4,050 research outputs found
Beyond ambiguity and ambivalence. Rethinking the tools of critique
This essay analyzes the central architecture of critique. It argues that, across the humanities, critique has followed a uniform methodology, wherein qualities like ambiguity, ambivalence, uncertainty, contradiction, and paradox have represented the main tools of not only critique and unmasking but also disclosure and transformation. Within teaching philosophy, critique has thus done more than to politicize the classroom; it has also ingrained an equation between pedagogy and therapeutic witnessing or confessionalism. For many, qualities like ambiguity and uncertainty have furthermore been imagined to bear distinctly \u27ethical\u27 fruits. This essay questions these staples of pedagogical theory, in particular the redemptive faith that paradox and contradiction will prove inherently critical and/or progressive. It therefore historicizes the architecture of critique, submitting that among other things the contemporary political climate challenges unbridled faith in those qualities. And it instead promotes values like trust, integrity, clarity, and noncontradiction as the goals of a postcritical education. (DIPF/Orig.
The Architecture of Critique
Irony, contradiction, discontinuity, antagonism, ambiguity, paradox, antinomy, aporia, contingency, indeterminacy, ambivalenceâin a list that continues. For decades, these have been the bywords of critical thought, whether within legal studies, left historiography, or humanistic inquiry at large. A constellation of such terms has defined what it means to do âtheory,â for that philosophical traditionâs structuralist-Marxist, poststructuralist-deconstructive, and other contemporary proponents. On the one hand, those grammars capture the broad intellectual ethos or spirit that has animated critical and revisionist scholarship since theoryâs heyday and institutionalization beginning in the 1970s. But on the other, they have also acted as the central apparatus of critique: it has been doctrinal that unmasking properties like contradiction, paradox, discontinuity, and antagonism will work simultaneously to disclose and to critique structures of power and domination. Vested with intensely political labor, that conceptual matrix has not only summed up the essence of a radical, left, or progressive politics but also been understood to distinguish such a political project from a (neo)liberal-legalistic-rationalist one
Nonlinear Self-Trapping of Matter Waves in Periodic Potentials
We report the first experimental observation of nonlinear self-trapping of
Bose-condensed 87Rb atoms in a one dimensional waveguide with a superimposed
deep periodic potential . The trapping effect is confirmed directly by imaging
the atomic spatial distribution. Increasing the nonlinearity we move the system
from the diffusive regime, characterized by an expansion of the condensate, to
the nonlinearity dominated self-trapping regime, where the initial expansion
stops and the width remains finite. The data are in quantitative agreement with
the solutions of the corresponding discrete nonlinear equation. Our results
reveal that the effect of nonlinear self-trapping is of local nature, and is
closely related to the macroscopic self-trapping phenomenon already predicted
for double-well systems.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Muscle Wasting and Sarcopenia in Heart FailureâThe Current State of Science
Sarcopenia is primarily characterized by skeletal muscle disturbances such as loss of muscle mass, quality, strength, and physical performance. It is commonly seen in elderly patients with chronic diseases. The prevalence of sarcopenia in chronic heart failure (HF) patients amounts to up to 20% and may progress into cardiac cachexia. Muscle wasting is a strong predictor of frailty and reduced survival in HF patients. Despite many different techniques and clinical tests, there is still no broadly available gold standard for the diagnosis of sarcopenia. Resistance exercise and nutritional supplementation represent the currently most used strategies against wasting disorders. Ongoing research is investigating skeletal muscle mitochondrial dysfunction as a new possible target for pharmacological compounds. Novel agents such as synthetic ghrelin and selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs) seem promising in counteracting muscle abnormalities but their effectiveness in HF patients has not been assessed yet. In the last decades, many advances have been accomplished but sarcopenia remains an underdiagnosed pathology and more efforts are needed to find an efficacious therapeutic plan. The purpose of this review is to illustrate the current knowledge in terms of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of sarcopenia in order to provide a better understanding of wasting disorders occurring in chronic heart failure
Atyidae and Palaemonidae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea) of Bocas del Toro, Panama.
The present contribution is a preliminary report on the freshwater caridean fauna of Bocas del Toro province, northeastern Panama, based on field collections carried out during a Shrimp Taxonomy Workshop at the STRI station in Bocas del Toro in August 2008. A total of eight species from two families, Atyidae and Palaemonidae, were collected at 17 different collection sites in the rivers, streams and ponds on several islands of the Bocas del Toro archipelago and the adjacent mainland. The species reported herein are Atya scabra (Leach, 1815), Jonga serrei (Bouvier, 1909), Micratya poeyi (GuĂ©rin-MĂ©neville, 1855), Potimirim glabra (Kingsley, 1878), P. potimirim (MĂŒller, 1881) (Atyidae), Palaemon pandaliformis (Stimpson, 1871), Macrobrachium acanthurus (Wiegmann, 1836) and M. crenulatum Holthuis, 1950 (Palaemonidae). The record of J. serrei is the first for Panama, and M. poeyi a P. glabra the first for Bocas del Toro province
Solitons on H-bonds in proteins
A model for soliton dynamics on a hydrogen-bond network in helical proteins
is proposed. It employs in three dimensions the formalism of fully integrable
Toda lattices which admits phonons as well as solitons along the hydrogen-bonds
of the helices. A simulation of the three dimensional Toda lattice system shows
that the solitons are spontaneously created and are stable and moving along the
helix axis. A perturbation on one of the three H-bond lines forms solitons on
the other H-bonds as well. The robust solitary wave may explain very long-lived
modes in the frequency range of 100 cm which are found in recent X-ray
laser experiments. The dynamics parameters of the Toda lattice are in
accordance with the usual Lennard-Jones parameters used for realistic H-bond
potentials in proteins.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
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