Numerical Analysis in Pascal ABC: Studies in Applied Mathematics by Leonid Zhavoronkov English | July 26, 2017 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B084P2H167 | 393 pages | EPUB | 4.47 Mb The aim of the book is maintenance of task setting, mathematical description and computer solving of the investigated problem. There are 79 code examples in the book that explain how to solve practical problems in mathematics, mechanics, economics, experimental data treatment, numeric row prediction, automatic control, dynamic modelling and information security. These items are associated by numerical analysis methods and using of programming language Pascal ABC as the main research instrument.The monograph is destined to broad sections of readers who apply information technologies in mathematics and mathematical methods in different practical activities. They are students of professional middle and high technical schools, educational and economic universities as well as specialists that are not professional programmers but are to use numerical methods and computer modelling in practice. Software package is applied.
Nuances of Blackness in the Canadian Academy: Teaching, Learning, and Researching while Black by Awad Ibrahim, Tamari Kitossa English | February 2, 2022 | ISBN: 1487528698, 1487528701 | 488 pages | PDF | 7 MB The essays in Nuances of Blackness in the Canadian Academy make visible the submerged stories of Black life in academia. They offer fresh historical, social, and cultural insights into what it means to teach, learn, research, and work while Black. Not Always So: Practicing the True Spirit of Zen By Shunryu Suzuki 2009 | 176 Pages | ISBN: 0060957549 | EPUB | 1 MB Not Always So is based on Shunryu Suzuki's lectures and is framed in his own inimitable, allusive, paradoxical style, rich with unexpected and off-centre insights. Suzuki knew he was dying at the time of the lectures, which gives his thoughts an urgency and focus even sharper than in the earlier book.In Not Always So Suzuki once again voices Zen in everyday language with the vigour, sensitivity, and buoyancy of a true friend. Here is support and nourishment. Here is a mother and father lending a hand, but letting you find your own way. Here is guidance which empowers your freedom (or way-seeking mind), rather than pinning you down to directions and techniques. Here is teaching which encourages you to touch and know your true heart and to express yourself fully, teaching which is not teaching from outside, but a voice arising in your own bein No Acting Please: A Revolutionary Approach to Acting and Living By Eric Morris, Joan Hotchkis, Jack Nicholson 1995 | 176 Pages | ISBN: 096297093X | EPUB | 2 MB A collection of 125 acting exercises that are based on journal excerpts and dialogues from Mr. Morris' classes. These exercises teach the actor to systematically eliminate his or her instrumental obstacles -- tensions, fears, inhibitions -- and explore the "being" state, where the actor does no more and no less than what he or she feels. As the title indicates, many of the techniques herein address the actor's need to avoid falling into the traps of concept and presentational acting. There is also a complete chapter on sense memory -- what it is, and how to practice it and apply it as an acting tool. Co-authored by Joan Hotchkis, and with a Foreword by Jack Nicholson. New Rome: The Empire in the East (History of the Ancient World) by Paul Stephenson English | February 22nd, 2022 | ISBN: 0674659627 | 464 pages | True EPUB | 14.18 MB A comprehensive new history of the Eastern Roman Empire based on the science of the human past. New Paths: Aspects of Music Theory and Aesthetics in the Age of Romanticism By Darla Crispin 2009 | 200 Pages | ISBN: 9058677346 | PDF | 7 MB In New Paths, five renowned scholars discuss a variety of topics related to Romanticism, focusing especially on the years 1800-1840. In a much-needed historical and critical overview of the concept of organicism, John Neubauer ranges from its origins in Enlightenment biology to its aftermath in postmodernism. Janet Schmalfeldt shows that not only Beethoven's op.47 should be called the Bridgetower rather than the Kreutzer Sonata but also that this makes a difference as to its meaning. Scott Burnham explains extreme contrasts between emotional and mechanical types of music in late Beethoven as stagings of the limits of human subjectivity. Jim Samson discusses Chopin's little-known musical upbringing in Warsaw, arguing that his grounding in eighteenth-century aesthetics (as opposed to theory) has thus far been neglected. Finally, Susan Youens's case study of Franz Lachner's Heine songs sheds light on radical experimentation by a so-called epigone in the period between Schubert and Schumann's miracle song year.Contributors: Scott Burnham, Princeton University; John Neubauer, University of Amsterdam; Jim Samson, Royal Holloway, University of London; Janet Schmalfeldt, Tufts University; Susan Youens, University of Notre Dame Robert MacKinnon, "Never a Dull Deal: Faith, Hope and Probability in Bridge" English | 2017 | pages: 242 | ISBN: 1771400331 | PDF | 2,1 mb In Bob Mackinnons bestseller, Bridge, Probability and Information, he drew on his professional background in mathematics to introduce readers to the mysteries of information theory and Bayes Theorem, and their surprisingly practical applications for bridge players. In this sequel, he takes these same ideas further, exploring the application of the concepts of conditional probability to opening leads, declarer play, bidding theory, and even the correct strategy at different forms of scoring. Jean-Luc Marion, "Negative Certainties " English | ISBN: 0226505618 | 2015 | 288 pages | PDF | 1372 KB In Negative Certainties, renowned philosopher Jean-Luc Marion challenges some of the most fundamental assumptions we have developed about knowledge: that it is categorical, predicative, and positive. Following Descartes, Kant, and Heidegger, he looks toward our finitude and the limits of our reason. He asks an astonishingly simple-but profoundly provocative-question in order to open up an entirely new way of thinking about knowledge: Isn't our uncertainty, our finitude and rational limitations, one of the few things we can be certain about?
Nazis on the Potomac: The Top-Secret Intelligence Operation that Helped Win World War II by Robert K. Sutton English | January 13th, 2022 | ISBN: 1612009875 | 240 pages | True EPUB | 31.47 MB Now a green open space enjoyed by residents, Fort Hunt, Virginia, about 15 miles south of Washington, DC. was the site of one of the highest-level, clandestine operations during World War II. Nature: An English Literary Heritage English | 2021 | ISBN: 1843846020 | 365 Pages | PDF | 2 MB What might it mean to study ideas of nature within our English literary heritage? In posing this question this volume invites us both to discover a diversity of ways of looking at a major continuing topos within English literature, and to ask what we mean by nature itself within this context. Starting from the premise of considering the pathetic fallacy which demands that nature reflects our emotional needs and beliefs as well as providing our material sustenance, the author explores the astonishing variety of themes grouped under the banner of \x26#34;nature writing\x26#34;. Some chapters consider the broad distinctions of nature experienced as time and mortality for human beings, and nature perceived as \x26#34;out there\x26#34; in the local or larger environment; others demonstrate how nature is commandeered in the erotic pastoral lyrics of the Elizabethan sonneteers, how the concept of a \x26#34;natural\x26#34; family underpins the tragedy of King Lear, and how definitions of what is natural are used to validate dominion over women and animals as well as the earth itself. A literary heritage of nature is here envisaged as a polyphony of voices across the centuries in which English texts influence and are influenced by their continental and North American fellow\-artists. The colonial preoccupations of the Elizabethan Sir Walter Ralegh are re\-examined in the writings of the American nineteenth\-century defender of nature David Henry Thoreau. The seventeenth\-century Norfolk physician Sir Thomas Browne\x27s musings begin and end the meditations by W.G. Sebald on his twentieth\-century East Anglian pilgrimage in The Rings of Saturn. Mary Shelley\x27s new genre of science fiction is turned upside down in Italo Calvino\x27s Cosmicomics. Ted Hughes translates Ovid. Seamus Heaney takes his inspiration from English, Irish and continental peers and predecessors. This polyphonic chorus of writing about nature has always enriched our literature and continues to do so. At the same it demonstrates how we have naturalised nature in our culture, as both a celebration, and an admonishment for what we take for granted in our attitudes to the natural world. |