• Margaret Masterman (4 May 1910 – 1 April 1986) was a British linguist and philosopher, most known for her pioneering work in the field of computational...
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  • wife of Charles F. G. Masterman Margaret Masterman (1910–1986), British linguist and philosopher; daughter of Charles F. G. Masterman Rex Hunt (diplomat)...
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    modern philosophy at the Cambridge Language Research Unit run by Margaret Masterman. Boden was appointed lecturer in philosophy at the University of Birmingham...
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    Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman PC MP (24 October 1873 – 17 November 1927) was a British radical Liberal Party politician, intellectual and man of...
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  • married (secondly) to the computational linguist and philosopher Margaret Masterman, with whom he founded the Epiphany Philosophers a group of (largely)...
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    Cambridge Language Research Unit (CLRU) and met the head of CLRU Margaret Masterman, who would inspire her to go into computer science. While working...
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  • Manchester University's philosophy department for over twenty years. With Margaret Masterman and Richard Braithwaite she was a founder member of the Epiphany Philosophers...
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  • called "micro-worlds" (due to the common sense knowledge problem). Margaret Masterman believed that it was meaning and not grammar that was the key to understanding...
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    scientist Jessica Mann 1937 2018 Writer Miriam Margolyes 1941 Actress Margaret Masterman 1910 1986 Computational linguist Suzy Menkes 1943 Editor of Vogue...
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    Sir Rex Masterman Hunt, CMG (29 June 1926 – 11 November 2012) was a British Government diplomat and colonial administrator. He was Governor, Commander-in-Chief...
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  • involved in linguistic or world knowledge. The first attempt was that by Margaret Masterman and her colleagues, at the Cambridge Language Research Unit in England...
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  • and Marvin Minsky founded the MIT AI Lab. Late 1950s, early 1960s Margaret Masterman and colleagues at University of Cambridge design semantic nets for...
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    (unknown) Ruth Barcan Marcus (Clare Hall) Moez Masoud (Fitzwilliam) Margaret Masterman (Lucy Cavendish) Emil Mattiesen Marshall McLuhan (Trinity Hall) J...
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    University College of Swansea, and two daughters, including Margaret Masterman, a linguist. Masterman was the author of A Book of Wild Things (1910), Lyrical...
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    However, during the 1950s and 60s, researchers in Cambridge headed by Margaret Masterman, in Leningrad headed by Nikolai Andreev and in Milan by Silvio Ceccato...
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  • Manchester University's philosophy department for over twenty years. With Margaret Masterman and Richard Braithwaite she was a founder member of the Epiphany Philosophers...
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  • (1908–1970) Michelle Mason Michela Massimi Brian Massumi (born 1956) Margaret Masterman (1910–1986) Benson Mates (1919–2009) Alexandre Matheron (1926–2020)...
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  • carrying out important early work on the subject in collaboration with Margaret Masterman and Michael Halliday, and later at the Cambridge Language Research...
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  • between science and religion. The founders of the group included Margaret Masterman, Richard Braithwaite, Dorothy Emmet, Robert H. Thouless, Michael Argyle...
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  • March – Christopher Lloyd, naval historian (born 1906) 1 April – Margaret Masterman, linguist (born 1910) 3 April – Peter Pears, tenor (born 1910) 7 April...
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    Moore Ludwig Wittgenstein Alice Ambrose Helen Knight Margaret MacDonald (philosopher) Margaret Masterman C. D. Broad Richard Braithwaite A. C. Ewing Frank...
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    commentaries). (2006) Language, cohesion and form: selected papers of Margaret Masterman. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Wilks, Y., Nirenburg, S.,...
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  • Research Unit, an independent research centre established in 1955 by Margaret Masterman. The unit was said to house "an extraordinary collection of eccentrics"...
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  • space. While at the Cambridge Language Research Unit (founded by Margaret Masterman) he and Parker-Rhodes used Maurice Wilkes' EDSAC to compute the combinatorial...
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  • the Cambridge language Research Unit in Cambridge, England under Margaret Masterman. In 1961 David G. Hays hired him to work for the RAND Corporation;...
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  • Masterman (1899–1911) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse that was the winner of the 1902 Belmont Stakes. At the 1903 dispersal sale of Belmont's stable...
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    Braithwaite (1900-1990), philosopher, married Margaret Masterman, (1910-1986, no direct relation to the Mastermans above), linguist and philosopher, and had...
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  • To his dismay, however, Masterman finds himself reassigned by Admiral Thomas as Roberts' new executive officer. When Masterman learns that Henry Johnson...
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    model, chef, host of the PBS T.V. show Daisy Cooks! and author Daisy Masterman (born 1990), Australian actress Daisy Maud Bellis (1887–1971), American...
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  • Character Affiliation Description Appeared in Leonard Masterman RH Havenite ambassador to Grayson The Honor of the Queen Estelle Matsuko Baroness Medusa...
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