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The author calls for radical action to solve the problems of
Europe. Among his suggestions are that the states of Europe,
including Britain, unite to form one body to serve the political
and economic interests of all.
This book shows how to identify potential design errors and modify
procedures in the design process to mitigate design-induced error.
Real life examples are used to demonstrate the points being made.
Many of the concerns raised in the book have come from a worldwide
study conducted with designers, managers, and end-users.
The book contains twelve essays by Stephen Holmes, Frances M. Kamm,
M?ria Ludassy, Steven Lukes, Gyorgy Markus, Andr's Saj?, G?sp?r
Mikl's Tam?s, Andrew Arato, Timothy Garton Ash, B?la Greskovits,
Will Kymlicka, and Aleksander Smolar. The studies explore a wide
scope of subjects that belong to disciplines ranging from moral
philosophy, through theory of human rights, democratic transition,
constitutionalism, to political economy. The common denominator of
the studies collected is their reference to the scholarly output of
J?nos Kis, in honor of his sixtieth birthday. J?nos Kis is a
distinguished political philosopher who, after many years spent as
a dissident under the Communist regime, emerged as an important
political figure in Hungary's transition to democracy. Currently he
is University Professor of Philosophy at Central European
University, Budapest.
This book shows how to identify potential design errors and modify
procedures in the design process to mitigate design-induced error.
Real life examples are used to demonstrate the points being made.
Many of the concerns raised in the book have come from a worldwide
study conducted with designers, managers, and end-users.
In many ways, it is "the best of times and the worst of times" for
the field of psychiatry. New discoveries in neuroscience are
leading us to a better understanding of several major disorders,
such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. New and effective
treatments are gradually emerging for these conditions, sometimes
combining medication with brief, targeted forms of psychotherapy.
And, psychiatrists are increasingly aware of the role of culture
and spiritual values in working emphatically with patients. At the
same time, psychiatry is being challenged from several quarters,
with both its diagnostic system and treatment methods, the subject
of great controversy. Mental illness itself continues to be
misunderstood or stigmatised, and those who treat psychiatric
disorders have been subject to harsh criticism and hostility.
Economic pressures have encroached on psychiatry's ability to
provide psychotherapy for many patients, and the "biopsychosocial
model" of treatment has been undermined. For all these reasons,
psychiatry finds itself "on the edge" -- the edge of both great
promise and equally great peril. In this collection of essays drawn
from his many years writing for Psychiatric Times, Ronald W Pies,
MD, defends psychiatry against its detractors, while also
acknowledging the profession's shortcomings and challenges. He
provides a robust defence of both the science and the art of
psychiatric treatment, while moving beyond the symptom-based, DSM
approach to diagnosis. Dr Pies takes on the positivist critics who
insist that only bodily disease is "real", and emphasises that both
psychiatry and general medicine identify disease states by the
presence of substantial suffering and incapacity. He also espouses
a broad-based, humanistic approach to the care of the patient,
drawing on several philosophical and spiritual traditions. Finally,
Pies argues that psychiatry cannot be viewed apart from the system
of ethical values that underlie medical practice in general, and
offers some caveats regarding the misuse of psychiatric expertise
for non-medical purposes. Unifying all these essays is the teaching
of the 12th century physician and sage, Maimonides, who said, "The
physician does not treat a disease; but rather, the diseased
person."
A sequel to his frequently cited Cost and Production Functions
(1953), this book offers a unified, comprehensive treatment of
these functions which underlie the economic theory of production.
The approach is axiomatic for a definition of technology, by
mappings of input vectors into subsets of output vectors that
represent the unconstrained technical possibilities of production.
To provide a completely general means of characterizing a
technology, an alternative to the production function, called the
Distance Function, is introduced. The duality between cost function
and production function is developed by introducing a cost
correspondence, showing that these two functions are given in terms
of each other by dual minimum problems. The special class of
production structures called Homothetic is given more general
definition and extended to technologies with multiple outputs.
Originally published in 1971. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the
latest print-on-demand technology to again make available
previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of
Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original
texts of these important books while presenting them in durable
paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy
Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage
found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University
Press since its founding in 1905.
A sequel to his frequently cited Cost and Production Functions
(1953), this book offers a unified, comprehensive treatment of
these functions which underlie the economic theory of production.
The approach is axiomatic for a definition of technology, by
mappings of input vectors into subsets of output vectors that
represent the unconstrained technical possibilities of production.
To provide a completely general means of characterizing a
technology, an alternative to the production function, called the
Distance Function, is introduced. The duality between cost function
and production function is developed by introducing a cost
correspondence, showing that these two functions are given in terms
of each other by dual minimum problems. The special class of
production structures called Homothetic is given more general
definition and extended to technologies with multiple outputs.
Originally published in 1971. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the
latest print-on-demand technology to again make available
previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of
Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original
texts of these important books while presenting them in durable
paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy
Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage
found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University
Press since its founding in 1905.
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