Author: Tomás Morales y Durán
Publisher: Libros de Verdad
ISBN:
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 238
Book Description
The word of the Buddha has remained pristine over the centuries because it has been encoded in pāli, a language created exclusively for this purpose, under a very complex system of redundancy. Like any artificial language that was not subjected to evolution, each concept has a word and each word has a single concept, like Morse. The complete code has 1,453,000 words that are distributed in 167,800 lines and these in 64,800 paragraphs. Redundancy is constant, so that each word will have a large number of occurrences in very different contexts. Decoding the texts requires having for each word all the available meanings, not only those derived from the compilation of its previous partial translations, but also those derived from its corresponding equivalent Sanskrit word, with its usages, and supported by the ancient Chinese in the parallel agamas, when it exists. One proceeds by substituting each word for each and every one of these meanings until one is found that fits all occurrences. And it is always found. Moreover, once it is done, it is verified that there is no meaning that uses more than one word. The secret of the pāli is that it is biunivocal, as is to be expected of any artificial language. Therefore, it is only possible to translate if all computer-aided texts are decoded synoptically. This is the first time this has been done, pouring its content into Spanish, which is one of the most richly nuanced languages in the world. And the other secret it has kept during these millennia is that its more than 7.2 million characters encode a unique message, which never contradicts itself, and which points to a single direction: enlightenment. The first book of the Dīgha Nikāya, the Collection of the Long Discourses of the Buddha, collects 17 suttas that do not fit into the typical format of discourses, but are groupings created centuries later managing to be classified as another canonical collection. This book seems to be composed to be given to Buddhist missionaries to be used as a manual for debate against other religions in order to gain followers. This is the tone of most of the first thirteen discourses. For this purpose, neither mythomania nor milacrery, which the Indian public has always liked so much, is disdained. If we study their structure, we immediately see that they are completely foreign to the canonical ones and their content, in general, is composed of a libel against a religious group, followed by a series of short-paste of canonical suttas selected without much criterion. DN 9. With Poṭṭhapāda, its unknown author goes into a series of dialectical traps until he reaches a point where he finds himself unable to get out and resolves it by complicating everything even more so that nothing is clear. In DN 13. The Three Knowledges, the Brahmins are blamed for the same vices and defects as the Buddhist monks. The rest of the false discourses do not try to imitate the regular structure of the suttas and neither the wording nor the content, which shows a short knowledge on the part of their authors of the rest of the Nikayas. They are marked with a double asterisk (**). Three of the four great discourses are also collected: the Mahapadana, the Mahanidana, and the Mahaparinibbana. But the stain of falsehood also extends through two of the great discourses: the Mahapadana, or The Great Chronicle of the Buddhas, which is a pamphlet of an exaggerated baroque excessive even for oriental taste, and the extensive Mahaparinibbana, which is not free from falsehoods spread throughout its extensive writing. On the contrary, the Mahanidana, or Great Discourse of the Causes, is an exhaustive compilation of the theory of Dependent Origination in a single text, and the Mahasatipatthana, or Great Discourse of the Instructions of Practice, does the same with different practices. Not all of them, but the ones he deals with are dealt with in depth. These two discourses alone make this book worthwhile.
DN1 - Collection of Long Speeches
Author: Tomás Morales y Durán
Publisher: Libros de Verdad
ISBN:
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 238
Book Description
The word of the Buddha has remained pristine over the centuries because it has been encoded in pāli, a language created exclusively for this purpose, under a very complex system of redundancy. Like any artificial language that was not subjected to evolution, each concept has a word and each word has a single concept, like Morse. The complete code has 1,453,000 words that are distributed in 167,800 lines and these in 64,800 paragraphs. Redundancy is constant, so that each word will have a large number of occurrences in very different contexts. Decoding the texts requires having for each word all the available meanings, not only those derived from the compilation of its previous partial translations, but also those derived from its corresponding equivalent Sanskrit word, with its usages, and supported by the ancient Chinese in the parallel agamas, when it exists. One proceeds by substituting each word for each and every one of these meanings until one is found that fits all occurrences. And it is always found. Moreover, once it is done, it is verified that there is no meaning that uses more than one word. The secret of the pāli is that it is biunivocal, as is to be expected of any artificial language. Therefore, it is only possible to translate if all computer-aided texts are decoded synoptically. This is the first time this has been done, pouring its content into Spanish, which is one of the most richly nuanced languages in the world. And the other secret it has kept during these millennia is that its more than 7.2 million characters encode a unique message, which never contradicts itself, and which points to a single direction: enlightenment. The first book of the Dīgha Nikāya, the Collection of the Long Discourses of the Buddha, collects 17 suttas that do not fit into the typical format of discourses, but are groupings created centuries later managing to be classified as another canonical collection. This book seems to be composed to be given to Buddhist missionaries to be used as a manual for debate against other religions in order to gain followers. This is the tone of most of the first thirteen discourses. For this purpose, neither mythomania nor milacrery, which the Indian public has always liked so much, is disdained. If we study their structure, we immediately see that they are completely foreign to the canonical ones and their content, in general, is composed of a libel against a religious group, followed by a series of short-paste of canonical suttas selected without much criterion. DN 9. With Poṭṭhapāda, its unknown author goes into a series of dialectical traps until he reaches a point where he finds himself unable to get out and resolves it by complicating everything even more so that nothing is clear. In DN 13. The Three Knowledges, the Brahmins are blamed for the same vices and defects as the Buddhist monks. The rest of the false discourses do not try to imitate the regular structure of the suttas and neither the wording nor the content, which shows a short knowledge on the part of their authors of the rest of the Nikayas. They are marked with a double asterisk (**). Three of the four great discourses are also collected: the Mahapadana, the Mahanidana, and the Mahaparinibbana. But the stain of falsehood also extends through two of the great discourses: the Mahapadana, or The Great Chronicle of the Buddhas, which is a pamphlet of an exaggerated baroque excessive even for oriental taste, and the extensive Mahaparinibbana, which is not free from falsehoods spread throughout its extensive writing. On the contrary, the Mahanidana, or Great Discourse of the Causes, is an exhaustive compilation of the theory of Dependent Origination in a single text, and the Mahasatipatthana, or Great Discourse of the Instructions of Practice, does the same with different practices. Not all of them, but the ones he deals with are dealt with in depth. These two discourses alone make this book worthwhile.
Publisher: Libros de Verdad
ISBN:
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 238
Book Description
The word of the Buddha has remained pristine over the centuries because it has been encoded in pāli, a language created exclusively for this purpose, under a very complex system of redundancy. Like any artificial language that was not subjected to evolution, each concept has a word and each word has a single concept, like Morse. The complete code has 1,453,000 words that are distributed in 167,800 lines and these in 64,800 paragraphs. Redundancy is constant, so that each word will have a large number of occurrences in very different contexts. Decoding the texts requires having for each word all the available meanings, not only those derived from the compilation of its previous partial translations, but also those derived from its corresponding equivalent Sanskrit word, with its usages, and supported by the ancient Chinese in the parallel agamas, when it exists. One proceeds by substituting each word for each and every one of these meanings until one is found that fits all occurrences. And it is always found. Moreover, once it is done, it is verified that there is no meaning that uses more than one word. The secret of the pāli is that it is biunivocal, as is to be expected of any artificial language. Therefore, it is only possible to translate if all computer-aided texts are decoded synoptically. This is the first time this has been done, pouring its content into Spanish, which is one of the most richly nuanced languages in the world. And the other secret it has kept during these millennia is that its more than 7.2 million characters encode a unique message, which never contradicts itself, and which points to a single direction: enlightenment. The first book of the Dīgha Nikāya, the Collection of the Long Discourses of the Buddha, collects 17 suttas that do not fit into the typical format of discourses, but are groupings created centuries later managing to be classified as another canonical collection. This book seems to be composed to be given to Buddhist missionaries to be used as a manual for debate against other religions in order to gain followers. This is the tone of most of the first thirteen discourses. For this purpose, neither mythomania nor milacrery, which the Indian public has always liked so much, is disdained. If we study their structure, we immediately see that they are completely foreign to the canonical ones and their content, in general, is composed of a libel against a religious group, followed by a series of short-paste of canonical suttas selected without much criterion. DN 9. With Poṭṭhapāda, its unknown author goes into a series of dialectical traps until he reaches a point where he finds himself unable to get out and resolves it by complicating everything even more so that nothing is clear. In DN 13. The Three Knowledges, the Brahmins are blamed for the same vices and defects as the Buddhist monks. The rest of the false discourses do not try to imitate the regular structure of the suttas and neither the wording nor the content, which shows a short knowledge on the part of their authors of the rest of the Nikayas. They are marked with a double asterisk (**). Three of the four great discourses are also collected: the Mahapadana, the Mahanidana, and the Mahaparinibbana. But the stain of falsehood also extends through two of the great discourses: the Mahapadana, or The Great Chronicle of the Buddhas, which is a pamphlet of an exaggerated baroque excessive even for oriental taste, and the extensive Mahaparinibbana, which is not free from falsehoods spread throughout its extensive writing. On the contrary, the Mahanidana, or Great Discourse of the Causes, is an exhaustive compilation of the theory of Dependent Origination in a single text, and the Mahasatipatthana, or Great Discourse of the Instructions of Practice, does the same with different practices. Not all of them, but the ones he deals with are dealt with in depth. These two discourses alone make this book worthwhile.
Bayesian Speech and Language Processing
Author: Shinji Watanabe
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 1316352102
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 447
Book Description
With this comprehensive guide you will learn how to apply Bayesian machine learning techniques systematically to solve various problems in speech and language processing. A range of statistical models is detailed, from hidden Markov models to Gaussian mixture models, n-gram models and latent topic models, along with applications including automatic speech recognition, speaker verification, and information retrieval. Approximate Bayesian inferences based on MAP, Evidence, Asymptotic, VB, and MCMC approximations are provided as well as full derivations of calculations, useful notations, formulas, and rules. The authors address the difficulties of straightforward applications and provide detailed examples and case studies to demonstrate how you can successfully use practical Bayesian inference methods to improve the performance of information systems. This is an invaluable resource for students, researchers, and industry practitioners working in machine learning, signal processing, and speech and language processing.
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 1316352102
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 447
Book Description
With this comprehensive guide you will learn how to apply Bayesian machine learning techniques systematically to solve various problems in speech and language processing. A range of statistical models is detailed, from hidden Markov models to Gaussian mixture models, n-gram models and latent topic models, along with applications including automatic speech recognition, speaker verification, and information retrieval. Approximate Bayesian inferences based on MAP, Evidence, Asymptotic, VB, and MCMC approximations are provided as well as full derivations of calculations, useful notations, formulas, and rules. The authors address the difficulties of straightforward applications and provide detailed examples and case studies to demonstrate how you can successfully use practical Bayesian inference methods to improve the performance of information systems. This is an invaluable resource for students, researchers, and industry practitioners working in machine learning, signal processing, and speech and language processing.
Nomenclature: Avoiding Babylonian Speech Confusion in Present Day Immunology
Author: Menno C. van Zelm
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
ISBN: 2889664457
Category : Medical
Languages : en
Pages : 131
Book Description
We acknowledge the initiation and support of this Research Topic by the International Union of Immunological Societies (IUIS). A/Prof. Menno van Zelm currently serves as the chairman for the IUIS Nomenclature Committee; Prof. Pablo Engel is the chair of the IUIS CD Nomenclature Sub-Committee; Prof. Loems Ziegler-Heitbrock is the chair of the IUIS Monocytes and Dendritic Cells in Blood Sub-Committee; Asst. Prof. Sanny Chan is a member of the WHO / IUIS Allergen Nomenclature Sub-Committee and A/Prof. Andrew Collins is co-chair of the Germline Gene Database (GLDB) Working Group of the Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire community (AIRR-C) and chair of the Inferred Allele Review Committee (IARC).
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
ISBN: 2889664457
Category : Medical
Languages : en
Pages : 131
Book Description
We acknowledge the initiation and support of this Research Topic by the International Union of Immunological Societies (IUIS). A/Prof. Menno van Zelm currently serves as the chairman for the IUIS Nomenclature Committee; Prof. Pablo Engel is the chair of the IUIS CD Nomenclature Sub-Committee; Prof. Loems Ziegler-Heitbrock is the chair of the IUIS Monocytes and Dendritic Cells in Blood Sub-Committee; Asst. Prof. Sanny Chan is a member of the WHO / IUIS Allergen Nomenclature Sub-Committee and A/Prof. Andrew Collins is co-chair of the Germline Gene Database (GLDB) Working Group of the Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire community (AIRR-C) and chair of the Inferred Allele Review Committee (IARC).
The Discourse on the All-embracing Net of Views
Author: Bhikkhu Bodhi
Publisher: Buddhist Publication Society
ISBN: 955240052X
Category : Tipiṭaka
Languages : en
Pages : 372
Book Description
The Brahmajala, one of the Buddha’s most important discourses, weaves a net of sixty-two cases capturing all the speculative views on the self and the world. The massive commentary and subcommentary allow for a close in-depth study of the work. The book contains a lengthy treatise on the Theravada conception of the Bodhisattva ideal. The long introduction is itself a modern philosophical commentary on the sutta.
Publisher: Buddhist Publication Society
ISBN: 955240052X
Category : Tipiṭaka
Languages : en
Pages : 372
Book Description
The Brahmajala, one of the Buddha’s most important discourses, weaves a net of sixty-two cases capturing all the speculative views on the self and the world. The massive commentary and subcommentary allow for a close in-depth study of the work. The book contains a lengthy treatise on the Theravada conception of the Bodhisattva ideal. The long introduction is itself a modern philosophical commentary on the sutta.
Text, Speech and Dialogue
Author: Petr Sojka
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 3642327907
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 708
Book Description
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Text, Speech and Dialogue, TSD 2012, held in Brno, Czech Republic, in September 2012. The 82 papers presented together with 2 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 173 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on corpora and language resources, speech recognition, tagging, classification and parsing of text and speech, speech and spoken language generation, semantic processing of text and speech, integrating applications of text and speech processing, machine translation, automatic dialogue systems, multimodal techniques and modeling.
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 3642327907
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 708
Book Description
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Text, Speech and Dialogue, TSD 2012, held in Brno, Czech Republic, in September 2012. The 82 papers presented together with 2 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 173 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on corpora and language resources, speech recognition, tagging, classification and parsing of text and speech, speech and spoken language generation, semantic processing of text and speech, integrating applications of text and speech processing, machine translation, automatic dialogue systems, multimodal techniques and modeling.
Springer Handbook of Speech Processing
Author: Jacob Benesty
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 3540491252
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 1170
Book Description
This handbook plays a fundamental role in sustainable progress in speech research and development. With an accessible format and with accompanying DVD-Rom, it targets three categories of readers: graduate students, professors and active researchers in academia, and engineers in industry who need to understand or implement some specific algorithms for their speech-related products. It is a superb source of application-oriented, authoritative and comprehensive information about these technologies, this work combines the established knowledge derived from research in such fast evolving disciplines as Signal Processing and Communications, Acoustics, Computer Science and Linguistics.
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 3540491252
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 1170
Book Description
This handbook plays a fundamental role in sustainable progress in speech research and development. With an accessible format and with accompanying DVD-Rom, it targets three categories of readers: graduate students, professors and active researchers in academia, and engineers in industry who need to understand or implement some specific algorithms for their speech-related products. It is a superb source of application-oriented, authoritative and comprehensive information about these technologies, this work combines the established knowledge derived from research in such fast evolving disciplines as Signal Processing and Communications, Acoustics, Computer Science and Linguistics.
Bēl Lišāni
Author: Rebecca Hasselbach-Andee
Publisher: Penn State Press
ISBN: 1646021584
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 228
Book Description
Akkadian, a Semitic language attested in writing from 2600 BCE until the first century CE, was the language of Mesopotamia for nearly three millennia. This volume examines the language from a comparative and historical linguistic perspective. Inspired by the work of renowned linguist John Huehnergard and featuring contributions from top scholars in the field, Bēl Lišāni showcases the latest research on Akkadian linguistics. Chapters focus on a wide range of topics, including lexicon, morphology, word order, syntax, verbal semantics, and subgrouping. Building upon Huehnergard’s pioneering studies focused on the identification of Proto-Akkadian features, the contributors explore linguistic innovations in the language from historical and comparative perspectives. In doing so, they open the way for further etymological, dialectical, and lexical research into Akkadian. An important update on and synthesis of the research in Akkadian linguistics, this volume will be welcomed by Semitists, Akkadian language specialists, and scholars and students interested in historical linguistics. In addition to the editors, the contributors to this volume include Paul-Alain Beaulieu, Øyvind Bjøru, Maksim Kalinin, N. J. C. Kouwenberg, Sergey Loesov, Jacob J. de Ridder, Ambjörn Sjörs, Michael P. Streck, and Juan-Pablo Vita.
Publisher: Penn State Press
ISBN: 1646021584
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 228
Book Description
Akkadian, a Semitic language attested in writing from 2600 BCE until the first century CE, was the language of Mesopotamia for nearly three millennia. This volume examines the language from a comparative and historical linguistic perspective. Inspired by the work of renowned linguist John Huehnergard and featuring contributions from top scholars in the field, Bēl Lišāni showcases the latest research on Akkadian linguistics. Chapters focus on a wide range of topics, including lexicon, morphology, word order, syntax, verbal semantics, and subgrouping. Building upon Huehnergard’s pioneering studies focused on the identification of Proto-Akkadian features, the contributors explore linguistic innovations in the language from historical and comparative perspectives. In doing so, they open the way for further etymological, dialectical, and lexical research into Akkadian. An important update on and synthesis of the research in Akkadian linguistics, this volume will be welcomed by Semitists, Akkadian language specialists, and scholars and students interested in historical linguistics. In addition to the editors, the contributors to this volume include Paul-Alain Beaulieu, Øyvind Bjøru, Maksim Kalinin, N. J. C. Kouwenberg, Sergey Loesov, Jacob J. de Ridder, Ambjörn Sjörs, Michael P. Streck, and Juan-Pablo Vita.
1997 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 982
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 982
Book Description
Biomedical Index to PHS-supported Research
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Medicine
Languages : en
Pages : 746
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Medicine
Languages : en
Pages : 746
Book Description
Reconstructing Early Buddhism
Author: Roderick S. Bucknell
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 1009236520
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 307
Book Description
Addresses key and contested questions regarding early Buddhism, revealing the path of meditative practice most likely followed by the Buddha.
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 1009236520
Category : Religion
Languages : en
Pages : 307
Book Description
Addresses key and contested questions regarding early Buddhism, revealing the path of meditative practice most likely followed by the Buddha.