Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Part of Periodical (2822) (remove)
Language
- English (2822) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (2822)
Keywords
- taxonomy (312)
- new species (255)
- Odonata (73)
- morphology (73)
- Financial Institutions (45)
- distribution (38)
- systematics (37)
- Taxonomy (36)
- Capital Markets Union (32)
- new records (32)
Institute
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (282)
- Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE) (276)
- E-Finance Lab e.V. (69)
- Extern (69)
- Institut für Wissenschaftliche Irenik (61)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (58)
- Evangelische Theologie (55)
- House of Finance (HoF) (54)
- Präsidium (38)
- Gesellschaftswissenschaften (29)
Three-taxon statement analysis (3TA) is a method that may help to formalize the taxonomical intuition of the synapomorphy of the clade as a combination of its diagnostic traits, even if each trait, if taken separately, may be found in one or many other taxa of the same relationship. Using example based on the real morphological data, we are showing that 3TA can recognize clade in case of the complete lack of it synapomorphies, as optimized under the criterion of standard parsimony.
"A groundbreaking decision"
(2018)
The conference "Kunst und Gebrechen" ("Art and Defects"), which was scheduled from March 19th to March 21st and then postponed due to Covid-19, finally took place from November 5th through to November 7th. [...] The conference had a clear biographical focus: Most of the fourteen presentations sought to disentangle the influence any clear "defects" artists might have had on their work or their reception. Of course, this already poses a problem that many of the speakers addressed: the idea of "defects" presupposes a teleological norm, be it physical, mental or concerning age or gender, from which it is possible to deviate. A defect is a defect first and foremost in the eye of the beholder and, as Manfred Kern mentioned in his introduction, it can be seen not just as an impediment, but as a catalyst for artistic expression, too.