9,298 research outputs found
The Evolution of the Retail Trade sector in Iberian Cities from the Nineteenth Century to the Second World War.
This is an Accepted Manuscript version of an article published by Taylor & Francis on 16 May 2017, available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2373518X.2017.1329195.The evolution of retail trade in European cities during the first decades of the twentieth century can be a powerful indicator about their urban and social dynamics. The growth in the number of shops, the spatial rearrangement of their distribution, and the increased social and political relevance of shopkeepers are features commonly highlighted by the historiography. But this picture is better known for Central and Northern European cities. As for the Iberian Peninsula although some efforts can be mentioned, there are still progress to be made. The papers discussed in this introductory essay address those questions through a double perspective: first, an analysis of the urban space and its impact on the development of the retail trade's spatial distribution and evolution; second, a historical and comparative analysis of four Iberian cities trying to build a better picture about the spatial, social and economic relevance of their retail trade. These perspectives will be explored for the cities of La Coruña, Barcelona, Bilbao and Lisbon studying the retail trade spatial distribution and the introduction of new forms of commercial concentration and consumption, roughly between 1840 and 1940Peer reviewe
Logic is Metaphysics
Analyzing the position of two philosophers whose views are recognizably divergent, W. O. Quine and M. Dummett, we intend to support a striking point of agreement between them: the idea that our logical principles constitute our principles about what there is, and therefore, that logic is metaphysics
On Quine's Ontology: quantification, extensionality and naturalism (or from commitment to indifference)
Much of the ontology made in the analytic tradition of philosophy nowadays is founded on some of Quine’s proposals. His naturalism and the binding between existence and quantification are respectively two of his very influential metaphilosophical and methodological theses. Nevertheless, many of his specific claims are quite controversial and contemporaneously have few followers. Some of them are: (a) his rejection of higher-order logic; (b) his resistance in accepting the intensionality of ontological commitments; (c) his rejection of first-order modal logic; and (d) his rejection of the distinction between analytic and synthetic statements. I intend to argue that these controversial negative claims are just interconnected consequences of those much more accepted and apparently less harmful metaphilosophical and methodological theses, and that the glue linking all these consequences to its causes is the notion of extensionality
Evolution of complexity following a quantum quench in free field theory
Using a recent proposal of circuit complexity in quantum field theories
introduced by Jefferson and Myers, we compute the time evolution of the
complexity following a smooth mass quench characterized by a time scale in a free scalar field theory. We show that the dynamics has two distinct
phases, namely an early regime of approximately linear evolution followed by a
saturation phase characterized by oscillations around a mean value. The
behavior is similar to previous conjectures for the complexity growth in
chaotic and holographic systems, although here we have found that the
complexity may grow or decrease depending on whether the quench increases or
decreases the mass, and also that the time scale for saturation of the
complexity is of order (not parametrically larger).Comment: V2: added references, new plots, and improved discussion of results
on Section 5, V3: Few minor corrections. Published versio
Momentum-space entanglement after smooth quenches
We compute the total amount of entanglement produced between momentum modes
at late times after a smooth mass quench in free bosonic and fermionic quantum
field theories. The entanglement and R\'enyi entropies are obtained in closed
form as a function of the parameters characterizing the quench protocol. For
bosons, we show that the entanglement production is more significant for light
modes and for fast quenches. In particular, infinitely slow or adiabatic
quenches do not produce any entanglement. Depending on the quench profile, the
decrease as a function of the quench rate can be either monotonic or
oscillating. In the fermionic case the situation is subtle and there is a
critical value for the quench amplitude above which this behavior is changed
and the entropies become peaked at intermediate values of momentum and of the
quench rate. We also show that the results agree with the predictions of a
Generalized Gibbs Ensemble and obtain explicitly its parameters in terms of the
quench data.Comment: 24 pages, 8 Figures; V2 matches published versio
Amplification of the Signal-to-Noise Ratio in Cosmic Ray Maps Using the Mexican Hat Wavelet Family
In this work we analyze the effect of smoothing maps containing arrival
directions of cosmic rays with a gaussian kernel and kernels of the mexican hat
wavelets of orders 1, 2 and 3. The analysis is performed by calculating the
amplification of the signal-to-noise ratio for several background patterns
(noise) and different number of events coming from a simulated source (signal)
for an ideal detector capable of observing the full sky with uniform coverage.
We extend this analysis for a virtual observatory with two sites, one in the
northern hemisphere, the other in the southern, considering an acceptance law.Comment: Contributions to the 32nd International Cosmic Ray Conference,
Beijing, China, August 201
From "Humanities and Computing" to "Digital Humanities": Digital Humanities in Portugal with a focus on Historical Research
In the following text I will develop three major aspects. The first is to draw attention to those who seem to have been the disciplinary fields where, despite everything, the Digital Humanities (in the broad perspective as will be regarded here) have asserted themselves in a more comprehensive manner. I think it is here that I run into greater risks, not only for what I have mentioned above, but certainly because a significant part, perhaps, of the achievements and of the researchers might have escaped the look that I sought to cast upon the past few decades, always influenced by my own experience and the work carried out in the field of History. But this can be considered as a work in progress and it is open to criticism and suggestions. A second point to note is that emphasis will be given to the main lines of development in the relationship between historical research and digital methodologies, resources and tools. Finally, I will try to make a brief analysis of what has been the Digital Humanities discourse appropriation in recent years, with very debatable data and methods for sure, because studies are still scarce and little systematic information is available that would allow to go beyond an introductory reflection
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