528 research outputs found

    The Euro Trouble and the Global Financial Crisis

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    Paradoxes of Social Rise: The Expansion of Middle Classes and the Financial Crisis

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    The article views the current financial crisis from the background of long term socio-economic changes in advanced industrial societies. Central points are the rise of middle classes, the accumulation of financial wealth in the upper strata of middle classes in combination with an increasing concentration of financial assets at the level of the top rich, and the advance of pension and investment funds as collective actors at financial markets. The paper analyses the interconnections between these developments in the framework of a multilevel model, culminating in the thesis of a collective “Buddenbrooks”-effect: a structural upward mobility of society will lead to an increasing imbalance at capital markets because a strongly rising volume of financial assets searching profitable investment opportunities will go parallel with a decline of the social reservoir of solvent entrepreneurial debtors. Therefore, advanced industrial economies are faced with chronic excess liquidity and export surpluses at capital markets, leading to the build-up of speculative bubbles and subsequent crashes. The author argues that the present crisis cannot be understood properly without taking account of these backgrounds

    Capitalism, Religion, and the Idea of the Demonic

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    Following the debate on the relationship between capitalism and religion, this paper discusses the role of religion in present-day capitalism. It argues that neither the secularization thesis nor the influential concepts of a "return" or a "transformation" of religions can offer a convincing interpretation of the challenges religions are faced with in modern capitalism. Partially following Habermas, the paper outlines an interactionist reinterpretation of Durkheim's theory of religion. It shows that from the viewpoint of such an interpretation, it is possible that the place of religion in modern societies can be filled not only by manifestly religious systems of meaning, but also by nominally nonreligious ones. I argue that the capital form of money can, in fact, assume the function of such a "latent" religion in an apparently "secularized" world. Nevertheless, to simply equate capitalism with religion, as many authors have suggested, would be shortsighted. Rather, as a characterization of the contemporary relationship between capitalism and religion, Paul Tillich's concept of the "demonic" appears more promising.Anknüpfend an die Debatte über das Verhältnis von Kapitalismus und Religion bemüht sich der Beitrag um eine Klärung der Rolle der Religionen im gegenwärtigen Kapitalismus. Weder die in der Soziologie entwickelten Theorien der Säkularisierung und Modernisierung noch die gegenwärtig einflussreichen Thesen einer religiösen "Wende" oder "Transformation" können den Herausforderungen, mit denen die Religionen im gegenwärtigen Kapitalismus konfrontiert sind, wirklich gerecht werden. Der Beitrag skizziert, teilweise an Habermas anknüpfend, eine interaktionstheoretische Reformulierung von Durkheims Religionstheorie. Aus dieser Reformulierung ergibt sich die These, dass der Platz der Religion in modernen Gesellschaften auch durch nominell nicht religiöse Sinnsysteme eingenommen werden kann. Die Kapitalform des Geldes kann, wie dann gezeigt wird, die Funktion einer solchen "latenten" Religion in einer vermeintlich "säkularisierten" Welt einnehmen. Es wäre gleichwohl verkürzt, Kapitalismus und Religion einfach gleichzusetzen, wie eine Reihe Autoren es vorgeschlagen haben. Vielmehr bietet Paul Tillichs Theorie des "Dämonischen" eine überzeugendere Konzeptualisierung des gegenwärtigen Verhältnisses von Kapitalismus und Religion.1 Introduction 2 Main lines of the debate on capitalism and religion 3 Discussion 4 An interactionist reformulation of Durkheim's theory of religion 5 Capitalism as a form of the "demonic" 6 Conclusion Reference

    Financial Markets and the Middle Classes: The Collective "Buddenbrooks"-Effect

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    The article views the current financial crisis from the background of long term structural socio-economic changes in advanced industrial societies. Central points are the rise of the middle classes during the second half of the 20th century, the accumulation of financial wealth in the middle classes in combination with a continuing high and even increasing concentration of financial assets at the level of the top rich, and the advance of pension and investment funds as a new type of collective actors at global financial markets. These changes go parallel with an economic development which is characterized by increasing instability, declining growth rates and financial crises. The paper tries to clarify the interconnections between these phenomena in the framework of a multi-level analysis which culminates in the model of a “collective Buddenbrooks-effect”: A structural upward mobility of society will lead to an increasing imbalance at capital markets, since on the one hand the volume of financial assets searching for profitable investment will rise, whereas on the other hand the social reservoir of solvent debtors and promising investment opportunities will decline. Therefore, advanced industrial economies are characterized by a bias towards capital export and excessive financial liquidity, with the well known consequences of low economic growth rates and the danger of speculative bubbles at the global capital markets. The middle classes who originally benefitted from the post-war prosperity, are negatively affected too. The author argues that the current crisis cannot be understood sufficiently without taking account of these structural socio-economic backgrounds

    Simulating spin-3/2 particles at colliders

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    Support for interactions of spin-3/2 particles is implemented in the FeynRules and ALOHA packages and tested with the MadGraph 5 and CalcHEP event generators in the context of three phenomenological applications. In the first, we implement a spin-3/2 Majorana gravitino field, as in local supersymmetric models, and study gravitino and gluino pair-production. In the second, a spin-3/2 Dirac top-quark excitation, inspired from compositness models, is implemented. We then investigate both top-quark excitation and top-quark pair-production. In the third, a general effective operator for a spin-3/2 Dirac quark excitation is implemented, followed by a calculation of the angular distribution of the s-channel production mechanism.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure

    Kinetic modeling and simulation of high-temperature by-product formation from urea decomposition

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    The Selective catalytic reduction (SCR) technique is widely applied in exhaust gas after-treatment of diesel engines. Depending on operating conditions, injected urea-water solution (UWS) can form liquid films on mixer blades and the pipe wall. Evaporation and subsequent reactions in the wall film can lead to deposits of urea and by-products, respectively. Especially deposits that are not decomposed up to high temperatures are challenging for the SCR technique. Thermogravimetric experiments are conducted for these stable urea by-products, such as ammelide, ammeline and their by-products, such as cyanamide or melamine. An analysis of the evolving gases during thermal decomposition led to a more detailed understanding of the kinetics. The postulated mechanism is able to predict the thermogravimetric analyses results and the effects of variation of the experimental conditions such as initial sample mass and heating rates. The evaluated kinetics, together with the recently developed kinetics for the urea/biuret/triuret/cyanuric acid system Tischer et al. (2019), can now be integrated into CFD simulations of SCR systems to numerically simulate all relevant physical and chemical processes in UWS equipped aftertreatment systems for a wide range of conditions
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