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Logos of Phenomenology and Phenomenology of the Logos. Book Five: The Creative Logos. Aesthetic Ciphering in Fine Arts, Literature and Aesthetics

Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Phenomenology; Aesthetics; Metaphysics; Philosophy of Man; Philosophy of Mind

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-3743-6

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-3744-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2006

Tabla de contenidos

The Ontopoiesis of Leonardo da Vinci’S Brainstorm Drawings

Patricia Trutty-Coohill

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 3-11

Phenomenology of the Countenance: Portraying the Soul, Staging a Lived Experience

Piero Trupia

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 13-28

Principios de Objetividad Poética

Antonio Domínguez Rey

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 29-48

Essential

J. C. Couceiro-Bueno

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 49-56

Musical Progeny: The Case of Phenomenology and Music

Ellen J. Burns

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 57-66

Art, Alterity and Logos: In the Spaces of Separation

Brian Grassom

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 67-78

Logos, Rationale and Desire in Convergent Art Practices

James P. Werner

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section I - The Brainstorm of Creative Experience | Pp. 79-90

Phenomenological Interretation of the Work of Art: R. Ingarden, M. Dufrenne, P. Ricoeur

Elga Freiberga

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section II - The Work of Art and Its Experiential Radius | Pp. 93-102

Painting from the Heart: Beauty, Moore and Merleau-Ponty’s Wholes of Visibility

David Brubaker

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section II - The Work of Art and Its Experiential Radius | Pp. 103-111

On Phenomenology of Memory and Memorial (in Terms of Architectural and Landscaping Creations)

Molodkina Ljudmila

Distributed security models based on a ‘web of trust’ eliminate single points of failure and alleviate performance bottlenecks. However, such distributed approaches rely on the ability to find trust paths between participants, which introduces performance overhead. It is therefore of importance to develop trust path discovery algorithms that minimize such overhead. Since peer-to-peer (P2P) networks share various characteristics with the web of trust, P2P search algorithms can potentially be exploited to find trust paths. In this paper we systematically evaluate the application of P2P search algorithms to the trust path discovery problem. We consider the number of iterations required (as expressed by the TTL parameter) as well as the messaging overhead, for discovery of single as well as multiple trust paths. Since trust path discovery does not allow for resource replication (usual in P2P applications), we observe that trust path discovery is very sensitive to parameter choices in selective forwarding algorithms (such as K-walker), but is relatively fast when the underlying network topology is scale-free.

Section II - The Work of Art and Its Experiential Radius | Pp. 113-129