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Topic: Russell Ebert


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In the News (Fri 13 Nov 09)

  
  A Study of Suppression of Information
Ebert is also an active member of the Institute of Food Technologists (IFT).
Ebert rebutted, leading to a request from Sue Anne Anderson, R.D., Ph.D., Senior Staff Scientist with the Life Sciences Research Office at FASEB for information about the vehicle for administration of monosodium glutamate in IGTC-sponsored double blind studies.
A July 13, 1990 letter from IGTC chairman Ebert to Walter Glinsmann, M.D., Associate Director of Clinical Nutrition, Division of Nutrition, FDA reads, in part "...attached are three [double-blind] protocols for your use...IGTC would be interested in your views, especially on the proposed work by Drs.
www.truthinlabeling.com /l-manuscript.html   (11687 words)

  
 Aristotle's Logic
The rise of modern formal logic following the work of Frege and Russell brought with it a recognition of the many serious limitations of Aristotle's logic; today, very few would try to maintain that it is adequate as a basis for understanding science, mathematics, or even everyday reasoning.
At the same time, scholars trained in modern formal techniques have come to view Aristotle with new respect, not so much for the correctness of his results as for the remarkable similarity in spirit between much of his work and modern logic.
See Frede 1981, Ebert 1985 for additional discussion of Aristotle's lists of categories.
plato.stanford.edu /entries/aristotle-logic   (11035 words)

  
 School’s Out? Never!: David Bordwell Keeps Working the Room. By Chuck Stephens.
But both shared a set of core beliefs, with Screen insisting that its theoretical sallies were aiding the class struggle, and Jump Cut fairly sympathetic to some versions of theory, particularly semiotics.
The late ‘70s also saw the development of trends in empirical film history; in the US those were centred on NYU (chiefly the courses taught by Jay Leyda), Iowa, and Wisconsin (the courses taught by Tino Balio and Russell Merritt).
Scope: Though the “publish or perish” imperative still holds sway over academic careers everywhere, the extremely prolific nature of your own publishing—some 15 full-length volumes (both as author and co-author) on a wide range of film-related topics, along with countless articles in books and periodicals the planet over—goes well beyond that of the average academic.
www.cinema-scope.com /cs26/int_stephens_bordwell.htm   (4162 words)

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