ReligionDispatches is the very first secular online magazine devoted to the scholarly analysis of religion for the general reader.
Founded in 2008 and edited by religion scholars Gary Laderman (Emory U.) and Linell Cady (ASU), ReligionDispatches covers all aspects of religion and public life from a progressive, but critical perspective. It bills itself as offering "critical analysis for the common good."
In her post "A Welcome Site," USC Scholar Diane Winston declared that "Religion Dispatches is exactly what we need now: smart writing about a crucial topic."
Writers and Bloggers
*Jeff Sharlet
*Linell Cady
*Randall Balmer
*Arri Eisen
*Diane Winston
*Amir Hussain
*Kathryn Lofton
*Svend White
*Michael Lerner
*Kathryn Joyce
*Tom Davis
*Ira Chernus
*Robert P. Jones
*Gabriel McKee
*Katie Meier
*Shabana Mir
Founded in 2008 and edited by religion scholars Gary Laderman (Emory U.) and Linell Cady (ASU), ReligionDispatches covers all aspects of religion and public life from a progressive, but critical perspective. It bills itself as offering "critical analysis for the common good."
In her post "A Welcome Site," USC Scholar Diane Winston declared that "Religion Dispatches is exactly what we need now: smart writing about a crucial topic."
Writers and Bloggers
*Jeff Sharlet
*Linell Cady
*Randall Balmer
*Arri Eisen
*Diane Winston
*Amir Hussain
*Kathryn Lofton
*Svend White
*Michael Lerner
*Kathryn Joyce
*Tom Davis
*Ira Chernus
*Robert P. Jones
*Gabriel McKee
*Katie Meier
*Shabana Mir
Capability Bias - The tendency to believe that the closer average performance is to a target, the tighter the distribution of the data set.
Long known, but recently codified bias. Based on observations by Daryl Clements, and Steve Hajec in their many years working with executives in the area of Business Excelence.
The subject tends to interpret the distribution as Follows:
Alternate interpretations are just as likely, but not considered:
Long known, but recently codified bias. Based on observations by Daryl Clements, and Steve Hajec in their many years working with executives in the area of Business Excelence.
The subject tends to interpret the distribution as Follows:
Alternate interpretations are just as likely, but not considered:
Mikael Nordfors (b. 22 December 1958 in Stockholm, Sweden) is a medical doctor with special interest in psychiatry and orthopaedic medicine, and is co-author of the American bestseller . He has also published the online booklet [http://open.coop/tiki-download_file.php?fileId88&highlightdemocracy Democracy 2.1]. He is also a musical composer/performer, having produced four CDs of symphonic synthesizer music named No Limits, Eternal Voyage, Take Off and Lux Eterna. Mikael claims to have Asperger syndrome.
He was one of the founders of the DemoEx political party in Vallentuna, Sweden, who for more than 4 years have been practising Dr. Nordfors' ideas on direct democracy combined with delegated voting in a real political setting. This idea have later also become adapted by The World Parliament Experiment, where MN is a member. He has been invited to many international conferences such the world political forum, Turin (chaired by Mikhail Gorbachev), the democracy collaborative, Washington DC (Benjamin Barber), The National Democratic Institute (Madeleine Albright), The World Social Forum and The International Conference for Chief Justices in Lucknow, India.
He was one of the founders of the DemoEx political party in Vallentuna, Sweden, who for more than 4 years have been practising Dr. Nordfors' ideas on direct democracy combined with delegated voting in a real political setting. This idea have later also become adapted by The World Parliament Experiment, where MN is a member. He has been invited to many international conferences such the world political forum, Turin (chaired by Mikhail Gorbachev), the democracy collaborative, Washington DC (Benjamin Barber), The National Democratic Institute (Madeleine Albright), The World Social Forum and The International Conference for Chief Justices in Lucknow, India.
Radically Disentangled Morphology is a late-insertion approach to morphology developed by Halldór Sigurðsson. In this approach, morphology is Radically Disentangled in the sense that instead of driving syntactic relations, it is taken to be a component of Phonological Form (PF). Morphology, being post-syntactic, can 'see' syntactic relations but syntactic operations cannot see anything in PF, including morphology.
References and Related Works
* Bobaljik, Jonathan David. 2007. Where's Phi? Agreement as a Post-Syntactic Operation. In David Adger, Susana Béjar, and Daniel Harbour, eds. Phi-Theory: Phi features across interfaces and modules, Oxford University Press. (.pdf)
* Platzack, Christer. 2006. Case as Agree marker. Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 77:71-99. (.pdf)
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2003. Case: abstract vs. morphological. In New Perspectives on Case Theory, ed. by Ellen Brandner and Heike Zinzmeister, 223-268. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2004. Agree and agreement: Evidence from Germanic. In Focus on Germanic Typology, ed. by Werner Abraham, 61-103. Berlin: Akademie Verlag.
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2006. The Nom/Acc alternation in Germanic. In Issues in Comparative Germanic Syntax, ed. by Jutta Hartmann and Laszlo Molnarfi, 13-50. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. (.pdf)
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2007. Remarks on features. Ms. To appear in Phases at the Interface, ed. by Kleanthes Grohman. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. (.pdf)
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2007. The Case of PRO. To appear in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory. (.pdf)
References and Related Works
* Bobaljik, Jonathan David. 2007. Where's Phi? Agreement as a Post-Syntactic Operation. In David Adger, Susana Béjar, and Daniel Harbour, eds. Phi-Theory: Phi features across interfaces and modules, Oxford University Press. (.pdf)
* Platzack, Christer. 2006. Case as Agree marker. Working Papers in Scandinavian Syntax 77:71-99. (.pdf)
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2003. Case: abstract vs. morphological. In New Perspectives on Case Theory, ed. by Ellen Brandner and Heike Zinzmeister, 223-268. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2004. Agree and agreement: Evidence from Germanic. In Focus on Germanic Typology, ed. by Werner Abraham, 61-103. Berlin: Akademie Verlag.
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2006. The Nom/Acc alternation in Germanic. In Issues in Comparative Germanic Syntax, ed. by Jutta Hartmann and Laszlo Molnarfi, 13-50. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. (.pdf)
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2007. Remarks on features. Ms. To appear in Phases at the Interface, ed. by Kleanthes Grohman. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. (.pdf)
* Sigurðsson, Halldór Ármann. 2007. The Case of PRO. To appear in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory. (.pdf)