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Kentucky Transportation Cabinet

Information on how to become a contractor, trucking regulations and bid lettings. Also includes local traffic information and live traffic cams.

Kentucky Transportation Cabinet

This is the state agency charged with overseeing the highway, rail, and aviation infrastructure. Includes information on highway planning, traffic laws, and contract procurement.

Kentucky Transportation Cabinet

Information about the state's roads from the people who built them. Contains news about construction projects, the state's Six Year Road Plan, the Statewide Transportation Plan, and maps of all 120 counties.

Kentucky Transportation Center

Provide services to the transportation community through research, technology, and education.

Kentucky Trimodal Transpark

The site offers information on the new environmentally friendly and attractive, high-tech commerce and business park that will be located in south central Kentucky.

KentuckyRoads.com

Features road conditions, projects, and highways. Includes photographs, history, and current information. Search by county and link to recent articles.

R.J. Corman Railroad Group

This Richmond-based company operates several short-track railroad lines and rail distribution centers throughout the state. They also provide derailment services, equipment rental, and operate a dinner train in the Bardstown area.

Transportation Bills in 2003 Regular Session

Lists the text and status of bills related to the state's transportation system considered during the 2000 Regular Session of the General Assembly.



"Matthew Johnson" wrote in message
news:153.21.08.05.609008000@srcbs.org...

>
>
> In article <152.02.14.05.869343000@srcbs.org>, Bart Goddard says...
>
> >matthew_member@newsguy.com wrote:
>
> >> If you weren't such a shocking ignoramus, Bart, you would know that
> >> EACH of the theologians I cited had an excellent training in
> >> logic. In their day, no one could reach their positions in society
> >> without learning the logic material of Aristotle's Organum
> >> thoroughly.
>
> >We're way better at logic today then they were even 300 years
> >ago.
>
> No, we are not. You certainly are not. If you were, you would not have
accused
> Gary of saying P and (not P), when he had done no such thing.
>
> > Logic is a _science_,
>
> True...
>
> > and like all sciences, 99% of it was invented since 1900.
>
> You make it sound like you think that since 99% of all sciences were
invented
> since 1900, 99% of logic is too. This is very false. You are relying on a
very
> false measuring stick to claim this. Most of NT textual criticism, for
example,
> ALSO a science, was invented by Griesbach in the 18th century. All the
great
> efforts of the 20th century have accomplished very little stabilization or
> change in the text compared to Griesbach, or Westcott-Hort, of the 19th
century.
>
> So what false measuring stick are YOU relying on? Pages in journals?
>
> >Mastering Aristotle is the
> >logical equivalent of a car mechanic "mastering"
> >the medieval wheel.
>
> No, that is completely false. A better analogy would be comparing to doing
> grade-school arithmetic: it can all be done in Roman Numerals, but that
would be
> much harder than in Hindu-Arabic numerals. Yet both are doing the same
> grade-school arithmetic (not to be confused with Dirichlet's idea of
> 'arithmetic').
>
> >It was mostly the Poles who developed
> >the subject into what it is today, which is the underpinning
> >of all computer science.
>
> And what was it that they really did? They developed the symbolic logic
and
> propositional logic that make it much _easier_ to perform logical
reasoning and
> prove theorems, but the two-valued logic, as applied in discussions like
these,
> was still much the same, based on exactly the same axioms; just as
grade-school
> arithmetic is the same whether you use Hindu-Arabic numerals, Roman
numerals, or
> an abacus. Truth tables and theorems of propositional logic are merely
much more
> convenient ways of accomplishing what Aristotle's students accomplished
with
> syllogisms. They also developed new th