scholarly journals جمالية النسق التعبدي في الكون، أو موسيقى الكائنات من منظور النورسي: دراسة في الكليات

Author(s):  
إدريس التركاوي

للكائنات في تأملات النورسي وظيفة موسيقية جمالية في الكون، تتشكَّل من حركاتها المادية وتسبيحاتها الروحية، في دلالة ازدواجية مركبة تأبى التفكُّك؛ ما يستفز التدبر في الإنسان، ويدفعه إلى إعادة قراءة الكون والكائنات؛ قراءة تراعى فيها الوحدة الكونية والقانون التعبدي المشترك الجامع بين طبيعة الشيء المادية ووظيفته التوحيدية المعنوية، وليس الاكتفاء بإحداهما. Nursi's reflections show that creatures have an aesthetic musical function which is composed of their physical movement and spiritual glorification, which comes in inseparable compound duality. This function provokes human contemplation that requires rereading the natural cosmos and creatures in such a way that takes into account the cosmos unity and the common worship law which bring together both the physical nature of things and their moral monotheistic function.  

1965 ◽  
Vol 5 (17) ◽  
pp. 125 ◽  
Author(s):  
KD McLachlan

Several methods of evaluating the phosphorus status of soils for the growth of pasture plants were compared. NaHCO3 and NH4F in HCl were the most suitable extractants used. On these soils, differing widely in origin and fertilizer history, phosphorus values of 30 p.p.m, as determined by three of the methods distinguished responsive from unresponsive soils. For the other, the bicarbonate method of Olsen et al. (1954), the corresponding value was 15 p.p.m. The evidence suggests that in the soils examined, all inorganic forms of soil phosphorus, as determined by the method of Chang and Jackson (1957), contributed in some degree to the pasture plants needs. The principal source of available phosphorus, however, was the aluminium phosphates. On the other hand, the evidence suggests that the principal loss in the availability of residual phosphorus to the plant may be through its conversion to organic forms. Iron phosphates appeared to be the least available of the inorganic forms. The common ability of the four successful methods to efficiently extract phosphorus from the aluminium source appears to be the prime reason for their measuring the soil phosphorus status for plants equally well. The physical nature of aluminium phosphate, however, has a marked effect on its ability to supply the plant's phosphorus needs. A crystalline form was less available than an amorphous one. The greater availability of the amorphous forms, of both iron and aluminium phosphates, appeared to depend more upon their solubility than on their positional availability due to the greater specific surface presented. Fertilizer application enriches the aluminium phosphate content of the soils, but, in these experiments, the quantities found were related significantly to the total applications made in the previous three years only.


Etyka ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 125-155
Author(s):  
Kazimierz Twardowski

To be scientific, ethics must not include statements that are derived in any manner other than ethical reasoning from axioms or facts. But on this road it cannot arrive at norms, at rules of conduct. Contrary to the common view, no science at all can give rules. Science says merely what is, and how it is, but not what ought to be. Norms, i.e. rules of conduct, follow not from theoretical studies but from the practical applications of the theoretical results. Hygiene, for instance, indicates physical movement as an indispensable condition of maintaining health; but the norm “We ought to make physical exercises” originates from our concern with the important aim of maintaining our health.


Perichoresis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 59-71
Author(s):  
Ramona Simuţ

AbstractOne of the major themes of discussion in the art and especially the literature of the 18th and 19th centuries was the body rather than the soul. In the beginning this seemed to be the case mostly because of the natural processes related to the transforming events of maturation and death of the human body and mind. However, towards the end of the 18th century and well into the 19th century, a certain shift took place from the common perspective on the body to a rather scientific literary approach. Our attempt is to notice and make the necessary connections between the concepts of nature (both human and external/physical nature) and the innovative technologies implemented in the then society, with a later reference to the new accidental and commercial facets of death felt as destruction of nature especially in the work of the American Romantic writers Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Being aware that they are highly spoken of in view of their transcendentalism as a particular philosophy dealing with the bond between man and nature, we will slowly come to terms with this type of concerns and connect them to the conflicting reality of industrialization as a sudden and repressive phenomenon within the society of men. Finally our point is that this very phenomenon caused the two writers to make a historical detour and use their formation as naturalist thinkers in order to make sense of their century’s deaths and diseases. This is to say that even from a Romantic perspective, the concern for the body is surprisingly concrete, while these writers’ transcendentalist concerns for the soul are prolix though without substance.


2015 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Liezel Wegner ◽  
Jarryd E. Pagel ◽  
Ashley W. Smit ◽  
Aimee Straszacker ◽  
Sarah L. Swart ◽  
...  

Background: Rock climbing is an extreme sport that is fast gaining interest in the Western Cape. Due to the physical nature of the sport, climbers often suffer neuromusculoskeletal (NMS) injuries. Physiotherapists are first-line practitioners who diagnose and treat NMS injuries, but no previous study has been conducted regarding common NMS injuries amongst rock climbers in the Western Cape.Objective: To determine the common NMS injuries amongst rock climbers, and the relationships between independent variables and injury.Method: A Quantitative, cross-sectional, retrospective descriptive study design utilised a self-developed survey based on the literature. This was completed by rock climbers from an indoor climbing gym in Cape Town and two outdoor crags in the Western Cape. Out of the total population of 650 climbers, 247 were conveniently sampled to complete the self-administered survey, making the results generalisable to the climbing population.Results: Finger flexor tendon pulley injuries were the most commonly diagnosed NMS injury. Injury to the fingers, hand and elbow regions were the most common self-reported injury by area. The risk of suffering climbing-related injuries was significantly correlated to gender, setting, grade and type of climbing, but not to frequency of climbing.Conclusion: The results of this study could assist physiotherapists to assess and manage the common NMS injuries that occur in this group of extreme athletes, as well as to raise awareness amongst rock climbers in the Western Cape about potential risk of injury.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Сергей Крамаров ◽  
Sergey Kramarov ◽  
Юрий Смирнов ◽  
Yuriy Smirnov ◽  
Сергей Соколов ◽  
...  

There are questions of management of the composite dynamic systems in the conditions of indeterminacy, including consideration of systems for an intellectual adaptive control, questions of assessment of a condition of the concentrated and distributed stochastic systems by various criteria are considered; questions of stochastic management of dynamic objects on the basis of the generalized probability criteria; questions of optimum stochastic control of the maneuvering objects; questions of assessment of parameters of the space and distributed environment and point estimation of a condition of the concentrated and distributed systems are considered in the monograph. Important sections of this monograph are questions of synthesis of optimum adaptive control systems of mekhatronny objects and synthesis of an intellectual adaptive control with prediction by a mekhatronny object of changeable structure. The monograph is intended for completion of the existing gap in the direction of development of the theory of management of stochastic non-linear objects on the basis of the common forms of probability criteria and analytical synthesis of the common objective laws of processes of management of non-linear many-dimensional and multiply connected systems, including systems on the basis of the fullest non-linear models of systems with the immediate accounting of their natural regularities, physical (chemical, etc.) criteria and restrictions. The edition of the book was initiated by the tasks formulated within the SMART project (Satellite Monitoring — to the Fissile Development of Territories) where a number of the keyest problems, including adaptability of adoption of administrative decisions is considered. The book is intended for scientists, experts, graduate students and undergraduates specializing in area of an intellectual adaptive control, development of indistinct and logical methods and devices and also for students of older years of physical and mathematical faculties and engineering higher education institutions on the corresponding specialties and the directions. The results explained in the book can find practical application during creation of perspective control systems, navigation, communication, etc., i.e. a wide class of the dynamic non-linear systems functioning in the conditions of indignations of various physical nature.


Author(s):  
J. G. Michopoulos ◽  
A. P. Iliopoulos

Failure criteria have a significant role in the design of composite structural systems. Often the questions of “which criterion is more physical” and “which criterion is the best” create uncertainty in the design decision making process. To underline the ill-posed nature of both of these questions in the present paper we are describing the initial steps of an effort to address two ontological characteristics of failure criteria as they are applicable to composite materials applications. The first characteristic is the non-objective nature of failure criteria and an informal description is provided. The second characteristic is an ontologically based cross-reducibility between criteria. To underline more formally this characteristic we utilize an ontology-based framework to clarify “how a criterion relates with another” in terms of its main semantic attributes. The non-physical nature of a theory is exposed when it is evaluated from the semantic view of a systemic perspective. The human role on the formation of any failure criterion is shown to have a foundationally subjective character, thus rendering the corresponding criterion as non-objective. In the context of the second effort, the creation of classification ontology in terms of the semantic projections of failure criteria in their structural heritage and usage is created. The common attributes of failure criteria are utilized to identify the bases of the attribute space that they can be ontologically classified. Web ontology software is utilized to aid the ontological construction process and the visual interpretation of the ontological context. The derived cross-reducibility suggests that failure theories are special reductions of one another.


1997 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 299-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Marie Mariotti ◽  
Alain Léger ◽  
Bertrand Mennesson ◽  
Marc Ollivier

AbstractIndirect methods of detection of exo-planets (by radial velocity, astrometry, occultations,...) have revealed recently the first cases of exo-planets, and will in the near future expand our knowledge of these systems. They will provide statistical informations on the dynamical parameters: semi-major axis, eccentricities, inclinations,... But the physical nature of these planets will remain mostly unknown. Only for the larger ones (exo-Jupiters), an estimate of the mass will be accessible. To characterize in more details Earth-like exo-planets, direct detection (i.e., direct observation of photons from the planet) is required. This is a much more challenging observational program. The exo-planets are extremely faint with respect to their star: the contrast ratio is about 10−10at visible wavelengths. Also the angular size of the apparent orbit is small, typically 0.1 second of arc. While the first point calls for observations in the infrared (where the contrast goes up to 10−7) and with a coronograph, the latter implies using an interferometer. Several space projects combining these techniques have been recently proposed. They aim at surveying a few hundreds of nearby single solar-like stars in search for Earth-like planets, and at performing a low resolution spectroscopic analysis of their infrared emission in order to reveal the presence in the atmosphere of the planet of CO H2O and O3. The latter is a good tracer of the presence of oxygen which could be, like on our Earth, released by biological activity. Although extremely ambitious, these projects could be realized using space technology either already available or in development for others missions. They could be built and launched during the first decades on the next century.


1978 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 389-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chr. de Vegt

AbstractReduction techniques as applied to astrometric data material tend to split up traditionally into at least two different classes according to the observational technique used, namely transit circle observations and photographic observations. Although it is not realized fully in practice at present, the application of a blockadjustment technique for all kind of catalogue reductions is suggested. The term blockadjustment shall denote in this context the common adjustment of the principal unknowns which are the positions, proper motions and certain reduction parameters modelling the systematic properties of the observational process. Especially for old epoch catalogue data we frequently meet the situation that no independent detailed information on the telescope properties and other instrumental parameters, describing for example the measuring process, is available from special calibration observations or measurements; therefore the adjustment process should be highly self-calibrating, that means: all necessary information has to be extracted from the catalogue data themselves. Successful applications of this concept have been made already in the field of aerial photogrammetry.


1988 ◽  
Vol 102 ◽  
pp. 329
Author(s):  
R.W.P. McWhirter

The intensity of a specrtal line from an optically thin plasma such as the outer atmosphere of the sun depends on both the atomic properties of the atomic ion responsible for the line and the physical nature of the plasma. In this paper we discuss the various ways in which the measured spectral intensities from the sun are used to discover something about the nature of the sun’s atmosphere. The technique has been referred to as the emission measure method. It has important limitations in terms of the accuracy of the specrtal data as well as the atomic data. We discuss some of these and suggest methods by which they may be assessed. The technique is illustrated by application to real observations from a number of authors.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document