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Paradigm | A Wisdom Archive on Paradigm |  | Paradigm A selection of articles related to Paradigm |  |
| We recommend this article: Paradigm - 1, and also this: Paradigm - 2. |
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paradigm, Paradigm, Paradigm - Etymology, Paradigm - Other uses, Paradigm - Paradigm shifts, Paradigm - Quote, Macrocosm and microcosm
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Paradigm |  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Jacob Neusner - Reframing the paradigm: From Judaism to JudaismsNeusner calls that encompassing Judaism that the canon presents a "system," when it is composed of three necessary components: an account of a world-view, a prescription of a corresponding way of life, and a definition of the social entity that finds definition in the one and description in the other. When those three fundamental components fit together, they sustain one another in explaining the whole of a social order, hence constituting the theoretical account of a system. Systems defined in this way work out a cogent picture, for those w ...
See also:Jacob Neusner, Jacob Neusner - Contributions to scholarship, Jacob Neusner - Systematic analysis of documents, Jacob Neusner - Reading documents critically, Jacob Neusner - Reframing the paradigm: From Judaism to Judaisms, Jacob Neusner - Viewing religions as systems illustrated by cases drawn from Judaism, Jacob Neusner - Methodology, Jacob Neusner - Studies critical of Neusner's work, Jacob Neusner - Impact, Jacob Neusner - Books by Jacob Neusner Read more here: » Jacob Neusner: Encyclopedia II - Jacob Neusner - Reframing the paradigm: From Judaism to Judaisms |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Indo-European copula - The resulting paradigms
Indo-European copula - Germanic languages.
Main article: Germanic verb
Old English kept the verbs wesan and bēon separate throughout the present stem, though it is not clear that they made the kind of consistent distinction in usage that we find, for example in Spanish. In the preterite, however, the paradigms fell together. Old English has no participle for this verb.
Indo-European copula - Latin and Romance languages ...
See also:Indo-European copula, Indo-European copula - General features, Indo-European copula - The Proto-Indo-European roots, Indo-European copula - *h1es-, Indo-European copula - *bhuH-, Indo-European copula - *wes-, Indo-European copula - *h1er-, Indo-European copula - *steh2-, Indo-European copula - The resulting paradigms, Indo-European copula - Germanic languages, Indo-European copula - Latin and Romance languages, Indo-European copula - Balto-Slavic languages, Indo-European copula - Celtic languages Read more here: » Indo-European copula: Encyclopedia II - Indo-European copula - The resulting paradigms |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Object-oriented programming - OOP as a new paradigm point of view or marketing termOOP is subject to much contention as to its precise definition or its principal ideas.
In the most general terms, OOP is the practice of writing program text decomposed in modules that encapsulate the representation of one data type per module, instead of collections of functions that call each other, or clauses that trigger each other.
They have been brought together, with associated terminology, to create a programming framework. ...
See also:Object-oriented programming, Object-oriented programming - Fundamental concepts, Object-oriented programming - OOP as a new paradigm point of view or marketing term, Object-oriented programming - Actor model, Object-oriented programming - Subparadigms, Object-oriented programming - OOP with procedural languages, Object-oriented programming - Static typing with the object-oriented paradigm, Object-oriented programming - Prototype-based model, Object-oriented programming - Object-based model, Object-oriented programming - Multimethod model, Object-oriented programming - Possible programming mistakes, Object-oriented programming - Critique, Object-oriented programming - Formal definition, Object-oriented programming - OOP in scripting, Object-oriented programming - History, Object-oriented programming - Learning Read more here: » Object-oriented programming: Encyclopedia II - Object-oriented programming - OOP as a new paradigm point of view or marketing term |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Stream processing - Stream processing considerationsAvaiable documentation on Stream processing is very scarce as this is written (September 12, 2005), only few, specialized institutions seems to have understood the implied power of the model. The Stanford University has been historically involved in a variety of projects on this, beginning from the Stanford Shading language and deploying a flexible, stand-alone stream processor called Imagine. Both those projects revealed the paradigm has a great potential so a much larger scale project has been started. With the name of Merrimac, a Stream-b ...
See also:Stream processing, Stream processing - Comparison with previous parallel paradigms, Stream processing - Conventional sequential paradigm, Stream processing - Parallel SIMD paradigm packed registers SWAR, Stream processing - Parallel Stream paradigm SIMD/MIMD, Stream processing - Stream processing considerations, Stream processing - Data dependancies and parallelism, Stream processing - Programming model notes, Stream processing - Generic processor architecture, Stream processing - Hardware-in-the-loop issues, Stream processing - Interesting Stream Processors Read more here: » Stream processing: Encyclopedia II - Stream processing - Stream processing considerations |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Stream processing - Stream processing considerationsAvaiable documentation on Stream processing is very scarce as this is written (September 12, 2005), only few, specialized institutions seems to have understood the implied power of the model. The Stanford University has been historically involved in a variety of projects on this, beginning from the Stanford Shading language and deploying a flexible, stand-alone stream processor called Imagine. Both those projects revealed the paradigm has a great potential so a much larger scale project has been started. With the name of Merrimac, a Stream-b ...
See also:Stream processing, Stream processing - Comparison with previous parallel paradigms, Stream processing - Conventional sequential paradigm, Stream processing - Parallel SIMD paradigm packed registers SWAR, Stream processing - Parallel Stream paradigm SIMD/MIMD, Stream processing - Stream processing considerations, Stream processing - Data dependencies and parallelism, Stream processing - Programming model notes, Stream processing - Generic processor architecture, Stream processing - Hardware-in-the-loop issues, Stream processing - Interesting Stream Processors Read more here: » Stream processing: Encyclopedia II - Stream processing - Stream processing considerations |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Narrative - DiscussionHuman beings seem to prefer to shape information into the form of a "story". Rather than organising data as facts in logical relationships, most people retain their everyday information as anecdotal narratives with characters, plots, motivations, and actions. At its broadest level, Fisher argues that all communication is a form of storytelling. In his "Narrative Paradigm", he defines "narration" as symbolic actions, words, and/or deeds that have sequence and meaning for those who live, create or interpret them: a definition broad enough to support his claim that all m ...
See also:Narrative, Narrative - Conceptual issues, Narrative - Discussion, Narrative - Main criticisms of the Narrative Paradigm, Narrative - Literary theory, Narrative - Other specific applications, Narrative - Related reading Read more here: » Narrative: Encyclopedia II - Narrative - Discussion |
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| |  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Imperative programming - OverviewThe hardware implementation of almost all computers is imperative; nearly all computer hardware is designed to execute machine code, which is native to the computer, written in the imperative style. From this low-level perspective, the program state is defined by the contents of memory, and the statements are instructions in the native machine language of the computer. Higher-level imperative languages use variables and more complex statements, but still follow the same paradigm. Recipes and process checklists, while not computer programs, a ...
See also:Imperative programming, Imperative programming - Overview, Imperative programming - History, Imperative programming - Example languages Read more here: » Imperative programming: Encyclopedia II - Imperative programming - Overview |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Political economy - The marketOne of the central conflicts in political economy is, of course, the role and functioning of the market economy in society. It is here where the broad range of paradigmatic assumptions collide, and on particular issues, individuals and groups with widely differing views will find common intellectual and practical political cause. In the political world, the fulcrum is on the ownership of capital surplus and production.
In the context of political economy, capitalism takes on a very broad meaning: the focus of the state on the maintain ...
See also:Political economy, Political economy - History of the term, Political economy - The scope of political economy, Political economy - Central concepts of political economy, Political economy - Production, Political economy - Capital, Political economy - Transport, Political economy - Exchange, Political economy - Consumption, Political economy - Disposal, Political economy - Disciplines which relate to political economy, Political economy - General paradigms of political economy, Political economy - Paradigms of distribution, Political economy - Paradigms of production, Political economy - The market Read more here: » Political economy: Encyclopedia II - Political economy - The market |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Political economy - The scope of political economyPolitical economy is centrally focused on the development of the polity. It pays particular attention to whether the polity is running a surplus or a deficit, since in the view of most political economy, any deficit must be met by selling assets, such as gold or other capital, to other polities - or by some form of borrowing or externalization.
Political economy, then, studies the mechanism of human activity in organizing material, and the mechanism of distributing the surplus or deficit that is the result of that activity. Note the d ...
See also:Political economy, Political economy - History of the term, Political economy - The scope of political economy, Political economy - Central concepts of political economy, Political economy - Production, Political economy - Capital, Political economy - Transport, Political economy - Exchange, Political economy - Consumption, Political economy - Disposal, Political economy - Disciplines which relate to political economy, Political economy - General paradigms of political economy, Political economy - Paradigms of distribution, Political economy - Paradigms of production, Political economy - The market Read more here: » Political economy: Encyclopedia II - Political economy - The scope of political economy |
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| | |  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Narrative - Conceptual issuesSemiotics begins with the individual building blocks of meaning called signs and studies the way in which signs are combined into codes to transmit messages. This is part of a general communication system using both verbal and nonverbal elements, creating a discourse with different modalities and forms. In On Realism in Art, Roman Jakobson argues that literature does not exist as a separate entity. He and many other semioticians prefer the view that all texts, whether spoken or written, are basically the same except that some a ...
See also:Narrative, Narrative - Conceptual issues, Narrative - Discussion, Narrative - Main criticisms of the Narrative Paradigm, Narrative - Literary theory, Narrative - Other specific applications, Narrative - Related reading Read more here: » Narrative: Encyclopedia II - Narrative - Conceptual issues |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Slovak declension - NounsFor each gender, there are four basic declension paradigms (i. e. declension models).
Note that many nouns (especially those following the paradigm chlap) have different endings then those of the paradigms in one or several grammatical cases. They are neither defined, nor listed in the following. The complete number of different paradigms for nouns is somewhere about 200.
A very small number of foreign nouns is not declined (i. e. the stem and ending never change).
Slova ...
See also:Slovak declension, Slovak declension - Introduction, Slovak declension - Legend, Slovak declension - Nouns, Slovak declension - The Masculine Gender, Slovak declension - The Feminine Gender, Slovak declension - The Neuter Gender, Slovak declension - Adjectives, Slovak declension - Paradigms, Slovak declension - The Comparative and Superlative, Slovak declension - Pronouns, Slovak declension - Personal pronouns, Slovak declension - Demonstrative Pronouns, Slovak declension - Interrogative and Relative and Indefinite pronouns, Slovak declension - Possessive pronouns, Slovak declension - Numerals, Slovak declension - Cardinal Numerals one two three. . ., Slovak declension - Ordinal Numerals first second . . . . Read more here: » Slovak declension: Encyclopedia II - Slovak declension - Nouns |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Slovak declension - Adjectives
Slovak declension - Paradigms.
This paradigm is used for adjectives ending in -a hard or neutral consonant + ý [in the masculine gender]
masculine
neuter
feminine
plural
This paradigm is used for adjectives ending in -a soft consonant + í [in the masculine gender] (includ ...
See also:Slovak declension, Slovak declension - Introduction, Slovak declension - Legend, Slovak declension - Nouns, Slovak declension - The Masculine Gender, Slovak declension - The Feminine Gender, Slovak declension - The Neuter Gender, Slovak declension - Adjectives, Slovak declension - Paradigms, Slovak declension - The Comparative and Superlative, Slovak declension - Pronouns, Slovak declension - Personal pronouns, Slovak declension - Demonstrative Pronouns, Slovak declension - Interrogative and Relative and Indefinite pronouns, Slovak declension - Possessive pronouns, Slovak declension - Numerals, Slovak declension - Cardinal Numerals one two three. . ., Slovak declension - Ordinal Numerals first second . . . . Read more here: » Slovak declension: Encyclopedia II - Slovak declension - Adjectives |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Progress philosophy - Argument for Lack of Progress in PhilosophyIt is often complained that philosophy has developed more slowly than the special sciences, and has not enjoyed the same sort of remarkable and definitive progress seen in chemistry or physics. It is nearly universally agreed (a remarkable feat, amongst philosophers) that this has something to do with the peculiar methods of philosophical inquiry. In particular, philosophy seems to lack the sort of developments that Thomas Kuhn called paradigms—achievements which, by their success, clearly determine which sort of questions are to be asked and what ...
See also:Progress philosophy, Progress philosophy - Argument for Progress in Philosophy, Progress philosophy - Argument for Lack of Progress in Philosophy, Progress philosophy - Optimism pessimism and paradigms, Progress philosophy - Would it have been worth it after all?, Progress philosophy - Philosophy as worthless, Progress philosophy - Philosophy as intrinsically worthy, Progress philosophy - Philosophy as instrumentally worthy Read more here: » Progress philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Progress philosophy - Argument for Lack of Progress in Philosophy |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Narrative - Literary theoryFor general purposes in Semiotics and Literary Theory, a 'narrative' is a story or part of a story. A story is any form of text, regardless of medium, describing a sequence of events caused and experienced by characters, some of whom may be fictional. It may be spoken, written or imagined, and it will have one or more points of view representing some or all of the participants or observers. In stories told verbally, there is a person telling the story, a narrator whom the audience can see and hear, and who adds layers of meaning to the text ...
See also:Narrative, Narrative - Conceptual issues, Narrative - Discussion, Narrative - Main criticisms of the Narrative Paradigm, Narrative - Literary theory, Narrative - Other specific applications, Narrative - Related reading Read more here: » Narrative: Encyclopedia II - Narrative - Literary theory |
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| |  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Object-oriented programming - Formal definitionThere have been several attempts on formalizing the concepts used in object-oriented programming. The following concepts and constructs have been used as interpretations of OOP concepts:
coalgebraic datatypes
existential quantification and modules
recursion
records and record extensions
F-bounded polymorphism
Attempts to find a consensus definition or theory behind objects have not proven very successful, and often diverge widely. For example, ...
See also:Object-oriented programming, Object-oriented programming - Fundamental concepts, Object-oriented programming - OOP as a new paradigm point of view or marketing term, Object-oriented programming - Actor model, Object-oriented programming - Subparadigms, Object-oriented programming - OOP with procedural languages, Object-oriented programming - Static typing with the object-oriented paradigm, Object-oriented programming - Prototype-based model, Object-oriented programming - Object-based model, Object-oriented programming - Multimethod model, Object-oriented programming - Possible programming mistakes, Object-oriented programming - Critique, Object-oriented programming - Formal definition, Object-oriented programming - OOP in scripting, Object-oriented programming - History, Object-oriented programming - Learning Read more here: » Object-oriented programming: Encyclopedia II - Object-oriented programming - Formal definition |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Chaos magic - Chaos magiciansPractitioners of chaos magic attempt to be outside of all categories - for them, worldviews, theories, beliefs, opinions, habits and even personalities are tools that may be chosen arbitrarily in order to understand or manipulate the world they see and create around themselves. Chaos magicians are frequently described as funny, extreme or very individualistic people. They also may consider themselves exceptionally tolerant, remarking that whatever one might disagree over is merely an opinion, and hence interchangeable, anyway.
For a list of notable chaos mag ...
See also:Chaos magic, Chaos magic - Pre-History, Chaos magic - History, Chaos magic - Magical paradigm shifting, Chaos magic - The Gnostic state, Chaos magic - Chaos magicians, Chaos magic - Symbols and deities, Chaos magic - In pop culture Read more here: » Chaos magic: Encyclopedia II - Chaos magic - Chaos magicians |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Demarcation problem - Feyerabend and the problem of autonomy in scienceThere has been a post-Kuhn trend to downplay the difference between science and non-science, as Kuhn's work largely called to question the Popperian ideal of simple demarcation, and emphasized the human, subjective quality of scientific change. The radical philosopher of science Paul Feyerabend took these arguments to their limit, arguing that science does not occupy a special place in terms of either its logic or method, so that any claim to special authority made by scientists cannot be upheld. This leads to a particularly democratic and a ...
See also:Demarcation problem, Demarcation problem - Science and religion part ways, Demarcation problem - Logical Positivism, Demarcation problem - Falsificationism, Demarcation problem - Kuhn and paradigm shifts, Demarcation problem - Feyerabend and the problem of autonomy in science, Demarcation problem - Conclusion Read more here: » Demarcation problem: Encyclopedia II - Demarcation problem - Feyerabend and the problem of autonomy in science |
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|  |  |  | Paradigm: Encyclopedia II - Chaos magic - Chaos magiciansPractitioners of chaos magick attempt to be outside of all categories - for them, worldviews, theories, beliefs, opinions, habits and even personalities are tools that may be chosen arbitrarily in order to understand or manipulate the world they see and create around themselves. Chaos magicians are frequently described as funny, extreme or very individualistic people. They also may consider themselves exceptionally tolerant, remarking that whatever one might disagree over is merely an opinion, and hence interchangeable, anyway.
For a list of notable chaos mag ...
See also:Chaos magic, Chaos magic - Pre-History, Chaos magic - History, Chaos magic - Magical paradigm shifting, Chaos magic - The Gnostic state, Chaos magic - Chaos magicians, Chaos magic - Symbols and deities, Chaos magic - In pop culture Read more here: » Chaos magic: Encyclopedia II - Chaos magic - Chaos magicians |
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