Friday, January 24, 2020

Transcendentalism in the Poems of Whitman Essay -- Biography Biographi

Transcendentalism in the Poems of Whitman      Ã‚  Ã‚   From looking at the titles of Walt Whitman's vast collection of poetry in Leaves of Grass one would be able to surmise that the great American poet wrote about many subjects -- expressing his ideas and thoughts about everything from religion to Abraham Lincoln. Quite the opposite is true, Walt Whitman wrote only about a single subject which was so powerful in the mind of the poet that it consumed him to the point that whatever he wrote echoed of that subject. The beliefs and tenets of transcendentalism were the subjects that caused Whitman to write and carried through not only in the wording and imagery of his poems, but also in the revolutionary way that he chose to write his poetry. The basic assumptions and premises of transcendentalism can be seen in all of Whitman's poems, and are evident in two short poetic masterpieces: "A Noiseless Patient Spider" and "When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer."    In the belief of transcendentalism, the reliance on intuition, instead of rationalization, became the means for a union between an individual's soul and the soul of the world or the cosmos. Called the Oversoul by Emerson, this collective soul gathered the soul of a person upon a person's death. To understand the Oversoul, one had to first understand oneself and then look toward nature as expressions and instructions for the living of one's life (Boller 1-3). Through all of Whitman's collections of poetry, essays, and letters, he quested to find the meaning of life and to understand the Oversoul, which the great poet referred to as the "float."    In "A Noiseless Patient, Whitman presents a simple analogy that compares a lone spider searching for a hold to his soul as... ...au, Roger. The Transcendentalist Constant in American Literature. New York: New York UP, 1980. Boller, Paul. American Transcendentalism, 1830-1860: An Intellectual Inquiry. New York: Putnam, 1974. Eckley, Wilton. "Whitman's 'A Noiseless Patient Spider.'" The Explicator 22 (1963): 20. Emmanuel, Lenny. "Whitman's Fusion of Science and Poetry." Walt Whitman Review 17 (1971): 73-81. Lindfors, Berndt. "Whitman's 'When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer.'" Walt Whitman Review 10 (1964): 19-21. Stedman, Edmund Clarence. "An Important American Critic Views Whitman." Critical Essays on Walt Whitman. Ed. James Woodress. Boston: G.K. Hall, 1983. 116-127. Whitman, Walt. "The Noiseless Patient Spider." Leaves of Grass. New York: Penguin, 1980. 347-348. Whitman, Walt. "When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer." Leaves of Grass. New York: Penguin, 1980. 226-227.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

National Crime & Criminal Information System

Preliminary Project Plan For the National Crime Information System Project Group Members Asebe Jeware Bereka Yesuf Betreab Solomon Fantaye Kumssa Hijira Seid Tadesse Aregawi Tilaye Teshome Table of Contents 1Executive Summary3 2Project Scope6 3Expected Benefits8 4Preliminary Project Timeline9 5Preliminary Staffing Requirements10 6Preliminary Risk Assessment11 7Preliminary Assumptions12 8Preliminary Budget13 9This Project And Its Impact On Or By Other Projects14 10This Project And Its Impact On Or By Existing Systems15 11This Project And Its Impact On Or By Existing Infrastructure16 12Recommendations / Next Steps17 13Appendices18Executive Summary The  National Crime Information System (NCIS)  will be the country’s central  database for tracking crime-related information. The project would act as a computerized index of crime and criminal justice information (i. e. – criminal record history information, fugitives, stolen properties, wanted and missing persons) and w ill be available to Federal Police, Regional state Police commissions, Federal Ministry of Justice, Federal Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, Federal Prison Administration, Authorized law enforcement agencies and other criminal justice organizations and it will be operational 24 hours a day.The purpose for maintaining the NCIS is to provide a computerized database for ready access by the Federal Police making an inquiry and for prompt disclosure of information in the system from other criminal justice agencies about crimes and criminals. This information assists authorized agencies in criminal justice and related law enforcement objectives, such as apprehending fugitives, locating missing persons, locating and returning stolen property, generating statistical data on crimes and criminals as well as in the protection of the law enforcement officers encountering the individuals described in the system.The project would be involved in eliciting the requirements from Federal Police , Regional State Polices, Ministry of Justice and Other Stakeholders, understanding those requirements and developing a prototype of the application that we have planned to build. The NCIS project will be completed in two years. We plan to achieve maximum automation of crime Investigation process and try to minimize the manual intervention. The system will have a common database in which authorized officers can easily find crime and criminal information anywhere in the country. BackgroundEthiopia has an administrative structure of federal system in which states forming the federation govern themselves through their own legislative, judiciary and executive organs. There are nine regional states and two city administrative councils that form the Government. This necessitates a high degree of coordination among the Federal Government, states and other institutions towards achieving national objectives. The Federal Police which is one of the major law enforcement bodies is expected to p lay a pivotal role in the administration of Crime Prevention and Investigation.However, the absence of a well organized National Crime Information system has remained a major challenge to the Organizations in Criminal Justice to carryout their duties and responsibilities successfully. This reality makes it mandatory to create and develop a well defined and systematized crime data collection method and the establishment of a sustainable Crime Information System that would be used as inexhaustible source of data/information for purposes of crime prevention, criminal investigation, policy formulation etc. Scope (X months or years in duration)The Project will introduce a new Information System; with the following features: †¢ It records and manages the national crimes and criminals information. †¢ Manages and Records missing, wanted persons and fugitives. †¢ Locating stolen properties and missing persons. †¢ Searching and generating statistical report on crimes and c riminals. †¢ Providing information on missing persons and stolen properties for further investigation. Outcomes / Expected Benefits †¢ The NCIS will make available a variety of records to be used for law enforcement and security purposes.These records are made up of a variety of forms of personal and property records. †¢ The information in the NCIS assists authorized agencies in criminal justice objectives, such as apprehending fugitives, locating missing persons, locating and returning stolen property, as well as in the protection of the law enforcement officers encountering the individuals described in the system. †¢ The system will have crime database information which will be centrally available and shared among stakeholders. Make available statistical data on crimes and criminals that would help in providing education to the public on major crimes †¢ Researchers and study centers will have access to the database information relevant for their purpose. à ¢â‚¬ ¢ Make available Statistical data on crimes that would help in revising existing laws and crime prevention directions †¢ Easily allocate data on criminals, missing persons, and lost properties.†¢ Formulates means and methods of criminal statistical data collection, organization , analysis and interpretation necessary to study the causes of crimes and design methods of crime prevention Project Scope Project Name: National Crime Information System (NCIS) | |Project Sponsor(s): |Project Manager: | |Federal Police |Fantaye | |Project Start Date: |Project End Date: | |October 2010 |October 2012 | |Goals / Objectives | |The business goals and objectives for this project will focus on implementing an Information System that: | |Facilitates coordination and information sharing between the major law enforcement and crime prevention organizations of the country | |Facilitates coordinated crime prevention and reduction. |Provides high levels of data security. | |Facilitates the electronic capture of data at its source. | |Eliminate redundant data entry throughout the organization. | |provide a computerized data base for ready access by a criminal justice Organs | | | |Project goals and objectives: | | | |Ensure that end users have input into the design process. |Accomplish project business goals and objectives within defined budget and time parameters. | |Minimize impact to standard business operations within the affected units. | |Craft a favorable and secure agreement between the Department and the selected vendor. | |Background / Narrative | |The absence of a centrally shared information system on crimes and criminals is a major problem for all criminal justices bodies of the country | |to easily allocate wanted persons, locate missing properties and have a realistic statistical data on major crimes.This reality makes it | |mandatory to create and develop a well defined and systematized crime data collection method and the establishment of a sustainable Crime | |Information System that would be used as inexhaustible source of data/information for purposes of crime prevention, criminal investigation, | |policy formulation etc. | |Project Deliverables | |The following are the tangible deliverables for this project: | |Preliminary Project Plan |Requirements Elicitation | |Requirements Analysis | |Architectural Design | |Object/Component Design | |Coding | |Testing | |Final version of all documents | | | |Intangible deliverables | |Security | |Performance | |Availability | |Accuracy | |Completeness | |Project Boundaries | |The project is limited to handle crime and criminal related information.

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

An Aristotelian Theory Of Consciousness - 1646 Words

The idea of creating a synthetic consciousness has fascinated the human imagination for many a century. These range from the ancient Pygmalion’s Galatea, the mythological golem, Victorian automatons, to our more recent fancies- computers, robots and other Turing machines. Perhaps the reason for this preoccupation with artificial intelligence is actually a quest to better understand our own consciousness. At first sight, the question â€Å"Can a machine be conscious?† appears deceptively simple. However, the answer to this question is entirely dependent on how we define consciousness. We can embark by defining consciousness in an Aristotelian fashion- by its function. Generally philosophers use the term â€Å"consciousness† mainly to describe†¦show more content†¦If we can only observe the behavior of others objectively, how can we be certain that they are conscious? Everyone around us could just as easily be a philosophical zombie, with all the functions and responses of a conscious being, but with no understanding or awareness of their responses. Thus, a metaphysical solipsist could very easily say that discussing whether a machine can be conscious or not is obsolete, because the concept holds no existence in anything but our own mind. The Turing test is a method conceived by Allan Turing to determine whether a mind is conscious. Supposing we create a machine that has been programmed to responds in the exact way that humans do. In the Turing test, both the machine and a human are asked the same questions. A person listening to their answers without knowing which of them was responding each time has to discern which answers are given by the machine. His premise is that if the answers of the machine and the human are indistinguishable, there would be no difference between machine and human in terms of consciousness. However, the Turing test only determines whether we think a machine is conscious by its superficial behaviors, and does not determine whether it is actually conscious Furthermore, we have no evidence that the human we are comparing the machine to in the test is conscious either- the Turing test only measures computational ability. Similarly, a neural activity scan could