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Abundant with practical advice and ready-to-use teaching examples,
this dynamic guide will help both new and experienced instructors
of Principles of Microeconomics to reconsider and refine their
courses. Mark Maier and Phil Ruder assemble the wisdom of 25
eminent scholars of economic education on how best to introduce
students to the discipline and inspire a long-lasting passion for
microeconomics. Beyond offering guidance to educators on how to
improve students' learning experience, the book proposes measures
for addressing many of the vexing challenges that face the
economics discipline today. Chapters provide suggestions on (1) how
to capture students' attention and ensure their continued
engagement, (2) including course content that focuses on important
public policy topics and pressing issues within modern society, (3)
adopting evidence-based pedagogical strategies in the classroom and
online, and (4) tackling issues of diversity, equity, and inclusion
within the discipline. The ideas advanced in this illuminating
guide highlight the possibility of continued improvement throughout
one's teaching career. The jargon-free advice in this insightful
teaching guide will also be of interest to deans, teaching and
learning center directors, and other administrators of
undergraduate institutions.
This book weaves emerging themes in future 6G and Next G networks
carefully together. It points to three spheres of contexts with
different narratives for the year 2030 and beyond, in which the
coming Metaverse as the precursor of the future Multiverse can be
embedded naturally. The book aims at providing the reader with new
cross-disciplinary research material, ranging from communication
and computer science to cognitive science, social sciences, and
behavioral economics, for building a deeper Metaverse. It will be
instrumental in helping the reader find and overcome some of the
most common 6G and Next G blind spots. Modern networks are more
than communication and computer science. They may be better viewed
as techno-social systems that exhibit complex adaptive system
behavior and resemble biological superorganisms. 6G and especially
Next G should go beyond continuing the linear incremental 6G=5G+1G
mindset of past generations of mobile networks. To this end, the
book: Helps readers inquire into new areas of knowledge or
understanding that they didn't have or didn't pay attention to find
their 6G/Next G blind spots Highlights the unique potential
benefits of the virtual world for society in that it provides a
useful extension of the real-world economy by compensating for its
well-known market failures, e.g., rising income inequality Provides
a comprehensive description of the original Metaverse vision and
highlights the different Metaverse components, applications, open
research challenges, and early Metaverse deployment examples from
both industry and academia Describes how the Multiverse goes beyond
the Metaverse origins and explores the importance of experience
innovation since experiences play a central role in the Metaverse
Explains Web3 and the emerging field of token engineering and
tokenization, i.e., the process of creating tokenized digital twins
via programmable tokens, which are viewed as the killer application
of Web3 networks for creating technology-enabled social organisms
and restoring tech-driven common goods Reviews anticipated 6G
paradigm shifts and elaborates on the difference between 6G and
Next G research, including Next G Alliance's audacious goals and
their symbiotic relationship between technology and a population's
societal and economic needs Doubles down on the mutually beneficial
symbiosis between digitalization and biologization for our possible
evolution into future metahumans with infinite capabilities by
making us smarter and creating a fundamentally new form of
sociality in the Metaverse and Multiverse as well as the future
stigmergy enhanced Society 5.0 by leveraging on time-tested
self-organization mechanisms borrowed from nature Presents a
variety of different concepts of the true nature of reality that
bring us closer to the original Metaverse vision and explains how
6G, Next G, and the Metaverse may eventually pave the way to the
peak-experience machine that democratizes access to the upper range
of human experiences Touches on the possible transition from
communication to services beyond communication, most notably the
cross-cultural phenomenon of communitas in anthropology and its
increasing degrees of perceived connectedness with others, the
world, and oneself, given the importance of creating a deep sense
of community in the Metaverse Written for students, network
researchers, professionals, engineers, and practitioners, 6G and
Onward to Next G: The Road to the Multiverse explores the latest
Internet developments, with a particular focus on 6G and Next G
networks in the context of the emerging Metaverse and future
Multiverse as the successors of today's mobile Internet that has
defined the last two decades.
In this monograph, we study recent results on some categories of
trigonometric/exponential sums along with various of their
applications in Mathematical Analysis and Analytic Number Theory.
Through the two chapters of this monograph, we wish to highlight
the applicability and breadth of techniques of
trigonometric/exponential sums in various problems focusing on the
interplay of Mathematical Analysis and Analytic Number Theory. We
wish to stress the point that the goal is not only to prove the
desired results, but also to present a plethora of intermediate
Propositions and Corollaries investigating the behaviour of such
sums, which can also be applied in completely different problems
and settings than the ones treated within this monograph.In the
present work we mainly focus on the applications of
trigonometric/exponential sums in the study of Ramanujan sums -
which constitute a very classical domain of research in Number
Theory - as well as the study of certain cotangent sums with a wide
range of applications, especially in the study of Dedekind sums and
a facet of the research conducted on the Riemann Hypothesis. For
example, in our study of the cotangent sums treated within the
second chapter, the methods and techniques employed reveal
unexpected connections with independent and very interesting
problems investigated in the past by R de la Breteche and G
Tenenbaum on trigonometric series, as well as by S Marmi, P Moussa
and J-C Yoccoz on Dynamical Systems.Overall, a reader who has
mastered fundamentals of Mathematical Analysis, as well as having a
working knowledge of Classical and Analytic Number Theory, will be
able to gradually follow all the parts of the monograph. Therefore,
the present monograph will be of interest to advanced undergraduate
and graduate students as well as researchers who wish to be
informed on the latest developments on the topics treated.
This book offers a welcome solution to the growing need for a
common language in interfaith dialogue; particularly between the
three Abrahamic faiths in our modern pluralistic society. The book
suggests that the names given to God in the Hebrew Bible, the New
Testament and the Quran, could be the very foundations and building
blocks for a common language between the Jewish, Christian and
Islamic faiths. On both a formal interfaith level, as well as
between everyday followers of each doctrine, this book facilitates
a more fruitful and universal understanding and respect of each
sacred text; exploring both the commonalities and differences
between the each theology and their individual receptions. In a
practical application of the methodologies of comparative theology,
Maire Byrne shows that the titles, names and epithets given to God
in the sacred texts of Judaism, Christianity and Islam contribute
towards similar images of God in each case, and elucidates the
importance of this for providing a viable starting point for
interfaith dialogue.
Philipp Maier offers a unique examination of the extent to which
governments and various interest groups have exerted pressure on
central banks. The book looks in particular at the Deutsche
Bundesbank - which acted as the blueprint for the European Central
Bank (ECB) - and utilises an original set of indicators to measure
external pressure and support from the government and other
institutions. The author demonstrates that although some of the
rhetoric of the Bundesbank may have been a response to political
pressure, the operation and conduct of German monetary policy has
not been influenced. The role of various pressure groups remains a
more contentious issue, as there is evidence that the Bundesbank
may have acted to appease the financial sector. The author also
finds that a high degree of public support towards the Bundesbank
has helped to mitigate the effect of external forces. As the ECB
was closely modelled on its German counterpart, the author is able
to extend his analysis to the European level and draw out explicit
predictions for the ECB. He argues that external pressure is
unlikely to influence the conduct of monetary policy, as it will be
less efficient and organised, and public support is likely to be
high. In the future, however, this could be jeopardised by a rapid
enlargement of EMU which may result in more concentrated and
powerful pressure groups. This interesting empirical study of the
effect of governments, interest groups and public support on the
behaviour and rhetoric of Central Banks will be welcomed by
financial and monetary economists, students and scholars of
European finance and European policymakers.
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