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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

Die gesetzlich geschlossenen hofgüter des badischen Schwarzwalds

Koch, Georg. January 1900 (has links)
Published also as the author's dissertation, Freiburg, 1900.
102

Rural landscape quality : the general and the particular

Powell, M. January 1985 (has links)
This is a theoretical dissertation built on the premise that different people appreciate landscape in different ways. It takes a multidisciplinary approach, and links findings made in several fields so as to attempt understanding of the phenomenon of rural landscape quality. A range of relatively modern explanations of the nature of landscape quality is examined and criticised primarily on the grounds of a tendency to confuse the abstract and uniform with the concrete and variable, that is, a failure to separate the general from the particular. A means of making this separation is then proposed and pursued for the remainder of the thesis. Discussion centres upon the activity of perceiving landscape. What does it involve? At the most abstract there are the structures of the senses and cognition inherited genetically and, with minor variations, common to all who perceive. At the most concrete there are the circumstances surrounding each individual engaged in the actual instant of perception. Between these two is the role played by the culture of the individual concerned. This thesis is slightly unusual in laying stress on the importance of the cultural inheritance as a factor contributing to differentiation and constant change in rural landscape quality. No firm conclusions are reached in what is essentially a work of experiment and speculation.
103

Methodological issues in evolutionary theory, with special reference to Darwinism and Lamarckism

Ho, Meng Wing January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
104

The Process Of Intergenerational Transmission Of Housing Wealth

Kayiket, Asli 01 September 2003 (has links) (PDF)
For several decades, Turkey has witnessed increasing investments in housing. There is evidence that some households benefited from this increase. The transfer of housing assets today is also an extensive social and economic phenomenon different from the traditional processes. There are several issues related to this process the most significant being the universal concern for its contribution to wealth polarization. Supply impacts in the markets are other aspect of the same process. Since greater accumulation of housing wealth has pooled in the hands of household heads aging 50 and more, the process of housing wealth transfers will gain significance soon. No extensive study of this process has yet been made. After reviewing the factors affecting the process of wealth transfers and elaborating the institutional background of inheritance, the intergenerational property transfers in Turkey are examined with the 1994 Households Income and Consumption Expenditures Survey, The Population Census and The Death Statistics of Turkey. It is possible to develop a model to investigate the number of potential benefactors and beneficiaries and, the prospective property transferred in one year as a result of inheritance. Then, the amount of transfer taxes by Ministry of Finance could be compared with taxes realized for the same year, as one method of exploring problems of process of housing inheritance in Turkey. The results depict that in one year 30 477 individual property owners die and approximately 102 000 individuals benefit. It is concluded that property wealth is in general transferred to those who are already homeowners. It is observed that the amount to be taken by the Treasury as inheritance tax should be 13 times greater than the actual amount transferred. And finally, it is concluded that taxation system should not be the only solution for the problems in inheritance processes, but Reverse Mortgage may be a solution for transmission of wealth inequalities and for the efficient use of inherited property. It is also mentioned that inherited properties may be pilot areas for new rehabilitation projects for declining neighborhoods.
105

Discovering lexical generalisations : a supervised machine learning approach to inheritance hierarchy construction

Sporleder, Caroline January 2004 (has links)
Grammar development over the last decades has seen a shift away from large inventories of grammar rules to richer lexical structures. Many modern grammar theories are highly lexicalised. But simply listing lexical entries typically results in an undesirable amount of redundancy. Lexical inheritance hierarchies, on the other hand, make it possible to capture linguistic generalisations and thereby reduce redundancy. Inheritance hierarchies are usually constructed by hand but this is time-consuming and often impractical if a lexicon is very large. Constructing hierarchies automatically or semiautomatically facilitates a more systematic analysis of the lexical data. In addition, lexical data is often extracted automatically from corpora and this is likely to increase over the coming years. Therefore it makes sense to go a step further and automate the hierarchical organisation of lexical data too. Previous approaches to automatic lexical inheritance hierarchy construction tended to focus on minimality criteria, aiming for hierarchies that minimised one or more criteria such as the number of path-value pairs, the number of nodes or the number of inheritance links (Petersen 2001, Barg 1996a, and in a slightly different context: Light 1994). Aiming for minimality is motivated by the fact that the conciseness of inheritance hierarchies is a main reason for their use. However, I will argue that there are several problems with minimality-based approaches. First, minimality is not well defined in the context of lexical inheritance hierarchies as there is a tension between different minimality criteria. Second, minimality-based approaches tend to underestimate the importance of linguistic plausibility. While such approaches start with a definition of minimal redundancy and then try to prove that this leads to plausible hierarchies, the approach suggested here takes the opposite direction. It starts with a manually built hierarchy to which a supervised machine learning algorithm is applied with the aim of finding a set of formal criteria that can guide the construction of plausible hierarchies. Taking this direction means that it is more likely that the selected criteria do in fact lead to plausible hierarchies. Using a machine learning technique also has the advantage that the set of criteria can be much larger than in hand-crafted definitions. Consequently, one can define conciseness in very broad terms, taking into account interdependencies in the data as well as simple minimality criteria. This leads to a more fine-grained model of hierarchy quality. In practice, the method proposed here consists of two components: Galois lattices are used to define the search space as the set of all generalisations over the input lexicon. Maximum entropy models which have been trained on a manually built hierarchy are then applied to the lattice of the input lexicon to distinguish between plausible and implausible generalisations based on the formal criteria that were found in the training step. An inheritance hierarchy is then derived by pruning implausible generalisations. The hierarchy is automatically evaluated by matching it to a manually built hierarchy for the input lexicon. Automatically constructing lexical hierarchies is a hard task, partly because what is considered the best hierarchy for a lexicon is to some extent subjective. Supervised learning methods also suffer from a lack of suitable training data. Hence, a semi-automatic architecture may be best suited for the task. Therefore, the performance of the system has been tested using a semi-automatic as well as an automatic architecture and it has also been compared to the performance achieved by the pruning algorithm suggested by Petersen (2001). The findings show that the method proposed here is well suited for semi-automatic hierarchy construction.
106

Likvidace dědictví / Liquidation of probate estate due to excessive debts

Libert, Karel January 2015 (has links)
This thesis deals with one of the civil procedure institutes, liquidation of probate estate due to excessive debts, also known as liquidation of heritage that is newly designated as liquidation of inheritance. The thesis aims to comprehensively cover the liquidation-of-inheritance-procedure, from the opening of inheritance proceedings till the issuance of the decision resolving the case. The thesis is divided into five sections. Introductory section explains the terminological shift from the concept of liquidation of heritage to the concept of liquidation of inheritance, it acquaints the reader with the legislation changes that took place at the turn of 2013 and 2014 and it outlines the differences between liquidation-of-inheritance-procedure and the standard inheritance proceedings. The second section of the thesis seeks to define the concept of liquidation of inheritance. The definition is being found within the sense and purpose of the legislation of this institute and it is also stated that the legal definition of this institute has not been legally established. In the third section of the thesis, there is a concise summary of development of the liquidation-of-inheritance-legislation in Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic since the late 19th century to the twentieth century. It may be noted,...
107

Řízení o dědictví / Inheritance proceedings

Černá, Kamila January 2011 (has links)
Inheritance proceedings The goal of my Master's thesis is to describe in detail the course of the inheritance proceedings. Even though, the overall rule states that inheritance is assumed at the moment of decedent's death, the inheritance proceedings must take place. It is therefore a procedure set by law that is presided by a notary as a court commissar who is authorized by a competent court. During the proceedings, the notary locates decedent's inheritors, his assets and debts. With conclusion of the proceedings, all decedent's property relations are assorted in order. Simply it can be said, the conclusion of the inheritance proceedings is a division of decedent's assets and debts among all heirs. This thesis is divided into five chapters. The first chapter describes the history of the inheritance proceedings and the position of a notary as a court commissar in the period in between the First Republic to the contemporary practice. Furthermore, the contemporary inheritance proceeding is characterized as well as its function and legal framework, including its demarcation as a non-adversarial process. The second chapter deals with matters of court's authority and competence for the inheritance proceedings. The subchapter with inheritance proceedings with a foreign aspect, e.g. inheritance proceeding...
108

The relationship between ideology, food (In) security and socio-religious cohesion in the Old Testament with specific reference to Deuteronomy and eighth century prophets

Ngqeza, Zukile January 2018 (has links)
Magister Theologiae - MTh / In this thesis I show the relationship and interplay between Deuteronomistic ideology, land (which sometimes leads to food security) and cohesion with God and with ‘brothers’ socioreligious cohesion) in Deuteronomy and the eighth century prophets (especially Micah, Amos, Isaiah and Hosea). This research argues that loyalty to the covenant with Yahweh guarantees cohesion/solidarity with Yahweh and with ‘brothers’, as well as “God’s gift of Land” (which sometimes amounts to food security). However, the broken covenant with Yahweh leads to “loss of land” which presents food insecurity, and as a consequence people turn against one another. These three interplaying-themes of ideology, land and cohesion does not follow a set path but rather but they appear in different ways hence in Deuteronomy 8 food security (abundance) leads to “loss of memory about Yahweh”. Yahweh is forgotten! But also food security fosters a relationship with Yahweh (idea of eating to remember Yahweh’s goodness). Deuteronomic texts of feasts, festivals and sharing will be utilized to prove how food (in)security guarantees and/or compromises cohesion with Yahweh and especially ‘brothers’ (Deuteronomy 6,14 and 15). The fertility curses of Deuteronomy 28 will be brought up as proof that the scarcity of food breaks down ideas of sharing and cohesion, hence, parents ate their children in secret without sharing with anyone (Deuteronomy 28:53- 5). Cohesion is compromised due to famine. The relationship between disobedience, food and fertility curses in the eighth century prophets will be explored.
109

Transgenerational inheritance of DNA methylation alterations at the H19 imprinting control region following maternal ethanol exposure in mice

Ungerer, Michelle January 2013 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree in Master of Science (Medicine) in the Division of Human Genetics / Foetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) is characterised by growth retardation, craniofacial dysmorphology and neurodevelopmental deficits. Whilst, not all alcohol exposed offspring display alcohol-related developmental anomalies, the percentage of affected offspring is greatly underestimated. Common behavioural disorders, such as ADHD and anxiety, are likely to be linked to the transgenerational effects of in utero alcohol exposure. Epigenetics has been highlighted as a potential mechanism in the aetiology of alcohol teratogenesis due to alcohol’s disruptive effects on the folate pathway, and subsequently DNA methylation. The imprinted H19/Igf2 domain is critical in foetal growth and development. The locus is regulated by the methylation-sensitive CTCF binding protein which binds to the H19 imprinting control region (ICR) upstream of the H19 locus. CTCF binding allows for the reciprocal expression of H19 and Igf2 in an allele-specific parent of origin manner. Due to the monoallelic expression of imprinted genes, DNA methylation changes within their control regions can lead to altered gene expression and possibly disease. Furthermore, if these alterations occur in the germline, disease states or susceptibility to disease may be transmittable to future generations. A mouse model was used to investigate the potential transgenerational effects of F0 chronic maternal ethanol exposure on parturition, growth, locomotor activity and anxiety. Furthermore, the transgenerational inheritance of H19 ICR DNA methylation was investigated and its possible contribution to the aforementioned phenotypes was determined. Phenotypic analysis revealed significantly reduced F1 fertility following alcohol exposure (P = 0.003) but no other significant perturbations in parturition. Although not significant at all generations, alcohol’s effects on growth and behaviour were apparent. DNA was extracted from tail biopsies, bisulfite modified and the CTCF1 and CTCF2 regions of the H19 ICR amplified. DNA methylation quantification via Pyrosequencing revealed significantly reduced mean methylation profiles at CTCF1 and CTCF2 within the F1 EtOH exposed group (P = 0.021), with CpG sites 1, 2, 4 and 6 of CTCF1 and CpG sites 1, 2, 3 (P = 0.021) and 5 (P = 0.043) of CTCF2 displaying statistically significant differences. In contrast, the EtOH group of the F2 generation showed an increase in CTCF1 mean methylation that trended towards significance (P = 0.083) suggesting a potential recovery or compensatory mechanism within the epigenetic machinery. The F3 generation EtOH exposed group displayed decreased CTCF1 mean methylation levels (P = 0.083). The F2 and F3 generations showed no significant difference in CTCF2 methylation levels between treatment groups. The significant change in CTCF1 methylation at the F1 generation and the trend towards significance in the F2 and F3 generations indicated potential transgenerational inheritance of altered H19 ICR DNA methylation. Correlations between DNA methylation at the H19 CTCF1 and CTCF2 binding sites with growth rate and behaviour measures revealed no significant relationships. This dissertation supports the involvement of epigenetic mechanisms in alcohol teratogenesis. In addition it contributes to the growing field of transgenerational epigenetic inheritance, with implications for the treatment of those with Foetal Alcohol Syndrome and/or Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders and their progeny.
110

Comparison by states of features of inheritance and estate taxes

Unknown Date (has links)
"The purpose of this paper is to compare by states features of inheritance and estate taxes, and to attempt to forecast their probable future trend"--Introduction. / Typescript. / "January, 1953." / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science." / Edward D. Trembly, Professor Directing Paper. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 55-57).

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