1,091 research outputs found
Philanthropy or solidarity? Ethical dilemmas about humanitarianism in crisis afflicted Greece
That philanthropy perpetuates the conditions that cause inequality is an old argument shared by thinkers such as Karl Marx, Oscar Wilde and Slavoj Zizek. I recorded the same argument in conversations regarding a growing humanitarian concern in austerity-ridden Greece. At the local level a number of solidarity initiatives provide the most impoverished families with humanitarian help. Some citizens participate in such initiatives wholeheartedly, while some other citizens criticize solidarity movements drawing primarily from Marxist-inspired arguments, such as, for example, that humanitarianism rationalises state inaction. The local narratives presented in this article bring forward two parallel possibilities engendered by the humanitarian face of social solidarity: first, its empowering potential (where solidarity initiatives enhance local social awareness), and second, the de-politicisation of the crisis and the experience of suffering (a liability that stems from the effectiveness of humanitarianism in ameliorating only temporarily the superficial consequences of the crisis). These two overlapping possibilities can help us problematise the contextual specificity and strategic employment of humanitarian solidarity in times of austerity
Dipole Interactions and Electrical Polarity in Nanosystems -- the Clausius-Mossotti and Related Models
Point polarizable molecules at fixed spatial positions have solvable
electrostatic properties in classical approximation, the most familiar being
the Clausius-Mossotti (CM) formula. This paper generalizes the model and
imagines various applications to nanosystems. The behavior is worked out for a
sequence of octahedral fragments of simple cubic crystals, and the crossover to
the bulk CM law is found. Some relations to fixed moment systems are discussed
and exploited. The one-dimensional dipole stack is introduced as an important
model system. The energy of interaction of parallel stacks is worked out, and
clarifies the diverse behavior found in different crystal structures. It also
suggests patterns of self-organization which polar molecules in solution might
adopt. A sum rule on the stack interaction is found and tested. Stability of
polarized states under thermal fluctuations is discussed, using the
one-dimensional domain wall as an example. Possible structures for polar hard
ellipsoids are considered. An idea is formulated for enhancing polarity of
nanosystems by intentionally adding metallic coatings.Comment: 18 pages (includes 6 embedded figures and 3 tables). New references,
and other small improvements. Scheduled for publication by J. Chem. Phys.,
Jan. 200
Jizz and the joy of pattern recognition:virtuosity, discipline and the agency of insight in UK naturalists’ arts of seeing
Approaches to visual skilling from anthropology and STS have tended to highlight the forces of discipline and control in understanding how shared visual accounts of the world are created in the face of potential differences brought about by multi-sensorial perception. Drawing upon a range of observational and interview material from an immersion in naturalist training and biological recording activities between 2003 and 2009, I focus upon jizz, a distinct form of gestalt perception much coveted by naturalist communities in the UK. Jizz is described as a tacit and embodied way of seeing that instantaneously reveals the identity of a species, relying upon but simultaneously suspending the arduous and meticulous study of an organism’s diagnostic characteristics. I explore the potential and limitations of jizz to allow for both visual precision and an enchanted and varied form of encounter with nature. In so doing, I explore how the specific characteristics of wild, intangible and irreverent virtuoso performance work closely together with disciplining taxonomic standards. As such, discipline and irreverence work together, are mutually enabling, and allow for an accommodation rather than a segregation of potential difference brought about by perceptual variety
Metallic Xenon, Molecular Condensates, and Superconductivity
A possibility of explaining the light absorption observed to occur under
pressure-induced xenon metallization as due to the transition to the
superconducting state is analyzed. The mechanism of the van der Waals bonding
is discussed.Comment: LaTeX 2.09 (RevTeX), 4 pages, 4 PostScript figures included in tex
Statistical-mechanical theory of ultrasonic absorption in molecular liquids
We present results of theoretical description of ultrasonic phenomena in
molecular liquids. In particular, we are interested in the development of
microscopical, i.e., statistical-mechanical framework capable to explain the
long living puzzle of the excess ultrasonic absorption in liquids. Typically,
ultrasonic wave in a liquid can be generated by applying the periodically
alternating external pressure with the angular frequency that corresponds to
the ultrasound. If the perturbation introduced by such process is weak - its
statistical-mechanical treatment can be done with the use of the linear
response theory. We treat the liquid as a system of interacting sites, so that
all the response/aftereffect functions as well as the energy dissipation and
generalized (wave-vector and frequency dependent) ultrasonic absorption
coefficient are obtained in terms of familiar site-site static and time
correlation functions such as static structure factors or intermediate
scattering functions. To express the site-site intermediate scattering
functions we refer to the site-site memory equations in the mode-coupling
approximation for the first-order memory kernels, while equilibrium properties
such as site-site static structure factors, direct and total correlation
functions are deduced from the integral equation theory of molecular liquids
known as RISM or one of its generalizations. All the formalism is phrased in a
general manner, hence the obtained results are expected to work for arbitrary
type of molecular liquid including simple, ionic, polar, and non-polar liquids.Comment: 14 pages, 1 eps-figure, RevTeX4-forma
Mediterranean conundrums : pluridisciplinary perspectives for research in the social sciences
This paper has two purposes. First, it summarises the various papers presented at a
Pluridisciplinary Conference on the Mediterranean treating the region from a variety of
perspectives, a selection of which are published in this issue of History and Anthropology.
Second, it attempts to explore some of the tensions between historians and anthropologists,
and political scientists and geographers, in the treatment of the region.peer-reviewe
Density Functional for Anisotropic Fluids
We propose a density functional for anisotropic fluids of hard body
particles. It interpolates between the well-established geometrically based
Rosenfeld functional for hard spheres and the Onsager functional for elongated
rods. We test the new approach by calculating the location of the the
nematic-isotropic transition in systems of hard spherocylinders and hard
ellipsoids. The results are compared with existing simulation data. Our
functional predicts the location of the transition much more accurately than
the Onsager functional, and almost as good as the theory by Parsons and Lee. We
argue that it might be suited to study inhomogeneous systems.Comment: To appear in J. Physics: Condensed Matte
Surface roughness over the northern half of the Greenland Ice Sheet from airborne laser altimetry
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2008JF001067.Surface roughness, defined as the standard deviation of small-scale elevation fluctuations from the linear trend over 0.5 km, can be estimated from high-resolution airborne laser altimetry. Here we present results for the northern half of the Greenland Ice Sheet using laser data collected in May 1995. Roughness is smallest in the central region straddling the ice divide, increases in amplitude toward the coast, and appears to be correlated with slope of the ice surface. For most of the study region surface roughness is 8 cm or less (<2.5 cm water equivalent). In smaller regions associated with fast flow, larger values are found. Comparison of the size of small-scale topographic disturbances with the spatial noise estimated from five closely spaced ice cores drilled in northwest Greenland shows good agreement. Similar correspondence was found earlier using nine ice cores from the Summit region. These results indicate that the airborne laser altimeter provides an efficient platform for characterizing the statistical nature of the snow surface over large areas of the polar ice sheets
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