489 research outputs found
Dialogue as Moral Paradigm: Paths Toward Intercultural Transformation
The Council of Europeâs 2008 White Paper on Intercultural Dialogue: âliving
together as equals in dignityâ points to the need for shared values upon which intercultural dialogue might rest. In order, however, to overcome the monologic separateness that threatens community, we must educate ourselves to recognize the dialogism of our humanity and to engage in deep encounters with others with a mature skepticism of all dogmatisms, including our own. In order to aid us in reaching the necessary insight, the author calls upon Bakhtinâs ideas of the dialogism of every utterance and of the unity and heteroglossia of language, Gadamerâs hermeneutical experience that shakes us loose from what we think we know, and Levinasâs description of that transcendent ideal of a dialogue beyond reciprocity. These perspectives break open our certainty that tribalism and individualism are fundamental, placing them instead as secondary phenomena that, though
powerful, pronounce neither the initial nor the final word on our life together
Founding quantum theory on the basis of consciousness
In the present work, quantum theory is founded on the framework of
consciousness, in contrast to earlier suggestions that consciousness might be
understood starting from quantum theory. The notion of streams of
consciousness, usually restricted to conscious beings, is extended to the
notion of a Universal/Global stream of conscious flow of ordered events. The
streams of conscious events which we experience constitute sub-streams of the
Universal stream. Our postulated ontological character of consciousness also
consists of an operator which acts on a state of potential consciousness to
create or modify the likelihoods for later events to occur and become part of
the Universal conscious flow. A generalized process of measurement-perception
is introduced, where the operation of consciousness brings into existence, from
a state of potentiality, the event in consciousness. This is mathematically
represented by (a) an operator acting on the state of potential-consciousness
before an actual event arises in consciousness and (b) the reflecting of the
result of this operation back onto the state of potential-consciousness for
comparison in order for the event to arise in consciousness. Beginning from our
postulated ontology that consciousness is primary and from the most elementary
conscious contents, such as perception of periodic change and motion, quantum
theory follows naturally as the description of the conscious experience.Comment: 41 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Foundations of Physics, Vol
36 (6) (June 2006), published online at
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10701-006-9049-
The Relational Power of Education: The immeasurability of knowledge, value and meaning
Recognizing the challenge of adequate evaluation in
higher education, this essay introduces some of the critical,
alternative-seeking conversation about educational measurement.
The thesis is that knowledge, value, and meaning emerge in the
relational dynamics of education, thus requiring complex
approaches to evaluation, utilizing relational criteria. The method
of the essay is to analyse two educational case studies Ă Ă Ă ĂÂą a travel
seminar and a classroom course Ă Ă Ă ĂÂą in dialogue with educational
literature and a process-relational philosophy of education.
Building from this analysis, the essay concludes with proposals for
relational criteria of evaluation: relations with self, community and
culture, difference, earth, and social structures
Gauge invariant derivative expansion of the effective action at finite temperature and density and the scalar field in 2+1 dimensions
A method is presented for the computation of the one-loop effective action at
finite temperature and density. The method is based on an expansion in the
number of spatial covariant derivatives. It applies to general background field
configurations with arbitrary internal symmetry group and space-time
dependence. Full invariance under small and large gauge transformations is
preserved without assuming stationary or Abelian fields nor fixing the gauge.
The method is applied to the computation of the effective action of spin zero
particles in 2+1 dimensions at finite temperature and density and in presence
of background gauge fields. The calculation is carried out through second order
in the number of spatial covariant derivatives. Some limiting cases are worked
out.Comment: 34 pages, REVTEX, no figures. Further comments adde
Rethinking the Ambiguities of Abstraction in the Anthropocene
The ambiguities of abstraction were at the heart of critical approaches to the problems of modernity. Abstraction, so fundamental to the modernist episteme, was seen to have alienated humanity from itself and from its entangled relations with its environment, constituting a fundamental rift between the subject and the world. This article analyses how the critique of the modernist episteme has increasingly shifted under the auspices of the Anthropocene. Rather than seeking to overcome the ambiguities of abstraction and return the human to the world, approaches that seek to affirm the Anthropocene have emphasised that modernist thought did not take abstraction far enough. Rather than abstraction being problematic for contemporary thought, abstraction is seen to be a facet of the world in its lively, partial and contingent interaction. This article is organised in three sections. The first section introduces the problematic of abstraction in the Anthropocene, highlighting that critical theory approaches tend to see the Anthropocene within a discourse of modernist critique. The second section draws out the importance of understanding the distinct mode of contemporary affirmation, which rather than seeking to return man to the world, emphasises the impossibility of finding meaning in the world. It is this inverting of critical understandings that enables abstraction to be seen positively rather than problematically. The final section expands on this point to consider how contemporary theoretical approaches articulate the transvaluation of abstraction as the guide to contemporary modes of life
The social, cosmopolitanism and beyond
First, this article will outline the metaphysics of âthe socialâ that implicitly and explicitly connects the work of lassical and contemporary cosmopolitan sociologists as different as Durkheim, Weber, Beck and Luhmann. In a second step, I will show that the cosmopolitan outlook of classical sociology is driven by exclusive differences. In understanding human affairs, both classical sociology and contemporary cosmopolitan sociology reflect a very modernist outlook of epistemological, conceptual, methodological and disciplinary rigour that separates the cultural sphere from the natural objects of concern. I will suggest that classical sociology â in order to be cosmopolitan â is forced (1) to exclude non-social and non-human objects as part of its conceptual and methodological rigour, and (2) consequently and methodologically to rule out the non-social and the non-human. Cosmopolitan sociology imagines âthe socialâ as a global, universal explanatory device to conceive and describe the non-social and non-human. In a third and final step the article draws upon the work of the French sociologist Gabriel Tarde and offers a possible alternative to the modernist social and cultural other-logics of social sciences. It argues for a inclusive conception of âthe socialâ that gives the non-social and non-human a cosmopolitan voice as well
Causal categories: relativistically interacting processes
A symmetric monoidal category naturally arises as the mathematical structure
that organizes physical systems, processes, and composition thereof, both
sequentially and in parallel. This structure admits a purely graphical
calculus. This paper is concerned with the encoding of a fixed causal structure
within a symmetric monoidal category: causal dependencies will correspond to
topological connectedness in the graphical language. We show that correlations,
either classical or quantum, force terminality of the tensor unit. We also show
that well-definedness of the concept of a global state forces the monoidal
product to be only partially defined, which in turn results in a relativistic
covariance theorem. Except for these assumptions, at no stage do we assume
anything more than purely compositional symmetric-monoidal categorical
structure. We cast these two structural results in terms of a mathematical
entity, which we call a `causal category'. We provide methods of constructing
causal categories, and we study the consequences of these methods for the
general framework of categorical quantum mechanics.Comment: 43 pages, lots of figure
Examining the Context of Strategy Instruction
The goal of literacy instruction is to teach reading and writing as tools to facilitate thinking and reasoning in a broad array of literacy events. An important difference in the disposition of children to participate in literacy experiences is the extent to which they engage in intentional self-regulated learning. The contexts attending six traditional models of strategy instruction are examined. An exploratory study, conducted with heterogeneous third graders, is reported, examining the implementation and outcomes of three models of strategy instructionâDirect Instruction, Reciprocal Teaching, and Collaborative Problem Solvingâwhich manipulated teacher and student control of activity, as well as the instructional context.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69008/2/10.1177_074193259101200306.pd
Visualising text co-occurrence networks
We present a tool for automatically generating a visual summary of unstructured text data retrieved from documents, web sites or social media feeds. Unlike tools such as word clouds, we are able to visualise structures and topic relationships occurring in a document. These relationships are determined by a unique approach to co-occurrence analysis. The algorithm applies a decaying function to the distance between word pairs found in the original text such that words regularly occurring close to each other score highly, but even words occurring some distance apart will make a small contribution to the overall co-occurrence score. This is in contrast to other algorithms which simply count adjacent words or use a sliding window of fixed size. We show, with examples, how the network generated can be presented in tree or graph format. The tree format allows for the user to interact with the visualisation and expand or contract the data to a preferred level of detail. The tool is available as a web application and can be viewed using any modern web browse
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