3,227 research outputs found
Weber and Simmelâs philosophical and political stances : a dialogue in three acts
This article is an imagined dialogue between Weber and Simmel which makes a modest use of some of the resources of theatrical play in order to provide an overall portrait of both thinkers and to bring their thought to bear on our present. The dialogue consists of three acts focused on three central problematics in as many critical moments in Weber and Simmelâs lives: Act I takes place during the preparations for the first conference of the German Sociological Association and thus deals with the constitution of sociology as a socio-cultural science. Act II takes place amidst the First World War and its theme is evidently politics. Finally, Act III, where our two characters correspond instead of maintaining a face-to-face dialogue, is situated towards the end of the war and focuses on the attitude to life and indeed to death, as Simmelâs tragic yet admirable death takes place then. A brief introduction explains how we tried to use the possibilities of the dialogical form to expound Weberâs and Simmelâs thought, to compel them to confront their own blind spots and âunthoughtsâ, as well as to explore new ways of teaching the classics and transmitting their thought
Re-thinking the Legacy 2012: The Olympics as commodity and gift
This paper opens discussion about the nature of Olympic âlegacyâ and articulates a contradiction in the way âlegacyâ is conceived - between âgiftâ and âcommodityâ (Mauss 1954).The The paper argues that establishing working definitions and parameters for âlegacyâ is a difficult task. Defining âlegacyâ is problematic especially if conceived as an entirely predictable or measurable set of objectives. Indeed, the definition of âlegacyâ is partly constitutive of the legacy itself, a component of achievements that the city might make. Such a âlegacy definitionâ will become a functional term in the complex planning and evolving conceptions underpinning urban change for some timeâif successfully negotiated and if governable. As such, âlegacyâ, and the activities and values entailed to it, can come to provide a catalytic âvocabulary of motivesâ and a legitimating discourse enabling politicians, communities and their individual representatives to justify investments, evolving strategies and activities connected to and connecting developmental gains in a more or less healthy fashion. It is because of this that legacy and its various meanings come to matter
Clustering in complex networks. I. General formalism
We develop a full theoretical approach to clustering in complex networks. A
key concept is introduced, the edge multiplicity, that measures the number of
triangles passing through an edge. This quantity extends the clustering
coefficient in that it involves the properties of two --and not just one--
vertices. The formalism is completed with the definition of a three-vertex
correlation function, which is the fundamental quantity describing the
properties of clustered networks. The formalism suggests new metrics that are
able to thoroughly characterize transitive relations. A rigorous analysis of
several real networks, which makes use of the new formalism and the new
metrics, is also provided. It is also found that clustered networks can be
classified into two main groups: the {\it weak} and the {\it strong
transitivity} classes. In the first class, edge multiplicity is small, with
triangles being disjoint. In the second class, edge multiplicity is high and so
triangles share many edges. As we shall see in the following paper, the class a
network belongs to has strong implications in its percolation properties
Understanding the social in a digital age
Datafication, algorithms, social media and their various assemblages enable massive connective processes, enriching personal interaction and amplifying the scope and scale of public networks. At the same time, surveillance capitalists and the social quantification sector are committed to monetizing every aspect of human communication, all of which threaten ideal social qualities, such as togetherness and connection. This Special Issue brings together a range of voices and provocations around âthe socialâ, all of which aim to critically interrogate mediated human connection and their contingent socialities. Conventional methods may no longer be adequate, and we must rethink not only the fabric of the social but the very tools we use to make sense of our changing social formations. This Special Issue raises shared concerns with what the social means today, unpicking and rethinking the seams between digitization and social life that characterize todayâs digital age
A Parameterized Centrality Metric for Network Analysis
A variety of metrics have been proposed to measure the relative importance of
nodes in a network. One of these, alpha-centrality [Bonacich, 2001], measures
the number of attenuated paths that exist between nodes. We introduce a
normalized version of this metric and use it to study network structure,
specifically, to rank nodes and find community structure of the network.
Specifically, we extend the modularity-maximization method [Newman and Girvan,
2004] for community detection to use this metric as the measure of node
connectivity. Normalized alpha-centrality is a powerful tool for network
analysis, since it contains a tunable parameter that sets the length scale of
interactions. By studying how rankings and discovered communities change when
this parameter is varied allows us to identify locally and globally important
nodes and structures. We apply the proposed method to several benchmark
networks and show that it leads to better insight into network structure than
alternative methods.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to Physical Review
Spin and Conductance-Peak-Spacing Distributions in Large Quantum Dots: A Density Functional Theory Study
We use spin-density-functional theory to study the spacing between
conductance peaks and the ground-state spin of 2D model quantum dots with up to
200 electrons. Distributions for different ranges of electron number are
obtained in both symmetric and asymmetric potentials. The even/odd effect is
pronounced for small symmetric dots but vanishes for large asymmetric ones,
suggesting substantially stronger interaction effects than expected. The
fraction of high-spin ground states is remarkably large.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Smoke gets in your eyes:what is sociological about cigarettes?
Contemporary public health approaches increasingly draw attention to the unequal social distribution of cigarette smoking. In contrast, critical accounts emphasize the importance of smokersâ situated agency, the relevance of embodiment and how public health measures against smoking potentially play upon and exacerbate social divisions and inequality. Nevertheless, if the social context of cigarettes is worthy of such attention, and sociology lays a distinct claim to understanding the social, we need to articulate a distinct, positive and systematic claim for smoking as an object of sociological enquiry. This article attempts to address this by situating smoking across three main dimensions of sociological thinking: history and social change; individual agency and experience; and social structures and power. It locates the emergence and development of cigarettes in everyday life within the project of modernity of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It goes on to assess the habituated, temporal and experiential aspects of individual smoking practices in everyday lifeworlds. Finally, it argues that smoking, while distributed in important ways by social class, also works relationally to render and inscribe it
Recommended from our members
The show must go on: making money glamorizing oppression
This article presents an interdisciplinary analysis of the glamorization of the courtesan image as proposed by Baz Luhrmannâs film Moulin Rouge. The film sparked the appearance of high-street fashion inspired by the image of the 19th-century Parisian courtesan, which prompted the authors to examine how and why such images might appeal to female consumers. The critical analysis reaches beyond the images themselves to identify and discuss the modes of circulation of such images, and their function in achieving both the material ends of capitalism (ever-increasing consumption and production) and the promotion of one of the systemâs core values (patriarchy). Moreover, the article hopes to illustrate the possibilities offered by integrating cultural and structural analyses of current social phenomena
Quantum and frustration effects on fluctuations of the inverse compressibility in two-dimensional Coulomb glasses
We consider interacting electrons in a two-dimensional quantum Coulomb glass
and investigate by means of the Hartree-Fock approximation the combined effects
of the electron-electron interaction and the transverse magnetic field on
fluctuations of the inverse compressibility. Preceding systematic study of the
system in the absence of the magnetic field identifies the source of the
fluctuations, interplay of disorder and interaction, and effects of hopping.
Revealed in sufficiently clean samples with strong interactions is an unusual
right-biased distribution of the inverse compressibility, which is neither of
the Gaussian nor of the Wigner-Dyson type. While in most cases weak magnetic
fields tend to suppress fluctuations, in relatively clean samples with weak
interactions fluctuations are found to grow with the magnetic field. This is
attributed to the localization properties of the electron states, which may be
measured by the participation ratio and the inverse participation number. It is
also observed that at the frustration where the Fermi level is degenerate,
localization or modulation of electrons is enhanced, raising fluctuations.
Strong frustration in general suppresses effects of the interaction on the
inverse compressibility and on the configuration of electrons.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figures, To appear in Phys. Rev.
- âŠ