Yield Stress
Today's Story on ADAPTING TO CHANGE: Often the big fear with CHANGE is the position it leaves you in. It may result in your respect being lost, your house, your job or your standing in the community. If we put too much of a value on these, then the change is feared most. At the end of the day these do have value, but what about your health, your smile and all the other values? We can often forget that in reality our health has more priority than our house. If we lose our house, we haven't lost our health, our depth of character, our smile, our honesty and our integrity. We can always get another house, but we can't always get our health fully back to its original state. Rather than see a change as the end, the sorrowful and pitiful, the miserable and frustrating; and ultimately wallow in this sadness and wonder what to do. We should realise that with every end there is a new beginning. We should forget all the pity, forget all the need for consolation and allow this period of sadness to end too. We should SEE a chance to start again, start over. What better position can we be in, if we've experienced the troubles that has caused an ENDING, we'll be aware of the pitfalls and avoid them in our new beginning. Sometimes as we stay with the moral high ground and find we suffer as a consequence, is it not the case that we're obviously putting too much value in the sufferance? If you stick with your good morals and for some reason you go down one rung of the ladder, why have you suffered? You haven't suffered, what you have done is chose to give value to the subject that's taken you down the rung of the ladder. It may have been the house you lost, when you should have considered that although the house has gone your health and fit mind remains intact. More often than not it isn't what happens in life that is the problem it is how we perceive it upon our lifestyle. If we adjust our view, we can get back on track. Today's story is the perfect illustration of keeping the moral high ground and at first thinking you've suffered a loss; but with due consideration the values had been wrong until you'd reconsidered. WHAT GOOD IS INTEGRITY? After a workshop, Paul (that's not his real name) said that he still has 10-year-old scars from the time he quit a good job rather than lie. When his boss asked him to issue a press release containing patently false statements, he refused, putting his employee badge on the table. His boss calmly handed the badge back to him saying, "Think this over. Why throw away a good job and a promising career?" Paul walked out so frustrated and frightened, he had to find a private place to cry. What's worse, he said that his act of moral courage was a meaningless waste. Someone else issued the press release and his boss's career flourished. "It took me years to find a job as good as that one and my family suffered, " he added. "So, what good did my integrity do for anyone?" Paul was looking for validation of his principled stance in the wrong places. We exercise integrity not to get what we want, but to be what we want. Integrity is not essentially about winning; it's about staying whole and being worthy of self-respect and the esteem of loved ones. It's about being honourable, not as a success strategy, but a life choice. Though Paul suffered for a time because of his moral courage, he would have suffered far worse had he betrayed his own values. While he didn't appreciate it, Paul preserved for himself and his family something far more valuable than his job -- his honour. And it's no accident that he now has a better job with no pressures to cheat or lie. (Michael Josephson, Speaker and Radio Commentator) QUOTE: 'It is not financial wealth one asks for, but just enough to preserve one's dignity, to work unhampered, to be generous, frank and independent.' (W. Somerset Maugham, 'Of Human Bondage', 1915)
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Yield Stress News
Mount Shasta a mixture of mysticism and majesty - The Register-Guard
27 May 2012 at 2:27pm The Register-Guard Armed with powerful crystals, they hire guides to show them portals to secret vortexes, while aficionados of Native American philosophy venture out on vision quests. The dormant volcanic peak, which presides over most of Northern California and a good ... |
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Don't overreact over one mistake - Las Vegas Sun
27 May 2012 at 3:04am Las Vegas Sun The current wisdom from the federal government is that risk can be regulated out of our daily lives. Had this philosophy prevailed during the '60s and '70s, this city would be a much different place. Without a calculated risk, the vision and genius of ... |
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An app for wisdom - Boston Globe
26 May 2012 at 5:49pm Boston Globe Created by real philosophers for real people, PhiloQuote provides instant wisdom tailored to your particular situation and delivered noiselessly to your smart phone. Looking for the perfect sentiment to express at your least favorite nephew's ... |
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International students Visit Somaiya Vidyavihar for Launch of Book and Sessio...
25 May 2012 at 10:23pm ![]() ChakraNews.com | ChakraNews.com ... As Jainism encourages spiritual development through cultivation of one's own personal wisdom and reliance on self control through vows, Somaiya has taken a step further as a part of their teaching and educating students through Jain philosophy. |
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Veteran counsels wisdom of listening - River Forest Leaves
24 May 2012 at 12:01pm River Forest Leaves For the Oak Park resident and Triton College philosophy teacher, the past is prologue. ?The past is very relevant to the present,? he said. ?I want to keep the continuity with the past alive.? As he grows older, Griffin said life is getting better for ... and more » |
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Canucks GM's philosophy of change doesn't include Vigneault - Canada.com
23 May 2012 at 8:18pm Canada.com And, over the last month, that philosophy was put to the test. While the precise details haven't been fully disclosed, the accepted wisdom has it that Canucks ownership wasn't as enthusiastic about retaining the head coach as the general manager. and more » |
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Philip K. Dick, Sci-Fi Philosopher, Part 1 - New York Times (blog)
20 May 2012 at 3:00pm ![]() New York Times (blog) | New York Times (blog) 20, 1974, Dick was hit with the force of an extraordinary revelation after a visit to the dentist for an impacted wisdom tooth for which he had received a dose of sodium pentothal. A young woman delivered a bottle of Darvon tablets to his apartment in ... and more » |
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For Mother's Day, the gift of earned wisdom - News & Observer
12 May 2012 at 10:08pm News & Observer And I recently received some rude and uninvited parenting advice from a stranger that prompted me to think about what, if any, ?parenting philosophy? I hold. That question made me laugh aloud because I realized (a) my parenting style is pretty much ... and more » |
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Six Pieces of Wisdom and Advice for College Grads, Inspired By and Borrowed ....
11 May 2012 at 2:41pm Huffington Post (This was paraphrased by Norman, but originally thought to have originated from the philosopher Goethe.) With a surface-level read, this may seem obvious and potentially overused -- as in, work hard and it will all work out for you. |
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The "Wisdom" of Pearson's Pineapple Passage - Huffington Post
10 May 2012 at 9:30am Huffington Post Clearly Pearson and Tisch need some lessons in classical philosophy. I decided to read up about wisdom in the University of Chicago's The Great Ideas, A Syntopicon of Great Books of the Western World edited by noted philosopher Mortimer Adler and ... and more » |
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Explain what is meant by yield stress and proof stress and explain why theynare important in structural design
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AS Level Physics "Pressure/Density" questions?
1.) The vinyl plastic floor covering on a kitchen floor has a compressive yield stress of 3.5 MPa. A lady of mass 60 kg wears high-heeled shoes. What is the smallest area of the sole of a heel which will not permanently damage the floor?
2.) A cube of wood of side 4.0 cm floats in fresh water with one quarter showing above the surface.
a.i.) Calculate the water pressure on the base of the cube
a.ii.) Calculate the density of the wood
b.) What fraction of the volume of the cube would be immersed if it was floated in olive oil?
(Olive oil = density/kg m -3 of 920.)
Any help is greatly appreciated.
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Can someone help me with this physics question? ?
1 - The vinyl floor covering a kitchen floor has a compressive yield stress of 3.5 MPa. A lady of mass 60kg wears high-healed shoes. What is the smallest area of the sole of a heel which will not permanently damage the floor?
OR
2 A cube of wood of side 4.0cm floats in fresh water with one quarter showing above the surface.
A - calculate 1 the water pressue on the base of the cube
2 The density of the wood
B What fraction of the volume of the cube owuld be immersed if it was floated in olive oil which has a density of 920kg/m^-3
Thanks . I hate physics! xxxxxxxxxxxxx
btw the answers are
1 84mm^2
2a i) 294 Pa
ii) 750 kgm^-3
B 0.82
I just need to know how to get there
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How to plot all the key properties using excel from steel tensile test results?
I am trying to work out how to plot proof stress, yield stress, and all of the key properties from tensile test data but can't seem to do it properly, I understand that to get proof stress, you calculate length of specimen x 0.1%.
But, as the strain values are in x10-6, how do I then plot where the first point is?
Another thing is, how do I find the proportional limit on the graph?
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A physics question i'm stuck with?
A particular steel has a tensile yield stress of 500MPa. What is the maximum load that can be taken by a support with a cross-section 2.4cm by 5.5cm.
I think MPa is millipascals, but i could be wrong. And if you can, sort of hint at how to do the question rather than just give me the answer. I like to think that I can do some of it instead of admitting defeat completely :) thanks
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