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acf-regs25-6-12_4 | These are the two thinkers most discussed as exemplars of a view contrasted with intuitionism and egoism in Henry Sidgwick’s The Methods of Ethics. | [
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acf-regs25-6-12_6 | For 10 points, Panopticon and On Liberty are respectively by what two founders of utilitarianism? | [
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acf-regs25-6-13_1 | During this decade, one leader delivered a speech in Johannesburg controversially comparing an agreement to the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah. | [
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acf-regs25-6-13_2 | In this decade, Dan Shomron signed a protocol named for the city of Hebron, where the Cave of the Patriarchs massacre occurred earlier in this decade. | [
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acf-regs25-6-13_3 | An intelligence agent codenamed “Champagne” allegedly had prior knowledge of an event in this decade perpetrated by Yigal Amir. | [
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acf-regs25-6-13_4 | The end of the First Intifada is generally dated to one of two events in this decade: the Madrid Conference, or an agreement that divided a region into Areas A, B, and C. | [
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acf-regs25-6-13_5 | This decade saw the signing of the Wye River memorandum and an agreement with Yasser Arafat that led to the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. | [
"1990s"
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acf-regs25-6-13_6 | For 10 points, name this decade in which the Oslo Accords were signed. | [
"1990s"
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acf-regs25-6-14_1 | Chains of these devices are used as multiplexers and demultiplexers in WDM systems. | [
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"Fabry–Pérot interferometers",
"interferometer"
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acf-regs25-6-14_2 | In one type of these devices, the quantity “pi times the square root of R all over one minus R” defines the finesse. | [
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acf-regs25-6-14_3 | Gyroscopes such as RLGs and FOGs are examples of these devices that operate using the Sagnac effect. | [
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acf-regs25-6-14_4 | A type of these devices called an etalon consisting of a cavity that filters out waves not in resonance is named for Fabry and Pérot. | [
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acf-regs25-6-14_5 | One of these optical devices consisting of a stone slab in a pool of mercury failed to detect a 0.04 fringe shift induced by the Earth’s motion. | [
"interferometry",
"interferometers",
"Michelson interferometers",
"Fabry–Pérot interferometers",
"interferometer"
] | acf-regs25-6-14 | 5 | Chains of these devices are used as multiplexers and demultiplexers in WDM systems. In one type of these devices, the quantity “pi times the square root of R all over one minus R” defines the finesse. Gyroscopes such as RLGs and FOGs are examples of these devices that operate using the Sagnac effect. A type of these devices called an etalon consisting of a cavity that filters out waves not in resonance is named for Fabry and Pérot. One of these optical devices consisting of a stone slab in a pool of mercury failed to detect a 0.04 fringe shift induced by the Earth’s motion. For 10 points, name these devices that split a beam of light and later recombine them to form patterns, which include one used to disprove the luminiferous aether in the Michelson–Morley experiment. | interferometers [accept interferometry; accept Michelson interferometers or Fabry–Pérot interferometers] | [
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acf-regs25-6-14_6 | For 10 points, name these devices that split a beam of light and later recombine them to form patterns, which include one used to disprove the luminiferous aether in the Michelson–Morley experiment. | [
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acf-regs25-6-15_1 | Edmund Waller’s poem “On a Girdle” invokes this thing in its final line after asking “Give me but what this ribbon bound.” | [
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acf-regs25-6-15_7 | For 10 points, Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130 says that a “mistress’ eyes are nothing like” what object? | [
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acf-regs25-6-16_2 | This city’s Gilded Balloon, Underbelly, Pleasance, and Assembly make up its “Big Four” venues. | [
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acf-regs25-6-16_3 | In this city, local stone was used to build the Canongate Wall of a government building designed to mirror an extinct volcano called Arthur’s Seat. | [
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acf-regs25-6-16_4 | Heavy investment has gentrified this city’s port area of Leith. | [
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acf-regs25-6-16_5 | The world’s largest performing arts festival is this city’s Festival Fringe. | [
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acf-regs25-6-16_8 | For 10 points, what largest city on the Firth of Forth is the capital of Scotland? | [
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acf-regs25-6-17_3 | Bhishma laid down his weapons because he refused to fight a warrior who underwent this action named Shikhandi. | [
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acf-regs25-6-19_2 | Cache-aware algorithms that perform this task may use “tiled” layouts of size equal to the square root of the cache size. | [
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acf-regs25-6-19_3 | In 2024, Virginia Vassilevska Williams’s team developed an algorithm for this task that marginally improved a bound previously established by her and Alman. | [
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acf-regs25-6-19_5 | This task is equivalent to composing two linear transformations. | [
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acf-regs25-6-19_6 | For 10 points, name this non-commutative operation that determines grid entries by taking inner products of rows and columns. | [
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acf-regs25-6-20_1 | In a novel from this country, a writer first encounters the lost novel The Labyrinth of Inhumanity after sleeping with an older acclaimed author he calls the “Spider-Mother.” | [
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acf-regs25-6-20_2 | That novel from this country was influenced by Roberto Bolaño, draws from the Yambo Ouologuem plagiarism scandal, and is titled The Most Secret Memory of Men. | [
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acf-regs25-6-20_6 | For 10 points, name this home country of Mohamed Mbougar Sarr, Mariama Bâ, and Leopold Senghor. | [
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acf-regs25-7-1_2 | Some accounts of this battle, like that of Mavro Orbini, claim that the noble Vuk traitorously fled from the right flank. | [
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acf-regs25-7-1_3 | According to some accounts of this battle, a knight rode up to an opposing ruler and asked to kiss his hand or feet before killing him with a hidden dagger. | [
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acf-regs25-7-1_4 | In works like The Mountain Wreath, 19th-century nationalists embraced a “myth” about this battle, which is commemorated on the holiday Vidovdan. | [
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acf-regs25-7-1_5 | This battle is considered inconclusive despite the death of Prince Lazar, one of the successors of Stefan Dušan. | [
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acf-regs25-7-1_6 | After his father died at this battle, Bayezid the Thunderbolt ascended to the throne. | [
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acf-regs25-7-1_7 | For 10 points, name this 1389 battle between Serbian forces and Murad I’s Ottoman army. | [
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acf-regs25-7-2_1 | Oshunmare, an orisha of these phenomena, is often equated with a goddess of them accompanied by the first two humans, Adanhu and Yewa. | [
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acf-regs25-7-2_2 | To keep the world from collapsing, Nana-Buluku tasks a group of red monkeys to constantly feed iron to a deity of these phenomena. | [
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acf-regs25-7-2_3 | A goddess of these phenomena is given offerings of white-colored food, is married to the sky loa Damballa, and is named Ayida-Weddo. | [
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acf-regs25-7-2_4 | The Wawalag sisters are swallowed by a god of these phenomena after it smells their menstrual blood. | [
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acf-regs25-7-2_5 | Yurlunggur and Wolunka are names for that creature associated with these phenomena, who created landmarks like Uluru while moving through songlines during the Dreamtime. | [
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acf-regs25-7-2_6 | For 10 points, name this phenomenon represented in Aboriginal myth by a namesake serpent. | [
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acf-regs25-7-5_2 | In quasi-static conditions, the power dissipation due to these phenomena is inversely proportional to a constant that is 1 for a sheet and 2 for a wire. | [
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acf-regs25-7-5_3 | Waste sorting at recycling facilities use these phenomena to separate metallic materials. | [
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acf-regs25-7-5_4 | In transformers, power loss caused by these phenomena can be minimized using laminated conductors and ferrite cores. | [
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acf-regs25-7-5_5 | Generation of these phenomena is used in braking systems often employed by roller coasters. | [
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acf-regs25-7-5_6 | These phenomena form due to a magnetic response as a consequence of Lenz’s law. | [
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acf-regs25-7-5_7 | For 10 points, what phenomena consist of electric charges moving in closed loops during induction, named for their resemblance to whirlpools? | [
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acf-regs25-7-6_1 | A group of “Slim shadows” in this poem who “trod a saraband” also appear as “damned grotesques [making] arabesques, / Like wind upon the sand” when seen with their “mop and mow.” | [
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acf-regs25-7-6_2 | The question “How else but through a broken heart / May Lord Christ enter in?” appears in this poem, which begins: “He did not wear his scarlet coat, / For blood and wine are red.” | [
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acf-regs25-7-6_3 | The pseudonym C.3.3. was used to publish this six-part poem in sestets, which describes the hanging of a figure who “walked amongst the Trial Men / in a suit of shabby gray.” | [
"Ballad of Reading Gaol",
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acf-regs25-7-6_4 | The claims that “the coward does it with a kiss” and “the brave man with a sword” appear in this poem after the refrain “each man kills the thing he loves.” | [
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acf-regs25-7-6_5 | For 10 points, name this poem written by Oscar Wilde after his release from the title prison. | [
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acf-regs25-7-7_3 | Legendarily, an inscription above the Academy warned, “Let no one ignorant of [this discipline] enter here.” | [
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