24,717 research outputs found
Festivals, fools and the Fasti: the Quirinalia and the Feriae Stultorum (Ovid, Fast. 2.475-532)
Introduction: Ovidâs Fasti presents many challenges to the reader: its subject matter, the
festivals and anniversaries of the Roman year, is less immediately accessible
than much of Ovidâs poetry; and unlike his earlier works, where familiarity
with the literary context provides plenty of material for literary criticism, the
Fasti is in constant dialogue not just with literature but also with the fabric
of Rome â its myths and monuments, its rituals and politics. As such, the
Fasti more than many texts requires an awareness of its social, historical and
religious context to be fully appreciated
On the convergence of a shock capturing discontinuous Galerkin method for nonlinear hyperbolic systems of conservation laws
In this paper, we present a shock capturing discontinuous Galerkin (SC-DG)
method for nonlinear systems of conservation laws in several space dimensions
and analyze its stability and convergence. The scheme is realized as a
space-time formulation in terms of entropy variables using an entropy stable
numerical flux. While being similar to the method proposed in [14], our
approach is new in that we do not use streamline diffusion (SD) stabilization.
It is proved that an artificial-viscosity-based nonlinear shock capturing
mechanism is sufficient to ensure both entropy stability and entropy
consistency, and consequently we establish convergence to an entropy
measure-valued (emv) solution. The result is valid for general systems and
arbitrary order discontinuous Galerkin method.Comment: Comments: Affiliations added Comments: Numerical results added,
shortened proo
Animals, Slaves, and Corporations: Analyzing Legal Thinghood
The Article analyzes the notion of legal âthinghoodâ in the context of the personâthing
bifurcation. In legal scholarship, there are numerous assumptions pertaining to this definition that are often not spelled out. In addition, oneâs chosen definition of âthingâ is often simply taken to be the correct one. The Article scrutinizes these assumptions and definitions. First, a brief history of the bifurcation is offered. Second, three possible definitions of âlegal thingâ are examined: Things as nonpersons, things as rights and duties, and things as property. The first two definitions are rejected as not being very interesting or serving any heuristic function. Conversely, understanding legal things as property is meaningful, useful, and helps to understand what it means to say that animals are legally things. Defining things as property has certain rather important implications, which are analyzed at the end of the Article. For instance, not everything needs to be either a person or a thing: The historical institution of outlawry involved treating individuals neither as legal persons nor as legal things. One must conclude that the personâthing bifurcation is less fundamental than is often
assumed
Philipp Melanchthon und Wilhelm Reiffenstein. Eine Humanistenfreundschaft im Spiegel dreier unbekannter Melanchthonbriefe aus der Bibliotheca Palatina
Pass it on: towards a political economy of propensity
The paper argues that the work of Gabriel Tarde on imitation provides a fertile means of understanding how capitalism is forging a new affective technology which conforms to a logic of propensity rather than to means-end reasoning. This it does by drawing together a biological understanding of semiconscious cognition with various practical geometric arts so as to re-stage the world as a series of susceptible situations which can be ridden rather than rigidly controlled. The paper examines the advent of technologies which attend to the variable geometry of so-called animal spirits in the realm of business and then, using Tarde's work as a springboard, considers some alternative means of understanding imitative rays which have less instrumental undertones. The paper is an illustration of the way in which biology and culture have increasingly become intertwined
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