Bill of quantities; reduce utility bills

Friday, August 15th, 2008

In a formal, traditional construction project in United Kingdom, a bill of quantities is used as a form of cost planning and mapping to monitor and control the construction cost during the execution or post-contract period of construction.

These documents originated historically as non-contractual measurements, taken off drawings to assist tenderers in quoting lump sum prices.

Bills of quantities are drawn up and specified by a cost professional called a quantity surveyor and prepared in advance to take into account the works required for a project, and then later used as a tender document to acquire bidding from the contractors who would be interested in winning the job.

There are different styles of bills of quantities, mainly the Elemental BOQ and Trade Bills.


External links

  • Buildsoft - [http://www.buildsoft.com.au - Bill of Quantities software for the building industry)
  • Estimator - Cost Estimation Software

Cost of money; pursue their immediate interest.

Monday, May 26th, 2008

The cost of money refers to the availability of credit and the interest rate at which that credit is available, expressed as present future value.

The “cost of money” refers to interest; either interest paid on an existing loan or unearned interest when money is tied up in material assets or other investments that do not generate income.

Production opportunities
Time preferences for consumption
Risk
Inflation

Bachelor of Applied Science; degree zero

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

A

Bachelor of Applied Science is an undergraduate academic degree awarded for a course of study that generally lasts three years in the United Kingdom and Australia, and four to five years in Canada, the Netherlands and the United States. In Canada and the Netherlands, the Bachelor of Applied Science is an alternate name that is equivalent to the Bachelor of Engineering, and is considered to be a professional degree.

A Bachelor of Applied Science degree usually requires a student to take a majority of their courses in the applied sciences, specializing in a specific area such as the following:

  • Engineering - General
  • Biological engineering
  • Biochemical engineering
  • Chemical engineering
  • Civil engineering
  • Computer engineering
  • Electrical engineering
  • Environmental engineering
  • Engineering science and mechanics
  • Geological engineering
  • Industrial engineering
  • Mechanical engineering
  • Mechatronics engineering
  • Mining engineering
  • Software engineering
  • Space engineering

A Bachelor of Applied Science degree does not necessarily require the study of an engineering discipline. Majors may be taken in more practical applications of sciences such as applied physics or applied chemistry. Most universities that offer this degree require a rigorous course schedule.

A graduate of a Bachelor of Applied Science program receives the designation BAS, B.ASc., B.A.Sc., B.App.Sc, B.Appl.Sc, or B.S. for a major or pass degree and BAS(Hons), B.ASc.(Hons), B.A.Sc.(Hons) and B.S. or others for an honours degree.

Institute of Higher Nervous Activity; provide a higher

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

The Institute of Higher Nervous Activity is part of the Russian Academy of Sciences.


Leading scientists of the institute

  • PM Balaban
  • AA Frolov
  • IA Shevelyov
  • LL Voronin


External links

  • http://www.ihna.ru/

Institute of Indirect Taxation; indirect utility function

Saturday, March 29th, 2008


The Institute of Indirect Taxation is a professional body in the United Kingdom. Its members specialise in the study and practice of indirect taxes. The body was formed in July 1991 and formally launched in October 1991. It gained permission to call itself an institute in December of the same year. It operates as a company limited by guarantee.

Entry to the Institute is normally gained by taking up to four professional examinations in indirect taxation. There are two routes through the exams, the Value Added Tax route and the customs route which reflect two of the most major areas that indirect taxation is applied to in the United Kingdom. It is possible to gain exemptions from some of the exams through possessing other suitable qualifications which include those from various British accountancy professional bodies, the Chartered Institute of Taxation and HM Revenue and Customs.

The four papers are:

  • I: Legal, Business and Professional Ethics
  • II: optional paper which is dependent on whether the VAT or customs route through the qualification is being taken
  • III: Other Indirect Taxes
  • IV: Stamp Taxes, Direct Taxes and Interaction of all Taxes

Those who have passed the examinations and been accepted into membership are entitled to use the designatory letters AIIT (Associate of the Institute of Indirect Taxation). Upon submission of a thesis to the institute it is possible to become a Fellow of the Institute of Indirect Taxation which allows for the use of the designatory letters FIIT. Other categories of member, which are without designatory letters, are student members and affiliate members. It is also possible to be made an honorary member or fellow.


External links

  • Institute website

Venice Biennale of architecture; utilities or

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Venice Biennale of architecture (1883-1927) originated as a renaissance on urban settings to promote the highly esthetic preferences of Pope Warren III. The movement washed through Europe spreading its extents to Iran and Nigeria. The secretive and effective undermining of local policies gave birth to an oppositional regime called MUTTS, Move Utilities To The Surface, which endeavored to celebrate the equipment and methods of resource delivery. To avoid the devastation of conflict, both groups arranged to Art-Deco modification of existing utilities in 1922.

Mostra di Architettura di Venezia, the Architecture section of the Venice Biennale was established in 1980, although architecture had been a part of the art biennale since 1975. The 2004 exhibition was called the “Metamorph”. The 10th exhbition, in 2006, was directed by Richard Burdett and dedicated to the theme of Cities, architecture and society.

As well as addressing the academic side of architecture, the Biennale is an occasion where big-name architects and designers can showcase new projects, arranged in different pavilions, each with different themes.

The Girls of Pleasure Island; pleasure remains always qualitatively

Monday, February 18th, 2008

The Girls of Pleasure Island is a 1953 comedy film directed by Alvin Ganzer and F. Hugh Herbert. The screenplay by F. Hugh Herbert is based on the novel by William Maier. The original music score is composed by Lyn Murray.


Plot summary

In 1945, Roger Halyard is a stiff-upper-lipped British gentleman who lives on a South Pacific island with his three nubile, naive daughters, Violet, Hester and Gloria. Hoping to shelter the girls from the lascivious advances of the opposite sex, Halyard is thwarted when 1,500 Marines arrive to transform the island into an aircraft landing base. Despite the best efforts of Halyard, his housekeeper Thelma, and Marine Colonel Reade, romance blossoms between the three girls and a trio of handsome leathernecks.


Main cast

  • Don Taylor - Lieutenant Gilmartin
  • Leo Genn - Roger Halyard
  • Elsa Lanchester - Thelma
  • Philip Ober - Colonel Reade
  • Joan Elan - Violet Halyard
  • Audrey Dalton - Hester Halyard
  • Dorothy Bromley - Gloria Halyard
  • Peter Baldwin - Private Henry Smith
  • Gene Barry - Captain Beaton
  • Arthur E. Gould-Porter - Reverend Bates
  • Barry Bernard - Wilkinson


External links

First Minister of Bajor; analogous

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

The First Minister of Bajor is a role analogous to Prime Minister in the politics of the fictional planet Bajor in Star Trek, the religious leader being the Kai. In the mirror universe this role is non-existent, Bajor being under the administration of Intendant Kira Nerys.


Office-holders since 2370

  • Kalem Apren
  • Winn Adami (acting)
  • Shakaar Edon
  • Analogous Quotes Analogous quotes and quotations from BrainyQuote. Philip Emeagwali, First, I identify an analogous Larry McMurtry, You expect far too much of.
  • C5: The Analogous Landscape Defining the nature of resemblance between things that are otherwise unlike is the focus of The Analogous Landscape project. In the tradition of monumental
  • Designing With Color - Analogous Colors Strengths: Nature is full of analogous colors. These color combinations create soothing effects. Families of analogous colors include warm colors (red,
  • www.oercommons.org/search?SearchableText=analogous Similar pages [PDF] What are the benefits of analogous communication in human computer File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLWe will demonstrate an application of analogous indicators to input Analogous communication could be defined as the corresponding item of typical
  • analogous colors Analogous colors are a palette of compatible color combinations that blend well together. They are neighbors on the color wheel.
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  • analogous - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about analogous Hutchinson encyclopedia article about analogous. analogous. Information about analogous in the Hutchinson encyclopedia.

University of Colombo Department of Economics; economics

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

The University of Colombo, Department of Economics is one of the oldest and most possibly the most popular departments in the Faculty of Arts with 700 undergraduates – including students who take Economics as one of three subjects in a General Arts degree, and those who take Special Arts degree in Economics.

When considering the history of Economics department it is vital to know about the history of the University of Colombo. The University of Colombo has a proud history of over a century and a quarter starting with the establishment of the Medical School – the predecessor to the present Faculty of Medicine of the University. It was on the present premises of the University of Colombo that the first fully-fledged University, the University of Ceylon was set up in 1942. After a series of changes the present institutional structure of the University of Colombo was established in 1978. Recently the University of Colombo was ranked among the top universities in Asia and the Pacific by the highly respected Asiaweek magazine.

Having initially focused on undergraduate training in a variety of disciplines, the University of Colombo has, since the early 1980’s, increasingly turned its attention to the development of teaching and training programs at postgraduate level. The Department of Economics in the Faculty of Arts took a leadership role in this activity by commencing in 1984 the Postgraduate Diploma in Economic Development. The Department now offers three more well recognized Postgraduate programs: the MA in Economics (1991, MPhil /PhD in Economics (1996) and MA in Financial Economics(2005). In addition to postgraduate programs, the department offers Diploma in Tourism Economics and Hotel Management Program(2005)to meet the growing needs of tourism and related industries.

At a time when large numbers of graduates in Economics were looking for postgraduate training opportunities, but were getting disappointed that opportunities and resources for this purpose at home and abroad were limited, the value of the services rendered by the postgraduate study program of the Department of Economics of the University of Colombo has been enormous.

Postgraduate training programs in Economics offered in the University of Colombo continue to attract large numbers of applicants with a variety of backgrounds. The University provides a stimulating environment for rigorous graduate study. The postgraduate students in turn provide luster to this excellent center of learning which serves the country’s need of producing higher-level manpower in the discipline of Economics, in increasingly important discipline in the Management of the affairs of the Sri Lankan society.

List of utilitarians; introduced by Bentham to

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

This is an incomplete list of advocates of utilitarianism.

  • John Austin
  • Jeremy Bentham
  • Richard Brandt
  • Charles Darwin
  • Epicurus
  • Fred Feldman
  • Jonathan Glover
  • William Godwin
  • Dan Goldstick
  • George Grote
  • Élie Halévy
  • R. M. Hare
  • John Harsanyi
  • Claude Adrien Helvétius
  • David Hume
  • Richard Layard
  • Lucretius
  • Harriet Taylor Mill
  • James Mill
  • John Stuart Mill
  • Ludwig von Mises
  • G.E. Moore
  • Yew-Kwang Ng
  • Alastair Norcross
  • Adam Smith
  • William Paley
  • David Pearce
  • Karl Popper
  • James Rachels
  • David Ricardo
  • Bertrand Russell
  • Richard D. Ryder
  • William Shaw
  • Henry Sidgwick
  • Peter Singer
  • J. J. C. Smart
  • Herbert Spencer
  • L. W. Sumner
  • Torbjörn Tännsjö
  • William Thompson

Nicholas of Basel; mistaken

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Nicholas of Basel (c.1308 - 1397), a prominent member of the Beghard community, who travelled widely as a missionary and propagated the teachings of his sect.

Though vigorously sought after by the Inquisition he eluded its agents for many years until in 1391 he was seized in Vienna, and burned at the stake as a heretic, together with two of his followers, John and James. A considerable legend has attached itself to Nicholas through the persistent but mistaken identification of him with the mysterious “Friend of God from the Oberland,” the “double” of Rulman Merswin, the Strasbourg banker who was one of the leaders of the 14th-century German mystics known as the Friends of God.


Arrondissements of the Hauts-de-Seine department; an increase

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

The 3 arrondissements of the Hauts-de-Seine department are:

  1. Arrondissement of Antony, (subprefecture: Antony) with 12 cantons and 12 communes. The population of the arrondissement was 373,097 in 1990, and was 380,371 in 1999, an increase of 1.95%.
  2. Arrondissement of Nanterre, (prefecture of the Hauts-de-Seine department: Nanterre) with 24 cantons and 15 communes. The population of the arrondissement was 735,586 in 1990, and was 756,101 in 1999, an increase of 2.79%.
  3. Arrondissement of Boulogne-Billancourt, (subprefecture: Boulogne-Billancourt) with 9 cantons and 9 communes. The population of the arrondissement was 282,975 in 1990, and was 292,409 in 1999, an increase of 3.33%.

Indirect pathway of movement; indirect utility

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Indirect pathway of movement describes the one of the pathways modulated by the striatum, the other being a direct pathway of movement.

In the indirect pathway, striatal neurons inhibit neurons in the globus pallidus externus, which in turn inhibit neurons in the subthalamic nucleus. The direct and indirect pathways then converge at the level of the globus pallidus internus with the excitation of neurons in this region by subthalamic neurons. Opposite of the direct pathway, globus pallidus internus neurons inhibit thalamic neurons that excite the premotor cortex.

The result of all these excitations and inhibitions is an inhibition of movement by the indirect pathway. This is why damage to the pathway, as in Parkinson’s disease, causes an inability to switch to new, desired motor programs.

Lund School of Economics and Management; economics

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

The Lund School of Economics and Management or Ekonomihögskolan is a business school at Lund University in Lund, Sweden. It is said to be one of the better business schools in Europe, and has been certified by EQUIS.

It was founded and financed by Holger Crafoord.

Also, has an impressive Industrial Relations program.


See also

  • Stockholm School of Economics
  • Gothenburg School of Economics
  • Umeå School of Business
  • List of universities in Sweden
  • List of business schools in Scandinavia


External links

  • Lund School of Economics and Management - Official site

Ship of Theseus; always qualitatively the

Monday, December 31st, 2007

The Ship of Theseus is a paradox also known as Theseus’ paradox. It raises the question of whether an object, which has had all its component parts replaced, remains fundamentally the same.

Contents


Variations of the paradox


Greek legend

According to Greek legend as reported by Plutarch,

Plutarch thus questions whether the ship would remain the same if it were entirely replaced, piece by piece. As a corollary, one can question what happens if the replaced parts were used to build a second ship. Which, if either, is the original Ship of Theseus?


Heraclitus’s river

The Greek philosopher Heraclitus is notable for his unusual view of identity. Arius Didymus quoted<ref>Fr 39.2, Dox. gr. 471.4</ref> him as saying:

Plutarch also informs us of Heraclitus’ claim about stepping twice into the same river, citing that it cannot be done because “it scatters and again comes together, and approaches and recedes”<ref>”On the E at Delphi” 392b</ref>.


Locke’s socks

John Locke proposed a scenario regarding a favorite sock that develops a hole. He pondered whether the sock would still be the same after a patch was applied to the hole. If yes, then, would it still be the same sock after a second patch was applied? Indeed, would it still be the same sock many years later, even after all of the material of the original sock has been replaced with patches?


Grandfather’s old axe

“Grandfather’s old axe” is a colloquial expression of unknown origin describing something of which little original remains: “it’s had three new heads and four new handles but it’s still the same old axe.” The phrase has also been used in banter as in: “This is George Washington’s original axe…”, while holding up an apparently new axe. This example is used explicitly to explain significant points of the plot in The Fifth Elephant by Terry Pratchett. A similar example was also seen in Only Fools and Horses, where Trigger (a central character) won an award for using the same broom to sweep the streets for twenty years, even though he’d replaced the head 17 times and the handle 14 times.


Other examples

One can think of many examples of objects which might fall prey to Theseus’s paradox: buildings and automobiles for example can undergo complete replacement whilst still maintaining some aspect of their identity. Businesses, colleges and universities often change addresses and residences, thus completely “replacing” their old material structure for a new one, yet keeping the same purpose and often the same people that keep the organization functioning as it was. If two businesses merge, their identities merge (or one is consumed by the other). Similarly, the human body constantly creates new cells as old cells die. Average age of cells in an adult body may be less than 10 years. <ref> Your Body Is Younger Than You Think </ref>

If we relate identity to actions and phenomena, identity becomes even harder to grasp. Depending upon one’s chosen perspective of what identifies or continues a hurricane, if a hurricane Evan collapses at a particular location and then one forms again at or near the same location, a person may be totally consistent to either choose to call the latter mentioned hurricane the same as the former (as in “Evan” was reinvigorated), or choose to call the latter a new hurricane “Frank” or “Georgia”.

One could also see the bands Napalm Death and The Little River Band as contemporary examples of Theseus’s paradox. Both band’s current line-ups contains none of the founding members, yet they continue to use the same name.

A somewhat, more layman’s example is in most Herby films. In these films, when any part of the protagonist (a “living” car named Herbie) is replaced, no one thinks anything of it, however; if one were to replace all of Herbie’s parts at once, which part would contain his “soul”, and if a certain car part DID contain his soul, would it be transferred if the part were attached to ANOTHER car?


Proposed resolutions


Aristotle’s causes

According to the philosophical system of Aristotle and his followers, there are four causes or reasons that describe a thing; these causes can be analyzed to get to a solution to the paradox. The formal cause or form is the design of a thing, while the material cause is the matter that the thing is made of. The “what-it-is” of a thing, according to Aristotle, is its formal cause; so the Ship of Theseus is the same ship, because the formal cause, or design, does not change, even though the matter used to construct it may vary with time. In the same manner, for Heraclitus’s paradox, a river has the same formal cause, although the material cause (the particular water in it) changes with time, and likewise for the person who steps in the river.

Another of Aristotle’s causes is the end or final cause, which is the intended purpose of a thing. The Ship of Theseus would have the same end, that is, transporting Theseus, even though its material cause would change with time. The efficient cause is how and by whom a thing is made, for example, how artisans fabricate and assemble something; in the case of the Ship of Theseus, the workers who built the ship in the first place could have used the same tools and techniques to replace the planks in the ship.


Definitions of “the same”

One common argument found in the philosophical literature is that in the case of Heraclitus’s river we are tripped up by two different definitions of “the same”. In one sense things can be qualitatively the same, by having the same properties. In another sense they might be numerically the same by being “one”. As an example, consider two bowling balls that look identical. They would be qualitatively, but not numerically, the same. If one of the balls was then painted a different color, it would be numerically, but not qualitatively, the same as its previous self.

By this argument, Heraclitus’s river is qualitatively, but not numerically, different by the time one attempts to make the second step into it. For Theseus’s ship, the same is true.

The main problem with this proposed solution to problems of identity is that if we construe our definition of properties broadly enough, qualitative identity collapses into numerical identity. For example, if one of the qualities of a bowling ball is its spatial or temporal location, then no two bowling balls that exist in different places or points in time could ever be numerically identical. Likewise, in the case of a river, since it has different properties at every point in time—such as variance in the peaks and troughs of the waves in particular spatial locations, changes in the amount of water in the river caused by evaporation—it can never be qualitatively identical at different points in time. Since nothing can be qualitatively different without also being numerically different, the river must be numerically different at different points in time.

(A problem: “Since nothing can be qualitatively different without also being numerically different, the river must be numerically different at different points in time.” - this contradicts the example in the first paragraph of the painted bowling ball)

(Actually, “nothing can be qualitatively different without also being numerically different” is a false claim. Not all qualities must be different for a thing to be, overall, qualitatively different. For instance, numerical value might be a quality factor that remains the same, while other qualities change.)


Four dimensionalism

One solution to this paradox may come from the concept of four-dimensionalism. David Lewis and others have proposed that these problems can be solved by considering all things as 4-dimensional objects. An object is a spatially extended three-dimensional thing that also extends across the 4th dimension of time. This 4-dimensional object is made up of 3-dimensional time-slices. These are spatially extended things that exist only at individual points in time. An object is made up of a series of causally related time-slices. All time-slices are numerically identical to themselves. And the whole aggregate of time-slices, namely the 4-dimensional object, is also numerically identical with itself. But the individual time-slices can have qualities that differ from each other.

The problem with the river is solved by saying that at each point in time, the river has different properties. Thus the various 3-dimensional time-slices of the river have different properties from each other. But the entire aggregate of river time-slices, namely the whole river as it exists across time, is identical with itself. So you can never step into the same river time-slice twice, but you can step into the same (4-dimensional) river twice.<ref>David Lewis,”Survival and Identity” (in Amelie O. Rorty [ed.] The Identities of Persons (1976; U. of California P.) Reprinted in his Philosophical Papers I.</ref>

A seeming difficulty with this is that in special relativity there is not a unique “correct” way to make these slices — it is not meaningful to speak of a “point in time” extended in space. However, this does not prove to be a problem: any way of slicing will do (including no ’slicing’ at all), provided that the boundary of the object changes in a fashion which can be agreed upon by observers in all reference frames. Special relativity still ensures that “you can never step into the same river time-slice twice”, because even with the ability to shift around which way spacetime is sliced, you are still moving in a timelike fashion, which will not multiply intersect a time-slice, which is spacelike.


Metaphysics of quality

Robert M. Pirsig’s metaphysics of quality, presented in Lila: An Inquiry into Morals, defines a hierarchy of patterns and uses it to offer another solution to the paradox: the ship is simultaneously a set of lower-order patterns (the parts) which change, and a single higher-order pattern (the ship as a whole) which remains constant.


Madhyamika Buddhism

Within the Madhyamika school of Mahayana Buddhism, Candrakirti identifies the self as:

an essence of things that does not depend on others; it is an intrinsic nature. The non-existence of that is selflessness.

Bodhisattvayogacaryācatuḥśatakaṭikā 256.1.7

Indeed the concept of Buddhist Emptiness is the strong assertion that all phenomena are empty of any essence - demonstrating that anti-essentialism lies at the very root of Buddhist praxis. Therefore, within this school it is the innate belief in essence that is considered to be the affliction which serves as the base of all suffering. However, the school also rejects the tenets of Idealism and Materialism; instead, the ideas of truth or existence, along with any assertions that depend upon them are limited to their function within the contexts and conventions that assert them, akin to Relativism or Pragmatism. For Madhyamakas, replacement paradoxes such as Ship of Theseus are answered by stating that the Ship of Thesesus remains so (within the conventions that assert it) until it ceases to function as the Ship of Theseus.


In popular culture

The Ship of Theseus paradox is addressed in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novel The Fifth Elephant. Here it is about an axe which periodically gets a new handle or a new blade. The characters in this book reason that, while it might not be the same axe physically, it will always remain the same axe emotionally. The Discworld series also pays homage to Heraclitus’ statement by claiming that the (notoriously polluted and slow-moving to the point of being solid) River Ankh in the city of Ankh-Morpork is the only river that it is possible to cross twice.

There is a reference to the paradox in the BBC comedy Only Fools and Horses. The character Trigger, who is a road sweeper, wins an award for having used the same broom for many years and thus saving money. When he is asked about it, he reveals naively that both the handle and head of the broom have been replaced several times. Trigger is a dim-witted character who makes foolish remarks, and the joke here is that he believes the broom to be the same one as he has always had.

In the 1986 book Foundation and Earth by Isaac Asimov, the ancient robot R. Daneel Olivaw says that over the thousands of years of his existence, every part of him has been replaced several times, including his brain, which he has carefully redesigned six times, replacing it each time with a newly constructed brain having the positronic pathways containing his current memories and skills, along with free space for him to learn more and continue operating for longer.

In So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish by Douglas Adams, Marvin the android claims he has undergone the same renovation, with the exception of the diodes down his left side (ironically, throughout the books he constantly complains of pain from just those diodes).

In the 1872 story Dr. Ox’s Experiment by Jules Verne there is a reference to Jeannot’s knife (the French equivalent of “Grandfather’s old axe”) apropos the van Tricasse’s family. In this family, since 1340, each time one of the spouses died the other remarried with someone younger, who took the family name.

The Heraclitus’s river paradox is featured in Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now Redux in the newly added French plantation scene in a dialogue between Captain Willard and French colonist Roxanne:

Roxanne: “Do you know why you can never step into the same river twice?”

Willard: “Yeah, ’cause it’s always moving.”

It is also featured in Disney’s Pocahontas, during the song “Just Around the Riverbend”, in which Pocahontas sings “What I love most about rivers is you can’t step in the same river twice; The water’s always changing, always flowing”

A variation of the paradox exists in the manga and anime, Ghost in the Shell.


See also

  • Identity and change
  • Mereological essentialism
  • Philosophical zombie
  • Sorites paradox
  • Shunyata
  • Standing wave


References

Derivative of a constant; function for

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

In calculus, the derivative of a constant function is zero. (A constant function is one that does not depend on the independent variable, such as f(x) = 7.)

The rule can be justified in various ways. The derivative is the slope of the tangent to the given function’s graph, and the graph of a constant function is a horizontal line, whose slope is zero. Alternatively, one can use the limit definition of the derivative. The difference quotient
<math>\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}</math> is zero for every h, and so therefore must be the limit of this quotient as h tends to zero, that is, f’(x).


Antiderivative of zero

A partial converse to this statement is the following:

If a function has a derivative of zero on an interval, it must be constant on that interval.

This is not a consequence of the original statement, but follows from the Mean value theorem. It can be generalized to the statement that

If two functions have the same derivative on an interval, they must differ by a constant,

or

If g is an antiderivative of f on and interval, then all antiderivatives of f on that interval are of the form g(x)+C, where C is a constant.

From this follows a weak version of the second Fundamental theorem of calculus: if f is continuous on [a,b] and f = g’ for some function g, then

<math>\int_a^b f(x) dx = g(b) - g(a)</math>.

List of sailing boat types; types of utilities

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

The following is a partial list of sailboat types, including keelboats, dinghies, catamarans and trimarans.

Contents


Keelboats and yachts


Sailing dinghies and skiffs


Catamarans and trimarans


Types of sailing vessels and rigs


Sails, spars and rigging


Sailing maneuvers

Section Eight of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms; not. Expectation

Monday, November 26th, 2007

Section Eight of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms provides everyone in Canada with protection against unreasonable search and seizure. This Charter right provides Canadians with their primary source of constitutionally enforced privacy rights against unreasonable intrusion from the state. Typically, this protects personal information that can be obtained through searching someone in pat-down, entering someone’s property or surveillance.

Under the heading of legal rights, section 8 states:

Any property found or seized by means of a violation of section 8 can be excluded as evidence in a trial under section 24(2).

Contents


Reasonable expectation of privacy

Generally speaking, the reasonable expectation of privacy does not protect against normal searches or seizures. Rather, the right focuses on the action being unreasonable on the basis that it violates an individual’s reasonable expectation of privacy.


Search

Not every form of examination constitutes search. A search within the meaning of section eight is determined by whether the investigatory technique used by the state diminishes a person’s reasonable expectation of privacy. The focus of analysis is upon the purpose of the examination. A police officer who compells someone to produce their licence would not be invasive enough to constitute a search (R. v. Ladouceur, [1990]<ref>R. v. Ladouceur, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1257.</ref>). Equally, an inspection of the inside of a car is not a search, but questions about the contents of a bag would be. (R. v. Mellenthin [1992]<ref>R. v. Mellenthin, [1992] 3 S.C.R. 615.</ref>)


Seizure

The meaning of seizure is fairly straight forward. In R. v. Dyment (1988),<ref>R. v. Dyment, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 417.</ref> the Court defined it simply as the “taking of a thing from a person by a public authority without that person’s consent.” This meaning has been narrowed to cover property taken in furtherance of administration or criminal investigation (Quebec (Attorney General) v. Laroche, [2002]<ref>Quebec (Attorney General) v. Laroche, [2002] 3 S.C.R. 708</ref>).


See also

  • Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution : equivalent US constitutional right


References

<references/>


External links

  • Canlii section 8 digest
  • Search and Seizure Overview
  • Fundamental Freedoms: The Charter of Rights and Freedoms - Charter of Rights website with video, audio and the Charter in over 20 languages

Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices; consumer

Sunday, November 11th, 2007
  1. redirectHarmonised Index of Consumer Prices
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