ral questions that might arise concerning personal identity. When we ask\Who am I? we might be being we are, what our possiblities are, under what conditions\I\would continue to exist. We'll begin our discussionon n wonder what\makes us tick\, what we ultimately value, what matters to us. We might also be asking what sort personal identity with the latter set of questions Consider a parallel set of questions (Id) Under what conditions are baseball-events events in the same game? E. g, under what conditions are a
1. In what physical condition is the writer's grandmother? with her? 3. Is she happy Why or why not? 4 Are retirement homes all bad? 5. What did the writer's mother decide to do when Grandma could not live on her own? 6. How are elderly people treated in many cultures? 7. Why are old people unhappy in a nursing home? 8. What is the writer's opinion concerning the treatment of aging people? 9. What is your own opinion concerning the old people n general?
1. C Applications of the Second Law N-Chapter6;VWB&S-8.1,8.2,8.5,8.6,8.7,8.8,9.6] 1. CI Limitations on the work that Can be supplied by a heat engine The second law enables us to make powerful and general statements concerning the maximum work that can be Q1
Can be continuous Trajectory of a space shuttle Mass density in a cross-section of a brain · Can be discrete dNa base sequence Digital image pixels Can be 1-D,2-D,·N-D For this course: Focus on a single(1-D) independent variable which we call“time
1. Machines Extend Proposition 151. 1(the Perfect Folk Theorem with discounting)to arbitrary mixtures of payoff profiles of the original game G=(N, (Ai, lilieN Allow for both rational and real weights on the set of profiles u(a): aE A]; note that the statement of the result will involve an approximation of the payoff profile Construct a machine that implements the strategies in your proof