2,899 research outputs found
Global equality of resources and the problem of valuation
The principle that every individual on the planet has a claim to an equal share of Earthâs natural resources has an intuitive attraction. Yet the Principle of Natural Resource Equality is not without its problems. This article focuses on the problem of valuation. Unless and until its adherents are able to develop an adequate theoretical mechanism for determining the comparative value of two or more bundles of natural resources the principle lacks applicability and persuasive force. Three adequacy constraints on such a mechanism are presented and then applied to a theorisation of the Principle of Natural Resource Equality that I have already expounded elsewhere: Global Equality of Resources. In each case I try to argue that Global Equality of Resources could satisfy the adequacy constraint, provided that both this theory and the relevant constraint are properly understood
Law, Liberty and the Rule of Law (in a Constitutional Democracy)
In the hunt for a better--and more substantial--awareness of the âlaw,â The author intends to analyze the different notions related to the ârule of lawâ and to criticize the conceptions that equate it either to the sum of âlawâ and âruleâ or to the formal assertion that âlaw rules,â regardless of its relationship to certain principles, including both ânegativeâ and âpositiveâ liberties. Instead, he pretends to scrutinize the principles of the ârule of law,â in general, and in a âconstitutional democracy,â in particular, to conclude that the tendency to reduce the âdemocratic principleâ to the âmajority ruleâ (or âmajority principleâ), i.e. to whatever pleases the majority, as part of the âpositive liberty,â is contrary both to the ânegative libertyâ and to the ârule of lawâ itself
Tunability and Noise Dependence in Differentiation Dynamics
The dynamic process of differentiation depends on the architecture, quantitative parameters, and noise of underlying genetic circuits. However, it remains unclear how these elements combine to control cellular behavior. We analyzed the probabilistic and transient differentiation of Bacillus subtilis cells into the state of competence. A few key parameters independently tuned the frequency of initiation and the duration of competence episodes and allowed the circuit to access different dynamic regimes, including oscillation. Altering circuit architecture showed that the duration of competence events can be made more precise. We used an experimental method to reduce global cellular noise and showed that noise levels are correlated with frequency of differentiation events. Together, the data reveal a noise-dependent circuit that is remarkably resilient and tunable in terms of its dynamic behavior
Intergenerational justice of what: welfare, resources or capabilities?
An important aspect of intergenerational justice concerns the specification of a 'currency of advantage' that can be used to evaluate distributive outcomes across time. Environmental theorists have introduced several innovative currencies of justice in recent years, such as ecological space and critical natural capital. However they have often downplayed the application of established currencies (such as welfare, resources or capabilities) to issues of futurity. After exploring the merits of a number of rival currencies, it is argued that the currency of 'capabilities to function' provides a promising basis for a theory of justice that takes seriously the rights and duties of intergenerational justice
Pure point diffraction and cut and project schemes for measures: The smooth case
We present cut and project formalism based on measures and continuous weight
functions of sufficiently fast decay. The emerging measures are strongly almost
periodic. The corresponding dynamical systems are compact groups and
homomorphic images of the underlying torus. In particular, they are strictly
ergodic with pure point spectrum and continuous eigenfunctions. Their
diffraction can be calculated explicitly. Our results cover and extend
corresponding earlier results on dense Dirac combs and continuous weight
functions with compact support. They also mark a clear difference in terms of
factor maps between the case of continuous and non-continuous weight functions.Comment: 30 page
Extinctions and Correlations for Uniformly Discrete Point Processes with Pure Point Dynamical Spectra
The paper investigates how correlations can completely specify a uniformly
discrete point process. The setting is that of uniformly discrete point sets in
real space for which the corresponding dynamical hull is ergodic. The first
result is that all of the essential physical information in such a system is
derivable from its -point correlations, . If the system is
pure point diffractive an upper bound on the number of correlations required
can be derived from the cycle structure of a graph formed from the dynamical
and Bragg spectra. In particular, if the diffraction has no extinctions, then
the 2 and 3 point correlations contain all the relevant information.Comment: 16 page
Tilings, tiling spaces and topology
To understand an aperiodic tiling (or a quasicrystal modeled on an aperiodic
tiling), we construct a space of similar tilings, on which the group of
translations acts naturally. This space is then an (abstract) dynamical system.
Dynamical properties of the space (such as mixing, or the spectrum of the
translation operator) are closely related to bulk properties of the individual
tilings (such as the diffraction pattern). The topology of the space of
tilings, particularly the Cech cohomology, gives information on how the
original tiling can be deformed. Tiling spaces can be constructed as inverse
limits of branched manifolds.Comment: 8 pages, including 2 figures, talk given at ICQ
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