Hackett, P.

From Tsadra Commons
Revision as of 12:33, 13 March 2018 by Jeremi (talk | contribs) (1 revision imported)

Hackett, P.

FirstName / namefirst Paul
LastName / namelast Hackett
Other wikis

If the page does not yet exist on the remote wiki, you can paste the tag {{PersonCall}} inside the destination page. But please first make sure you are on the right page. Some wikis have the person page on Person/<COMMONS PERSON PAGENAME>, in which case the page <COMMONS PERSON PAGENAME> needs to be redirected. Ask if you need clarification.

Full Name

Paul Gerard Hackett

Affiliation

Columbia University

American Institute of Buddhist Studies

Columbia University's Center for Buddhist Studies

Education

  • Ph.D. Religion, Columbia University
  • M.Phil. Religion, Columbia University
  • M.L.S. College of Information Studies, University of Maryland - College Park
  • M.A. History of Religions, University of Virginia
  • B.S. Physics and Astronomy, University of Arizona

Other Information

http://www.columbia.edu/~ph2046/RnD/Hackett/ - Personal Website

Doctoral Dissertation

Barbarian Lands: Theos Bernard, Tibet, and the American Religious Life. (2008) Thesis advisor: Robert Thurman.

The dissertation presented the first and only comprehensive narrative of the life of Theos Bernard (1908-1947). In the context of this narrative, the dissertation examined such issues as Bernard’s place in the early history of the American subculture and counter-culture informed by Indian concepts of religiosity and the narrative of the genesis and spread of Indian and Buddhist religious traditions in America over the last 150 years. In addition, Bernard’s life and writings are examined as a paradigm of an ethnically American counter-culture religious experience and his academic activities are discussed in terms of their broader implications for the study of religion.

Masters Thesis

Approaches to Tibetan Information Retrieval: Segmentation vs. n-grams. (2000)

Thesis advisor: Douglas Oard.

This thesis reported the results of research evaluating automatic word-segmented indexing for Tibetan documents against a system using n-gram indexing in a search and retrieval system. For the thesis an algorithm for automatic sentence- and word-segmentation for Tibetan was designed and implemented in conjunction with a shallow parser performing automatic Part-of-Speech tagging.

Publications

Template:Footer