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Recent discoveries in astronomy and relativistic astrophysics as
well as experiments on particle and nuclear physics have blurred
the traditional boundaries of physics. It is believed that at the
birth of the Universe, a whirlwind of matter and antimatter, of
quarks and exotic leptons, briefly appeared and merged into a sea
of energy. The new phenomena and new states of matter in the
Universe revealed the deep connection between quarks and the
Cosmos. Motivated by these themes, this book discusses different
topics: gravitational waves, dark matter, dark energy, exotic
contents of compact stars, high-energy and gamma-ray astrophysics,
heavy ion collisions and the formation of the quark-gluon plasma in
the early Universe. The book presents some of the latest researches
on these fascinating themes and is useful for experts and students
in the field.
Walter Greiner (1935-2016) was a German physicist of the Goethe
University, Frankfurt, well-known for his many contributions in
scientific research and developments, in particular the field of
nuclear physics. He was a well-respected science leader and a
teacher who had supervised batches of young collaborators and
students, many of whom are now leaders in both academics and
industry worldwide. Greiner had a wide interest of science which
covered atomic physics, heavy-ion physics, and nuclear
astrophysics. Greiner co-founded GSI, the Helmholtz Centre for
Heavy Ion Research, and the multi-disciplinary research center,
FIAS (Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies). Besides numerous
professorship with universities worldwide, including the University
of Maryland, Greiner received many prestigious prizes in honor of
his outstanding contributions, among others are the Otto Hahn Prize
and the Max Born Prize.This memorial volume is a special tribute by
Greiner's former colleagues, students, and friends honoring his
contributions and passion in science. The volume begins with a
writing by Greiner about his early days in science. The subsequent
articles, comprising personal and scientific reminiscences of
Walter Greiner, serve as timely reviews on various topics of
current interest.
Multiplying Worlds argues that modern forms of virtual reality
first appear in the urban/commercial milieu of London in the late
eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century (1780-1830). It develops a
revisionary account of relations between romanticism and popular
entertainments, 'high' and 'low' literature, and verbal and visual
virtual realities during this period. The argument is divided into
three parts. The first, 'From the Actual to the Virtual', focuses
on developments during the period from 1780 to 1795, as represented
by Robert Barker's Panorama, Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon, and James
Graham's Temple of Health and Hymen. The second part, 'From
Representation to Poiesis', extends the study of late eighteenth-
and early nineteenth-century virtual realities to include textual
media. It considers the relation between textual and visual
virtual-realities, while also introducing the Palace of Pandemonium
and Satan/Prometheus as key figures in late eighteenth-century
explorations of the implications of virtual reality. There are
chapters on Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho, Beckford's
Fonthill Abbey, the Phantasmagoria, and Romantic representations of
Satan. The book's third part, 'Actuvirtuality and Virtuactuality',
provides an introduction to the Romantics' remarkably diverse (and
to this point rarely studied) engagements with the virtual. It
focuses on attempts to describe or indirectly present the cultural,
material, or psychological apparatuses that project the perceptual
world; reflections on the epistemological, ethical and political
paradoxes that arise in a world of actuvirtuality and
virtuactuality; and experiments in the construction of virtual
worlds that, like those of Shakespeare (according to Coleridge) are
not bound by 'the iron compulsion of [everyday] space and time'.
This volume in the 21st Century Oxford Authors series offers
students and readers a comprehensive selection of the work of
William Blake (1757-1827). Accompanied by full scholarly apparatus,
this authoritative edition enables students to explore Blake's
poetry, illuminated poetry, and prose alongside selections from his
letters, manuscripts, notebook, advertising pamphlets, marginalia,
and works he printed in conventional letterpress. The edition
arranges Blake's works in chronological order, according to the
date when they were first printed or, in the case of unpublished
works, the years in which they were composed. With the help of
editorial headnotes and annotations, this arrangement brings to the
foreground Blake's material and intellectual labours as a poet,
painter, prophet, and non-academic philosopher; the networks of
acquaintances, friends, patrons, and enemies who helped support or
provoke this work; and the tumultuous historical events he
responded to, which included the beginning of modern feminism, the
agricultural and industrial revolutions, the American and French
Revolutions, William Pitt's so-called 'Reign of Terror' in Britain,
an attempted revolution in Ireland (1798), a successful slave
rebellion in Haiti (1791-1804), and the French revolutionary and
Napoleonic wars. Some editions attempt to sanitize Blake, by hiding
from view the most startling elements of his thought; but in this
edition Blake's sexual, political, religious, and poetic heterodoxy
comes into full view. At the same time, this edition foregrounds
the dynamics of Blake's composite art, with equal weight given to
its verbal and visual dimensions; makes visible the chief lines of
force that structure his oeuvre; and highlights his developing
thought on sapphism, sodomy, the body, relations between the sexes,
the roots of violence, and the politics of imagination. This is a
Blake whose dialogue with his own time anticipates much later
developments, including modern depth psychologies; analyses of the
social and psychological dynamics of war and peace; interest in the
body, sexuality, and gender; and experiments in the relation
between actual and virtual realities-a Blake who is provocative,
unsettling, exhilarating, and somehow our contemporary. Explanatory
notes and commentary are included, to enhance the study,
understanding, and enjoyment of these works, and the edition
includes an Introduction to the life and works of Blake, and a
Chronology.
This volume in the 21st Century Oxford Authors series offers
students and readers a comprehensive selection of the work of
William Blake (1757-1827). Accompanied by full scholarly apparatus,
this authoritative edition enables students to explore Blake's
poetry, illuminated poetry, and prose alongside selections from his
letters, manuscripts, notebook, advertising pamphlets, marginalia,
and works he printed in conventional letterpress. The edition
arranges Blake's works in chronological order, according to the
date when they were first printed or, in the case of unpublished
works, the years in which they were composed. With the help of
editorial headnotes and annotations, this arrangement brings to the
foreground Blake's material and intellectual labours as a poet,
painter, prophet, and non-academic philosopher; the networks of
acquaintances, friends, patrons, and enemies who helped support or
provoke this work; and the tumultuous historical events he
responded to, which included the beginning of modern feminism, the
agricultural and industrial revolutions, the American and French
Revolutions, William Pitt's so-called 'Reign of Terror' in Britain,
an attempted revolution in Ireland (1798), a successful slave
rebellion in Haiti (1791-1804), and the French revolutionary and
Napoleonic wars. Some editions attempt to sanitize Blake, by hiding
from view the most startling elements of his thought; but in this
edition Blake's sexual, political, religious, and poetic heterodoxy
comes into full view. At the same time, this edition foregrounds
the dynamics of Blake's composite art, with equal weight given to
its verbal and visual dimensions; makes visible the chief lines of
force that structure his oeuvre; and highlights his developing
thought on sapphism, sodomy, the body, relations between the sexes,
the roots of violence, and the politics of imagination. This is a
Blake whose dialogue with his own time anticipates much later
developments, including modern depth psychologies; analyses of the
social and psychological dynamics of war and peace; interest in the
body, sexuality, and gender; and experiments in the relation
between actual and virtual realities-a Blake who is provocative,
unsettling, exhilarating, and somehow our contemporary. Explanatory
notes and commentary are included, to enhance the study,
understanding, and enjoyment of these works, and the edition
includes an Introduction to the life and works of Blake, and a
Chronology.
Blake's Critique of Transcendence is the first full-length book to examine in any detail or consistency the relation between Blake's text and the visual designs in The Four Zoas, one of the most important works in Blake's oeuvre. It revises our understanding of Blake's relation to Swedenborg, Young, and Locke, and provides a new account of Blake's views on the body, imagination, sublimity, sexuality, and transcendence.
`Short copy entry, for Eng Lit 91' This book focuses on the tension
in Blake's poetry between a hermeneutics of suspicion and a
hermeneutics of belief: it offers a new account of the way in which
Blake's major prophecies work and of the stratagems they employ to
consolidate error and so open their readers' eyes to `otherness'.
Central to Peter Otto's reading is a re-definition of the role of
Los and Jesus in Blake's work, emphasising Blake's prophetic
intent. In the course of a radically new reading of Milton and
Jerusalem, it is argued that in these poems the autonomous,
world-forming imagination (that is staple to many accounts of
Romanticism) is subject to visionary deconstruction. Rather than
subordinating existence to perception, Blake's poems attempt to
induce their readers to act. Constructive Vision is the first
systematic and comprehensive analysis of Blake's work to draw on a
radically new understanding of Blake's view of humanity.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ Stimmen Des Russischen Volks In Liedern Peter Otto von Goetze
Cotta, 1828 Folk songs, Russian
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