Rational Analysis of Self-Alignment Force of Reactive Additive Molecule

Author(s):  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Shengdong Zhang
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (S1) ◽  
pp. 144-146
Author(s):  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Song Lan ◽  
Te-Jen Tseng ◽  
Chung-Ching Hsieh ◽  
Juncheng Xiao ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shlomi Sher ◽  
Johannes Muller-Trede ◽  
Craig R. M. McKenzie
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-124
Author(s):  
Michael Dorfman

In a series of works published over a period of twenty five years, C.W. Huntington, Jr. has developed a provocative and radical reading of Madhyamaka (particularly Early Indian Madhyamaka) inspired by ‘the insights of post- Wittgensteinian pragmatism and deconstruction’ (1993, 9). This article examines the body of Huntington’s work through the filter of his seminal 2007 publication, ‘The Nature of the M?dhyamika Trick’, a polemic aimed at a quartet of other recent commentators on Madhyamaka (Robinson, Hayes, Tillemans and Garfield) who attempt ‘to read N?g?rjuna through the lens of modern symbolic logic’ (2007, 103), a project which is the ‘end result of a long and complex scholastic enterprise … [which] can be traced backwards from contemporary academic discourse to fifteenth century Tibet, and from there into India’ (2007, 111) and which Huntington sees as distorting the Madhyamaka project which was not aimed at ‘command[ing] assent to a set of rationally grounded doctrines, tenets, or true conclusions’ (2007, 129). This article begins by explicating some disparate strands found in Huntington’s work, which I connect under a radicalized notion of ‘context’. These strands consist of a contextualist/pragmatic theory of truth (as opposed to a correspondence theory of truth), a contextualist epistemology (as opposed to one relying on foundationalist epistemic warrants), and a contextualist ontology where entities are viewed as necessarily relational (as opposed to possessing a context-independent essence.) I then use these linked theories to find fault with Huntington’s own readings of Candrak?rti and N?g?rjuna, arguing that Huntington misreads the semantic context of certain key terms (tarka, d???i, pak?a and pratijñ?) and fails to follow the implications of N?g?rjuna and Candrak?rti’s reliance on the role of the pram??as in constituting conventional reality. Thus, I find that Huntington’s imputation of a rejection of logic and rational argumentation to N?g?rjuna and Candrak?rti is unwarranted. Finally, I offer alternate readings of the four contemporary commentators selected by Huntington, using the conceptual apparatus developed earlier to dismiss Robinson’s and Hayes’s view of N?g?rjuna as a charlatan relying on logical fallacies, and to find common ground between Huntington’s project and the view of N?g?rjuna developed by Tillemans and Garfield as a thinker committed using reason to reach, through rational analysis, ‘the limits of thought.’


1957 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 338-340
Author(s):  
Albion Roy King
Keyword(s):  

1926 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Spotts McDowell
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 450-451 ◽  
pp. 582-585
Author(s):  
Qing En Li ◽  
Rui Ren ◽  
Jian Qiu

In recent years, as the load increasing gradually,problems in voltage stability of regional power network which is the terminal of power grid is serious. From the voltage stability machine rational analysis to roll out small interfering voltage stability criterion of new, and the modal method is used to determine the key nodes and areas of the system theory basis.


2011 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 262-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Oaksford ◽  
Nick Chater

AbstractMere facts about how the world is cannot determine how we ought to think or behave. Elqayam & Evans (E&E) argue that this “is-ought fallacy” undercuts the use of rational analysis in explaining how people reason, by ourselves and with others. But this presumed application of the “is-ought” fallacy is itself fallacious. Rational analysis seeks to explain how people do reason, for example in laboratory experiments, not how they ought to reason. Thus, no ought is derived from an is; and rational analysis is unchallenged by E&E's arguments.


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