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Although the ideas of ""tradition"" and ""modernity"" may seem to
be directly opposed, David Ellenson, a leading contemporary scholar
of modern Jewish thought, understood that these concepts can also
enjoy a more fluid relationship. In honor of Ellenson, editors
Michael A. Meyer and David N. Myers have gathered contributors for
Between Jewish Tradition and Modernity: Rethinking an Old
Opposition to examine the permutations and adaptations of these
intertwined forms of Jewish expression. Contributions draw from a
range of disciplines and scholarly interests and range in subject
from the theological to the liturgical, sociological, and literary.
The geographic and historical focus of the volume is on the United
States and the State of Israel, both of which have been major sites
of inquiry in Ellenson's work. In twenty-two essays, contributors
demonstrate that modernity did not simply replace tradition in
Judaism but rather entered into a variety of relationships with it:
adopting or adapting certain elements, repossessing rituals that
had once been abandoned, or struggling with its continuing
influence. In four parts - Law, Ritual, Thought, and Culture -
contributors explore a variety of subjects, including the role of
reform in Israeli Orthodoxy, traditions of twentieth-century
bar/bat mitzvah, end-of-life ethics, tensions between Zionism and
American Jewry, and the rise of a 1960s New York Jewish
countrerculture. An introductory essay also presents an
appreciation of Ellenson's scholarly contribution. Bringing
together leading Jewish historians, anthropologists, sociologists,
philosophers and liturgists, Between Jewish Tradition and Modernity
offers a collective view of a historically and culturally
significant issue that will be of interest to Jewish scholars of
many discplines. Contributors Include: Adam S. Ferziger, Jack
Wertheimer, Jonathan D. Sarna, Deborah E. Lipstadt, Michael A.
Meyer, Steven M. Lowenstein, William Cutter, Riv-Ellen Prell,
Carole B. Balin, Arnold J. Band, Paula E. Hyman, Zvi Zohar, Elliot
N. Dorff, Isa Aron, Dalia Marx, Arnold M. Eisen, Michael Marmur,
Rachel Adler, Lewis M. Barth, Lawrence A. Hoffman, Wendy I.
Zierler.
This book offers a new perspective into the world of international
schools and the lucrative industry that accompanies it. It examines
how the notion of the 'global' becomes a successful commodity, an
important social imaginary and a valuable identity marker for these
communities of privileged migrants and host country nationals. The
author invites the reader on an ethnographic journey through an
international school community located in Germany - illuminating
the central features that define and maintain the sector, including
its emphasis on 'globality', engagement with the concept of 'Third
Culture Kid', and its wider contentious relationship with the
'local'. While much attention is placed on 'global citizenship',
international school communities experience degrees of isolation,
limited mobility, over-protection and dependency on the school
community- impacting their everyday lives, inside and outside the
school. This book is guided by larger questions pertaining to the
education and mobilities of 'migrant' youths and young adults, as
well as the notion of what it means to be 'global' today.
A collection of essays that explore the effects of modernization on
Jewish self-understanding. Over the last three centurles, the
Jewish experience has been profoundly affected by modernity, which
Meyer defines as not only technological advance, cultural
innovation, and reliance upon human reason but also as the
adaptation of Jews to a modern framework within non-Jewish
economies, societies, and cultures. Judaism within Modernity begins
with an exploration of Jewish historiography and the problems of
periodization in modern Jewish history. In these beginning essays
we see the range of Meyer's thinking about what constitutes
modernization and how to determine its beginning. He discusses the
role of history in defining identity among Jews and suggests that
finding an adequate paradigm of continuity is essential to the
historian's task. The essays in the second section focus on the
Jews of Germany. Here Meyer writes about the influence of German
Jews on Jews in the United States, comparing the historical
experience of the two communities. These essays also address the
intersection of religion, scholarship, and history with politics in
nineteenth- and twentiety-century Germany. A third section deals
with the European Reform movement, which brought a liberal Judaism
to the majority of German Jews. Here Meyer likewise presents a
fresh perspective on the way the Reform movement was viewed by
those outside of it, especially by non-Jews. The essays in the
final section explore Judaism in the United States. In particular,
they show how reform Judaism and Zionism were able to recondle
their initial differences. Judaism within Modernity is an
impressive collection of essays written by a renowned Jewish
historian and will be a standard volume for students and scholars
of the modern Jewish experience.
"The Culture of Christendom" brings together original essays by
distinguished historians on medieval European history. Their range
reflects the breadth of Denis Bethell's own interests, which though
centred on the high medieval church encompassed the culture of the
middle ages as a whole.
Meyer's Geometry and Its Applications, Second Edition, combines
traditional geometry with current ideas to present a modern
approach that is grounded in real-world applications. It balances
the deductive approach with discovery learning, and introduces
axiomatic, Euclidean geometry, non-Euclidean geometry, and
transformational geometry. The text integrates applications and
examples throughout and includes historical notes in many chapters.
The Second Edition of Geometry and Its Applications is a
significant text for any college or university that focuses on
geometry's usefulness in other disciplines. It is especially
appropriate for engineering and science majors, as well as future
mathematics teachers.
* Realistic applications integrated throughout the text, including
(but not limited to):
- Symmetries of artistic patterns
- Physics
- Robotics
- Computer vision
- Computer graphics
- Stability of architectural structures
- Molecular biology
- Medicine
- Pattern recognition
* Historical notes included in many chapters
* Instructor's Manual with solutions available for all adopters of
the text
The intestinal protozoan Giardia was first described over 300 years
ago in 1681 by Leeuwenhoek, from his own stools. In his description
of Giardia, he noted the size, movement, and morphology of the
organism, and associated its presence with the diarrheic nature of
his stools and his dietary habits. This truly remarkable account
contains the first description of Giardia in morphologic,
pathogenic, and epidemiologic terms. Our knowledge of the organisms
in the genus Giardia has advanced tremendously in the past two
decades. With the advent of new tech nologies, including techniques
in electron microscopy, biochemistry, immunochemistry, tissue
culture, and physiology, a tidal wave of information has appeared
on the organization and function of this parasitic protozoan and
its interaction with its host. The purpose of this book is to
celebrate the tricentennial discovery of Giardia by Leeuwenhoek by
presenting the above-mentioned advances in our knowledge of Giardia
and giardiasis. In the first section of this book, the dominant
theme is the biology of the organism and the correlation of
structure-function relationships."
The birth of modern Jewish studies can be traced to the
nineteenth-century emergence of the Wissenschaft des Judentums, a
movement to promote a scholarly approach to the study of Judaism
and Jewish culture. Frontiers of Jewish Scholarship offers a
collection of essays examining how Wissenschaft extended beyond its
original German intellectual contexts and was transformed into a
diverse, global field. From the early expansion of the new
scholarly approaches into Jewish publications across Europe to
their translation and reinterpretation in the twentieth century,
the studies included here collectively trace a path through largely
neglected subject matter, newly recognized as deserving attention.
Beginning with an introduction that surveys the field's German
origins, fortunes, and contexts, the volume goes on to document
dimensions of the growth of Wissenschaft des Judentums elsewhere in
Europe and throughout the world. Some of the contributions turn to
literary and semantic issues, while others reveal the penetration
of Jewish studies into new national contexts that include Hungary,
Italy, and even India. Individual essays explore how the United
States, along with Israel, emerged as a main center for Jewish
historical scholarship and how critical Jewish scholarship began to
accommodate Zionist ideology originating in Eastern Europe and
eventually Marxist ideology, primarily in the Soviet Union.
Finally, the focus of the volume moves on to the land of Israel,
focusing on the reception of Orientalism and Jewish scholarly
contacts with Yemenite and native Muslim intellectuals. Taken
together, the contributors to the volume offer new material and
fresh approaches that rethink the relationship of Jewish studies to
the larger enterprise of critical scholarship while highlighting
its relevance to the history of humanistic inquiry worldwide.
This collection of challenging and well-designed test problems
arising in literature studies also contains a wide spectrum of
applications, including pooling/blending operations, heat exchanger
network synthesis, homogeneous azeotropic separation, and dynamic
optimization and optimal control problems.
This book is a study of how market-oriented policies could be used
to improve trade-off between cost restraint and greater quality and
availability to restructure the way the public and private sectors
provide health care.
America's ability to deliver quality health care efficiently to its
citizens is both an important component of national productivity
and a hallmark of a civilized society. Recognizing the critical
need to reform and restructure the way the public and the private
sectors provide health care, CED trustees launched a study of how
market-oriented pol
This book offers a new perspective into the world of international
schools and the lucrative industry that accompanies it. It examines
how the notion of the 'global' becomes a successful commodity, an
important social imaginary and a valuable identity marker for these
communities of privileged migrants and host country nationals. The
author invites the reader on an ethnographic journey through an
international school community located in Germany - illuminating
the central features that define and maintain the sector, including
its emphasis on 'globality', engagement with the concept of 'Third
Culture Kid', and its wider contentious relationship with the
'local'. While much attention is placed on 'global citizenship',
international school communities experience degrees of isolation,
limited mobility, over-protection and dependency on the school
community- impacting their everyday lives, inside and outside the
school. This book is guided by larger questions pertaining to the
education and mobilities of 'migrant' youths and young adults, as
well as the notion of what it means to be 'global' today.
Rabbi, educator, intellectual, and community leader, Leo Baeck
(1873-1956) was one of the most important Jewish figures of prewar
Germany. The publication of his 1905 Das Wesen des Judentums (The
Essence of Judaism) established him as a major voice for liberal
Judaism. He served as a chaplain to the German army during the
First World War and in the years following, resisting the call of
political Zionism, he expressed his commitment to the belief in a
vibrant place for Jews in a new Germany. This hope was dashed with
the rise of Nazism, and from 1933 on, and continuing even after his
deportation to Theresienstadt, he worked tirelessly in his capacity
as a leader of the German Jewish community to offer his
coreligionists whatever practical, intellectual, and spiritual
support remained possible. While others after the war worked to
rebuild German Jewish life from the ashes, a disillusioned Baeck
pronounced the effort misguided and spent the rest of his life in
England. Yet his name is perhaps best-known today from the Leo
Baeck Institutes in New York, London, Berlin, and Jerusalem
dedicated to the preservation of the cultural heritage of
German-speaking Jewry. Michael A. Meyer has written a biography
that gives equal consideration to Leo Baeck's place as a courageous
community leader and as one of the most significant Jewish
religious thinkers of the twentieth century, comparable to such
better-known figures as Martin Buber, Franz Rosenzweig, and Abraham
Joshua Heschel. According to Meyer, to understand Baeck fully, one
must probe not only his thought and public activity but also his
personality. Generally described as gentle and kind, he could also
be combative when necessary, and a streak of puritanism and an
outsized veneration for martyrdom ran through his psychological
makeup. Drawing on a broad variety of sources, some coming to light
only in recent years, but especially turning to Baeck's own
writings, Meyer presents a complex and nuanced image of one of the
most noteworthy personalities in the Jewish history of our age.
The intestinal protozoan Giardia was first described over 300 years
ago in 1681 by Leeuwenhoek, from his own stools. In his description
of Giardia, he noted the size, movement, and morphology of the
organism, and associated its presence with the diarrheic nature of
his stools and his dietary habits. This truly remarkable account
contains the first description of Giardia in morphologic,
pathogenic, and epidemiologic terms. Our knowledge of the organisms
in the genus Giardia has advanced tremendously in the past two
decades. With the advent of new tech nologies, including techniques
in electron microscopy, biochemistry, immunochemistry, tissue
culture, and physiology, a tidal wave of information has appeared
on the organization and function of this parasitic protozoan and
its interaction with its host. The purpose of this book is to
celebrate the tricentennial discovery of Giardia by Leeuwenhoek by
presenting the above-mentioned advances in our knowledge of Giardia
and giardiasis. In the first section of this book, the dominant
theme is the biology of the organism and the correlation of
structure-function relationships."
This collection of challenging and well-designed test problems
arising in literature studies also contains a wide spectrum of
applications, including pooling/blending operations, heat exchanger
network synthesis, homogeneous azeotropic separation, and dynamic
optimization and optimal control problems.
In recent years, the classical theory of stochastic integration and
stochastic differential equations has been extended to a
non-commutative set-up to develop models for quantum noises. The
author, a specialist of classical stochastic calculus and
martingale theory, tries to provide an introduction to this rapidly
expanding field in a way which should be accessible to probabilists
familiar with the Ito integral. It can also, on the other hand,
provide a means of access to the methods of stochastic calculus for
physicists familiar with Fock space analysis. For this second
edition, the author has added about 30 pages of new material,
mostly on quantum stochastic integrals.
This volume represents a part of the main result obtained by a
group of French probabilists, together with the contributions of a
number of colleagues, mainly from the USA and Japan. All the papers
present new results obtained during the academic year 1991-1992.
The main themes of the papers are: quantum probability (P.A. Meyer
and S. Attal), stochastic calculus (M. Nagasawa, J.B. Walsh, F.
Knight, to name a few authors), fine properties of Brownian motion
(Bertoin, Burdzy, Mountford), stochastic differential geometry
(Arnaudon, Elworthy), quasi-sure analysis (Lescot, Song, Hirsch).
Taken all together, the papers contained in this volume reflect the
main directions of the most up-to-date research in probability
theory. FROM THE CONTENTS: J.P. Ansal, C. Stricker: Unicite et
existence de la loi minimale.- K. Kawazu, H. Tanaka: On the maximum
of a diffusion process in a drifted Brownian environment.- P.A.
Meyer: Representation de martingales d'operateurs, d'apres
Parthasarathy-Sinha.- K. Burdzy: Excursion laws and exceptional
points on Brownian paths.- X. Fernique: Convergence en loi de
variables aleatoires et de fonctions aleatoires, proprietes de
compacite des lois, II.- M. Nagasawa: Principle ofsuperposition and
interference of diffusion processes.- F. Knight: Some remarks on
mutual windings.- S. Song: Inegalites relatives aux processus
d'Ornstein-Ulhenbeck a n-parametres et capacite gaussienne c
(n,2).- S. Attal, P.A. Meyer: Interpretation probabiliste et
extension des integrales stochastiques non commutatives.- J. Azema,
Th. Jeulin, F. Knight, M. Yor: Le theoreme d'arret en une fin
d'ensemble previsible.
All the papers contained in the volume are original, fully refereed
researchpapers. They represent a fairly broad spectrum of the
research activity in probability theory, which was done
internationally in 1990-1991, with particular emphasis on Markov
processes and stochastic calculus. The latter subject keeps
growing, and some important new developments, included in the
volume, concern anticipative stochastic integrals, and new
applications of the enlargements of filtrations to the study of
zeros of martingales. FROM THE CONTENTS: R. Bass, D. Khoshnevisan:
Stochastic calculus and the continuity of local times of Levy
processes.- M.T. Barlow, P. Imkeller: On some sample path
properties of Skorokhod integral processes.- T.S. Mountford: A
critical function for the planar Brownian convex hull.- L. Dubins,
M. Smorodinsky: The modified, discrete Levy transformation is
Bernoulli.- M. Baxter: Markov processes on the boundary of the
binary tree.- R. Abraham: Unarbre aleatoire infini associe a
l'excursion brownienne.- S.E. Kuznetsov: On the existence of a dual
semigroup.
You probably know that food, water, sunlight, and oxygen are
required for life, but there is a fifth element of health that is
equally vital and often overlooked: The Earth's magnetic field and
its corresponding PEMFs (pulsed electromagnetic fields). The two
main components of Earth's PEMFs, the Schumann and Geomagnetic
frequencies, are so essential that NASA and the Russian space
program equip their spacecrafts with devices that replicate these
frequencies. These frequencies are absolutely necessary for the
human body's circadian rhythms, energy production, and even keeping
the body free from pain. But there is a big problem on planet earth
right now, rather, a twofold problem, as to why we are no longer
getting these life-nurturing energies of the earth. In this book
we'll explore the current problem and how the new science of PEMF
therapy (a branch of energy medicine), based on modern quantum
field theory, is the solution to this problem, with the many
benefits listed below:
- eliminate pain and inflammation naturally - get deep,
rejuvenating sleep - increase your energy and vitality - feel
younger, stronger, and more flexible - keep your bones strong and
healthy - help your body with healing and regeneration - improve
circulation and heart health - plus many more benefits
Results important for the general understanding of nuclear
structure have emerged from the study of the nuclei in the mass
region around the neutron-deficient and neutron-rich Zirconium
isotopes. This research report gives the proceedings of a workshop
which brought together about 70 experts in the area. Review papers
deal with the theoretical interpretation of the unusual properties
of these medium-mass nuclei, using the mean field approach, a
microscopic description, the interacting boson model and particle
rotor calculations. Papers also discuss experimental procedures for
studying nuclei far from stability and the possibility of complete
spectroscopy. The reviews are supplemented by short contributions
presenting very new results. Phenomena discussed include the
interplay between subshell effects and the strong proton-neutron
interaction in determining nuclear shape, the coexistence of
different nuclear shape and the occurrence of fast beta decay.
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