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Please sign and share the petition 'Tighten regulation on taking, making and faking explicit images' at Change.org initiated by Helen Mort to the w:Law Commission (England and Wales) to properly update UK laws against synthetic filth. Only name and email required to support, no nationality requirement. See Current and possible laws and their application @ #SSF! wiki for more info on the struggle for laws to protect humans.
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A '''[[w:thesis|thesis]]''' (Often Bachelors/Masters) or '''dissertation''' (often Doctoral) <ref>Originally, the concepts "dissertation" and "thesis" (plural, "theses") were not interchangeable. When, at ancient universities, the lector had completed his lecture, there would traditionally follow a disputation, during which students could take up certain points and argue them. The position that one took during a disputation was the thesis, while the dissertation was the line of reasoning with which one buttressed it. Olga Weijers: The medieval ''disputatio''. In: [http://www.ascleiden.nl/Pdf/horaestklein.pdf ''Hora est! (On dissertations)''], p.23-27. Leiden University Library, 2005</ref> is a document submitted in support of candidature for an [[w:academic degree|academic degree]] or professional qualification presenting the author's [[w:research|research]] and findings.<!-- who knows what this source actually says? It's not publicly accessible and (especially if not even quoted from) needs to be replaced with one that is--><ref name="iso7144">International Standard [[w:International Organization for Standardization|ISO ]] 7144: Documentation—[http://www.iso.org/iso/en/CatalogueDetailPage.CatalogueDetail?CSNUMBER=13736&ICS1=1&ICS2=140&ICS3=40 Presentation of theses and similar documents], International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, 1986.</ref> ( Wikipedia ) | * A '''[[w:thesis|thesis]]''' (Often Bachelors/Masters) or '''dissertation''' (often Doctoral) <ref>Originally, the concepts "dissertation" and "thesis" (plural, "theses") were not interchangeable. When, at ancient universities, the lector had completed his lecture, there would traditionally follow a disputation, during which students could take up certain points and argue them. The position that one took during a disputation was the thesis, while the dissertation was the line of reasoning with which one buttressed it. Olga Weijers: The medieval ''disputatio''. In: [http://www.ascleiden.nl/Pdf/horaestklein.pdf ''Hora est! (On dissertations)''], p.23-27. Leiden University Library, 2005</ref> is a document submitted in support of candidature for an [[w:academic degree|academic degree]] or professional qualification presenting the author's [[w:research|research]] and findings.<!-- who knows what this source actually says? It's not publicly accessible and (especially if not even quoted from) needs to be replaced with one that is--><ref name="iso7144">International Standard [[w:International Organization for Standardization|ISO ]] 7144: Documentation—[http://www.iso.org/iso/en/CatalogueDetailPage.CatalogueDetail?CSNUMBER=13736&ICS1=1&ICS2=140&ICS3=40 Presentation of theses and similar documents], International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, 1986.</ref> ( Wikipedia ) | ||
:: The term "thesis" comes from the [[w:Greek language|Greek]] θέσις, meaning "something put forth", and refers to an [[w:intellectual|intellectual]] [[w:proposition|proposition]]. ( Wikipedia ) | ::: The term "thesis" comes from the [[w:Greek language|Greek]] θέσις, meaning "something put forth", and refers to an [[w:intellectual|intellectual]] [[w:proposition|proposition]]. ( Wikipedia ) | ||
* A '''[[w:Venn diagram|Venn diagram]]''' or '''set diagram''' is a [[w:diagram|diagram]] that shows all possible [[w:logic|logic]]al relations between a finite collection of different [[w:Set (mathematics)|sets]]. ( Wikipedia ) | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
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