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"Wang Fu and the Comments of a Recluse by Margaret Pearson is an interesting, small academic foray into later Han political theory by a man who aspired to office, but refused to compromise his integrity in order to gain official appointment. Wang Fu is characterized as a student of Xunzi, who believed that capable officials were commonplace, though they were flawed and thus required oversight. He argued against what we perceive as nepotism as the maternal relatives of the empress would be well rewarded with high positions. He believes more so in character to justify an official appointment, though strongly believed in continued checks on their performance. The higher your office, the more you should be punished for failing to live up to the duties required of that office."--Goodreads
This IBM® Redbooks® publication discusses the value proposition of cross-channel solutions and describes the IBM Retail Integration Framework Commerce Product Strategy solution and service-oriented architecture (SOA) as an enabler. In depth, this book describes cross-channel processes and cross-channel features and proposes scenarios and configurations to meet the challenges in a competitive environment. This book describes the latest features and techniques of IBM WebSphere® Commerce Version 7. In it, we present an overview of the WebSphere Commerce order and inventory management systems, the distributed order management (referred to as DOM throughout this book) integration framework, an...
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This book presents the results of a European-Chinese collaborative research project, Manipulation of Reynolds Stress for Separation Control and Drag Reduction (MARS), including an analysis and discussion of the effects of a number of active flow control devices on the discrete dynamic components of the turbulent shear layers and Reynolds stress. From an application point of view, it provides a positive and necessary step to control individual structures that are larger in scale and lower in frequency compared to the richness of the temporal and spatial scales in turbulent separated flows.
For well over a thousand years Chinese and Japanese women created, commissioned, collected and used paintings, yet until recently this fact has scarcely been acknowledged in the study of East Asian art by Westerners.