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???? (Hardcover)
Stefan Muller
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R1,443
Discovery Miles 14 430
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Few would dispute that many Western industrial democracies
undertook extensive deregulation in the 1970s and 1980s. Yet this
narrative, in its most familiar form, depends upon several
historiographical assumptions that bely the complexities and
pitfalls of studying the recent past. Across thirteen case studies,
the contributors to this volume investigate this "deregulatory
moment" from a variety of historical perspectives, including
transnational, comparative, pan-European, and national approaches.
Collectively, they challenge an interpretive framework that treats
individual decades in isolation and ignores broader trends that
extend to the end of the Second World War.
The subject of algebraic cycles has thrived through its interaction
with algebraic K-theory, Hodge theory, arithmetic algebraic
geometry, number theory, and topology. These interactions have led
to such developments as a description of Chow groups in terms of
algebraic K-theory, the arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, progress on
the celebrated conjectures of Hodge and Tate, and the conjectures
of Bloch and Beilinson. The immense recent progress in algebraic
cycles, based on so many interactions with so many other areas of
mathematics, has contributed to a considerable degree of
inaccessibility, especially for graduate students. Even specialists
in one approach to algebraic cycles may not understand other
approaches well. This book offers students and specialists alike a
broad perspective of algebraic cycles, presented from several
viewpoints, including arithmetic, transcendental, topological,
motives and K-theory methods. Topics include a discussion of the
arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, higher Abel-Jacobi regulator maps,
polylogarithms and L-series, candidate Bloch-Beilinson filtrations,
applications of Chern-Simons invariants to algebraic cycles via the
study of algebraic vector bundles with algebraic connection,
motivic cohomology, Chow groups of singular varieties, and recent
progress on the Hodge and Tate conjectures for Abelian varieties.
This book casts the theory of periods of algebraic varieties in the
natural setting of Madhav Nori's abelian category of mixed motives.
It develops Nori's approach to mixed motives from scratch, thereby
filling an important gap in the literature, and then explains the
connection of mixed motives to periods, including a detailed
account of the theory of period numbers in the sense of
Kontsevich-Zagier and their structural properties. Period numbers
are central to number theory and algebraic geometry, and also play
an important role in other fields such as mathematical physics.
There are long-standing conjectures about their transcendence
properties, best understood in the language of cohomology of
algebraic varieties or, more generally, motives. Readers of this
book will discover that Nori's unconditional construction of an
abelian category of motives (over fields embeddable into the
complex numbers) is particularly well suited for this purpose.
Notably, Kontsevich's formal period algebra represents a torsor
under the motivic Galois group in Nori's sense, and the period
conjecture of Kontsevich and Zagier can be recast in this setting.
Periods and Nori Motives is highly informative and will appeal to
graduate students interested in algebraic geometry and number
theory as well as researchers working in related fields. Containing
relevant background material on topics such as singular cohomology,
algebraic de Rham cohomology, diagram categories and rigid tensor
categories, as well as many interesting examples, the overall
presentation of this book is self-contained.
This up-to-date introduction to Griffiths' theory of period maps
and period domains focusses on algebraic, group-theoretic and
differential geometric aspects. Starting with an explanation of
Griffiths' basic theory, the authors go on to introduce spectral
sequences and Koszul complexes that are used to derive results
about cycles on higher-dimensional algebraic varieties such as the
Noether-Lefschetz theorem and Nori's theorem. They explain
differential geometric methods, leading up to proofs of
Arakelov-type theorems, the theorem of the fixed part and the
rigidity theorem. They also use Higgs bundles and harmonic maps to
prove the striking result that not all compact quotients of period
domains are Kahler. This thoroughly revised second edition includes
a new third part covering important recent developments, in which
the group-theoretic approach to Hodge structures is explained,
leading to Mumford-Tate groups and their associated domains, the
Mumford-Tate varieties and generalizations of Shimura varieties.
This book is thematically positioned at the intersections of Urban
Design, Architecture, Civil Engineering and Computer Science, and
it has the goal to provide specialists coming from respective
fields a multi-angle overview of state-of-the-art work currently
being carried out. It addresses both newcomers who wish to obtain
more knowledge about this growing area of interest, as well as
established researchers and practitioners who want to keep up to
date. In terms of organization, the volume starts out with chapters
looking at the domain at a wide-angle and then moves focus towards
technical viewpoints and approaches.
This book contains the final versions of the proceedings of the
fifth EUROGRA PHICS Workshop on Rendering held in Darmstadt,
Germany, between 13-15 June 1994. With around 80 participants and
30 papers, the event continued the successful tradition of the
previous ones establishing the event as the most im portant meeting
for persons working on this area world-wide. After more than 20
years of research, rendering remains an partially unsolved,
interesting, and challenging topic. This year 71 (!) papers have
been submitted from Europe, North America, and Asia. The average
quality in terms of technical merit was impressive, showing that
substantial work is achieved on this topic from several groups
around the world. In general we all gained the impression that in
the mean time the technical quality of the contributions is
comparable to that of a specialised high-end, full scale
conference. All papers have been reviewed from at least three
members of the program committee. In addition, several colleagues
helped us in managing the reviewing process in time either by
supporting additional reviews, or by assisting the members of the
committee. We have been very happy to welcome eminent invited
speakers. Holly Rush meier is internationally well known for her
excellent work in all areas of rendering and gave us a review of
modelling and rendering participating media with em phasis on
scientific visualization. In addition, Peter Shirley presented a
survey about future rends in rendering techniques.
The subject of algebraic cycles has thrived through its interaction
with algebraic K-theory, Hodge theory, arithmetic algebraic
geometry, number theory, and topology. These interactions have led
to such developments as a description of Chow groups in terms of
algebraic K-theory, the arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, progress on
the celebrated conjectures of Hodge and Tate, and the conjectures
of Bloch and Beilinson. The immense recent progress in algebraic
cycles, based on so many interactions with so many other areas of
mathematics, has contributed to a considerable degree of
inaccessibility, especially for graduate students. Even specialists
in one approach to algebraic cycles may not understand other
approaches well. This book offers students and specialists alike a
broad perspective of algebraic cycles, presented from several
viewpoints, including arithmetic, transcendental, topological,
motives and K-theory methods. Topics include a discussion of the
arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, higher Abel-Jacobi regulator maps,
polylogarithms and L-series, candidate Bloch-Beilinson filtrations,
applications of Chern-Simons invariants to algebraic cycles via the
study of algebraic vector bundles with algebraic connection,
motivic cohomology, Chow groups of singular varieties, and recent
progress on the Hodge and Tate conjectures for Abelian varieties.
The book describes a large fragment of a grammar of German in terms
of the HPSG paradigm. On a broad empirical basis it develops a
formally explicit theory with special emphasis on various
word-order phenomena: the relatively free position of constituents
in the midfield with reference to coherent constructions,
positioning in the verb complex, initial-field occupancy, and
extraposition. The analysis of these phenomena is embedded in a
general theory of sentence structure and a discussion of relevant
formal mechanisms.
Current therapies for most human genetic diseases are inadequate.
In response to the need for effective treatments, modern molecular
genetics is providing tools for an unprecedented new approach to
the treatment of diseases; e.g. the direct manipulation of mutant
genes or the input on new therapeutic genes. The treatment of human
disease by gene transfer has now moved from the theoretical to the
practical realm. With the initiation of clinical trials involving
somatic gene therapy in different countries, a critical assessment
of the different aspects involved with this new technique is
necessary. This volume provides an overview on all these
interdisciplinary aspects by some well known experts all over the
world.
Das Rechnungswesen gehoert zu den zentralen Unternehmensbereichen.
Neben der Abbildung interner Vorgange im Rahmen des Controllings
bildet es auch die Basis fur die extern orientierte
Unternehmensrechnung. Beide Teilgebiete haben sich in den letzten
Jahren dynamisch entwickelt. Entsprechend komplex und kontrovers
ist die Diskussion in Wissenschaft und Praxis. In "Controlling und
Rechnungslegung" bieten renommierte Fachexperten eine ausgewogene
Mischung aus neuesten wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen und
aktuellen Beispielen.
So unstrittig die gewaltigen Vorteile und Wohlstandsgewinne sind,
welche uns die zunehmende Verflechtung der Weltwirtschaft in den
vergangenen Jahrzehnten beschert hat, so toricht ware es zu
leugnen, dass der weltweite Handel auch negative Seiten besitzt -
und die Gemuter spaltet, Angste schurt und sich als
Projektionsflache fur allerlei Befurchtungen anbietet."
Das 7.Otto-Beisheim-Kolloquium diskutiert zentrale Fragen zur
Zukunft der Stadt mit prominenten Vertretern aus Wissenschaft und
Praxis. Sie zeigen exemplarisch, welchen Stadten es gelang, ihre
Innenstadte zu revitalisieren.
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