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      • AHCISCOPUSKCI등재

        OPENING AN EMBASSY IN SEOUL: SOME REFLECTIONS

        GORDON LONGMUIR 계명대학교 한국학연구원 2005 Acta Koreana Vol.8 No.1

        Though Canada established formal diplomatic relations with the Republic of Korea in 1964, there was no embassy in Seoul until 1973. That year D. Gordon Longmuir was dispatched to Seoul to help open that embassy and serve as First Secretary and Consul, as well as Chargé d’Affaires until a resident ambassador arrived early in 1974. He stayed in Seoul until 1976. Among the more pressing duties of the embassy while he was stationed there was ensuring adequate safeguards for a nuclear reactor Korea was considering buying from Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL). At first Canada, somewhat distrustful of President Park Chung Hee, was uncertain whether or not to provide Park with such a nuclear power plant. However, after the ROK agreed to ratify the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, the deal was signed and Korea eventually went on to purchase a total of four Canadian-designed CANDU nuclear reactors. As a representative of the Canadian government, Longmuir was in the audience on August 15, 1974, when a disgruntled Korean-Japanese attempted to assassinate Park but shot and killed Park’s wife instead. He also watched as, under Park’s leadership, the Korean economy began its rapid march to modernization while the government resisted pressure for democratization. The embassy occasionally had to intervene on behalf of some activist Canadian missionaries who felt that urban workers were being asked to pay too heavy a price for Korea’s economic progress.

      • KCI등재후보

        Aluminum toxicity to bone: A multisystem effect?

        Gordon L. Klein 대한골다공증학회 2019 Osteoporosis and Sarcopenia Vol.5 No.1

        Aluminum (Al) is the third most abundant element in the earth's crust and is omnipresent in our environment, including our food. However, with normal renal function, oral and enteral ingestion of substances contaminated with Al, such as antacids and infant formulae, do not cause problems. The intestine, skin, and respiratory tract are barriers to Al entry into the blood. However, contamination of fluids given parenterally, such as parenteral nutrition solutions, or hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis or even oral Al-containing substances to patients with impaired renal function could result in accumulation in bone, parathyroids, liver, spleen, and kidney. The toxic effects of Al to the skeleton include fractures accompanying a painful osteomalacia, hypoparathyroidism, microcytic anemia, cholestatic hepatotoxicity, and suppression of the renal enzyme 25-hydroxyvitamin D-1 alpha hydroxylase. The sources of Al include contamination of calcium and phosphate salts, albumin and heparin. Contamination occurs either from inability to remove the naturally accumulating Al or from leeching from glass columns used in compound purification processes. Awareness of this long-standing problem should allow physicians to choose pharmaceutical products with lower quantities of Al listed on the label as long as this practice is mandated by specific national drug regulatory agencies.

      • SCIESCOPUS

        A model for an adaptable axisymmetric extrusion die with a bearing length

        Gordon, W.A.,Van Tyne, C.J.,Moon, Y.H. Elsevier 2007 Journal of materials processing technology Vol.191 No.1-3

        The adaptable design method uses upper bound models to determine die shapes that meet specified criteria, such as minimizing distortion in the product. This method has been developed for the axisymmetric extrusion process. In order to extend the methodology to the three-dimensional extrusion of a non-axisymmetric shape, the deformation zone in the upper bound model would need to be extended into the bearing region of the extrusion die. The necessary equations and conditions needed to make such an extension are presented in this paper. Finite element modeling (FEM) is used to compare the results of extrusion through dies designed by the adaptable die design method, for a model with the deformation zone extended into the bearing region, to a model without such an extension. The results indicate that the upper bound model incorporating a bearing length provides a realistic flow field. The results also demonstrate that the upper bound model can be used to analyze a multi-sectioned die, so long as: (1) the die surface and first derivative of the surface are continuous between sections, and (2) calculation of the internal power of deformation is made for each section separately. The results provide further support for the findings that the average effective strain and the volumetric effective strain rate deviation are robust criteria, which can be used to determine optimal adaptable die shapes with an upper bound model.

      • KCI등재후보
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      • KCI등재

        Dasan’s Philosophy of Law

        Gordon B. Mower 성균관대학교 유교문화연구소 2023 儒敎文化硏究(中文版) Vol.- No.39

        In general, Confucians have taken a dim view of the law. They have felt warranted in this view by a reading of Confucius’ Analects 2.3 in which the Master apparently disparages law-centered governance. Two great Confucian philosophers, however, Zhu Xi and Jeong Yakyong (widely known by his pen name, Dasan), view the role of law in society differently. Like all Confucians, they teach the cultivation of virtue, but alongside building social harmony through ritual and good character, these two philosophers perceive that social order also requires the penal law. In this paper, I argue that Zhu Xi and Dasan, and Dasan in particular, follow the evidentiary lead of the classical Chinese philosopher Mozi to support their legal philosophy. Mozi offered three standards for establishing truth claims: empirical evidence from common life, authoritative evidence, and evidence of outcomes. Mozi’s empirical standard takes evidence of common life from what ordinary people have seen. Zhu Xi and Dasan take the evidence of common life, not from what the people have seen, but from common understandings contained in the written language. They use this approach to arrive at a different understanding of Analects 2.3 than other Confucians, one that relates the content of that passage to Analects 12.17. They interpret the passage on a philological basis that supports the presence of penal law from a perspective of ordinary life. For authoritative evidence, Zhu Xi and Dasan like Mozi appeal to the authority of the ancient sages, who register their support for penal law. Dasan also follows Mozi’s evidentiary lead in the evidence of outcomes by fully developing a consequential picture of how the absence of law detrimentally affects society. On this point, Dasan establishes a new and revolutionary legal outlook that differs from that of Zhu Xi. I show Dasan taking lessons from the classical Legalists to arrive at this position warranted by the evidence of outcomes. Having satisfied the three evidentiary standards, Dasan thus establishes the importance of the penal law from a Confucian perspective.

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