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The Gibson paradox, long observed by economists and named by John Maynard Keynes (1936), is a positive relationship between the interest rate and the price level. This paper explains the relationship by means of interest-rate, cost-push inflation. In the model: spending is driven in part by changes in the rate of interest and the central bank sets the ...
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Gibson's Passion: The Challenges for Catholics
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, 2005A contemporary film on Christian antisemitism terms this centuries-long disease within the Church as a "shadow" on the cross. Recent Catholic documents have spoken in even stronger language. In 1989 the Pontifical Commission for Justice and Peace at the Vatican issued a major document on racism, in which it clearly placed antisemitism high on its list ...
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ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review, 1972
Evaluation of computer systems is sometimes made using a so-called Gibson mix. This is a list of common machine instructions with weights depending on how often they are supposed to occur in typical programs. By using these weights to estimate the mean instruction execution time, the "speed" of a computer system is supposed to be measured.
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Evaluation of computer systems is sometimes made using a so-called Gibson mix. This is a list of common machine instructions with weights depending on how often they are supposed to occur in typical programs. By using these weights to estimate the mean instruction execution time, the "speed" of a computer system is supposed to be measured.
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Leonardo, 1982
Anyone privileged to have known J. J. Gibson, even slightly, will recall the excitement of being with him. Perhaps it came from his delight in odd views you might present to him; or from his zest for discovery; or from his freedom, on reaching new conclusions, to abandon his older ones.
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Anyone privileged to have known J. J. Gibson, even slightly, will recall the excitement of being with him. Perhaps it came from his delight in odd views you might present to him; or from his zest for discovery; or from his freedom, on reaching new conclusions, to abandon his older ones.
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