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Gosset and knowledge
Guinness was a progressive agro-chemical business and Gosset would apply his statistical knowledge both in the brewery and on the farm — to the selection of the best yielding varieties of barley.

Gosset and by
Famous pseudonyms of people who were neither authors nor actors include the architect Le Corbusier ( né Charles Édouard Jeanneret ), and the statistician Student ( né William Sealey Gosset ), discoverer of Student's < var > t </ var >- distribution in statistics ( Gosset's employer prohibited publication by employees to prevent trade secrets being revealed ).
In the English literature, a derivation of the t-distribution was published in 1908 by William Sealy Gosset while he worked at the Guinness Brewery in Dublin.
William Sealy Gosset ( June 13, 1876 October 16, 1937 ) is famous as a statistician, best known by his pen name Student and for his work on Student's t-distribution.
* E. S. Pearson ( 1990 ) ‘ Student ’, A Statistical Biography of William Sealy Gosset, Edited and Augmented by R. L. Plackett with the Assistance of G. A. Barnard, Oxford: University Press.
Random methods of computation and experimentation ( generally considered forms of stochastic simulation ) can be arguably traced back to the earliest pioneers of probability theory ( see, e. g., Buffon's needle, and the work on small samples by William Sealy Gosset ), but are more specifically traced to the pre-electronic computing era.
* Student's t-distribution published by William Sealy Gosset ( anonymously ).
The generalization to n dimensions is sometimes referred to as the Soddy Gosset theorem, even though it was shown by R. Lachlan in 1886.
The t-statistic was introduced in 1908 by William Sealy Gosset, a chemist working for the Guinness brewery in Dublin, Ireland (" Student " was his pen name ).
It is named in honor of William Sealey Gosset, who wrote under the pseudonym Student, and dividing by an estimate of scale is called studentizing, in analogy with standardizing and normalizing: see Studentization.
While Gosset gives more details, her general picture of the groups ' politics is the same, but she presents the matter very differently: speaking of the Washington, D. C. rally that occurred two days after the Albert / Shalom article, Gosset acknowledges the breadth of speakers at the rally, but — despite the then-recent founding of UFPJ, which she does not mention — describes the anti-war movement as " increasingly dominated by the international A. N. S. W. E. R.
Gosset blames ANSWER and the IAC for ignoring atrocities committed by various Arab regimes-mainly Saddam Hussein's Iraq and the Palestinian Authority: " Not surprisingly, criticism of Saddam Hussein is not aired at IAC / A. N. S. W. E. R .- controlled protest events.
Robertson was approached by Eckles, Varner, and Gosset a few months before the incident at the Green Moon Mall.
This honeycomb was first studied by Gosset who called it a 9-ic semi-regular figure ( Gosset regarded honeycombs in n dimensions as degenerate n + 1 polytopes ).
The recognition of their endocrine-related properties were later described by Gosset and Masson in 1914, and these tumors are now known to arise from the enterochromaffin ( EC ) and enterochromaffin-like ( ECL ) cells of the gut.

Gosset and study
The E < sub > 8 </ sub > lattice is also called the Gosset lattice after Thorold Gosset who was one of the first to study the geometry of the lattice itself around 1900.

Gosset and error
Gosset had almost all of his papers including The probable error of a mean published in Pearson's journal Biometrika using the pseudonym Student.

Gosset and two
* 1900: Thorold Gosset enumerated the list of semiregular convex polytopes with regular cells ( Platonic solids ) in his publication On the Regular and Semi-Regular Figures in Space of n Dimensions, including one regular cubic honeycomb, and two semiregular forms with tetrahedra and octahedra.

Gosset and
* 1876 William Sealey Gosset, English chemist and statistician ( d. 1937 )
* June 13 William Sealy Gosset, English chemist ( d. 1937 )
* Richard Gosset Molesworth, 11th Viscount Molesworth ( 1907 1997 )
Gosset asserts that libertarian Justin Raimondo of antiwar. com agrees with the " hijacking " thesis, but then quotes him: " The people who came to these demonstrations 100, 000 in Washington don't share the politics of the organizers.

Gosset and Pearson
Gosset and Pearson had a good relationship and Pearson helped Gosset with the mathematics of his papers.
Gosset was a friend of both Pearson and Fisher, an achievement, for each had a massive ego and a loathing for the other.

Gosset and .
Father Gosset, the chaplain to the Chinese students at the Catholic University of Leuven, wrote to Hergé urging him to be sensitive about what he wrote about China.
Hergé agreed, and in the spring of 1934 Gosset introduced him to Chang Chong-jen ( Zhang Chongren ), a young sculpture student at the Brussels Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts.
The Champagne house of Gosset was founded as a still wine producer in 1584 and is the oldest Champagne house still in operation today.
Among those who actively fought in the Resistance, a number died for it-for instance the writer Jean Prévost, the philosopher and mathematician Jean Cavaillès, and the philosopher Jean Gosset ; among those who survived and went on to reflect on their experience, a particularly visible one was André Malraux.
Born in Canterbury, England to Agnes Sealy Vidal and Colonel Frederic Gosset, Gosset attended Winchester College before reading chemistry and mathematics at New College, Oxford.
However, it was R. A. Fisher who appreciated the importance of Gosset's small-sample work, after Gosset had written to him to say I am sending you a copy of Student's Tables as you are the only man that's ever likely to use them !.

acquired and knowledge
I knew this knowledge to be corrupting at the time I acquired it ; ;
Richard was a solitary student in New York and acquired, in his remoteness, a thorough if bookish knowledge of Asian lore, literature, life, politics and history.
Tylor formulated one of the early and influential anthropological conceptions of culture as " that complex whole, which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by as of society.
From his associations in the house of his uncle, and later as his uncle's disciple and as a member of the academy at Sepphoris, Rav acquired such an extraordinary knowledge of traditional lore as to make him its foremost exponent in his native land.
One of the earliest articulations of the anthropological meaning of the term " culture " came from Sir Edward Tylor who writes on the first page of his 1897 book: “ Culture, or civilization, taken in its broad, ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society .” The term " civilization " later gave way to definitions by V. Gordon Childe, with culture forming an umbrella term and civilization becoming a particular kind of culture.
In the last fifty years or so, more and more researchers have studied knowledge and use of language as a cognitive phenomenon, the main problems being how knowledge of language can be acquired and used, and what precisely it consists of.
Following an education in a strict religious and ethical environment as an altar boy at the vicarage of Jimpley, he became a rather isolated, independent and disciplined person, and acquired a knowledge and an appreciation for the scientific method in a practical world.
The subject is a discussion of the interrelation between man's reason and the knowledge acquired through perception ( the five senses ).
* How is knowledge acquired?
case is analyzed by referring to a view of Gangesha ( 13th c .), who takes any true belief to be knowledge ; thus a true belief acquired through a wrong
The second question that will be dealt with is the question of how knowledge is acquired.
Idealists believe that knowledge is primarily ( at least in some areas ) acquired by a priori processes or is innate — for example, in the form of concepts not derived from experience.
Research has found that, even when students report not using the knowledge acquired in school, a considerable portion is retained for many years and long-term retention is strongly dependent on the initial level of mastery.
There is much less consensus on the crucial question of how much knowledge acquired in school transfers to tasks encountered outside formal educational settings, and how such transfer occurs.
As a servant to a French milliner, she learned about costume and acquired a knowledge of French which afterwards stood her in good stead.
The Arabs acquired knowledge of gunpowder some time between 1240 and 1280, by which time Hasan al-Rammah had written, in Arabic, recipes for gunpowder, instructions for the purification of saltpeter, and descriptions of gunpowder incendiaries.
* Crystallized intelligence ( Gc ) includes the breadth and depth of a person's acquired knowledge, the ability to communicate one's knowledge, and the ability to reason using previously learned experiences or procedures.
In this capacity they doubtless acquired considerable knowledge and technical skill in metal working.
In 1437, there is evidence that he was instructing a wealthy tradesman on polishing gems, but where he had acquired this knowledge is unknown.
He acquired a knowledge of Hebrew by studying with a Jew who converted to Christianity, and took the unusual position ( for that time ) that the Hebrew, and not the Septuagint, was the inspired text of the Old Testament.
He became a lector, a minor office in the Christian church, and his later writings show a detailed knowledge of the Bible, likely acquired in his early life.
Under the guidance of two village priests, Millet acquired a knowledge of Latin and modern authors, before being sent to Cherbourg in 1833 to study with a portrait painter named Paul Dumouchel.
I can at times feel strong the beauties, you describe, in themselves, & for themselves but more frequently all things appear little all the knowledge, that can be acquired, child's play the universe itself what but an immense heap of little things?

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