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Over the last decade, many local students have preferred to study
overseas. This has caused governments to announce the creation of
programs and developments in the higher education sector to upgrade
South-East Asia to a leading education hub. Moreover, many
governments declared that they would work on the insurance of
learning to increase the quality of the degrees and the teaching
itself. This has led many to question the results of these
declarations. Higher Education Challenges in South-East Asia
provides an overview of what has been happening over the last ten
years in higher education in South-East Asia. It also works to
solve the challenges in modern education such as the impacts of
digitalization, globalization, and Generation Y and Z learning
styles. Covering topics that include globalization, educational
technologies, and comparative teaching, this book impacts academic
institutions, policymakers, government officials, university and
college administrators and leaders, academicians, researchers, and
students.
The relationship between language and identity is a complex topic
everywhere in the world, but maybe it is even more crucial for
those people living in the Balkans who speak a Romance variety.
This volume is the result of a project started by the Balkan
History Association, and brings together scholars trained in social
sciences and humanities to offer the reader a thorough
sociolinguistic and anthropological account of this region. It
constitutes a contribution to a reformulation of methodological and
analytical issues, providing a better insight in the linguistic and
geopolitical processes taking place in the area. Contributors are
Michael Studemund-Halevy, Catalin Mamali, Anna-Christine Weirich,
Ewa Nowicka, Daniela-Carmen Stoica, Mircea Maran, Zvjezdana Vrzic,
and Monica Hutanu.
In the present book, Oliver Kahl offers, for the first time, a
complete, annotated English translation of Ibn Juljul’s
Ṭabaqāt al-aṭibbāʾ wa-l-ḥukamāʾ, one of the earliest
Arabic texts of its kind. Ibn Juljul’s work, completed in the
year 987 CE in Córdoba, is essentially a collection of
biographical essays on ancient and medieval physicians, scientists
and philosophers, interspersed with numerous anecdotes and
containing a highly instructive, relatively long section on
‘Andalusian sages’. The work represents a most crucial source
for our understanding of the evolution and the development of
medicine and philosophy in Muslim Spain, drawing also on a number
of otherwise unattested Latin-into-Arabic translations, and
abounding moreover in burlesque literary embellishments.
'Ali ibn Sahl Rabban at-Tabari's Indian Books, completed in the
year 850 CE as an appendix to his medico-philosophical
chef-d'oeuvre "Paradise of Wisdom", belong to the most remarkable
texts in Arabic scientific literature. The Indian Books offer a
unique, interpretative summary of the main tenets of Ayurvedic
medicine, as understood by Arabic-speaking scholars on the basis of
now lost translations from Sanskrit. The present book centres
around a critical edition and annotated translation of this crucial
text, framed by a detailed introduction and extensive glossaries of
terms. Tabari's learned expose of Ayurveda also throws a more
nuanced light on the allegedly uncontested supremacy of Greek
humoralism in 9th-century Arabic medicine.
The aim of this volume is to collect original contributions by the
best specialists from the area of proof theory, constructivity, and
computation and discuss recent trends and results in these areas.
Some emphasis will be put on ordinal analysis, reductive proof
theory, explicit mathematics and type-theoretic formalisms, and
abstract computations. The volume is dedicated to the 60th birthday
of Professor Gerhard Jager, who has been instrumental in shaping
and promoting logic in Switzerland for the last 25 years. It
comprises contributions from the symposium "Advances in Proof
Theory", which was held in Bern in December 2013. Proof theory came
into being in the twenties of the last century, when it was
inaugurated by David Hilbert in order to secure the foundations of
mathematics. It was substantially influenced by Goedel's famous
incompleteness theorems of 1930 and Gentzen's new consistency proof
for the axiom system of first order number theory in 1936. Today,
proof theory is a well-established branch of mathematical and
philosophical logic and one of the pillars of the foundations of
mathematics. Proof theory explores constructive and computational
aspects of mathematical reasoning; it is particularly suitable for
dealing with various questions in computer science.
Have you ever felt like there was a space between you and God? Or
that there was something more to your faith that you were just
missing out on? "Revive Your Life " helps guide you to building a
strong foundation and relationship with Jesus Christ. Lessons
learned in "Revive Your Life " are based solidly on the everlasting
Word of God. If you desire to strengthen your faith, then "Revive
Your Life " is for you
The Kitab Tahrim dafn al-ahya', the Book on the Prohibition to Bury
the Living, written by the Nestorian physician 'Ubaidallah Ibn
Buhtisu' (d. c. 1060 CE), deals with the causes, signs and
treatments of apparent death. Based on a short pseudo-Galenic
treatise, whose Greek original is lost, 'Ubaidallah's Arabic
commentary is a comprehensive and in many ways unique piece of
scientific writing that moreover promotes a psychological
understanding of physical illness. Oliver Kahl's present book
offers a critical Arabic edition with annotated English translation
of 'Ubaidallah's work on apparent death, framed by a detailed
introductory study and extensive glossaries covering all relevant
terms; for comparative purposes, the Arabic and Hebrew recensions
of the lost Greek prototype are presented in an appendix.
Targeted audience * Specialists in numerical computations,
especially in numerical optimiza tion, who are interested in
designing algorithms with automatie result ver ification, and who
would therefore be interested in knowing how general their
algorithms caIi in principle be. * Mathematicians and computer
scientists who are interested in the theory 0/ computing and
computational complexity, especially computational com plexity of
numerical computations. * Students in applied mathematics and
computer science who are interested in computational complexity of
different numerical methods and in learning general techniques for
estimating this computational complexity. The book is written with
all explanations and definitions added, so that it can be used as a
graduate level textbook. What this book .is about Data processing.
In many real-life situations, we are interested in the value of a
physical quantity y that is diflicult (or even impossible) to
measure directly. For example, it is impossible to directly measure
the amount of oil in an oil field or a distance to a star. Since we
cannot measure such quantities directly, we measure them
indirectly, by measuring some other quantities Xi and using the
known relation between y and Xi'S to reconstruct y. The algorithm
that transforms the results Xi of measuring Xi into an estimate fj
for y is called data processing.
This volume dedicated to William Q. Meeker on the occasion of
his sixtieth birthday is a collection of invited chapters covering
recent advances in accelerated life testing and degradation models.
The book covers a wide range of applications to areas such as
reliability, quality control, the health sciences, economics and
finance. Additional topics covered include accelerated testing and
inference, step-stress testing and inference, nonparametric
inference, model validity in accelerated testing, the point process
approach, bootstrap methods in degradation analysis, exact
inferential methods in reliability, dynamic perturbed systems, and
degradation models in statistics. Advances in Degradation Modeling
is an excellent reference for researchers and practitioners in
applied probability and statistics, industrial statistics, the
health sciences, quality control, economics, and finance.
In this two-volume compilation of articles, leading researchers
reevaluate the success of Hilbert's axiomatic method, which not
only laid the foundations for our understanding of modern
mathematics, but also found applications in physics, computer
science and elsewhere. The title takes its name from David
Hilbert's seminal talk Axiomatisches Denken, given at a meeting of
the Swiss Mathematical Society in Zurich in 1917. This marked the
beginning of Hilbert's return to his foundational studies, which
ultimately resulted in the establishment of proof theory as a new
branch in the emerging field of mathematical logic. Hilbert also
used the opportunity to bring Paul Bernays back to Goettingen as
his main collaborator in foundational studies in the years to come.
The contributions are addressed to mathematical and philosophical
logicians, but also to philosophers of science as well as
physicists and computer scientists with an interest in foundations.
Oliver Kahl and Henrietta Sharp Cockrell present a facsimile
edition of a newly discovered medieval medical text attributed to
the famous physician Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ
al-Rāzī (Rhazes, d. 925 CE). This unique Arabic manuscript
comprises a work in the health regimen genre titled “Book of the
Crown” (Kitāb al-Iklīl). Copied in 1220 CE and bound parallel
to the text (flip-bound), it is highly unusual, both in terms of
physical appearance and topical choices. The edition is accompanied
by an annotated English translation en regard, a detailed
introduction including a codicological study, and bilingual
indices.
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