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Robots have an impressive impact of everyone’s life nowadays. Their history comes from centuries, their philosophy is governed by laws and principles. Mainly, this study is aimed to present some relevant aspects of industrial robot’s history and philosophy and some of their real life application in industry.
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This work, in two volumes, is a book to identify bryo phytes in Romania by identification key, description, chorology and ecology. In the last chapter of the paper gives a summary of associations of bryophytes and their spread in Romania.
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The Department of Reformed Theology and Music of Babeș–Bolyai University in Kolozsvár/Cluj-Napoca in joint venture with the Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary headquartered in Budapest and the Reformed Public and Cultural Centre Foundation [Református Közéleti és Kulturális Központ Alapítvány] held a confer-ence featuring the title above in Kolozsvár/Cluj-Napoca on 7–8 June 2018. The volume contains the written material of the joint conference in English.
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First of all, I would like to thank you for this wonderful opportunity to speak before you. I am grateful for this possibility, being fully aware that neither of the greeters knew what the others would say. And this is really not a problem as we are all different and we perceive the agenda of this two-day conference held in Kolozsvár/Cluj from different perspectives.
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This text should not only be understood as a praise of the magazine on the occasion of a significant jubilee. As a long-term contributor to this magazine, the author points out the importance of its appearance and sees it as a “mirror of Bosnia” and a successful model that should be followed by other cities and municipalities in this country.
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The ongoing debate surrounding know-how and skill is one of the most animated and diverse areas of contemporary philosophy. In fact, the inquiry is hardly limited to philosophical theories and arguments, as inputs from cognitive psychology and neuroscience, linguistics, computer science, and other fields have been regularly called upon and analyzed in the literature. Moreover, the range of philosophical theories and traditions that have been brought to bear on the debate is unusually vast, stretching from the ancient to the most novel, and from classical analytic philosophy to various strands of continental philosophy, of which the phenomenological tradition has probably been appealed to the most, whether to lend support to, or to criticize a certain idea. While the distinctions have been anticipated or mirrored in various approaches, the main source of the current debate is Ryle (1949)’s famous distinction between two types of knowledge: knowledge-that (i.e., propositional knowledge) and knowledge-how. Ryle criticizes what he calls, in a somewhat derogatory manner, intellectualism, that is, the view that all knowledge (including know-how) is propositional. The intellectualist position has been revived by Jason Stanley and Timothy Williamson in their 2001 joint paper “Knowing How.” This paper has elicited an impressive number of responses, both favourable and critical, and has stimulated new research and creative reappraisals of previously less problematized views of such fundamental notions as knowledge, skill, proposition and propositional knowledge, intelligence, etc.
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The present issue of the Studia UBB. Digitalia is exclusively dedicated to articles written by students of the Babeș-Bolyai University. The idea of this special issue was born during a module of digital humanities we taught in the spring of 2020. The course was dedicated to students from different social sciences and humanities faculties from the university. Some of their final projects were so well accomplished and interesting, that we considered publishing them, and thus a special issue of our journal appeared as the best option. Given these prerequisites, we stress on the fact that all authors are at their first (major) editorial experience and while the peer-reviewers suggested many improvements for the texts – which were subsequently taken into account – their greenness might still be noticeable. Upon reflection, we did not consider this as a drawback, but rather a refreshing feature, pointing to the future of digital humanities research.
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