World Soul

The concept of the world soul is difficult to understand in large part because over the course of history it has been invoked to very different ends and within the frameworks of very different philosophical systems, with very different concepts of the world soul emerging as a result. This volume brings together eleven chapters by leading philosophers in their respective fields that collectively explore the various ways in which this concept has been understood and employed, covering the following philosophical areas: Platonism, Stoicism, Medieval, Indian (Vedāntic), Kabbalah, Renaissance, Early Modern, German Romanticism, German Idealism, American Transcendentalism, and contemporary quantum mechanics and panpsychism theories. In addition, short reflections illuminate the impact the concept of the world soul has had on a small selection of areas outside of philosophy: harmony, biology (spontaneous generation), the music of Henry Purcell, psychoanalysis, and Gaia theories.

2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Beyeler ◽  
Hanspeter Kriesi

This article explores the impact of protests against economic globalization in the public sphere. The focus is on two periodical events targeted by transnational protests: the ministerial conferences of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the annual meetings of the World Economic Forum (WEF). Based on a selection of seven quality newspapers published in different parts of the world, we trace media attention, support of the activists, as well as the broader public debate on economic globalization. We find that starting with Seattle, protest events received extensive media coverage. Media support of the street activists, especially in the case of the anti-WEF protests, is however rather low. Nevertheless, despite the low levels of support that street protesters received, many of their issues obtain wide public support.


Author(s):  
Bernard Faye

The close adaptation of camel to its desert environment could explain its weak expansion out of the arid lands of the world. This adaptation can contribute to the desertification combat, attesting to its small ecological footprint with traditional extensive farming. The camel population in the world, despite its active growth, remains marginal, and its contribution to the greenhouse gas emission is negligible. However, the current trends to the intensification of camel productions could change the impact of the species on the environment and on animal metabolism. The necessity to expect a better productivity face to the growing demand could lead to a “specialization” of the camel farms and a specific selection of the camel. Such trends require care with a possible erosion of the camel biodiversity and the consequences on the interactions between the emerging camel production system and the environment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Zion Elani

Quantum computing, a fancy word resting on equally fancy fundamentals in quantum mechanics, has become a media hype, a mainstream topic in popular culture and an eye candy for high-tech company researchers and investors alike. Quantum computing has the power to provide faster, more efficient, secure and accurate computing solutions for emerging future innovations. Governments the world over, in collaboration with high-tech companies, pour in billions of dollars for the advancement of computing solutions quantum-based and for the development of fully functioning quantum computers that may one day aid in or even replace classical computers. Despite much hype and publicity, most people do not understand what quantum computing is, nor do they comprehend the significance of the developments required in this field, and the impact it may have on the future. Through these lecture notes, we embark on a pedagogic journey of understanding quantum computing, gradually revealing the concepts that form its basis, later diving in a vast pool of future possibilities that lie ahead, concluding with understanding and acknowledging some major hindrance and speed breaking bumpers in their path.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 266-279
Author(s):  
Yukun Cheng ◽  
Zhiqi Xu ◽  
Shuangliang Yao

Abstract Bitcoin is the most famous and the most used cryptocurrency in the world, such that it has received extreme popularity in recent years. However the Bitcoin system is accompanied by different attacks, including the block withholding (BWH) attack. When a miner plays the BWH attack, it will withhold all the blocks newly discovered in the attack pool, damaging the honest miners’ right to obtain the fair reward. In this paper, we consider a setting in which two miners may honestly mine or perform the BWH attack in a mining pool. Different strategy profiles will bring different payoffs, in addition influence the selection of the strategies. Therefore, we establish an evolutionary game model to study the behavior tendency of the miners and the evolutionary stable strategies under different conditions, by formulating the replicator dynamic equations. Through numerical simulations, we further verify the theoretical results on evolutionary stable solutions and discuss the impact of the factors on miners’ strategic choice. Based on these simulation results, we also make some recommendations for the manager and the miners to mitigate the BWH attack and to promote the cooperation between miners in a mining pool.


Author(s):  
Mikhail P. Rozhok

Introduction: Acute middle purulent otitis is a fairly common disease among both children and adults. The share of acute otitis media is 25-30% of the total number of ear diseases. Children and the elderly are much more likely to suffer. Successful selection of a topical medicinal product plays a significant role in the treatment of people with acute purulent otitis media. Despite the large number of medicines available on the pharmaceutical market of Ukraine and the world, there is a tendency to increase antibiotic resistance in pathogens of this disease. Therefore, the purpose of the study was to determine the impact on the course of this disease use of a new drug «Neladex». Materials and methods: The studies were conducted in an outpatient setting. 30 patients were divided into two groups, one of which the main (15 people) received Neladex drops in addition to conventional treatment, and the other did not. Results: In patients of the main group, the regression of symptoms of the disease, results of otoscopy and tonal audiometry occurred faster than those in the patients of control group. Conclusion: The use of the drug Neladex in the treatment of patients with acute purulent otitis media in the pre-perforation stage increases the effectiveness of therapy, which gives reason to recommend this drug for topical treatment of patients with the above pathology as an antibacterial and anti-inflammatory agent. «Neladex» can replenish the arsenal of local agents used in the treatment of patients with acute middle purulent otitis with myringitis in the pre-puncture stage.


2017 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 419-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saltanat Janenova ◽  
Colin Knox

Kazakhstan has ambitious plans to become one of the top 30 developed countries in the world by 2050. Its most recent route map to achieve this is the Plan for the Nation: 100 Concrete Steps, announced by the president in May 2015. A key pillar in this reform agenda is the development of a professional civil service. This article considers whether civil service reforms to date and those envisaged under the new plan offer a trajectory to the 2050 stated goal. It finds that despite significant political endorsement at the highest level, reforms have focused on institutional, structural and legal changes without the necessary attention to how these will impact on the quality of public services provision. The article highlights the interdependence between civil service reforms and an outcomes-based approach and adapts the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Better Life framework for Kazakhstan as a way of making this connection. Points for practitioners Moving to an outcomes-based approach in a developing country challenges practitioners to focus on the impact of their work and to be judicious and context-specific in the selection of results indicators.


Author(s):  
Julie Brown ◽  
Nicholas Cook ◽  
Stephen Cottrell

This chapter provides an overview of the long-standing and highly popular British radio programme Desert Island Discs (DID). It sets out the historical contexts in which the programme was established and developed, and interrogates both its changing format and the meanings and values that have been associated with DID over time. Developments in the production process are also assessed, including the impact of various presenters and the selection of castaways, as well as the programme’s place in broader media culture and its relationship to particular national identities. Finally, it considers the potential value of DID to the world of scholarship, particularly following the establishment in 2011 of the programme’s online archive, and the contribution of chapter authors to the realisation of that potential.


2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Fortmann

AbstractThe writings of Niklas Luhmann, the towering architect of modern systems theory, abound with references to the literature of early German Romanticism. Starting from this observation, the article investigates the relevance of certain Romantic ideas for the formation of Luhmann’s theory. Transcending categories of influence and commentary, it argues that literature does not anticipate theory in this case, nor does theory flesh out blind spots in literary texts. Rather, it suggests that systems theory repeatedly turns to Romanticism in order to perfect its tools and sharpen its concepts, increasing in complexity with each encounter. It is precisely this potential for interruption and growth that Luhmann sees and values in the early Romantics and that makes them privileged partners in his ongoing attempt to add new pillars to the grand edifice of his social theory.To be sure, the task of reconsidering the relations between systems theory and early Romanticism could take different routes and the article outlines some of these in a roadmap for alternative inquiries. A second aside, included in the article, addresses a potentially misleading case of homonymy – the notion of system. When the Romantics speak of ›system‹, often with some degree of reservation, they engage critically as well as poetically with the philosophy of German Idealism. Luhmann, by contrast, finds his models elsewhere and thus tends to circumvent this particular tradition.Nonetheless, in the ongoing endeavor of theory building, Romanticism seems to offer just the right kind of balance between affinity and resistance to systems theory to qualify as (what Luhmann considers the highest form of compliment) an irritation. Without a strong dose of Romanticism, one might say, systems theory would neither ›see‹ the world by way of observation, nor recognize the resilience of communication (even in the face of incomprehensibility), nor fully acknowledge the systemic processes of creating autonomy by way of autopoiesis.With Romanticism, Luhmann claims, art begins to reflect on its autonomy. Now fully liberated from serving religious purposes or teaching moral lessons, art commences anew. It becomes markedly and decidedly self-reflexive. Though it shares this feature with all functional systems, there is something special in the self-reflexivity, which constitutes the autonomy of art – the rejection of all determinations coming from the outside. Modern art presents nothing but art and it draws radical attention to this fact. Romantic irony, doublings, and a penchant for negotiating writing as the medium of literature, all perform this feat. Through such devices, Romanticism playfully showcases the autonomy of art and, by extension, the autopoiesis of art as social system. Looking at the way Romanticism treats and establishes autonomy deepens the theoretical insights into the workings of autopoiesis.Luhmann also credits Romanticism with exploring the boundaries of communication. He reads Romantic texts as staging prolonged experiments with self-sabotaging communications, be they reduplication, indeterminacy, oscillation, or incommunicability. While testing the limits of communication, Romanticism cannot help but demonstrate how unshakably robust the concept is – for communication can indeed communicate all of the above and still not fall apart. Since even outlandish communication fails to bring about its own end, the Romantics serve as a test case for a larger point Luhmann likes making: communication is the foundation of all social systems and as such, always continues, no matter what. Having been vetted in this way, his theory stands, as Luhmann notes with much delight.What Literary Studies consider as fiction, systems theory describes as a particular model of observation. Romanticism with its fairy tale universes, dream-like parallel spheres, unlikely encounters and split characters, offers contingent, ever-changing and always advancing observations. It thus brings to light that which is otherwise confined to the background – the world as it appears and as it potentially could be. In so doing, Romanticism makes the world, however fleetingly, noticeable for both the occasional reader as well as the astute theorist.Conversely, to Luhmann’s infatuation, the Romantics seem to have found in him exactly the kind of reader they always dreamed of – someone who transitions effortlessly from reader to critic, and who renews the textual tradition upon which he draws, unlocking the potential of texts as he endows them with new and unexpected meanings, while also deepening his own critical insights through the challenges they pose. Luhmann himself might either have been conscious of this connection or appalled by the suggestion, but in the intellectual encounters he sought and created throughout his works, the foremost theorist of social systems lets himself be profoundly irritated by the writers of early German Romanticism.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 187-210
Author(s):  
María Isabel Porras ◽  
María José Báguena

Abstract Within the framework of recent historiography about the role of the World Health Organization (WHO) in modernizing public health and the multifaceted concept of global health, this study addresses the impact of the WHO’s “country programs” in Spain from the time it was admitted to this organization in 1951 to 1975. This research adopts a transnational historical perspective and emphasizes attention to the circulation of health knowledge, practices, and people, and focuses on the Spain-0001 and Spain-0025programs, their role in the development of virology in Spain, and the transformation of public health. Sources include historical archives (WHO, the Spanish National Health School), various WHO publications, the contemporary medical press, and a selection of the Spanish general press.


2021 ◽  
pp. 137
Author(s):  
Kayus Kayowuan Lewoleba ◽  
Mulyadi Mulyadi ◽  
Satino Satino ◽  
Liva Wadillah

The problem of early marriage or child marriage is not a new problem in Indonesia and for countries in the world. Underage marriage is considered a serious problem because it raises controversy in society, not only in Indonesia but also a global issue. According to the Council of Foreign Relations, Indonesia is one of the ten countries in the world with the highest absolute number of child marriages and the second highest in ASEAN after Cambodia. It is estimated that one in five girls in Indonesia are married before they reach 18 years of age. In 2018 in Indonesia, 1 in 9 girls aged 20-24 were married before the age of 18, commonly known as child marriage. Child age should be a period for physical, emotional and social development before entering adulthood. The practice of child marriage is related to the fact that child marriage violates children's human rights, limiting their choices and opportunities. Every child has the right to survive, grow and develop as well as the right to protection from violence and discrimination as mandated in the 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia. The selection of the Limo Village area as a partner area is due to the physical condition of the Limo area which is adjacent to UPNVJ, but more than that the selection of this location is because as a real contribution, the campus cares for the problems that occur in the community. The method of activity in this community service is carried out online because it coincides with the implementation of the Covid-19 Emergency PPKM, in the form of counseling on the topic "Prevention and Prevention of Child Marriage for Youth and Youth Organizations". The results of this community service activity, the participants became open to understanding and insight into the impact of early marriage, the role of parents to supervise adolescent children, especially in association so that children avoid promiscuity which results in pregnancy outside marriage. The importance of providing access in the form of convenience for children, especially girls, to gain knowledge about reproductive health and sex education so that children have the ability to take care of themselves. Other factors such as socio-cultural aspects, customs and religion contribute to the widespread practice of child marriage in certain areas.Masalah  perkawinan  usia  dini    atau perkawinan usia anak bukan merupakan masalah yang baru di Indonesia dan bagi negara-negara di dunia. Perkawinan di bawah umur dinilai menjadi masalah  serius  karena  memunculkan  kontroversi  di  masyarakat,  tidak  hanya  di Indonesia namun juga menjadi isu global. Menurut  Council of Foreign  Relations,  Indonesia  merupakan  salah  satu  dari  sepuluh  negara  di  dunia  dengan angka absolut tertinggi perkawinan anak dan  tertinggi kedua di ASEAN setelah Kamboja. Diperkirakan satu dari lima anak perempuan di Indonesia menikah sebelum mereka mencapai 18 tahun.Pada tahun 2018 di Indonesia, 1 dari 9 anak perempuan berusia 20-24 tahun menikah sebelum usia 18 tahun, lazim disebut perkawinan anak. Seharusnya usia anak merupakan masa bagi perkembangan fisik, emosional dan sosial sebelum memasuki masa dewasa. Praktik perkawinan anak berkaitan dengan fakta bahwa perkawinan anak melanggar hak asasi anak, membatasi pilihan serta peluang mereka. Setiap anak berhak atas kelangsungan hidup, tumbuh dan berkembang serta berhak atas perlindungan dari kekerasan dan diskriminasi sebagaimana diamanatkan dalam Undang-Undang Dasar Negara Republik Indonesia Tahun 1945.   Pemilihan wilayah Kelurahan Limo sebagai  wilayah mitra karena kondisi wilayah Limo  yang berdekatan dengan UPNVJ secara fisik, namun lebih dari itu  pemilihan  lokasi ini karena sebagai kontribusi nyata, kepedulian  kampus terhadap masalah-masalah yang terjadi di masyarakat . Adapun metode kegiatan dalam pengabdian masyarakat ini adalah   dilakukan secara daring karena bertepatan dengan pemberlakuan  PPKM Darurat Covid-19, berupa penyuluhan dengan topik “Penaggulangan dan Pencegahan Perkawinan Anak Bagi  Remaja dan Karang Taruna “ . Hasil dari kegiatan pengabdian masyarakat ini para peserta  menjadi terbuka  pemahaman dan wawasannya akan dampak dari pernikahan dini, peran dari orang tua untuk melakukan pengawasan terhadap anak-anak remaja terutama dalam pergaulan agar anak-anak terhindar dari pergaulan bebas yang  mengakibatkan trejadinya kehamilan diluar nikah.  Pentingnya memberikan akses berupa kemudahan kepada anak-anak  terutama anak perempuan untuk mendapatkan  pengetahuan tentang kesehatan reproduksi dan pendidikan seks  agar anak-anak mempunyai kemmapuan  menjaga diri. Faktor lain seperti  aspek sosial budaya, adat istiadat dan agama  memberi kontribusi terhadap maraknya praktek pernikahan usia anak pada beberapa wilayah tertentu.


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