Melissa L. Sevigny. Under Desert Skies: How Tucson Mapped the Way to the Moon and Planets. x + 172 pp., figs., bibl., index. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2016. $19.95 (paper).

Isis ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
pp. 227-228
Author(s):  
Janet Vertesi
Oryx ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 381-382
Author(s):  
Anthony Smith
Keyword(s):  
The Moon ◽  

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kidder Smith

In the thirteenth century Dogen brought Zen to Japan. His tradition flourishes there still today and now has taken root across the world. Abruptly Dogen presents some of his pith writings—startling, shifting, funny, spilling out in every direction. They come from all seventy-five chapters of his masterwork, the Eye of Real Dharma (Shōbōgenzō 正法眼藏), and roam through mountains, magic, everyday life, meditation, the nature of mind, and how the Buddha is always speaking from inside our heads. An excerpt from chapter 1, “A Case of Here We Are”: Human wisdom is like a moon roosting in water. No stain on the moon, nor does the water rip. However wide and grand the light, it still finds lodging in a puddle. The full moon, the spilling sky, all roosting in a single dewdrop on a single blade of grass. A man of wisdom is uncut, the way a moon doesn’t pierce water. Wisdom in a man is unobstructed, the way the sky’s full moon is unobstructed in a dewdrop. No doubt about it, the drop’s as deep as the moon is high. How long does this go on? How deep is the water, how high the moon?


The distance between a laser transmitter on Earth and corner reflectors in space can now be measured with a precision of a few centimetres. The main theme of the meeting is the exploitation of such measurements between stations on Earth and reflectors embedded in artificial satellites or placed on the Moon. This Prologue prepares the way for the more specialized papers by reviewing the advances already made in geodesy and geophysics using less accurate observations of artificial satellites, and by briefly outlining previous lunar dynamical studies.


2010 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 378
Author(s):  
Yulia Nasrul Latifi

Danarto’s Rembulan di Dasar Kolam (The Moon Beneath the Pond) tells about a wife’s sacrifice in an unfortunate situation. The wife, is an unfortunate woman whose husband cheats and treats her disrespectfully. Yet, her spirituality endures her in such situation. Paul Ricoeur’s hermeneutics theory proposes the hypothesis that the analysis of symbol is a guide to the analysis of text, and the other way around. Both must be submitted to a process of metamorphosis or dialectical phenomena. The result of this analysis is the emergence of symbolical meaning in various terms. Rabi’ah becomes a symbol of a wife’s strength. Her wisdom and personality give the way out to her household problems. Her social status as well as gender role is the symbol that religiosity belongs to anyone despite one’s social status. From this character, it can be seen that the knowledge of spiritualism is aimed not only vertically (to God) but also horizontally (to humanity). The title Rembulan or the Moon symbolizes the wife, because, despite her condition- symbolized as the pond-she endures and still gives her shine, like the moon.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 77
Author(s):  
Rachel Klassen ◽  
Juana M. Liceras

This study examines bilinguals’ gender use strategies in code-switched agreement (i.e. the moon is bonita) and concord (i.e. la moon) structures. Thirty-five L1 Spanish-L2 English adult bilinguals and 43 L1 English-L2 Spanish adults with an intermediate (N=18) or advanced (N=25) level of proficiency in Spanish completed an acceptability judgment task in which they rated code-switched Adjectival Predicates and DPs. The results show that only the L1 Spanish-L2 English bilinguals prefer the Adj (in the case of agreement) or the D (in the case of concord) to be marked for the gender of the Spanish translation equivalent of the English N, but that all groups rate agreement structures higher than concord structures. Both of these findings corroborate previous work on intrasentential code-switching, however, this is the first study to offer an account for the contrast in processing difficulty between agreement and concord structures. We argue that this difference can be explained in terms of the way in which the features are valued in agreement and in concord. Under the double-feature valuation mechanism (Liceras et al., 2008) in agreement both features are valued in a single direction, while in concord the features are valued in two different directions. It is this unidirectionality of the feature valuation mechanism in agreement that makes code-switched agreement structures such as Adjectival Predicates easier to process.


1959 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 8-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. V. Evans ◽  
S. Evans ◽  
J. H. Thomson

In recent years the way in which the moon reflects radio waves has been the subject of much study. Observations by Yaplee [1] at 2860 Mc/s, Trexler [2] at 198 Mc/s, Evans [3] at 120 Mc/s, and others show that radio waves are reflected principally by a small region at the center of the moon's visible disk which has a radius of the order of one-third of the lunar radius.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document