7,910 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Conversations with Robert: âJews as Jewsâ and the Critique of the Critique
I first met Robert some twenty-five years ago. I had just begun my PhD. As time passed, it was evident that things were not working out between me and my then supervisor, and Robert, whom I had met earlier, stepped in and offered to take over. After a little hesitation (and for the very reasons Robert had identi- fied), I agreed. I think it would not be an over- statement to say that without that intervention, I would have simply given up. Robert had an uncanny way of building up what was, by then, my shattered confidence. It was only after I had finished that I realized how Robert put me back together both emotionally and academically. Robert would respond to my work, first, by saying how good it was, how insightful, and then spend the rest of the time gently taking it (but not me) to pieces while at the same time moving me in directions and making connections I did not see myself.</jats:p
Recommended from our members
Disavowal. Distinction and Repetition: Alain Badiou and the Radical Tradition of Antisemitism
My focus in this chapter on the militant French philosopher, Alain Badiou, emerges from my work into the various ways that the Shoah has been incorporated into antisemitic ways of thinking. In what follows, I argue that Badiouâs thoughts on what he terms âuses of the word âJewââ3 in general, as well as on the Shoah in particular, offers a series of continuities with what can be called the radical tradition of antisemitismâa tradition that reaches back at least as far as Bruno Bauerâs anti-emancipationist, and avant le lettre, antisemitic texts of the 1840s. It simultaneously questions the notion of a sharp rupture between what have been termed âclassicalâ and ânewâ antisemitism. It questions also the place of the Shoah in recent critical thinking within a dialectic of disavowal, dis-tinction, and repetition
Recommended from our members
Continuity and Discontinuity
This paper argues that antizionism must be understood, like the antisemitism that came before it, as an ideology. Here I draw upon Arendtâs definition of ideology as a radical distortion of social and political relations. I draw also upon Fine and Spencerâs understanding of the Jewish question as the antisemitic reaction to Jewish emancipation. I argue that antizionism is a reconfiguration of that reaction in the context of Jewsâ modern emancipation in the form of national self-determination in the State of Israel. While that modern reaction, antizionism, displays both continuity and discontinuity with the antisemitism that came before it, it remains a manifestation of the Jewish question
Construction management research and the attempt to build a social science
The paper challenges the view that the major theoretical and methodological issues in the social sciences have been resolved and that positivism provides the only sound basis for research in construction. By examining the relationship between specialist discourses and natural language and Weber's failure to provide a basis for objective causal explanations of social action, it is argued that the kind of theorising that Runeson advocates is at best premature and at worst preempts the achievement of a more rigorous and thorough understanding of construction processes. Reporting some empirical research on the design and construction of reinforced concrete structures, the paper seeks to demonstrate some theoretical methodological and practical implications of an interpretive style of research
Studies of Work: Achieving Hybrid Disciplines in IT Design and Management Studies
We explore the relationship between ethnomethodology (EM), ethnography and the needs of managers and designers in industry, considering both ethnomethodological and industrial criteria of adequacy and explicating their relationship through the concept of âaudience.â We examine a range of studies in this light, with a view to their possible candidacy as hybrid studies and identify three types of application of EM studies of work: market research, design, and business improvement. Application in the first of these fields we dub âanthropological,â in that it consists in studying and reporting back on the ways of exotic people (customers). This is the application most commonly found in studies of computer supported co-operative work (CSCW). A second CSCW application, âtechnomethodology,â involves the introduction of EM concepts into the design process. A further application, dubbed âholding-up-a-mirror,â involves reporting back to members of a setting upon their own activities. We argue that technomethodology and holding-up-a-mirror both offer the possibility of creating hybrid disciplines. We consider the objection that improvement and design involve the introduction of value judgements that threaten the practice of EM indifference, arguing that action research can serve as a guarantee of unique adequacy (UA) by testing the researcherâs understanding as analysis in action in the setting. Furthermore, the standard of reporting required by the UA criterion contributes to the effectiveness of proposed solutions
Evidence for chaotic behaviour in pulsar spin-down rates
We present evidence for chaotic dynamics within the spin-down rates of 17
pulsars originally presented by Lyne et al. Using techniques that allow us to
re-sample the original measurements without losing structural information, we
have searched for evidence of a strange attractor in the time series of
frequency derivatives for each of the 17 pulsars. We demonstrate the
effectiveness of our methods by applying them to a component of the Lorenz and
R\"ossler attractors that were sampled with similar cadence to the pulsar time
series. Our measurements of correlation dimension and Lyapunov exponent show
that the underlying behaviour appears to be driven by a strange attractor with
approximately three governing non-linear differential equations. This is
particularly apparent in the case of PSR B182811 where a correlation
dimension of 2.06\pm0.03 and a Lyapunov exponent of
inverse days were measured. These results provide an additional diagnostic for
testing future models of this behaviour.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figures, 2 tables, Accepted to MNRA
Recommended from our members
Systematic Underestimation of Maximum Crest Heights in Deep Water Using Surface-Following Buoys
- âŠ