8,081 research outputs found
An integral equation approach to the plasma self consistent field problem
Problem of collisionless, fully ionized single component plasma treated by means of Green functio
Methods of Quadrature for Euler Transform Integrals
Quadrature methods for Euler transform integral
On surgery curves for genus one slice knots
If a knot K bounds a genus one Seifert surface F in the 3-sphere and F
contains an essential simple closed curve alpha that has induced framing 0 and
is smoothly slice, then K is smoothly slice. Conjecturally, the converse holds.
It is known that if K is slice, then there are strong constraints on the
algebraic concordance class of such alpha, and it was thought that these
constraints might imply that alpha is at least algebraically slice. We present
a counterexample; in the process we answer negatively a question of Cooper and
relate the result to a problem of Kauffman. Results of this paper depend on the
interplay between the Casson-Gordon invariants of K and algebraic invariants of
alpha.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure. Typographical correction
Univocity, Duality, and Ideal Genesis: Deleuze and Plato
In this essay, we consider the formal and ontological implications of one specific and intensely contested dialectical context from which Deleuze’s thinking about structural ideal genesis visibly arises. This is the formal/ontological dualism between the principles, ἀρχαί, of the One (ἕν) and the Indefinite/Unlimited Dyad (ἀόριστος δυάς), which is arguably the culminating achievement of the later Plato’s development of a mathematical dialectic.3 Following commentators including Lautman, Oskar Becker, and Kenneth M. Sayre, we argue that the duality of the One and the Indefinite Dyad provides, in the later Plato, a unitary theoretical formalism accounting, by means of an iterated mixing without synthesis, for the structural origin and genesis of both supersensible Ideas and the sensible particulars which participate in them. As these commentators also argue, this duality furthermore provides a maximally general answer to the problem of temporal becoming that runs through Plato’s corpus: that of the relationship of the flux of sensory experiences to the fixity and order of what is thinkable in itself. Additionally, it provides a basis for understanding some of the famously puzzling claims about forms, numbers, and the principled genesis of both attributed to Plato by Aristotle in the Metaphysics, and plausibly underlies the late Plato’s deep considerations of the structural paradoxes of temporal change and becoming in the Parmenides, the Sophist, and the Philebus. After extracting this structure of duality and developing some of its formal, ontological, and metalogical features, we consider some of its specific implications for a thinking of time and ideality that follows Deleuze in a formally unitary genetic understanding of structural difference. These implications of Plato’s duality include not only those of the constitution of specific theoretical domains and problematics, but also implicate the reflexive problematic of the ideal determinants of the form of a unitary theory as such. We argue that the consequences of the underlying duality on the level of content are ultimately such as to raise, on the level of form, the broader reflexive problem of the basis for its own formal or meta-theoretical employment. We conclude by arguing for the decisive and substantive presence of a proper “Platonism” of the Idea in Deleuze, and weighing the potential for a substantive recuperation of Plato’s duality in the context of a dialectical affirmation of what Deleuze recognizes as the “only” ontological proposition that has ever been uttered. This is the proposition of the univocity of Being, whereby “being is said in the same sense, everywhere and always,” but is said (both problematically and decisively) of difference itself
The nonorientable four-genus of knots
We develop obstructions to a knot K in the 3-sphere bounding a smooth
punctured Klein bottle in the 4-ball. The simplest of these is based on the
linking form of the 2-fold branched cover of the 3-sphere branched over K.
Stronger obstructions are based on the Ozsvath-Szabo correction term in
Heegaard-Floer homology, along with the G-signature theorem and the
Guillou-Marin generalization of Rokhlin's theorem. We also apply Casson-Gordon
theory to show that for every n greater than one there exists a knot that does
not bound a topologically embedded nonorientable ribbon surface F in the 4-ball
with first Betti number less than n.Comment: 20 pages; expository change
The relationship of dementia prevalence in older adults with intellectual disability (ID) to age and severity of ID
Background: Previous research has shown that adults with intellectual disability (ID) may be more at risk of developing dementia in old age than expected. However, the effect of age and ID severity on dementia prevalence rates has never been reported. We investigated the predictions that older adults with ID should have high prevalence rates of dementia that differ between ID severity groups and that the age-associated risk should be shifted to a younger age relative to the general population.
Method: A two-staged epidemiological survey of 281 adults with ID without Down syndrome (DS) aged >60 years; participants who screened positive with a memory task, informant-reported change in function or with the Dementia Questionnaire for Persons with Mental Retardation (DMR) underwent a detailed assessment. Diagnoses were made by psychiatrists according to international criteria. Prevalence rates were compared with UK prevalence and European consensus rates using standardized morbidity ratios (SMRs).
Results: Dementia was more common in this population (prevalence of 18.3%, SMR 2.77 in those aged >65 years). Prevalence rates did not differ between mild, moderate and severe ID groups. Age was a strong risk factor and was not influenced by sex or ID severity. As predicted, SMRs were higher for younger age groups compared to older age groups, indicating a relative shift in age-associated risk.
Conclusions: Criteria-defined dementia is 2–3 times more common in the ID population, with a shift in risk to younger age groups compared to the general population
Criminal neighbourhoods: does the density of prior offenders encourage others to commit crime?
Using crime data over a period of a decade for Glasgow, this paper explores whether the
density of prior offenders in a neighbourhoods has an influence on the propensity of others to
(re)commence offending. The study shows that the number of ‘newly active’ offenders in a
neighbourhood in the current quarter is positively associated with the density of prior
offenders for both violent and property crime from the previous two years. In the case of
‘newly active’ property offenders, the relationship with active prior offenders is only
apparent when prior offender counts exceed the median. The paper postulates that intraneighbourhood
social mechanisms may be at work to create these effects. The results suggest
that policies which concentrate offenders in particular neighbourhoods may increase the
number of ‘newly active’ offenders, and point to evidence of a threshold at which these
effects take place
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