Search for: "John W. Moore" Results 281 - 291 of 291
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20 Jun 2010, 8:58 am by Lawrence Solum
  John Stuart Mill, for example, thought that there were higher pleasures (e.g., from listening to great music or reading a great novel) and lower pleasures (e.g., from strong drink, drugs, or playing video games). [read post]
14 May 2020, 12:09 pm by Phil Dixon
Where grounds for recusal of trial judge would arise only during sentencing (if at all), defendant was not entitled to writ of mandamus ordering recusal from trial In Re: John Moore, 955 F.3d 384 (April 9, 2020). [read post]
25 Sep 2011, 10:14 am by Lawrence Solum
  John Stuart Mill, for example, thought that there were higher pleasures (e.g., from listening to great music or reading a great novel) and lower pleasures (e.g., from strong drink, drugs, or playing video games). [read post]
18 Oct 2007, 4:21 pm
Shelley Moore Capito, he could be forced to raise tens of millions of dollars. [read post]
20 Sep 2014, 1:06 pm
Peter Checkland, Systems Thinking, Systems Practice, Chichester : John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 1999) is then a critical element in the way in which the legal system (in this case of the United States) interacts with the world, both as a legal and as a socio-economic-political actor. [read post]
28 Sep 2020, 10:02 am by William Ford, Tia Sewell
Nicol Turner Lee, Brookings senior fellow, will moderate a panel discussion with Mark MacCarthy, Georgetown faculty; Frida Pollu, CEO of pymetrics; Elham Tabassi, chief of staff at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and John Villasenor, nonresident senior fellow at Brookings, on how the U.S. and other countries can develop responsible AI by standardizing AI principles and processes. [read post]
21 Dec 2007, 10:20 am
Last year, John Moore from Brand Autopsy set up an excellent White Elephant Blog. [read post]
23 Jun 2014, 12:57 pm by Schachtman
ITERATIVE DISJUNCTIVE SYLLOGISM Basic propositional logic teaches that the disjunctive syllogism (modus tollendo ponens) is a valid argument, in which one of its premises is a disjunction (P v Q), and the other premise is the negation of one of the disjuncts: P v Q ~P­­­_____ ∴ Q See Irving Copi & Carl Cohen Introduction to Logic at 362 (2005). [read post]