91,902 research outputs found
Almost laura algebras
In this paper, we propose a generalization for the class of laura algebras,
which we call almost laura. We show that this new class of algebras retains
most of the essential features of laura algebras, especially concerning the
important role played by the non-semiregular components in their
Auslander-Reiten quivers. Also, we study more intensively the left supported
almost laura algebras, showing that these are characterized by the presence of
a generalized standard, convex and faithful component. Finally, we prove that
almost laura algebras behave well with respect to full subcategories,
split-by-nilpotent extensions and skew group algebras.Comment: 21 pages, very minor changes, to appear in J. Algebr
International financial regulation: A role for the Eurozone? EU Diplomacy Paper 08/2012, October 2012
The deepest financial crisis to strike the global economy since the Great Depression has unceremoniously called into question the very foundations of the Western economic model. The liberalisation of capital flows and the growing internationalisation of financial markets outpaced global regulatory and supervisory efforts. The repercussions of the financial crisis have given new dynamism to the reform of financial regulation both globally and within the European Union (EU). The Eurozone, by way of its own failings, has emerged as a stronger conceptual and legitimate entity since the onset of the crisis, but to what extent does this equate to a greater external role, in particular in the reform of international financial regulation? This paper argues that the Eurozone is currently not in a position to play an important role
in the reform of international financial regulation, as it is a weak actor in the context of the EU financial architecture, which is still largely characterised by differing national regimes, a prevailing influence from the UK and fragmented external representation. The key finding from this study is that internal tensions in the EU are at
the very heart of the Eurozoneâs difficulties in playing a role in the reform of international financial regulation. Surmounting these tensions is a pre-requisite for the
Eurozone if it is to overcome its structural weakness in international financial politics. However, the implications of such evolutions to the Eurozone, as an entity, and to European integration are far-reaching
Moving into the information age : from records to Google Earth
Many of us are avid recorders of Yorkshireâ varied flora and fauna. Over a recording career of many years a single recorder can personally amass large data sets or, if involved with networks of similarly-minded people, groups of recorders can rapidly build truely massive data sets numbering many tens of thousands of records. Sometimes we wish to make sense of these large data sets by mapping their geographic location, perhaps to understand distributional trends in space across time. Though data sets can be easily mapped in software such as MapMate or Levana, the resulting maps are basic outline projections of the reference region on which records are plotted (Figure 1). Though useful for understanding distribution in the abstract they lack the directness (and ability to zoom in and out) offered by scaleable photographic representations of location as provided by satellite imagery embedded and rendered in a digital environment. As County Butterfly Recorder (Butterfly Conservation) for Yorkshire I wished to make use of the software Google Earth, which is the pre-eminent example of scaleable mapping software, to map butterfly sightings across a number of years. The object was to motivate recorders in the coming butterfly-recording year to go out and explore those parts of Yorkshire which had not so far provided any butterfly sightings. The problem was how to take almost 75,000 records, representing just two years worth of butterfly sightings, currently residing in the butterfly software Levana and plot them in Google Earth. This turned out to be a relatively painless journey but requiring some tricks that I thought it would be useful to share. I would hope that this article will allow other people with data bases of records that they would like to present in Google Earth to do exactly that
Introduction
Husserlâs philosophy, by the usual account, evolved through three stages: 1. development of an anti-psychologistic, objective foundation of logic and mathematics, rooted in Brentanian descriptive psychology; 2. development of a new discipline of "phenomenology" founded on a metaphysical position dubbed "transcendental idealism"; transformation of phenomenology from a form of methodological solipsism into a phenomenology of intersubjectivity and ultimately (in his Crisis of 1936) into an ontology of the life-world, embracing the social worlds of culture and history. We show that this story of three revolutions can provide at best a preliminary orientation, and that Husserl was constantly expanding and revising his philosophical system, integrating views in phenomenology, ontology, epistemology and logic with views on the nature and tasks of philosophy and science as well as on the nature of culture and the world in ways that reveal more common elements than violent shifts of direction. We argue further that Husserl is a seminal figure in the evolution from traditional philosophy to the characteristic philosophical concerns of the late twentieth century: concerns with representation and intentionality and with problems at the borderlines of the philosophy of mind, ontology, and cognitive science
Estonia: a model for interwar Europe?
While Estoniaâs 1925 Law on Cultural Self-Government for National Minorities is often cited as a rare functioning example of Renner and Bauerâs non-territorial autonomy scheme, there has until recently been comparatively little research on how the law operated in practice. This article analyses the institutions of German and Jewish minority self-government established in inter-war Estonia, arguing that (prior to the eclipse of democracy in 1934, at least) these possessed considerable depth and authoritative competence in the area of cultural and educational policy. Cultural autonomy did not resolve all outstanding points of division between state, majority and (in particular) Baltic German minority; nevertheless, it played a positive role in the regulation of ethnonational tensions. Even less well-known is the international resonance of this unique law, which transnational minority activists argued should serve as a general model for the regulation of minority disputes. The League of Nations rightly questioned this claim, and the non-territorial autonomy model was scarcely applied beyond the Baltic region during the 1920s. However, it is still instructive to revisit the 1925 law today, at a time when several post-communist states have adopted minority rights legislation based on similar principles
Biological Fluid Mechanics Under the Microscope: A Tribute to John Blake
John Blake (1947--2016) was a leader in fluid mechanics, his two principal
areas of expertise being biological fluid mechanics on microscopic scales and
bubble dynamics. He produced leading research and mentored others in both
Australia, his home country, and the UK, his adopted home. This article reviews
John Blake's contributions in biological fluid mechanics, as well as giving the
author's personal viewpoint as one of the many graduate students and
researchers who benefitted from his supervision, guidance and inspiration. The
key topics from biological mechanics discussed are: `squirmer' models of
protozoa, the method of images in Stokes flow and the `blakelet' solution,
discrete cilia modelling via slender body theory, physiological flows in
respiration and reproduction, blinking stokeslets in microorganism feeding,
human sperm motility, and embryonic nodal cilia.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures. Submitted versio
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