5,790 research outputs found
Cultural Rights and Civic Virtue
This paper addresses the potential tension between two broadly stated policy objectives: the preservation of distinctive cultural traditions, often through the mechanism of formal legal rights, and the fostering of civic virtue, a sense of local community and the advancement of common civic enterprises. Many political liberals argued that liberal societies have an obligation to accommodate the cultural traditions of various sub groups through legal rights and a redistribution of social resources. The “right to cultural difference” is now widely (if not universally) understood to be a basic human right, on par with rights to religious liberty and racial equality. Other theorists writing in the liberal, civic republican, and urban sociology traditions expounded on the necessity of civic virtue, community and common enterprises initiated and executed at the local or municipal level of government or private association. These theorists argued that common projects, shared norms and social trust are indispensable elements of effective democratic government and are necessary to the altruism and public spiritedness that in turn secure social justice. These two policy goals therefore may at times be in conflict. This conflict is especially severe in larger culturally diverse cities, where social trust and civic virtue are most needed and often in shortest supply. Policies designed to counter cosmopolitan alienation and anomie by fostering civic virtue, social trust and common social norms will inevitably conflict with the cultural traditions and sub group identification of some minority groups. The paper argues that such conflicts are often best confronted on the field of political debate and policy analysis, not in the language of civil rights. Rights discourse, with its inherent absolutism, is ill suited to the type of subtle tradeoffs that these conflicts often entail.Law, Rights, Multiculturalism
Entropy production in full phase space for continuous stochastic dynamics
The total entropy production and its three constituent components are
described both as fluctuating trajectory-dependent quantities and as averaged
contributions in the context of the continuous Markovian dynamics, described by
stochastic differential equations with multiplicative noise, of systems with
both odd and even coordinates with respect to time reversal, such as dynamics
in full phase space. Two of these constituent quantities obey integral
fluctuation theorems and are thus rigorously positive in the mean by Jensen's
inequality. The third, however, is not and furthermore cannot be uniquely
associated with irreversibility arising from relaxation, nor with the breakage
of detailed balance brought about by non-equilibrium constraints. The
properties of the various contributions to total entropy production are
explored through the consideration of two examples: steady state heat
conduction due to a temperature gradient, and transitions between stationary
states of drift-diffusion on a ring, both in the context of the full phase
space dynamics of a single Brownian particle
Stability and reactivity of dimethylethoxysilane
The chemistry of the compound dimethylethoxysilane (DMES) is discussed especially as it relates to waterproofing silica surfaces. Some of the desirable properties of this compound are that it readily reacts with silica in the vapor phase, it is a low boiling point liquid (54 C), and the by-product of its reaction with silica is the rather inert substances ethanol. It is currently used by NASA to re-waterproof the HRSI shuttle tiles before relaunching the vehicle. Very little information is available on this particular compound in the literature or even on related silane compounds that have both a hydride group and an alkoxy group. Since the close proximity of two groups often drastically affects the chemical behavior of each group, chemical reactions were carried out in the laboratory with DMES to verify the expected behavior of these two functional groups located on DMES. Some of the reactions tested would be potentially useful for quantitative or qualitative measurements on DMES. To study the reactions of DMES with silica surfaces, cabosil was used as a silica substrate because of its high surface area and the ease of detection by infrared spectroscopy as well as other techniques
IMPRISONMENT FOR DEBT
Imprisonment for debt is usually thought of as a barbarous custom which declined continuously as civilization and Christianity advanced and which was totally done away with long ago. The facts, however, are otherwise. It seems doubtful if history warrants any generalization to the effect that the imprisonment of debtors has been a steadily declining practice. Certain it is, that in a greater or less degree it exists today in many parts of the United States, in England, and in some other countries. Moreover, creditors are making use of it on a comparatively large scale. It is the purpose of this paper to trace briefly the growth of the idea of arrest in civil actions in early times, its progress in the common law, and its development around the writs known as capias ad respondendum and capias ad satisfaciendum. As representative of the American law on the subject, the present practice in the state of Michigan will be examined, Michigan being a state in which the law of civil arrest bas had an unusually luxuriant development. Finally, there will be an examination of available statistics as to the extent and results of the present-day civil arrest, and an attempt will be made to draw some conclusions as to its desirability
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