scholarly journals Die Zeit in zweidimensionaler Betrachtung

2016 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Friedrich Koch

AbstractB-time, i. e. the temporal scale of the B-series of events, is one and the same for all times, while A-times (the temporal scales of A-series) are as many as there are moments of time. This means that A-theorists will have to consider one-dimensional time two-dimensionally: as changing within itself at every moment. The two-dimensional view is here put to service for a meta-compatibilist theory of freedom, a theory, that is, which reconciles freedom, determinism and their first order incompatibility at the second order. Kant’s position is interpreted as meta-compatibilist as well, but as having the drawback of separating time and freedom. In order to appreciate the connection of time and freedom, one has to acknowledge that in free acts the future is determined further according to plan, while at the same time the past is (with nomological necessity) co-determined further in countless unclear and inscrutable ways. A free act thus consumes its own range of freedom by positing retroactively the sufficient causal antecedents for its taking place: It was free before it occurred and is part of nature after.

2003 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey G Inge-Vechtomov

Discovery of DNA double structure is a symbol of establishment of the template principle in biology of the XX century. Template processes (replication, transcription, translation) have several common characteristics: they proceed in three consequent steps - initiation, elongation and termination and are followed by correction or repair. All of them possess the character of polyvarian-cy, which means that they arc carried by enzymatic systems composed of interchangeable components, which operate with different precision. There may be enzymatic components, identical or closely related by structure, which are involved in different template processes. Along with linear templates (DNA, RNA) so called first order templates there are space or conformational templates in the cell. The latter ones are represented by some proteins, which can change their conformation, memorize it and transfer to newly synthesized homologous polypeptides (second order templates). The second order templates may interact either with each other or with the first order templates. Knowledge about relations between different template processes in the cell brings a new glance on mutual influence of different types of variability and on their roles in evolution.


2001 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 318-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quentin S. Hanley

In analyzing the behavior of a Hadamard transform imaging spectroscopic system in an optical sectioning microscope, a previously undescribed masking effect was observed. During the process of characterizing this artifact, it was noted that while many masking errors have been reported previously in the literature, no attempt has been made to classify them or to systematically treat their effects in a variety of imaging and spectroscopy arrangements. Previous reports have documented echo artifacts in one-dimensional Hadamard mask systems based on sequences of length 2 n – 1, for which the echoes are well defined. Other valid cyclic S-sequences, such as those of prime length 4 m + 3 ≠ 2 n – 1, do not exhibit such behavior. Masking errors may be present with these sequences, but they do not appear as echoes. Recovered intensities are observed having both positive and negative magnitude distributed throughout the transform axis. These masking defects appear superficially to be “noise”, making associated errors more difficult to diagnose. Masking effects in two-dimensional systems have not been previously reported. In these, the relationship between the original image and resulting “echoes” can be quite complicated. This paper treats a variety of masking effects theoretically and presents simulations based on that treatment. Mask errors are divided into first- and second-order effects depending on whether the encoding passes through a mask once or twice. Symmetric, asymmetric, and static masking errors in one-dimensional Hadamard transform systems are treated in both first- and second-order arrangements. Where prior data exist, an attempt has been made to collect and categorize known mask-related artifacts and where appropriate provide additional documentation. Mask errors may be spatially varying or spatially invariant over the mask or within a given pixel. In systems which are spatially variant, proper sampling of the image or spectrum by the elements composing the mask is a prerequisite for successful correction of the data. Corrections applied to data from masks with spatially variant errors may cause artifacts to appear and, in some instances, complete correction may be impossible. The effects of photobleaching and mask spreading due to processes such as diffraction or aberrations in both one- and two-dimensional mask systems are investigated. Photobleaching is relatively easy to correct when an exponential decay model is applicable. In second-order systems, mask spreading gives rise to echoes or distortion even in perfectly implemented masks. Mask spreading can, in many cases, be corrected by analyzing the observed “echoes” and building a correction matrix or by using knowledge of the point, line, or other spreading function of the system. Finally, in masks of length 2 n – 1, a few simple rules greatly assist in diagnosing masking effects.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. eaav7282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshitaka Kawasugi ◽  
Kazuhiro Seki ◽  
Satoshi Tajima ◽  
Jiang Pu ◽  
Taishi Takenobu ◽  
...  

A Mott insulator sometimes induces unconventional superconductivity in its neighbors when doped and/or pressurized. Because the phase diagram should be strongly related to the microscopic mechanism of the superconductivity, it is important to obtain the global phase diagram surrounding the Mott insulating state. However, the parameter available for controlling the ground state of most Mott insulating materials is one-dimensional owing to technical limitations. Here, we present a two-dimensional ground-state mapping for a Mott insulator using an organic field-effect device by simultaneously tuning the bandwidth and bandfilling. The observed phase diagram showed many unexpected features such as an abrupt first-order superconducting transition under electron doping, a recurrent insulating phase in the heavily electron-doped region, and a nearly constant superconducting transition temperature in a wide parameter range. These results are expected to contribute toward elucidating one of the standard solutions for the Mott-Hubbard model.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 340-360
Author(s):  
Ethan Kleinberg

Abstract In this article I revisit Herbert Marcuse’s 1964 work One-Dimensional Man with the goal of reactivating Marcuse’s critique of one-dimensional society but in regard to the current practice and discipline of history. On my reading, it is in the field of history that the dangers of one-dimensionality are felt most acutely today. Especially in the ways that historians and philosophers of history continue to render history as a mausoleum to warehouse an entombed and inactive past. In what follows, I offer a willful and intentional reading of the role and place of philosophy of history in One-Dimensional Man in order to demonstrate the ways that history and historians have now become key proponents of one-dimensionality. I then marshal Marcuse’s analysis, though shorn of the speculative teleology that characterizes the two-dimensional history of Marcuse’s dialectic, in order to reactivate history as a multi-dimensional force to enact change in the future.


Politics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 026339572110350
Author(s):  
Katjana Gattermann ◽  
Claes H de Vreese ◽  
Wouter van der Brug

The dominant perspective of European Parliament (EP) elections is that these are second-order national elections where little is at stake. This Special Issue asks whether this perspective is still valid in view of increased politicization of European integration and in view of the higher turnout levels at the last EP elections. This introduction provides a general framework for the Special Issue and reflects upon some of its main findings. We argue that EP elections can only be considered first-order if they are primarily about the policies, rather than the polity. Some of the contributions in this Special Issue suggest that this is indeed the case. We reflect upon this and argue that there are reasons to expect that EP elections will become more first order in the future.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (04) ◽  
pp. 1650045 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahiro Yajima ◽  
Kazuhito Yamasaki

Geometric structures of dynamical systems are investigated based on a differential geometric method (Jacobi stability of KCC-theory). This study focuses on differences of Jacobi stability of two-dimensional second-order differential equation from that of one-dimensional second-order differential equation. One of different properties from a one-dimensional case is the Jacobi unstable condition given by eigenvalues of deviation curvature with different signs. Then, this geometric theory is applied to an overhead crane system as a two-dimensional dynamical system. It is shown a relationship between the Hopf bifurcation of linearized overhead crane and the Jacobi stability. Especially, the Jacobi stable trajectory is found for stable and unstable spirals of the two-dimensional linearized system. In case of the linearized overhead crane system, the Jacobi stable spiral approaches to the equilibrium point faster than the Jacobi unstable spiral. This means that the Jacobi stability is related to the resilience of deviated trajectory in the transient state. Moreover, for the nonlinear overhead crane system, the Jacobi stability for limit cycle changes stable and unstable over time.


2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. P. Markakis

Certain nonlinear autonomous ordinary differential equations of the second order are reduced to Abel equations of the first kind ((Ab-1) equations). Based on the results of a previous work, concerning a closed-form solution of a general (Ab-1) equation, and introducing an arbitrary function, exact one-parameter families of solutions are derived for the original autonomous equations, for the most of which only first integrals (in closed or parametric form) have been obtained so far. Two-dimensional autonomous systems of differential equations of the first order, equivalent to the considered herein autonomous forms, are constructed and solved by means of the developed analysis.


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