12,884 research outputs found
The Divine Comedy at Corinth: Paul, Menander and the Rhetoric of Resurrection
This article asks how the New Comedy of Menander might have influenced Paul\u27s theological rhetoric in 1 Cor 5â15. An intertextual reading of Paul\u27s letter against the backdrop of Menander\u27s Samia reveals a number of shared topics, ethical concerns and dramatic characteristics. Paul\u27s citation of Menander\u27s Thais in 1 Cor 15.33 is part of this larger strategy to frame the struggles in Corinth within the ambit of Greek household âsituation comedyâ. Like Menander, Paul hybridises tragic and comic motifs throughout his epistle, inflecting the comedy of the Christ narrative with tragic examples of human misapprehension in this plea for ecclesial reconciliation
The Death of Tragedy: The Form of God in Paulâs \u3cem\u3eCarmen Christi\u3c/em\u3e and Euripidesâ Bacchae
Scholarship on Phil 2:6â11 has long wrestled with the question of âinterpretive staging.â While acknowledging that Jewish sapiential and apocalyptic literature as well as Roman apotheosis narratives provide important matrices for the hymn, the following study pinpoints a third backdrop against which Paul\u27s dramatic christology would have been heard in Philippi: Euripidean tragedy. Echoes of Dionysus\u27s opening monologue from Euripides\u27s Bacchae in the carmen Christi suggest that Roman hearers of Paul\u27s letter likely understood Christ\u27s kenotic metamorphosis as a species of Dionysian revelation. This interpretive recognition accomplishes a new integration of the hymn\u27s Jewish and imperial-cultic transcripts. Jesus\u27s Bacchic portraiture supports a theology of Christ\u27s pre-existence, while simultaneously establishing him as a Dionysian antithesis to the imperial Apollonian kyrios Caesar. These Dionysian echoes also elevate the status of slaves and women, and suggest that âthe tragicâ remains modally present within the otherwise comic fabula of the Christ myth
Interplay Between Transmission Delay, Average Data Rate, and Performance in Output Feedback Control over Digital Communication Channels
The performance of a noisy linear time-invariant (LTI) plant, controlled over
a noiseless digital channel with transmission delay, is investigated in this
paper. The rate-limited channel connects the single measurement output of the
plant to its single control input through a causal, but otherwise arbitrary,
coder-controller pair. An infomation-theoretic approach is utilized to analyze
the minimal average data rate required to attain the quadratic performance when
the channel imposes a known constant delay on the transmitted data. This
infimum average data rate is shown to be lower bounded by minimizing the
directed information rate across a set of LTI filters and an additive white
Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel. It is demonstrated that the presence of time
delay in the channel increases the data rate needed to achieve a certain level
of performance. The applicability of the results is verified through a
numerical example. In particular, we show by simulations that when the optimal
filters are used but the AWGN channel (used in the lower bound) is replaced by
a simple scalar uniform quantizer, the resulting operational data rates are at
most around 0.3 bits above the lower bounds.Comment: A less-detailed version of this paper has been accepted for
publication in the proceedings of ACC 201
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