Cool Modern Residential Architecture images

Check out these modern residential architecture images:

edmonton modern residential architecture
modern residential architecture

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a Saturday morning walk down the street in Edmonton…such fine modern homes, so linear and adorable

collage created in irfanview, in three strips, border added in PS

Spanish mansion near old city limit
modern residential architecture

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Another Spanish-style residence
modern residential architecture

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Advantages of 3D Architectural Animation  

Advantages of 3D Architectural Animation  

Article by Anthony Miller







What is Architectural Animation?

Architectural Animation is a short digital architectural movie which includes the concerned project or construction, the site, animated people and vehicles, all of which are digitally generated through 2D or 3D animation techniques. Unlike an architectural rendering, which is a single image from a single point of view, an architectural animation is a series of such still images. When this series of images are put together in a sequence and played, they produce the effect of a movie, much like a real movie except, all images in an architectural animation are digitally created by computer. It is appropriate to add a computer-generated digital landscape around the central construction to enhance its visual effect and to better convey its relationship to the surrounding area. Architectural animation is thus an effective and attractive way to provide designers and stakeholders with a realistic view of what the project will look like on completion.

Advantages of Architectural Animation

3D architectural animation is highly user-friendly for the viewers since it provides an accurate realistic visual of the construction. Its gives a clear idea about the building from all angles along with a visual on core construction activities. Concepts of computer graphics and 3D animation help in creating highly realistic 3D architectural animation of any construction, and it gives a completely authentic idea of the finished product or building to the client. Designers or architects emboss their designs or plans on paper sheets and make them comprehensible for the clients through labeling. These days, various 3D animation software have been introduced in the market, which facilitate designers to present their plans in a more simplified and legible manner. Moving at par with industry standards, expert animators also use 3D animation techniques to prepare 3D project models, 3D house plans, 3D building plans, and 3D construction plans to provide a step by step analysis of the whole construction process.

If you have purchased a new house and are planning to get the interiors designed by a professional, then a 3D architectural animation is the answer to all your worries. We, at Ohio Animations, provide you with those answers.

For clarification gives us a call at 614-356-8000 or 614-818-9061Mail us at info@ohioanimation.com.

With 11 years of experience at your service, your dream home will soon be a reality.



About the Author

The author of this article, Anthony Miller, is a Business Development Executive at Cybervation Inc, a well known Web Design and Development Company based at Columbus, OH USA.

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Desktop Mates  

Desktop Mates  

Article by Bryan







The leading developers of animated characters for Microsoft Agent technologies since 1999, offering the largest selection and the most realistic MS Agent characters available, anywhere!DesktopMates are animated human like characters that live on your desktop as your personal interactive companion & assistant capable of speech & doing tasks for you using Microsoft Agent & Artificial Intelligence Technologies. All versions of Windows 2000, Me, XP and Vista already comes with the core components for MSAgent Technology as part of your windows operating system.DesktopMates are animated human like characters that live on your desktop as your personal interactive companion & assistant capable of speech & doing tasks for you using Microsoft Agent & Artificial Intelligence Technologies. All versions of Windows 2000, Me, XP and Vista already comes with the core components for MSAgent Technology as part of your windows operating systemDesktopMates are animated human like characters that live on your desktop as your personal interactive companion & assistant capable of speech & doing tasks for you using Microsoft Agent & Artificial Intelligence Technologies. All versions of Windows 2000, Me, XP and Vista already comes with the core components for MSAgent Technology as part of your windows operating systemDesktopMates characters ARE NOT stand alone programs that function by themselves. If you are a “New User” and not already using this technology, please go to the “New User Start Up Instructions Page” by clicking the “Free Starter Package Box” below and get up and running first before purchasing any DesktopMates characters. The New User Start Up software and components required to operate DesktopMates characters are fully functional and FREE!Once your up and running and familiar with how it works, stop back and check out the great lineup of DesktopMates character models available. Choose from an extensive showcase of characters including Office Assistants, fantasy & theme characters such as Androids, Wizards and Egyptians, and YES, we also have adult oriented models as well.Grab A Copy Click hereAlong with the free software & components available, any character models you purchase are yours to keep and use.

Well, now you can! With the Ultra Hal Artificial Intelligence Program you can chat with your DesktopMates character about anything you want. Ultra Hal has a huge conversational database and also has the ability to learn from every sentence that you say, and after a while of chatting with your character they can even develop a similar personality to yours. Grab A Copy Click hereArtificial Intelligence is the wave of the future and will one day become the standard on how we will interact with our computers.

NO monthly fees or re-billing charges EVER! Grab A Copy Click here



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Desktop Mates

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Lastest High School Economics Textbooks News

Guest column: Visit to Winning the Future High School reveals dynamics of economic policy
Redistribute the wealth. Tax the rich. These are two of the phrases used by Barack Obama to describe his philosophy of economics. I use the term “philosophy” of economics because neither he nor anyone he has appointed have any real-world…
Read more on Kinston Free Press

How the ‘Harbrace Handbook of English’ Changed the Way Americans Learn About Writing
This year is the 70th birthday of the Harbrace Handbook of English. It will go unnoticed by most—but it’s an anniversary with a lot of significance for the University of Tennessee: Harbrace is the best-selling college textbook of all time, and it’s the creation of former UT English professor John C. Hodges. Yes, that John C. Hodges—the one the campus library is named after. Brooks Clark and Cari …
Read more on Metro Pulse

Has the value of a college degree changed in recent years?
FROM CNN’s Jack Cafferty: President Obama flew to Durham, North Carolina, Monday to meet with his Jobs and Competitiveness Council hoping to get some ideas from corporate leaders on how to boost the economy and promote job creation. Now there’s an idea. He’s going to need all the help he can get. With 9.1% unemployment, [...]
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Don’t let the right turn the clock back on sex

HARRY CLARKE – St Thomas Aquinas
nursing philosophy statement

Image by Fergal Claddagh
THE RUNAWAY ABBOT

*St. Thomas Aquinas was a hero of the faith in quite a different sense from the early martyrs who bore witness by their deaths. He was a giant of learning, a tower of intellectual strength, a "master of those who know," as Dante said of Aristotle. He was declared a Doctor of the Church in 1567 and the Patron of Catholic Schools in 1880.*

Some miles from the monastery of Monte Cassino stood a great crag or cliff, standing up like a pillar of the Apennines. It was crowned with a castle that bore the name of The Dry Rock, and was the eyrie in which the eaglets of the Aquino branch of the Imperial family were nursed to fly. Here lived Count Landulf of Aquino, who was the father of Thomas Aquinas and some seven other sons. In military affairs he doubtless rode with his family, in the feudal manner; and apparently had something to do with the destruction of the monastery. But it was typical of the tangle of the time, that Count Landulf seems afterwards to have thought that it would be a tactful and delicate act to put in his son Thomas as Abbot of the monastery. This would be of the nature of a graceful apology to the Church, and also, it would appear, the solution of a family difficulty.

For it had been long apparent to Count Landulf that nothing could be done with his seventh son Thomas, except to make him an Abbot or something of that kind. Born in 1226, he had from childhood a mysterious objection to becoming a predatory eagle, or even to taking an ordinary interest in falconry or tilting or any other gentlemanly pursuits. He was a large and heavy and quiet boy, and phenomenally silent, scarcely opening his mouth except to say suddenly to his schoolmaster in an explosive manner, "What is God?" The answer is not recorded but it is probable that the asker went on worrying out answers for himself. The only place for a person of this kind was the Church and presumably the cloister; and so far as that went, there was no particular difficulty. It was easy enough for a man in Count Landulf’s position to arrange with some monastery for his son to be received there; and in this particular case he thought it would be a good idea if he were received in some official capacity, that would be worthy of his worldly rank. So everything was smoothly arranged for Thomas Aquinas becoming a monk, which would seem to be what he himself wanted; and sooner or later becoming Abbot of Monte Cassino. And then the curious thing happened.

In so far as we may follow rather dim and disputed events, it would seem that the young Thomas Aquinas walked into his father’s castle one day and calmly announced that he had become one of the Begging Friars, of the new order founded by Dominic the Spaniard; much as the eldest son of the squire might go home and airily inform the family that he had married a gypsy; or the heir of a Tory Duke state that he was walking tomorrow with the Hunger Marchers organised by alleged Communists. By this, as has been noted already, we may pretty well measure the abyss between the old monasticism and the new, and the earthquake of the Dominican and Franciscan revolution. Thomas had appeared to wish to be a Monk; and the gates were silently opened to him and the long avenues of the abbey, the very carpet, so to speak, laid for him up to the throne of the mitred abbot. He said he wished to be a Friar, and his family flew at him like wild beasts; his brothers pursued him along the public roads, half-rent his friar’s frock from his back and finally locked him up in a tower like a lunatic.

It is not very easy to trace the course of this furious family quarrel, and how it eventually spent itself against the tenacity of the young Friar; according to some stories, his mother’s disapproval was short-lived and she went over to his side; but it was not only his relatives that were embroiled. We might say that the central governing class of Europe, which partly consisted of his family, were in a turmoil over the deplorable youth; even the Pope was asked for tactful intervention, and it was at one time proposed that Thomas should be allowed to wear the Dominican habit while acting as Abbot in the Benedictine Abbey. To many this would seem a tactful compromise; but it did not commend itself to the narrow medieval mind of Thomas Aquinas. He indicated sharply that he wished to be a Dominican in the Dominican Order, and not at a fancy-dress ball; and the diplomatic proposal appears to have been dropped.

Thomas of Aquino wanted to be a Friar. It was a staggering fact to his contemporaries; and it is rather an intriguing fact even to us; for this desire, limited literally and strictly to this statement, was the one practical thing to which his will was clamped with adamantine obstinacy till his death. He would not be an Abbot; he would not be a Monk; he would not even be a Prior or ruler in his own fraternity; he would not be a prominent or important Friar; he would be a Friar. It is as if Napoleon had insisted on remaining a private soldier all his life. Something in this heavy, quiet, cultivated, rather academic gentleman would not be satisfied till he was, by fixed authoritative proclamation and official pronouncement, established and appointed to be a Beggar. It is all the more interesting because, while he did more than his duty a thousand times over, he was not at all like a Beggar; nor at all likely to be a good Beggar. He had nothing of the native vagabond about him, as had his great precursors; he was not born with something of the wondering minstrel, like St. Francis; or something of the tramping missionary, like St. Dominic. But he insisted upon putting himself under military orders, to do these things at the will of another, if required. He may be compared with some of the more magnanimous aristocrats who have enrolled themselves in revolutionary armies; or some of the best of the poets and scholars who volunteered as private soldiers in the Great War. Something in the courage and consistency of Dominic and Francis had challenged his deep sense of justice; and while remaining a very reasonable person, and even a diplomatic one, he never let anything shake the iron immobility of this one decision of his youth; nor was he to be turned from his tall and towering ambition to take the lowest place.

The first effect of his decision, as we have seen, was much more stimulating and even startling. The General of the Dominicans, under whom Thomas had enrolled himself, was probably well aware of the diplomatic attempts to dislodge him and the worldly difficulties of resisting them. His expedient was to take his young follower out of Italy altogether; bidding him proceed with a few other friars to Paris. There was something prophetic even about this first progress of the travelling teacher of the nations; for Paris was indeed destined to be in some sense the goal of his spiritual journey; since it was there that he was to deliver both his great defence of the Friars and his great defiance to the antagonists of Aristotle. But this his first journey to Paris was destined to be broken off very short indeed. The friars had reached a turn of the road by a wayside fountain, a little way north of Rome, when they were overtaken by a wild cavalcade of captors, who seized on Thomas like brigands, but who were in fact only rather needlessly agitated brothers. He had a large number of brothers: perhaps only two were here involved. Indeed he was the seventh; and friends of Birth Control may lament that this philosopher was needlessly added to the noble line of ruffians who kidnapped him. It was an odd affair altogether. There is something quaint and picturesque in the idea of kidnapping a begging friar, who might in a sense be called a runaway abbot. There is a comic and tragic tangle in the motives and purposes of such a trio of strange kinsmen. There is a sort of Christian cross-purposes in the contrast between the feverish illusion of the importance of things, always marking men who are called practical; and the much more practical pertinacity of the man who is called theoretical.

Thus at least did those three strange brethren stagger or trail along their tragic road, tied together, as it were, like criminal and constable; only that the criminals were making the arrest. So their figures are seen for an instant against the horizon of history; brothers as sinister as any since Cain and Abel. For this queer outrage in the great family of Aquino does really stand out symbolically, as representing something that will forever make the Middle Ages a mystery and a bewilderment; capable of sharply contrasted interpretations like darkness and light. For in two of those men there raged, we might say screamed, a savage pride of blood and blazonry of arms, though they were princes of the most refined world of their time, which would seem more suitable to a tribe dancing round a totem. For the moment they had forgotten everything except the name of a family, that is narrower than a tribe, and far narrower than a nation. And the third figure of that trio, born of the same mother and perhaps visibly one with the others in face or form, had a conception of brotherhood broader than most modern democracy, for it was not national but international; a faith in mercy and modesty far deeper than any mere mildness of manners in the modern world; and a drastic oath of poverty, which would now be counted quite a mad exaggeration of the revolt against plutocracy and pride. Out of the same Italian castle came two savages and one sage; or one saint more pacific than most modern sages. That is the double aspect confusing a hundred controversies. That is what makes the riddle of the medieval age; that it was not one age but two ages. We look into the moods of some men, and it might be the Stone Age; we look into the minds of other men, and they might be living in the Golden Age; in the most modern sort of Utopia. There were always good men and bad men; but in this time good men who were subtle lived with bad men who were simple. They lived in the same family; they were brought up in the same nursery; and they came out to struggle, as the brothers of Aquino struggled by the wayside, when they dragged the new friar along the road and shut him up in the castle on the hill.

When his relations tried to despoil him of his friar’s frock he seems to have laid about them in the fighting manner of his fathers, and it would seem successfully, since this attempt was abandoned. He accepted the imprisonment itself with his customary composure, and probably did not mind very much whether he was left to philosophise in a dungeon or in a cell. Indeed there is something in the way the whole tale is told, which suggests that through a great part of that strange abduction, he had been carried about like a lumbering stone statue. Only one tale told of his captivity shows him merely in anger; and that shows him angrier than he ever was before or after. It struck the imagination of his own time for more important reasons; but it has an interest that is psychological as well as moral. For once in his life, for the first time and the last, Thomas of Aquino was really hors de lui; riding a storm outside that tower of intellect and contemplation in which he commonly lived. And that was when his brothers introduced into his room some specially gorgeous and painted courtesan, with the idea of surprising him by a sudden temptation, or at least involving him in a scandal. His anger was justified, even by less strict moral standards than his own; for the meanness was even worse than the foulness of the expedient. Even on the lowest grounds, he knew his brothers knew, and they knew that he knew, that it was an insult to him as a gentleman to suppose that he would break his pledge upon so base a provocation; and he had behind him a far more terrible sensibility; all that huge ambition of humility which was to him the voice of God out of heaven. In this one flash alone we see that huge unwieldy figure in an attitude of activity, or even animation; and he was very animated indeed. He sprang from his seat and snatched a brand out of the fire, and stood brandishing it like a flaming sword. The woman not unnaturally shrieked and fled, which was all that he wanted; but it is quaint to think of what she must have thought of that madman of monstrous stature juggling with flames and apparently threatening to burn down the house. All he did, however, was to stride after her to the door and bang and bar it behind her; and then, with a sort of impulse of violent ritual, he rammed the burning brand into the door, blackening and blistering it with one big black sign of the cross. Then he returned, and dropped it again into the fire; and sat down on that seat of sedentary scholarship, that chair of philosophy, that secret throne of contemplation, from which he never rose again.

(G K Chesterton)

Don’t let the right turn the clock back on sex
The moral right are on the rampage. They want to take us back to the 1950s—when housewives were tied to the sink and were an extension of their husbands, with little or no independence.
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Teamsters, Community Leaders and Labor Allies Send Delegation to Emerald Performance – Sun Capital Partners
Emerald Performance Unions, Community/Business Leaders, Environmental Groups Cite Dangers in Unjust Lockout
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Health science – Sodium Tripolyphosphate – Sodium Metabisulfite  

Health science – Sodium Tripolyphosphate – Sodium Metabisulfite  

Article by hi joiney







Acquisition of health-related knowledgeMain articles: Life science and Biomedical researchMedical research is basic and applied research conducted to improve the evaluation of new treatments for both safety and efficacy in what are termed clinical trials, or to develop new treatments (referred to as preclinical research) or to better scale up health care interventions and improve health systems (e.g. health systems research and evidence based health care).The increased longevity of humans over the past century is due in large part to medical research. Among the major advancements in medicine have been vaccines for measles and polio, insulin treatment for diabetes, classes of antibiotics for treating a host of maladies, medication for high blood pressure, improved treatments for AIDS, statins and other treatments for atherosclerosis, new surgical techniques such as microsurgery, and increasingly successful treatments for cancer. New, beneficial tests and treatments are expected as a result of the human genome project. Many challenges remain, however, including the appearance of antibiotic resistance, the obesity epidemic, and notably, the paucity of knowledge on how to better organize health care delivery. Application of health-related knowledge (health care)Main article: Health careHealth care is the prevention, treatment, and management of illness and the preservation of mental and physical well being through the services offered by the medical, nursing, and allied health professions. According to the World Health Organization, health care embraces all the goods and services designed to promote health, including reventive, curative and palliative interventions, whether directed to individuals or to populations. The organized provision of such services may constitute a health care system. This can include a specific governmental organization such as the National Health Service in the UK, or a cooperation across the National Health Service and Social Services as in shared care.There is a wide range of traditional areas of health care. The most common areas are: medicine, nursing, midwifery, pharmacy, dentistry, clinical laboratory sciences (in vitro diagnostics), and various forms of therapy to supplement the healing process and restore proper activity (e.g. dietetics, recreational, physical, occupational, orthoptic care, speech, and respiratory).Like health science in general, health care includes both the study and application of preventing and curing human diseases and disorders. Medical doctors include physicians and surgeons.There are many different branches of medicine; the other health care professions also have specialties or focus on specific populations or settings of care. Public health studies the effect of environmental factors such as available health care resources on the health of the general population, often focusing on particular populations, such as mothers and children. Dietitians educate people about proper nutrition, particularly specific dietary needs of populations such as people with diabetes, breastfeeding women, and people with celiac disease. Other less common medical areas include first aid and triage.Dental health has grown in importance in recent decades making dentistry a major field of health sciences. Counselling, hospice care, home care, nutrition, medical social work, alternative medicine, pharmacology, and toxicology are all considered part of health science.Clinical laboratory sciences (in vitro diagnostics) is also a major field of health sciences.Veterinary medicine is the health science dedicated exclusively to the care of animals. Veterinary medicine is involved in preventing and curing animal diseases and disorders, inspecting animal-originated food (such as milk and meat) and animal husbandry. Health practices Conventional Western practicesAthletic trainingClinical laboratory sciences (in vitro diagnostics)DentistryDieteticsEpidemiologyEvidence-based medicineGenetic counselingMedical physicsMedicineNursingNutritionObstetrics, including MidwiferyOccupational therapyOptometryOrthopticsOsteopathic medicine (Note: Osteopathy, as practiced in most countries other than the USA, is listed under complementary and alternative practices below)ParamedicinePharmacyPhysical therapy (physiotherapy)Prosthetics and OrthoticsPsychology, including Animal, Behavioural, Clinical, Health, Medical, Neuropsychology and othersPsychoanalysisPsychotherapy, including Cognitive therapyPublic healthPhysical educationSpeech-Language PathologySurgery, including anaesthesiologyVeterinary medicine Historical westernFurther information: Ancient Greek medicine, Medicine in ancient Rome, Byzantine medicine, and Medieval medicineBlood lettingHeroic medicineMagnet therapyPatent medicinePhrenologyTrepanation Complementary and alternative medicineMain articles: Complementary and alternative medicine and Alternative medicineAlexander TechniqueChiropractic (in some countries: included within Conventional Western practices)Dorn methodHerbalismHolistic healthHomeopathyHypnosisMassage therapyNatural medicineNaturopathic medicineOrthomolecular medicineOsteopathy (Note: Osteopathic medicine as practiced in the USA is listed under traditional western practices above) New Age or spiritualistChristian ScienceFaith healingJohreiMaharishi Vedic MedicineReiki Contemporary themesBecause health science deal with human life, issues of medical ethics, an important area of ethics, arise frequently. Medical ethics includes questions on topics such as a patient’s right to privacy and his/her right to be involved in treatment and decision-making. Euthanasia, abortion, human cloning, stem cell research and genetic engineering are especially controversial issues directly related to health science. Evidence based health care focuses on integrating research evidence with context and values to better guide policies and practice. An example of initiatives that take this approach to improve public health policy is the Evidence Informed Policy Network (EVIPNet) of the World Health Organization. History of health scienceMain articles: History of biology and History of medicineThe foundations for the Health Sciences fields are as old as the human race. Humans have always been in need of solutions to address illness, injury, and various health related issues such as childbirth. With modern technology and the backing of the pure sciences, the scientific accuracy of these fields has greatly improved. Nevertheless, many cultures have used and continue to use various herbs and other culturally specific solutions to help solve health problems that may or may not be backed by any scientific support. See alsoMain article: Outline of health scienceAcademic health science centreBiomedical engineeringBiomedical informaticsBiomedical researchBiomedical technologyEmergency medical servicesEvidence-based medicineHealth care, Acronyms in healthcareHealth economicsHistory of medicineList of health sciences topicsMedical EncyclopediaMedical ethicsMedical informaticsPharmaceutical industryPreventive medicinePublic healthPublicly-funded health care External links and referencesNational Institute of Environmental Health SciencesThe US National Library of MedicineHealth Science Researchers, Jobs and Discussions References^ World Heath Organization Report. (2000). Why do health systems matter?. WHO. v  d  eHealth careEconomics  Industry  Philosophy  Policy  Providers  Ranking  Reform  SystemHealth sciencesMedicine  Dentistry  Nursing  Allied health professionsSettingsAssisted living  Clinic  Hospital  Nursing homeSkills/proceduresIncident report  Isolation  Report  Universal precautionsEquipmentDiagnosticVital signs: Blood pressure cuff  Stethoscope  ThermometerOther: Ophthalmoscope  OtoscopeMedicationNeedle  Pill organizer  SyringeToiletingAdult diaper  Bedpan  Foley catheter  Incontinence pad  UrinalRestraintChemical restraint  Limb restraint  Locking clothing  Posey vest  StraitjacketMobility devicesCane  Patient lift   Sling lift  Walker  Wheelchair  Motorized wheelchairv  d  eTechnologyApplied scienceArchaeology  Artificial intelligence  Ceramic engineering  Computing  Electronics  Energy  Energy storage  Engineering geology  Engineering physics  Environmental Engineering Science  Environmental technology  Fisheries science  Materials science and engineering  Microtechnology  Nanotechnology  Nuclear technology  Optics  Particle physics  ZoographyInformationCommunication  Graphics  Information technology  Music  Speech recognition  Systematics  Visual technologyIndustryBusiness informatics  Construction  Financial engineering  Fishing  Industrial technology  Machinery  Manufacturing  MiningMilitaryMilitary technology  Military technology and equipment  Ammunition  Bombs  Military engineering  Weapons engineering  Military communications  Army engineering maintenanceDomesticEducational technology  Domestic appliances  Domestic technology  Food technologyEngineeringAerospace  Agricultural  Architectural  Audio  Automotive  Biochemical  Biological  Biomedical  BioTech  Broadcast  Building officials  Ceramic  Chemical  Civil  Computer  Construction  Control  Cryogenics  Electrical  Electronic  Engineering technology  Enterprise  Entertainment  Environmental  Food  Genetic  Hydraulics  Industrial  Materials  Mechanical  Mechatronics  Metallurgical  Mining  Naval  Network  Nuclear  Ocean  Ontology  Optical  Petroleum  Radio Frequency  Software  Structural  Systems  Technician  Telecommunications  Textile  Tissue  Traffic  TransportHealth / safetyBioinformatics  Biomedical  Biotechnology  Cheminformatics  Fire protection engineering  Health technologies  Medical technology  Nutrition  Pharmaceuticals  Safety

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hegel philosophy?

Question by BILLY THE GOOT: hegel philosophy?
does it have any application to politics do u think

Best answer:

Answer by Keith M
The Hegelian dialectic could be adjusted to be political as a compromising of two sides.

The Hegelian dialectic argues that an assertion (known as the “thesis”) gives rise to its opposite (know as the “antithesis”). This tension between the two sides plays out in some combination, compromise, or shifting of understanding that its better (known as the ‘synthesis’). While Hegel seemed to use the dialectic as an epistemological tool, it could be simplified to relate to politics.

What do you think? Answer below!

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where can i get help for grade 11 computer science project?

Question by manutdfan: where can i get help for grade 11 computer science project?
its like u have to make a manual system(of a company) into computerised. list advantages,problems etc. like hospital(patient records,addresses,stock of medicines).need 50 pgs..like b4 everything was manual…in a library now u can store stuff in computer.u can use anything(word,excel etc)and write about any system.

Best answer:

Answer by jacknyk64
Well, I would think your teacher would help you if you need it. You could also talk to other computer faculty members. Anyone you know who owns a business or works in a managerial or secretarial job will know some good information about how information is recorded and kept and computerised now, as opposed to several years ago.

What do you think? Answer below!

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150 reasons to love Canterbury

150 reasons to love Canterbury
The Press
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Alison Hillhouse: Class of 2011: Too Talented to Sit in a Cubicle… But Not to Roll up Their Sleeves
Class of 2011 just dreams of a more self-directed, personally fulfilling pathway to success: entrepreneurship. Practically speaking, entrepreneurship is also more accessible than ever, as Millennials have the tools to make their dreams come to life.
Read more on The Huffington Post

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Lastest Painting For Dummies News

Calendar
Friday, May 20 ‘Erasing Borders 2011,’ 9 a.m.-8 p.m. at Charles B. Wang Center, SUNY/Stony Brook. Richly provocative exhibition of work by artists of the Indian diaspora who confront issues of sexuality, terror, disease, the environment, racial and sectarian politics and the fluidity of identities in painting, prints, installations, video, and sculpture. With great technical [...]
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