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From Amazon to Tinder, from Google to Deliveroo, there is no facet
of human life which the digital revolution has not streamlined and
dematerialised. Its objective was to reduce the cost of physical
interactions by forgoing face-to-face interactions, a direct result
of the free-market shock of the 1980s, which sought to seamlessly
expand the marketplace in every possible dimension. Today, we can
be algorithmically entertained, educated, cared for and courted in
a way which was impossible in the old industrial society, where
institutions structured the social world. Today, these institutions
have been replaced by monetised virtual contact. As with the
industrial revolution of the past, the digital revolution is
creating a new economy and a new sensibility, bringing about a
radical revaluation of society and its representations.Â
While obsessed with the search for an efficient management of human
relations, the new digital capitalism gives rise to an irrational
and impulsive Homo numericus prone to an array of addictive
behaviours. Far from producing a new agora, social media
produce a radicalization of public debate in which hate-filled
speech directed against adversaries becomes the norm. The
good news is that these outcomes are not inevitable. Technologies
have not taken control of our lives. The digital revolution also
offers an alternative path: one that leads to a world in which
every word deserves to be listened to, without a transcendent truth
hanging over it. Are we able to seize the new opportunities
opened up by the digital revolution without succumbing to its dark
side?
The end of the Second World War in Europe gave way to a gigantic
refugee crisis. Thoroughly prepared by Allied military planners,
the swift repatriation of millions of former forced laborers,
concentration camp inmates and prisoners of war nearly brought this
dramatic episode top a close. Yet in September 1945, the number of
displaced persons placed under the guardianship of Allied armies
and relief agencies in occupied Germany amounted to 1.5 million. A
costly burden for the occupying powers, the Jewish, Polish,
Ukrainian, Yugoslav and Baltic DPs unwilling to return to their
countries of origin presented a complex international problem.
Massed in refugee camps stretched from Northern Germany to Sicily,
the DPs had become long-term asylum seekers.
Based on the records of the International Refugee Organization,
this book describes how the European DP crisis impinged on the
shape of the postwar order. The DP question directly affected the
outbreak of the Cold War; the transformation of the "West" into a
new geopolitical entity; the conduct of political purges and
retribution; the ideology and methods of modern humanitarian
interventions; the appearance of international agencies and
non-governmental organizations; the emergence of an international
human rights system; the organization of migration movements and
the redistribution of "surplus populations"; the advent of Jewish
nationhood; and postwar categorizations of political and
humanitarian refugees.
Most of us would agree that we want to live a successful life. But
what constitutes a successful life? How do we measure a life well
lived?Mining for Gold: Essays Exploring the Relevancy of Torah in
the Modern World focuses on these questions of life's values.
Editor Rabbi Daniel Cohen has compiled essays from twenty leading
rabbis in North America and Israel to reveal how the gold standard
of living well can be reached in the modern world. Their
conclusions find that ultimate wealth comes from having a good name
or a virtuous character. The time to earn that good name is now,
not when one is lying on a deathbed. If one's life is infused with
the timeless values of family, friends, faith, and goodness, the
end of life will come with few regrets. In this book, new insights
on amplifying these values in your life are provided.One person who
lived these values every day was Lester Gold. Mining for Gold:
Essays Exploring the Relevancy of Torah in the Modern World is a
tribute to his life and the timeless values he embodied. He
understood that the answers to life's mysteries emerge from the
Bible, the Torah. These essays and reflections from Lester's
friends and family will help you do the same.
Neuroscience, Selflessness, and Spiritual Transcendence conveys the
manner by which selflessness serves as a neuropsychological and
religious foundation for spiritually transcendent experiences. The
book combines neurological case studies and neuroscience research
with religious accounts of transcendence experiences from the
perspective of both the neurosciences and the history of religions.
Chapters cover the subjective experience of transcendence, an
historical summary of different philosophical and religious
perspectives, a review of the neuroscience research that describes
the manner by which the brain processes and creates a self, and
more. The book presents a model that bridges the divide between
neuroscience and religion, presenting a resource that will be
critical reading for advanced students and researchers in both
fields.
How populism is fueled by the demise of the industrial order and
the emergence of a new digital society ruled by algorithms In the
revolutionary excitement of the 1960s, young people around the
world called for a radical shift away from the old industrial
order, imagining a future of technological liberation and
unfettered prosperity. Industrial society did collapse, and a
digital economy has risen to take its place, yet many have been
left feeling marginalized and deprived of the possibility of a
better life. The Inglorious Years explores the many ways we have
been let down by the rising tide of technology, showing how our new
interconnectivity is not fulfilling its promise. In this revelatory
book, economist Daniel Cohen describes how today's postindustrial
society is transforming us all into sequences of data that can be
manipulated by algorithms from anywhere on the planet. As
yesterday's assembly line was replaced by working online, the
leftist protests of the 1960s have given way to angry protests by
the populist right. Cohen demonstrates how the digital economy
creates the same mix of promises and disappointments as the old
industrial order, and how it revives questions about society that
are as relevant to us today as they were to the ancients. Brilliant
and provocative, The Inglorious Years discusses what the new
digital society holds in store for us, and reveals how can we once
again regain control of our lives.
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Great Mistakes (Paperback)
Daniel Cohen; Illustrated by Margaret C. Brier
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Great mistakes make great reading! No area of human endeavor is
immune to human error, as these stories of mistakes throughout
history clearly show. Some of these mistakes are foolish or funny.
Others are serious, terrifying or disastrous. Some are famous.
Others are not well known. All of them are marvelously
entertaining. Here is the amusing story of a triple double play,
the little-known truth about the awesome angle of the Leaning Tower
of Pisa, the harrowing tale of the man who was hanged twice. The
famous and colorful mayor of New York, Fiorello La Guardia, once
said, "I don't make many mistakes, but when I make one, it's a
beaut." Everyone makes mistakes-mayors, presidents, kings,
generals, police officers, judges, scientists, explorers,
millionaires, baseball players, parents and students. So remember
when you make a mistake, you are not alone! You are in the company
of some of the most powerful and smartest people in history!
Hiram Bingham was the ideal explorer-adventurer handsome, rich,
intelligent, brave, and tough. His life seems like something out of
film hero Indiana Jones s exploits in Raiders of the Lost Ark. The
descendant of strong-willed missionaries, Bingham was born in
Hawaii in 1875, At Yale he specialized in South American studies
and became a college teacher. Gradually, the romance of the past
took hold of his practical soul. Obsessed by the Incas and his
dream of uncovering lost cities, Bingham initiated and expedition
to Peru that would lead him to uncharted territories. Using
quotations from Bingham s accounts, Cohen describes how in 1911
Bingham made the greatest archaeological find of the century, the
rediscovery of Machu Picchu, the abandoned Inca city in the remote
Peruvian mountains. On later expeditions he discovered other lost
cities, as he continued his research on the mysteries of Machu
Picchu and the last of the Incans, despite the physical hardships
and dangers of exploration. When World War I broke out, Bingham
learned to fly no small accomplishment in those pioneering days of
aviation. He eventually joined the American forces in France as
head of the largest Allied flight training base in Europe. After
the war, the ambitious and restless Bingham entered a new career,
politics, and was elected senator from Connecticut in a landslide
victory. But he was too proud an individualist to do well in
government. Bingham spent the rest of his life writing and
lecturing. Bingham led the kind of action-packed life that most
people only dream of. Daniel Cohen has written a story sure to
capture the imagination of everyone who likes history enlivened by
cliff-hanging adventures."
Henry Stanley's physical and mental toughness earned him the
nickname Bula Matari, "Rock Breaker." Although best known for
finding the lost Scottish missionary David Livingstone, the
explorer and journalist had many other adventures around the world.
Born in Wales in 1841, he was placed in a workhouse by his uncle at
the age of six. Stanley escaped nine years later and made his way
to New Orleans by working as a cabin boy. He fought for the
Confederacy and was taken prisoner at Shiloh, one of the Civil
War's bloodiest fights. After the war, Stanley discovered his
talent for journalism and traveled thousands of miles to cover
battles and other news. His abilities made him the perfect man to
lead the New York Herald's expedition to Africa to find
Livingstone. The two men became friends, and when Livingstone died,
Stanley felt it was his duty to continue his work, including the
search for and confirmation of the Nile's source. From 1874 to
1877, Stanley embarked on an expedition that mapped huge areas of
central Africa. He encountered tribal warfare, exotic illnesses,
and dense jungles, but nothing stopped him. On his last African
journey, Stanley helped rescue a government official, Emin Pasha,
who was trapped in Sudan during a revolt to drive Europeans and
Egyptians out of the country. While on this expedition, Stanley
located the fabled Mountains of the Moon, the ultimate source for
the Nile.
A Sampler of Useful Computational Tools for Applied Geometry,
Computer Graphics, and Image Processing shows how to use a
collection of mathematical techniques to solve important problems
in applied mathematics and computer science areas. The book
discusses fundamental tools in analytical geometry and linear
algebra. It covers a wide range of topics, from matrix
decomposition to curvature analysis and principal component
analysis to dimensionality reduction. Written by a team of highly
respected professors, the book can be used in a one-semester,
intermediate-level course in computer science. It takes a practical
problem-solving approach, avoiding detailed proofs and analysis.
Suitable for readers without a deep academic background in
mathematics, the text explains how to solve non-trivial geometric
problems. It quickly gets readers up to speed on a variety of tools
employed in visual computing and applied geometry.
In this book, Daniel Cohen explores the connections between
arguments and metaphors most pronounced in philosophy, because
philosophical discourse is both thoroughly metaphorical and replete
with argumentation. The metaphors we use for arguments, as well as
the ways we use metaphors as arguments and in arguments, provides
the basis for a tripartite theoretical framework for understanding
and evaluating arguments. There are logical, rhetorical, and
dialectical dimensions to arguments, each providing norms for
conduct, vocabulary for evaluation, and criteria for success. In
turn, the identified roles for arguments in general discourse can
be applied to metaphors, helping to explain what they mean and how
they work. Cohen covers the nature of arguments, their modes and
structures, and the principles of their evaluation. He also
addresses the nature of metaphors, their place in language and
thought, and their connections to arguments, identifying and
reconciling arguments' and metaphors' respective roles in
philosophy.
The end of the Second World War in Europe gave way to a gigantic
refugee crisis. Thoroughly prepared by Allied military planners,
the swift repatriation of millions of former forced laborers,
concentration camp inmates and prisoners of war nearly brought this
dramatic episode top a close. Yet in September 1945, the number of
displaced persons placed under the guardianship of Allied armies
and relief agencies in occupied Germany amounted to 1.5 million. A
costly burden for the occupying powers, the Jewish, Polish,
Ukrainian, Yugoslav and Baltic DPs unwilling to return to their
countries of origin presented a complex international problem.
Massed in refugee camps stretched from Northern Germany to Sicily,
the DPs had become long-term asylum seekers. Based on the records
of the International Refugee Organization, this book describes how
the European DP crisis impinged on the shape of the postwar order.
The DP question directly affected the outbreak of the Cold War; the
transformation of the "West" into a new geopolitical entity; the
conduct of political purges and retribution; the ideology and
methods of modern humanitarian interventions; the appearance of
international agencies and non-governmental organizations; the
emergence of an international human rights system; the organization
of migration movements and the redistribution of "surplus
populations"; the advent of Jewish nationhood; and postwar
categorizations of political and humanitarian refugees.
Why society’s expectation of economic growth is no longer
realistic Economic growth—and the hope of better things to
come—is the religion of the modern world. Yet its prospects have
become bleak, with crashes following booms in an endless cycle. In
the United States, eighty percent of the population has seen no
increase in purchasing power over the last thirty years and the
situation is not much better elsewhere. The Infinite Desire for
Growth spotlights the obsession with wanting more, and the global
tensions that have arisen as a result. Daniel Cohen provides a
whirlwind tour of the history of economic growth, from the early
days of civilization to modern times, underscoring what is so
unsettling today. He examines how a future less dependent on
material gain might be considered, and how, in a culture of
competition, individual desires might be better attuned to the
greater needs of society.
From New York Times best-selling author Thomas Piketty and noted
Professors of Economis Daniel Cohen and Gilles Saint-Paul, comes an
in-depth discussion of rising inequalities in the western world. It
explores the extent to which rising inequalities are the mechanical
consequence of changes in economic fundamentals (such as changes in
technological or demographic parameters), and to what extent they
are the contingent consequences of country-specific and
time-specific changes in institutions.
Both the 'fundamentalist' view and the 'institutionalist' view have
some relevance. For instance, the decline of traditional
manufacturing employment since the 1970s has been associated in
every developed country with a rise of labor-market inequality (the
inequality of labor earnings within the working-age population has
gone up in all countries), which lends support to the
fundamentalist view. But, on the other hand, everybody agrees that
institutional differences (minimum wage, collective bargaining, tax
and transfer policy, etc.) between Continental European countries
and Anglo-Saxon countries explain why disposable income inequality
trajectories have been so different in those two groups of
countries during the 1980s-90s, which lends support to the
institutionalist view.
The chapters in this volume show the strength of both views.
Through empirical evidence and new theoretical insights the
contributors argue that institutions always play a crucial role in
shaping inequalities, and sometimes preventing them, but that
inequalities across age, sex, and skills often recur. From Sweden
to Spain and Portugal, from Italy to Japan and the USA, the volume
explores the diversity of the interplay between market forces and
institutions.
Why society's expectation of economic growth is no longer realistic
Economic growth--and the hope of better things to come-is the
religion of the modern world. Yet its prospects have become bleak,
with crashes following booms in an endless cycle. In the United
States, eighty percent of the population has seen no increase in
purchasing power over the last thirty years and the situation is
not much better elsewhere. The Infinite Desire for Growth
spotlights the obsession with wanting more, and the global tensions
that have arisen as a result. Amid finite resources, increasing
populations, environmental degradation, and political unrest, the
quest for new social and individual goals has never been so
critical. Leading economist Daniel Cohen provides a whirlwind tour
of the history of economic growth, from the early days of
civilization to modern times, underscoring what is so unsettling
today. The new digital economy is establishing a "zero-cost"
production model, inexpensive software is taking over basic tasks,
and years of exploiting the natural world have begun to backfire
with deadly consequences. Working hard no longer guarantees social
inclusion or income. Drawing on economics, anthropology, and
psychology, and thinkers ranging from Rousseau to Keynes and
Easterlin, Cohen examines how a future less dependent on material
gain might be considered and, how, in a culture of competition,
individual desires might be better attuned to the greater needs of
society. At a time when wanting what we haven't got has become an
obsession, The Infinite Desire for Growth explores the ways we
might reinvent, for the twenty-first century, the old ideal of
social progress.
This book is an in-depth discussion of rising inequalities in the western world. It explores the extent to which rising inequalities are the mechanical consequence of changes in economic fundamentals (such as changes in technological or demographic parameters), and to what extent they are the contingent consequences of country-specific and time-specific changes in institutions. It includes both theoretical and empirical contributions.
This volume presents the proceedings of the first French-Soviet
workshop on algebraic coding, held in Paris in July 1991. The idea
for the workshop, born in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) in 1990,
was to bring together some of the best Soviet coding theorists.
Scientists from France, Finland, Germany, Israel, Italy, Spain, and
the United States also attended. The papers in the volume fall
rather naturally into four categories: - Applications of
exponential sums - Covering radius - Constructions -Decoding.
This book presents a selection of the papers presented at EUROCODE
'90, the symposium on coding theory held in Udine, Italy, November
1990. It gives the state of the art on coding in Europe and ranges
from theoretical top- ics like algebraic geometry and combinatorial
coding to applications like modulation, real-space decoding and
VLSI implementation. The book is divided into eight sections: -
Algebraic codes - Combinatorial codes - Geometric codes -
Protection of information - Convolutional codes - Information
theory - Modulation - Applications of coding. Five of the sections
are introduced by an invited contribution.
This book contains a selection of papers presented at a Symposium
on coding theory: "3 Journees sur le Codage," held November 24-26,
1986, in Cachan near Paris, France. It gives an account of the
state of the art of research in France on Coding, ranging from
rather theoretical topics like algebraic geometry and combinatorial
coding to applications like modulation, real-space decoding and
implementation of coding algorithms on microcomputers. The
symposium was the second one of this type. With its broad spectrum,
it was a unique opportunity for contacts between university and
industry on the topics of information and coding theory.
This book contains a selection of papers presented at a Symposium
on coding theory: "3 Journ es sur le Codage," held November 24-26,
1986, in Cachan near Paris, France. It gives an account of the
state of the art of research in France on Coding, ranging from
rather theoretical topics like algebraic geometry and combinatorial
coding to applications like modulation, real-space decoding and
implementation of coding algorithms on microcomputers. The
symposium was the second one of this type. With its broad spectrum,
it was a unique opportunity for contacts between university and
industry on the topics of information and coding theory.
The view that the Internet and the information and communication
technology (ICT) revolution would deliver a frictionless economy
without recessions is, at least for the time being, dead. This book
takes stock of the ICT revolution, going well below the surface to
ask and answer a few key questions: did the ICT revolution
contribute to the divergence in the growth record? And if this is
the case, how and why were some countries better equipped to
exploit the potential of ICT? The naive approach to the Internet
views e-commerce as a means to achieve a perfect world of
competition. By making information cheap and readily available, it
should allow the affluent consumer to raise competitive pressure on
firms, help the firms themselves to put competitive pressure on
their own suppliers and so on. For the poor countries, the story
goes, the Internet should lower the barriers to entry to rich
countries' markets and foster their inclusion in world markets.
However, the theory of economic geography does not support the idea
that geography becomes irrelevant as the cost of distance is
reduced.
How populism is fueled by the demise of the industrial order and
the emergence of a new digital society ruled by algorithms In the
revolutionary excitement of the 1960s, young people around the
world called for a radical shift away from the old industrial
order, imagining a future of technological liberation and
unfettered prosperity. Industrial society did collapse, and a
digital economy has risen to take its place, yet many have been
left feeling marginalized and deprived of the possibility of a
better life. The Inglorious Years explores the many ways we have
been let down by the rising tide of technology, showing how our new
interconnectivity is not fulfilling its promise. In this revelatory
book, economist Daniel Cohen describes how today's postindustrial
society is transforming us all into sequences of data that can be
manipulated by algorithms from anywhere on the planet. As
yesterday's assembly line was replaced by working online, the
leftist protests of the 1960s have given way to angry protests by
the populist right. Cohen demonstrates how the digital economy
creates the same mix of promises and disappointments as the old
industrial order, and how it revives questions about society that
are as relevant to us today as they were to the ancients. Brilliant
and provocative, The Inglorious Years discusses what the new
digital society holds in store for us, and reveals how can we once
again regain control of our lives.
A study of the nature and the policy implication of changes in the
global economy in relationship to the process of regional
integration, conducted using the newest techniques of economic
analysis. The principal message drawn from these analytical and
policy insights is that in a world characterised by trade
distortions and nonlinearities, regional integration may or may not
foster global integration, and may or may not advance regional or
global convergence. The key is good economic policy based on sound
economic analysis. Part one of the volume covers three
international trade policy issues: regionalism and multilateralism;
the political economy of trade policy; and trade income inequality.
Part two (chapters 7-11) focuses on three 'domestic' problems faced
by regional groups: labour migration; exchange rate arrangements;
and real convergence.
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