| Pronunciation: | `rezu'looshun | ||
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| Matching Terms: | resolutioner, resolutionist | ||
| Definition: |
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| Synonyms: | answer, declaration, firmness, resoluteness, resolve, resolve, resolving, resolving power, result, settlement, solution, solvent, solving | ||
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| Antonyms: | irresoluteness, irresolution, preparation | ||
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| See Also: | adamance, breakdown, bullheadedness, conclusion, deciding, decision, decision, decision making, decisiveness, Declaration of Independence, denouement, determination, determination, diagonalisation, diagonalization, document, factoring, factorisation, factorization, finding, harmony, joint resolution, musical harmony, obduracy, obstinacy, obstinance, papers, partitioning, physical phenomenon, pigheadedness, purpose, remission, remittal, self-command, self-control, self-will, single-mindedness, statement, steadfastness, stubbornness, subsidence, trait, unyieldingness, willpower, written document | ||
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| Definition: | \Res`o*lu"tion\ (-l?"sh?n), n. [F. r['e]solution. L.
resolutio a loosening, solution. See {Resolve}.]
1. The act, operation, or process of resolving. Specifically:
(a) The act of separating a compound into its elements or
component parts.
(b) The act of analyzing a complex notion, or solving a
vexed question or difficult problem.
The unraveling and resolution of the
difficulties that are met with in the execution
of the design are the end of an action.
--Dryden.
2. The state of being relaxed; relaxation. [Obs.]
3. The state of being resolved, settled, or determined;
firmness; steadiness; constancy; determination.
Be it with resolution then to fight. --Shak.
4. That which is resolved or determined; a settled purpose;
determination. Specifically: A formal expression of the
opinion or will of an official body or a public assembly,
adopted by vote; as, a legislative resolution; the
resolutions of a public meeting.
5. The state of being resolved or firm in opinion or thought;
conviction; assurance. [Obs.]
Little resolution and certainty there is as touching
the islands of Mauritania. --Holland.
6. (Math.) The act or process of solving; solution; as, the
resolution of an equation or problem.
7. (Med.) A breaking up, disappearance; or termination, as of
a fever, a tumor, or the like.
8. (Mus.) The passing of a dissonant into a consonant chord
by the rising or falling of the note which makes the
discord.
{Joint resolution}. See under {Joint}, a.
{Resolution of a force} or {motion} (Mech.), the separation
of a single force or motion into two or more which have
different directions, and, taken together, are an
equivalent for the single one; -- the opposite of
{composition of a force}.
{Resolution of a nebula} (Astron.), the exhibition of it to
the eye by a telescope of such power as to show it to be
composed of small stars.
Syn: Decision; analysis; separation; disentanglement;
dissolution; resolvedness; resoluteness; firmness;
constancy; perseverance; steadfastness; fortitude;
boldness; purpose; resolve. See {Decision}.
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| Definition: | 1. the maximum number of pixels that can be displayed on a monitor, expressed as (number of horizontal pixels) x (number of vertical pixels), i.e., 1024x768. The ratio of horizontal to vertical resolution is usually 4:3, the same as that of conventional television sets. 2. A mechanical method for proving statements of first order logic, introduced by J. A. Robinson in 1965. Resolution is applied to two clauses in a sentence. It eliminates, by unification, a literal that occurs "positive" in one and "negative" in the other to produce a new clause, the resolvent. For example, given the sentence: (man(X) => mortal(X)) AND man(socrates). The literal "man(X)" is "negative". The literal "man(socrates)" could be considered to be on the right hand side of the degenerate implication True => man(socrates) and is therefore "positive". The two literals can be unified by the binding X = socrates. The truth table for the implication function is A | B | A => B
--+---+-------
F | F | T
F | T | T
T | F | F
T | T | T(The implication only fails if its premise is true but its conclusion is false). From this we can see that A => B == (NOT A) OR B Which is why the left hand side of the implication is said to be negative and the right positive. The sentence above could thus be written ((NOT man(socrates)) OR mortal(socrates))
AND
man(socrates)Distributing the AND over the OR gives ((NOT man(socrates)) AND man(socrates))
OR
mortal(socrates) AND man(socrates)And since (NOT A) AND A == False, and False OR A == A we can simplify to just mortal(socrates) AND man(socrates) So we have proved the new literal, mortal(socrates). Resolution with backtracking is the basic control mechanism of prolog. See also modus ponens, sld resolution. | ||
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| See Also: | hardware, logic, networking | ||
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| Definition: | Degree of molecular detail on a physical map of DNA, ranging from low to high. | ||
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| Definition: | The formal adoption of a motion. | ||
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| Definition: | Degree of molecular detail on a physical map of DNA, ranging from low to high. | ||
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