The intersection of near-death experiences (NDEs) and traumatic brain injury (TBI): neurobiological, phenomenological, and creative implications. [PDF]
Iacono D, Feltis GC.
europepmc +1 more source
TranSC: Hardware-Aware Design of Transcendental Functions Using Stochastic Logic
Mehran Shoushtari Moghadam +2 more
openalex +1 more source
Aspect perception and rule‐following in Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations
Abstract This paper aims to highlight a distinctive, projective, mode of aspect perception within Wittgenstein's philosophy that has gone underappreciated in the scholarly literature. Although it bears a family resemblance to other instances of the phenomenon Wittgenstein describes as ‘noticing an aspect’ in PI Part II §113, it is distinctive in that ...
James Connelly
wiley +1 more source
The causal model of spiritual well-being based on an accompanist of god and spiritual intelligence. [PDF]
Moshashaei SKD, Yarahmadi Y, Sharifi HP.
europepmc +1 more source
‘The Devil Made Me Do It’ Electus per Deus and Quasi‐Occult Crime in South Africa
ABSTRACT This study interrogates the phenomenon of ‘occult crime’ in South Africa, focusing on the perspectives of crime such as Electus per Deus, the murder of Kirsty Theologo, Hansie Cronjé, and the context behind the assumed connection between criminal culpability, mens daemonica, and the occult.
Tristán Kapp
wiley +1 more source
Will advancement in technologies bring fear and damage human employment? Evidence from China's manufacturing industry. [PDF]
Wang P, Li D, Wang Y, Han Q, Khan YA.
europepmc +1 more source
Residually rationally solvable one‐relator groups
Abstract We show that the intersection of the rational derived series of a one‐relator group is rationally perfect and is normally generated by a single element. As a corollary, we characterise precisely when a one‐relator group is residually rationally solvable.
Marco Linton
wiley +1 more source
Generic solutions of equations involving the modular <i>j</i> function. [PDF]
Eterović S.
europepmc +1 more source
On the (Dis)connection between growth and primitive periodic points
Abstract In 1972, Cornalba and Shiffman showed that the number of zeros of an order zero holomorphic function in two or more variables can grow arbitrarily fast. We generalize this finding to the setting of complex dynamics, establishing that the number of isolated primitive periodic points of an order zero holomorphic function in two or more variables
Adi Glücksam, Shira Tanny
wiley +1 more source

