johnson County 31 Lafayette County 32 Lincoln County 33 Little River County 34 Logan County 35 Lonoke County 36 Madison County 37 Marion County 156 1 Miller County 2 Mississippi County 3 Monroe County 4 Montgomery County -
Annual Report
COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS ANNUAL REPORT July 1,1996-June 30,1997 Main Office Washington Office The Harold Pratt House 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. 58 East 68th Street, New York, NY 10021 Washington, DC 20036 Tel. (212) 434-9400; Fax (212) 861-1789 Tel. (202) 518-3400; Fax (202) 986-2984 Website www. foreignrela tions. org e-mail publicaffairs@email. cfr. org OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS, 1997-98 Officers Directors Charlayne Hunter-Gault Peter G. Peterson Term Expiring 1998 Frank Savage* Chairman of the Board Peggy Dulany Laura D'Andrea Tyson Maurice R. Greenberg Robert F Erburu Leslie H. Gelb Vice Chairman Karen Elliott House ex officio Leslie H. Gelb Joshua Lederberg President Vincent A. Mai Honorary Officers Michael P Peters Garrick Utley and Directors Emeriti Senior Vice President Term Expiring 1999 Douglas Dillon and Chief Operating Officer Carla A. Hills Caryl R Haskins Alton Frye Robert D. Hormats Grayson Kirk Senior Vice President William J. McDonough Charles McC. Mathias, Jr. Paula J. Dobriansky Theodore C. Sorensen James A. Perkins Vice President, Washington Program George Soros David Rockefeller Gary C. Hufbauer Paul A. Volcker Honorary Chairman Vice President, Director of Studies Robert A. Scalapino Term Expiring 2000 David Kellogg Cyrus R. Vance Jessica R Einhorn Vice President, Communications Glenn E. Watts and Corporate Affairs Louis V Gerstner, Jr. Abraham F. Lowenthal Hanna Holborn Gray Vice President and Maurice R. Greenberg Deputy National Director George J. Mitchell Janice L. Murray Warren B. Rudman Vice President and Treasurer Term Expiring 2001 Karen M. Sughrue Lee Cullum Vice President, Programs Mario L. Baeza and Media Projects Thomas R. -
13 Friday, July 9 9:25 PM
USATF Olympic Trials Missouri’s Involved Athletes, Coaches, & Staff Michelle Moran Fiona Asigbee Women’s Heptathlon Women’s Heptathlon 2000 Big 12 Champion 2003 Big 12 Champion Janae Strickland Women’s Shot Put Christian Cantwell Derrick Peterson Two-time All-American Men’s Shot Put Men’s 800m Run 2004 IAAF World Indoor Champ 1999 NCAA Champion World’s Leading Shot Putter1 American Collegiate Record Holder Tim Dunne Ray Hughes Men’s 800m Run Men’s Steeplechase2 2003 All-American 1997 Big 12 Champion Dr. Rick McGuire Brett Halter Jared Wilmes Tom Lewis Jen Artioli Esteban Missouri Head Coach Missouri Asst. Coach Missouri Asst. Coach Sports Information Sports Medicine Ruvalcaba Heptathlon Coach Throws Coach Men’s Distance Coach Message Therapy 1 Photo by Kirby Lee (Sporting Image) at 2004 IAAF Indoor Championships 2 Photo by Allison Wade (New York R.R.) at 2003 Maine Distance Festival Missouri Track & Field 2004 News & Notes CONTACT INFO: Outdoor Season TOM LEWIS USATF Olympic Team Trials (O) 573-884-9486 (C) 573-424-9447 Sacramento, Calif. (F) 573-882-4720 July 9-18, 2004 [email protected] Inside the Notes... USA Track & Field Olympic Trials #21 MISSOURI PARTICIPANTS Location: Sacramento, Calif. TRACK & FIELD'S OLYMPIC TRIALS BEGIN FRIDAY IN SACRAMENTO Track: A.G. Spanos Sports Complex 3-11 CHRISTIAN CANTWELL Seven current and former Tigers to embark Hosts: Sacramento Sports Commission, 12-14 DERRICK PETERSON on two-week long trip 15 TIMOTHY DUNNE Sacramento State University, and 16-17 MICHELLE MORAN USA Track & Field The U.S. Track and Field Olympic Team Trials will begin Friday, July 9th in Sacramento, Calif., and seven current 18-19 FIONA ASIGBEE Advancement: The top three in each and former Tigers will be in attendance, vying for a spot 20-21 JANAE STRICKLAND event will land a spot Team USA that travels in the 27th Olympic Games to be held in Athens, Greece 22-23 RAY HUGHES to the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, in August. -
Nathanael Greene Papers, List of Contributors
Nathanael Green Papers William L. Clements Library List of Contributors The University of Michigan Finding Aid: https://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsead/umich-wcl-M-337gre?view=text For more details, see the Clements Library card catalog. Abeel, James Blount, Reading Alexander, Nataniel, d.1808 Blount, William, 1749-1800 Anderson, Robert Bostwick, Andrew Andrews, John Bourne, Benjamin, 1755-1808 Andrews, Richard Bowen, Ephraim Anthony, Joseph Bowen, Jabez Armstrong, John Bowen, Oiver Armstrong, James Bowman, Jr. Armstrong, Thomas Boyle, Richard Arnold, Jonathan Bradley, John Arnold, Welcome Branham, Ebenezer Arthur, James Bratton, William Baddeley, John Bren, Chevalier de Bagge, Traugott Brice, Walker, & Craike Bainbridge, Peter Brickell, John Baker, Richard B. Brodhead, Daniel, 1736-1809 Balfour, Nisbet, 1743-1823 Brown, Benjamin Banks, Henry Brown, John, 1736-1803 Banks, John, -1784 Brown, Joseph Barbe-Marbois, Francois Marbois, Brown, W marqis de, 1745-1837 Browne, James Barbee, Thomas Brownfield, Robert Bard, Peter Brownson, Nathan], d.1796 Barnwell, John Bruff, James Barry, Henry, 1750-1822 Buford, Abraham, 1749-1833 Baylor, George, 1752-1784 Burke, Aedanus, 1743-1802 Beall, William [Dent], -1829 Burke, Thomas, c. 1747-1783 Bentley, William Burllinggam, Samuel; Porter, Nathan Bently, Mrs. Barbara Burnet, Ichabod, 1755-1783 Berryhill, John Burnet, William Biddle, Clement, 1740-1814 Burnside, John, d.1781 Bigham, John Buford, Abraham, 1749-1833 Bignall, [Robert]; Hawkins, [Benjamin], Burton, Robert 1754-1816 Burwell, Lewis, -1800 Blaau, -
Beyond Emboldenment Beyond Mark S
Beyond Emboldenment Beyond Mark S. Bell Emboldenment How Acquiring Nuclear Weapons Can Change Foreign Policy What happens to the foreign policies of states when they acquire nuclear weapons? This question has grown in importance as new nuclear powers have emerged and other states have moved closer to joining the nuclear club. Indeed, determining the costs that the United States and others should be prepared to pay to prevent nuclear proliferation hinges on assessing how nuclear weapons affect the be- havior of the states that acquire them and how dangerous those effects are. If states expand their interests in world politics or act more aggressively in the aftermath of nuclear acquisition, preventing nuclear proliferation should be a higher priority than if nuclear weapons do not signiªcantly affect the for- eign policies of the states that acquire them. Crafting deterrence strategies for new nuclear states also requires understanding the foreign policy effects that nuclear weapons are likely to have in a given case.1 Despite its importance, the question of how nuclear weapons affect the for- eign policies of the states that acquire them has not been satisfactorily an- swered. The literature on nuclear weapons has generally examined the effects of nuclear weapons on outcomes other than foreign policy; has focused on the effects of nuclear weapons on the calculations of other states rather than the acquiring state; and has often sought to explore how states with nuclear weapons should behave rather than how they do behave. The literature that has examined the effects of nuclear weapons on foreign policy has tended to conºate effects of nuclear weapons under catch-all terms such as “em- boldenment” while ignoring other potential effects of nuclear acquisition. -
TNSR and Discusses the Joys and Pains of the Review Process, Giving Some Advice for Both Reviewers and Those Submitting Their Work for Review
ISSN 2576-1021 ISSN 2576-1153 Print: Online: Texas National Security Review CLARITY & QUAGMIRE Volume 2 Issue 2 MASTHEAD TABLE OF CONTENTS Staff: The Foundation Publisher: Managing Editor: 04 Reviewing Blues Ryan Evans Megan G. Oprea, PhD Assistant Editor: Francis J. Gavin Autumn Brewington Editor-in-Chief: Associate Editors: William Inboden, PhD Galen Jackson, PhD Van Jackson, PhD Stephen Tankel, PhD The Scholar 10 When Do Leaders Change Course? Theories of Success and the American Withdrawal Editorial Board: from Beirut, 1983–1984 Alexandra T. Evans and A. Bradley Potter Chair, Editorial Board: Editor-in-Chief: 40 How to Think About Nuclear Crises Francis J. Gavin, PhD William Inboden, PhD Mark S. Bell and Julia Macdonald Robert J. Art, PhD Beatrice Heuser, PhD Patrick Porter, PhD Richard Betts, PhD Michael C. Horowitz, PhD Thomas Rid, PhD John Bew, PhD Richard H. Immerman, PhD Joshua Rovner, PhD Nigel Biggar, PhD Robert Jervis, PhD Brent E. Sasley, PhD The Strategist Philip Bobbitt, JD, PhD Colin Kahl, PhD Elizabeth N. Saunders, PhD Hal Brands, PhD Jonathan Kirshner, PhD Kori Schake, PhD 68 After the Responsible Stakeholder, What? Debating America’s China Strategy Joshua W. Busby, PhD James Kraska, SJD Michael N. Schmitt, DLitt Hal Brands and Zack Cooper Robert Chesney, JD Stephen D. Krasner, PhD Jacob N. Shapiro, PhD Eliot Cohen, PhD Sarah Kreps, PhD Sandesh Sivakumaran, PhD 82 Crossroads: Counter-terrorism and the Internet Audrey Kurth Cronin, PhD Melvyn P. Leffler, PhD Sarah Snyder, PhD Brian Fishman Theo Farrell, PhD Fredrik Logevall, PhD Bartholomew Sparrow, PhD 102 The End of the End of History: Reimagining U.S. -
Per House by Name As Well As by Accomplishment. Such, However, Is 1840 to 1851, His Length of Service Being Unsurpassed by A
DANIEL STURGEON, A STUDY IN OBSCURITY GEORGE ROADMAN1 nrfjxB Constitution of the United States has provided for only two JL senators from each state, a factor which ought to attract more than the average amount of public attention for those who have made the grade. A state as large and politically important as Pennsylvania should be able, by virtue of this fact alone, to list its representatives in the up- per house by name as well as by accomplishment. Such, however, is not the case, for in the long listof senators who served inthe nineteenth century, few attained any degree of national prominence and then only as a President, political boss, or member of a Presidential cabinet. The reasons for the well-known and lamentable obscurity of Penn- sylvania senators are many and varied, and are quite often explainable only as a result of rather complete studies of the lives of those involved. One of these unknowns, Daniel Sturgeon of Uniontown, is worth con- sidering because he combined the factors of long service in state and national public life with an almost total obscurity as far as the pages of history are concerned. 2 From 1818 to 1858, Sturgeon pursued a politi- cal career that began with his election to the state house of representa- tives, took him to the state senate in 1826, made him speaker of the senate in 1828, saw him appointed auditor general under Governor George Wolf in 1830, elected him state treasurer in 1836, and finally carried him into the United States Senate where he remained from 1840 to 1851, his length of service being unsurpassed by a Pennsylva- nian until Don Cameron's twenty years of service from 1877 to 1897. -
Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[Ongoing]
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3d5nb07z No online items Guide to the Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[ongoing] Processed by The Bancroft Library staff University Archives University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: 510) 642-2933 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/UARC © 1998 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. CU-149 1 Guide to the Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[ongoing] Collection number: CU-149 University Archives University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: 510) 642-2933 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/UARC Finding Aid Author(s): Processed by The Bancroft Library staff Finding Aid Encoded By: GenX © 2011 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Collection Title: Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley Date: 1952-[ongoing] Collection Number: CU-149 Creator: University of California, Berkeley. Office of the Chancellor Extent: circa 200 boxes Repository: The University Archives. University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: 510) 642-2933 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/UARC Abstract: The Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[ongoing], includes records for the chancellorships of Clark Kerr, Glenn T. Seaborg, Edward W. Strong, Martin Meyerson, Roger Heyns, and Albert H. Bowker.