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  • ...n in [[psychology]]. It has had reasonable success in computer science and artificial intelligence (see below). Some studies extended the approach to specific su [[Category:Languages and Literature]]
    22 KB (3,253 words) - 23:42, 12 December 2020
  • ...that democratic government should operate. However, as I said, these are artificial democracies, rather than “organic” democracies. What your democracies ...hich creates a military confrontation with differences in social security, languages, and culture. What ideas could be proposed to the people, to gradually era
    46 KB (8,026 words) - 12:43, 1 May 2016
  • ...remaining independent of a particular implementation language. Programming languages are primarily intended for expressing algorithms in a form that can be exec ...e appeal of this approach is the elegant [[Formal semantics of programming languages|semantics]]: a change in the axioms has a well defined change in the algori
    49 KB (7,317 words) - 23:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...eryday creativity, exceptional creativity and even [[Artificial Creativity|artificial creativity]]. Unlike many phenomena in science, there is no single, authori ...novel with respect to the whole of human history). Drawing on ideas from [[artificial intelligence]], she defines psychologically creative ideas as those which c
    55 KB (7,689 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...nyway comparable. But the [[civilization]] of the [[second Eden]] was an [[artificial]] [[structure]]— it had not been evolved —and was therefore [[doomed]] ...e [[language]] of the Adamsonites and later ''Andites''. Many [[modern]] [[languages]] are derived from this early [[speech]] of these central Asian tribes who
    50 KB (7,677 words) - 01:28, 13 December 2020
  • ...ance]]" of a short and amiable piece, or ''[[Romance languages]]'' for the languages derived from [[Latin]] (French, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, and Portuguese) ...e vast commercial market of the English-speaking world still resisted this artificial divide.
    50 KB (8,118 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...uded in psychological theory and practice, particularly in areas such as [[artificial intelligence]], [[neuropsychology]], and [[cognitive neuroscience]]. ...e approximately 6,000 different languages currently in use, including sign languages, and many thousands more that are considered [[extinct language|extinct]].
    56 KB (8,237 words) - 00:50, 13 December 2020
  • ...more complete process. That insight generated his strategy of inducing an "artificial tide" in his patient (with the aid of magnets) to evoke a cathartic ebb or ...psychedelics were psychotomimetics, suitable only for mind control and the artificial induction of insanity in warfare. An entirely different group of scientists
    51 KB (7,640 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...to speak over thirty different languages fluently and another twelve or so languages that are officially extinct. Because of my skills in linguistics and my abi ...es about the future, which they had recorded in symbol pictures or extinct languages like Sumerian, Mayan, and Chakobsan.
    90 KB (15,547 words) - 22:08, 21 January 2010
  • ...ost widely-read scholars of his time (greatly aided by his fluency in many languages), as well as a notorious author. During this time, despite his committed [[ ...heme in his discussion of God). Meanwhile, the woman's temptation is to an artificial innocence; a secret envy of God's incorporeality and impassibility. The def
    58 KB (8,742 words) - 14:06, 15 April 2009
  • ...h the extent of conquest; and, as soon as time or accident had removed the artificial supports, the stupendous fabric yielded to the pressure of its own weight. ...etary industrializing world civilization, divided between many nations and languages.
    43 KB (6,155 words) - 23:41, 12 December 2020
  • cleverly crafted ... proponents of the ‘strong Artificial Intelligence’ paradigm [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
    43 KB (6,612 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...2529056</ref><ref name="Epstein">Epstein J.M. and Axtell R. (1996) Growing Artificial Societies - Social Science from the Bottom. Cambridge MA, MIT Press.</ref> #Epstein J.M. and Axtell R. (1996) Growing Artificial Societies - Social Science from the Bottom. Cambridge MA, MIT Press.
    78 KB (11,964 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...t enabled their text to print out in perfect English, or about sixty other languages. It took us a two days to figure out how to access the disc, but once we di Sarah: "But how did you immediately know it was an artificial construction, and not a natural set of chambers or caves?"
    106 KB (18,324 words) - 22:09, 21 January 2010
  • ...he seconda pratica may seem in consequence an accumulation of licences, of artificial infringements of earlier rules. On the other hand, the distinction between ...the minor triad. The notion that the minor was a shading of the major, an artificial variant of the natural triad (Helmholtz), was not really taken as a satisfa
    125 KB (19,232 words) - 22:31, 12 December 2020

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