Florentin Smarandache - Florentin Smarandache It is disputed whether this article should be included in Wikipedia. Florentin Smarandache (born December 10, 1954) is an American-Romanian mathematician, writer, poet, and artist. Born in Bălceşti, in the Romanian district of Vâlcea, he fled the country in 1988 and emigrated to the United States in 1990. He obtained a doctorate in mathematics from the State University of Chişinău, Moldova, in 1997. He works as an Associate Professor of Mathematics at the University of New Mexico, Gallup branch, a two-year college. Smarandache has published poems, a novel, dramas and fiction in Romanian, French, and English. His writings often have a paradoxical bend, and in fact he describes himself as a "leader of paradoxism". He invented a new idiosyncratic approach to dialectics he calls.
Dezert-Smarandache theory - Dezert-Smarandache theory As a generalization of Dempster-Shaffer Theory (DST) of evidence, the Dezert-Smarandache Theory (DSmT) of plausible and paradoxical reasoning allows to formally combine any kind of information (certain, uncertain, paradoxical). It was developed by Jean Dezert and Florentin Smarandache. The DSmT is able to fusion complex data/information fusion problems where the DST usually fails, especially when conflicts (paradoxes) between sources become large and when the refinement of the frame of discernment is inaccessible because of the vague, relative, and imprecise nature of elements of the frame of discernment..
Paradoxism - Paradoxism According to Florentin Smarandache, paradoxism 1980 is the theory and school of using paradoxes in literary and artistic creation. Followers of paradoxism believe that it reveals inherent contradictions of existence by focusing on them, whereas other avant-garde movements such as dadaism and surrealism do not. It makes use of clusters of antitheses, antinomies, contradictions, parables, odds, oxymorons, paradoxes in creations. Paradoxism is also a term claimed to have been coined by Edward Thomas Hood in 1992 in a manuscript titled Paradoxism. Hood has registered the paradoxism.com domain name, and gives 16 related definitions for paradoxism and paradoxist, including the "time-chance continuum". The first manifesto for paradoxism was published in Smarandache's 1983 French book "Le sens du non-sense" (The sense of the non-sense), Editions Artistiques, Fes, Morocco, which.
Neutrosophy - neutrality of this article is disputed. Neutrosophy is a theory developed by Florentin Smarandache following on from the work of Basarab Nicolescu and Stéphane Lupasco. This theory considers every notion or idea together with its opposite or negation and the spectrum of "neutralities" (i.e. notions or ideas located between the two extremes, supporting neither nor ). The and ideas together are referred to as . The theory claims that every idea tends to be neutralized and balanced by and ideas - as a state of equilibrium. Expositions of neutrosophy might be difficult to understand, since Smarandache (as "leader of paradoxism") is fond of paradoxes, such as "All is possible, the impossible too!". In addition, Smarandache employs unusual grammatical constructions, leading to paragraphs such as: "Human being is un organized chaos, endowed.
Non-Aristotelian logic - for another article on this topic. Compare with: Non-monotonic logic where every statement is true or false, but not immutable. Some developers of non-Aristotelian logics Giordano Bruno Asger Jorn Jan Lukasiewicz Stéphane Lupasco Florentin Smarandache.
List of Romanians - insuline Engineering Henri Coandă, inventor of jet engine George Constantinescu, inventor, Dumitru Prunariu, astronaut Anghel Saligny, engineer Aurel Vlaicu, flight pioneer Traian Vuia, first heavier-than-air self-propellant aircraft Mathematics Stefan Odobleja, cybernetics precursor Grigore Moisil, mathematician Traian Lalescu, mathematician Florentin Smarandache, mathematician Gheorghe Ţiţeica, mathematician Others Emil Racoviţă, polar explorer Dimitrie Gusti, sociologist Business Octav Botnar, Nissan UK chairman, billionaire Nicolae Malaxa, Romanian tycoon in the 1930s Various Fabian Pascal.
Karl Wilhelm Friedrich von Schlegel - Frankfurt he edited Concordia (1820-1823), and began the issue of his Sämtliche Werke. He also delivered lectures, which were republished in his Philosophie des Lebens (1828) and in his Philosophie der Geschichte (1829). He died on the 11th of January 1829 at Dresden. A permanent place in the history of German literature belongs to Friedrich Schlegel and his brother August Wilhelm as the critical leaders of the Romantic school, which derived from them most of its governing ideas as to the characteristics of the middle ages, and as to the methods of literary expression. Of the two brothers, Friedrich was unquestionably the more original genius. He was the real founder of the Romantic school; to him more than to any other member of the school we owe the revolutionizing and germinating.
Communes of the Aveyron département - 12108 12220 Galgan 12109 12360 Gissac 12110 12140 Golinhac 12111 12390 Goutrens 12112 12420 Graissac 12113 12160 Gramond 12114 12320 Grand-Vabre 12115 12230 L'Hospitalet-du-Larzac 12116 12460 Huparlac 12117 12210 Lacalm 12118 12600 Lacroix-Barrez 12119 12210 Laguiole 12120 12310 Laissac 12121 12350 Lanuéjouls 12123 12150 Lapanouse 12122 12230 Lapanouse-de-Cernon 12124 12500 Lassouts 12125 12380 Laval-Roquecezière 12126 12150 Lavernhe 12127 12170 Lédergues 12128 12440 Lescure-Jaoul 12129 12430 Lestrade-et-Thouels 12130 12300 Livinhac-le-Haut 12131 12740 La Loubière 12133 12450 Luc (CAR) 12134 12220 Lugan 12135 12270 Lunac 12136 12350 Maleville 12137 12160 Manhac 12138 12330 Marcillac-Vallon 12139 12540 Marnhagues-et-Latour 12140 12200 Martiel 12141 12550 Martrin 12142 12390 Mayran 12143 12360 Mélagues 12144 12120 Meljac 12145 12100 Millau 12146 12000 Le Monastère (CAR) 12147 12360 Montagnol 12148 12220 Montbazens 12149 12550 Montclar 12150 12200 Monteils 12151.
Communes of the Yonne département - 89450 Tharoiseau 89410 89200 Tharot 89411 89320 Theil-sur-Vanne 89412 89420 Thizy 89413 89430 Thorey 89414 89260 Thorigny-sur-Oreuse 89415 89200 Thory 89416 89520 Thury 89417 89700 Tissey 89418 89700 Tonnerre 89419 89130 Toucy 89420 89520 Treigny 89421 89420 Trévilly 89422 89430 Trichey 89423 89700 Tronchoy 89424 89460 Trucy-sur-Yonne 89425 89570 Turny 89426 89580 Val-de-Mercy 89427 89580 Vallan 89428 89150 Vallery 89429 89320 Vareilles 89430 89144 Varennes 89431 89420 Vassy 89432 89320 Vaudeurs 89433 89200 Vault-de-Lugny 89434 89320 Vaumort 89436 89210 Venizy 89437 89230 Venouse 89438 89290 Venoy 89439 89600 Vergigny 89440 89330 Verlin 89441 89270 Vermenton 89442 89150 Vernoy 89443 89510 Véron 89445 89700 Vézannes 89446 89450 Vézelay 89447 89700 Vézinnes 89448 89420 Vignes 89449 89340 Villeblevin 89450 89150 Villebougis 89451 89320 Villechétive 89452 89300 Villecien 89453 89240 Villefargeau 89454 89120 Villefranche.
Marie Brémont - in the First World War. She married again in 1967 to a taxi driver Florentin Bremont. Over the course of her life, she worked in a pharmaceutical factory, as a nanny, and as a seamstress. At 103, she was hit by a car and broke her arm. She died on June 6th, 2001 at her retirement home Cande, France. She left no children. External Links Her BBC Obituary Preceded by: Eva Morris Oldest Person in the World Succeeded by: Maude Farris-Luse.
List of French airports - Joigny 89 222 LFGL Lons Courlaoux 39 232 LFGM Montceau les Mines 71 314 LFGN Paray le Monial 71 304 LFGO Pont/Yonne 89 72 LFGP St Florentin Cheu 89 107 LFGQ Semur en Auxois 21 321 LFGR Doncourt les Conflans 54 245 LFGS Longuyon Villette 54 350 LFGT Sarrebourg Buhl 57 266 LFGU Sarreguemines Neunkirch 57 260 LFGV Thionville Yutz 57 158 LFGW Verdun le Rozelier 55 375 LFGX Champagnole Crotenay 39 531 LFGY St Die Remomeix 88 361 LFGZ Nuits St Georges 21 243 LFHA Issoire le Broc 63 378 LFHC Pérouges Meximieux 01 214 LFHD Pierrelatte 26 60 LFHE Romans St Paul 26 181 LFHF Ruoms 07 110 LFHG St Chamond l'Horme 42 395 LFHH Vienne Reventin 38 219 LFHI Morestel 38 245 LFHJ Lyon Corbas 69 198 LFHL.
List of Interior Ministers of France - is a list of interior ministers of France: Louis Phélypeaux, Comte de Saint-Florentin: 1757-1775 Chrétien Guillaume de Lamoignon de Malesherbes: 1775 – 21 May 1776 Charles Louis François Paul de Barentin: 21 May 1776 – 16 July 1789 François Emmanuel Guignart, Comte de Saint-Priest: 16 July 1789 – December 1790 Antoine de Valdec de Lessart: Jan – 20 November 1791 Bon Claude Cahier de Gerville: 20 November 1791 – 15 March 1792 Jean Marie Roland de la Platière: 15 March – 13 June 1792; 12 September 1792 – 25 January 1793 Dominique-Joseph Garat: 23 January – 20 August 1793 Jules-François Paré: 20 August 1793 – 5 April 1794 None 20 April 1794 – 3 November 1795 Pierre Bénézech: 3 November 1795 – 31 July 1797 Nicolas Louis François: August – September.