11,623 research outputs found
Metaphor and criticism
The prevalence of colourful metaphors and figurative language in critics' descriptions of artworks has long attracted attention. Talk of ‘liquid melodies,’ ‘purple prose,’ ‘soaring arches,’ and the use of still more elaborate figurative descriptions, is not uncommon. My aim in this paper is to explain why metaphor is so prevalent in critical description. Many have taken the prevalence of art-critical metaphors to reveal something important about aesthetic experience and aesthetic properties. My focus is different. I attempt to determine what metaphor enables critics to achieve and why it is so well-suited to helping them achieve it. I begin by outlining my account of what metaphors communicate and defend it against objections to the effect that it does not apply to art-critical metaphors. I then distinguish between two kinds of art-critical metaphor. This distinction is not normally drawn, but drawing it is essential to understanding why critics use metaphor. I then explain why each kind of metaphor is so common in criticism
The dispensability of metaphor
Many philosophers claim that metaphor is indispensable for various purposes. What I shall call the ‘Indispensability Thesis’ is the view that we use at least some metaphors to think, to express, to communicate, or to discover what cannot be thought, expressed, communicated, or discovered without metaphor. I argue in this paper that support for the Indispensability Thesis is based on several confusions. I criticize arguments presented by Stephen Yablo, Berys Gaut, Richard Boyd, and Elisabeth Camp for the Indispensability Thesis, and distinguish it from several plausible claims with which it is easily confused. Although I do not show that the thesis is false, I provide seven grounds for suspicion of our sense (if we have it) that some metaphors are indispensable for the purposes claimed by advocates of the Indispensability Thesis
A Spinorial Hamiltonian Approach to Gravity
We give a spinorial set of Hamiltonian variables for General Relativity in
any dimension greater than 2. This approach involves a study of the algebraic
properties of spinors in higher dimension, and of the elimination of
second-class constraints from the Hamiltonian theory. In four dimensions, when
restricted to the positive spin-bundle, these variables reduce to the standard
Ashtekar variables. In higher dimensions, the theory can either be reduced to a
spinorial version of the ADM formalism, or can be left in a more general form
which seems useful for the investigation of some spinorial problems such as
Riemannian manifolds with reduced holonomy group. In dimensions ,
the theory may be recast solely in terms of structures on the positive
spin-bundle , but such a reduction does not seem possible in
dimensions , due to algebraic properties of spinors in these
dimensions.Comment: 20 pages, Latex 2e. Published versio
Lsdiff M and the Einstein Equations
We give a formulation of the vacuum Einstein equations in terms of a set of
volume-preserving vector fields on a four-manifold . These vectors
satisfy a set of equations which are a generalisation of the Yang-Mills
equations for a constant connection on flat spacetime.Comment: 5 pages, no figures, Latex, uses amsfonts, amssym.def and amssym.tex.
Note added on more direct connection with Yang-Mills equation
The ADHM construction and non-local symmetries of the self-dual Yang-Mills equations
We consider the action on instanton moduli spaces of the non-local symmetries
of the self-dual Yang-Mills equations on discovered by Chau and
coauthors. Beginning with the ADHM construction, we show that a sub-algebra of
the symmetry algebra generates the tangent space to the instanton moduli space
at each point. We explicitly find the subgroup of the symmetry group that
preserves the one-instanton moduli space. This action simply corresponds to a
scaling of the moduli space.Comment: AMSLatex, 19 pages, no figures. Some discussions clarified, and
citations made more accurate. I am grateful to the referee for detailed
comments. Version to appear in Communications in Mathematical Physic
Cosmic Strings and Chronology Protection
A space consisting of two rapidly moving cosmic strings has recently been
constructed by Gott that contains closed timelike curves. The global structure
of this space is analysed and is found that, away from the strings, the space
is identical to a generalised Misner space. The vacuum expectation value of the
energy momentum tensor for a conformally coupled scalar field is calculated on
this generalised Misner space. It is found to diverge very weakly on the
Chronology horizon, but more strongly on the polarised hypersurfaces. The
divergence on the polarised hypersurfaces is strong enough that when the proper
geodesic interval around any polarised hypersurface is of order the Planck
length squared, the perturbation to the metric caused by the backreaction will
be of order one. Thus we expect the structure of the space will be radically
altered by the backreaction before quantum gravitational effects become
important. This suggests that Hawking's `Chronology Protection Conjecture'
holds for spaces with non-compactly generated Chronology horizon.Comment: 15 pages, plain TeX, 2 figures (not included), DAMTP-R92/3
Valiente Kroon's obstructions to smoothness at infinity
We conjecture an interpretation in terms of multipole moments of the
obstructions to smoothness at infinity found for time-symmetric,
conformally-flat initial data by Valiente Kroon (Comm. Math. Phys. 244 (2004),
133-156).Comment: To appear in GR
A positive mass theorem for low-regularity Riemannian metrics
We show that the positive mass theorem holds for continuous Riemannian
metrics that lie in the Sobolev space for manifolds of
dimension less than or equal to or spin-manifolds of any dimension. More
generally, we give a (negative) lower bound on the ADM mass of metrics for
which the scalar curvature fails to be non-negative, where the negative part
has compact support and sufficiently small norm. We show that a
Riemannian metric in for some with
non-negative scalar curvature in the distributional sense can be approximated
locally uniformly by smooth metrics with non-negative scalar curvature. For
continuous metrics in , there exist smooth approximating
metrics with non-negative scalar curvature that converge in for all
.Comment: 21 pages. The results on the positive mass theorem were announced in
arxiv:1205.1302, with a sketch of the proo
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