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This study analyses the politics of climate policy in a range of
affluent democracies and at EU level in order to identify political
strategies that would make it easier for governments to make major
cuts in greenhouse gas emissions without sustaining significant
political damage.
This book offers an original interpretation and close reading of
Plato's Phaedo, focusing on the relation between logos and the soul
in order to illuminate the ethical and political dimensions of
philosophy as "care of the soul." Jesse I. Bailey argues that the
central issue of the dialogue is the relation between logos and the
defining activity of the soul. The soul, in accord with logos,
gathers the multiplicity of phenomena into the intelligible wholes
of experience. This definitive activity also applies to the soul
itself, as the soul gathers itself to itself in logos. Ethical
living demands the development of a harmonious unity in the self
through this activity. Thus, the book argues that the traditional
"pillars" of Platonism-the immortality of the soul and the
Forms-are presented not as fully-developed theories to be accepted
by the reader whole cloth, but rather as provocations for thought.
This study analyses the politics of climate policy in a range of
affluent democracies and at EU level in order to identify political
strategies that would make it easier for governments to make major
cuts in greenhouse gas emissions without sustaining significant
political damage.
The American primary tank in the Second World War was inferior to
its German counterpart for all but the final months of the war. The
U.S. tank evolved and demonstrated its superiority to the world in
Operation DESERT STORM in 1991. This monograph examines the
evolution of America's primary tank in the years between 1945 and
1991 focusing on three periods: the Second World War, the Korean
War, and the 1973 Arab Israeli War. Each period examines the
adversary, America's industrial capabilities, and the combat
environment. Describing the adversary highlights there is a
tangible threat to U.S. armored forces. In the face of this threat,
the United States remained capable of building new more complicated
and more expensive tanks, which demonstrates the industrial
endowment required to meet the demands of the threat. An
examination of the combat environment reveals why the U.S. Army and
its armor force seemed so fixated on Europe as the next war's first
battlefield. Ultimately, this paper serves to demonstrate that a
tank series, such as the M1 Abrams family, is a required component
in the U.S. Army's combined arms arsenal. As such, it is important
that the aging Abrams, having served the Army in Operation Desert
Storm and the Global War on Terror, continue to evolve in
preparation for the next war.
The American primary tank in the Second World War was inferior to
its German counterpart for all but the final months of the war. The
U.S. tank evolved and demonstrated its superiority to the world in
Operation DESERT STORM in 1991. This monograph examines the
evolution of America's primary tank in the years between 1945 and
1991 focusing on three periods: the Second World War, the Korean
War, and the 1973 Arab Israeli War. Each period examines the
adversary, America's industrial capabilities, and the combat
environment. Describing the adversary highlights there is a
tangible threat to U.S. armored forces. In the face of this threat,
the United States remained capable of building new more complicated
and more expensive tanks, which demonstrates the industrial
endowment required to meet the demands of the threat. An
examination of the combat environment reveals why the U.S. Army and
its armor force seemed so fixated on Europe as the next war's first
battlefield. Ultimately, this paper serves to demonstrate that a
tank series, such as the M1 Abrams family, is a required component
in the U.S. Army's combined arms arsenal. As such, it is important
that the aging Abrams, having served the Army in Operation Desert
Storm and the Global War on Terror, continue to evolve in
preparation for the next war.
Over the past 30 years, wind energy has evolved from a small
industry active in a few countries to a large international
industry involving major players in the manufacturing, development,
and utility sectors. Coinciding with the industry growth,
significant innovation in the technology has resulted in larger
sized turbines with lower associated costs of energy and more
complex designs in all subsystems, from the rotor to the drivetrain
to the electronics and control systems. However, as deployment of
the technology grows and its role within the electricity sector has
become more prominent, so have the expectations of the technology
in terms of performance, reliability, and cost. This book surveys
the landscape of systems engineering methods and catalogues the
various existing modelling tools that relate to the design of wind
energy systems from components to entire plants.
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