|
Showing 1 - 25 of
71 matches in All Departments
This hand book is concerned with optical imaging – from simple
pinhole cameras to complex imaging systems. It spans the range all
the way from optical physics to technical optics. Based on ray- and
wave-optical approaches complemented by principles of Fourier
optics, the book discusses the process of imaging from the
beginning until image capture where, in particular, the different
topics are well integrated with each other. Different imaging
systems and sensors are reviewed as well as lenses and aberrations,
image intensification and processing. The second and enlarged
edition has been updated by actual developments and complemented by
the topic of smart phone camera photography. The latter plays an
important role today in the field of optical imaging and represents
a fully integrated optical system with potential for further new
developments. For physicists, natural scientists, engineers,
photographers and microscopists on one side and students of
physics, natural sciences or engineering in general on the other
side, the books provides an introduction into the complex field of
optical imaging. For all of them with practical experience the book
conveys a deeper insight into the intricacies and quality
assessment of their daily used devices.
This open access book provides a broad range of insights on market
engineering and information management. It covers topics like
auctions, stock markets, electricity markets, the sharing economy,
information and emotions in markets, smart decision-making in
cities and other systems, and methodological approaches to
conceptual modeling and taxonomy development. Overall, this book is
a source of inspiration for everybody working on the vision of
advancing the science of engineering markets and managing
information for contributing to a bright, sustainable, digital
world. Markets are powerful and extremely efficient mechanisms for
coordinating individuals' and organizations' behavior in a complex,
networked economy. Thus, designing, monitoring, and regulating
markets is an essential task of today's society. This task does not
only derive from a purely economic point of view. Leveraging market
forces can also help to tackle pressing social and environmental
challenges. Moreover, markets process, generate, and reveal
information. This information is a production factor and a valuable
economic asset. In an increasingly digital world, it is more
essential than ever to understand the life cycle of information
from its creation and distribution to its use. Both markets and the
flow of information should not arbitrarily emerge and develop based
on individual, profit-driven actors. Instead, they should be
engineered to serve best the whole society's goals. This motivation
drives the research fields of market engineering and information
management. With this book, the editors and authors honor Professor
Dr. Christof Weinhardt for his enormous and ongoing contribution to
market engineering and information management research and
practice. It was presented to him on the occasion of his sixtieth
birthday in April 2021. Thank you very much, Christof, for so many
years of cooperation, support, inspiration, and friendship.
This volume collects and revises the key essays of Gunther Teubner,
one of the world’s leading sociologists of law. Written over the
past twenty years, these essays examine the ‘dark side’ of
functional differentiation and the prospects of societal
constitutionalism as a possible remedy. Teubner's claim is that
critical accounts of law and society require reformulation in the
light of the sophisticated diagnoses of late modernity in the
writings of Niklas Luhmann, Jacques Derrida and select examples of
modernist literature. Autopoiesis, deconstruction and other
post-foundational epistemological and political realities compel us
to confront the fact that fundamental democratic concepts such as
law and justice can no longer be based on theories of stringent
argumentation or analytical philosophy. We must now approach law in
terms of contingency and self-subversion rather than in terms of
logical consistency and rational coherence. -- .
The term transnational governance designates untraditional types of
international and regional collaboration among both public and
private actors. These legally-structured or less formal
arrangements link economic, scientific and technological spheres
with political and legal processes. They are challenging the type
of governance which constitutional states were supposed to
represent and ensure. They also provoke old questions: Who bears
the responsibility for governance without a government? Can
accountability be ensured? The term 'constitutionalism' is still
widely identified with statal form of democratic governance. The
book refers to this term as a yardstick to which then contributors
feel committed even where they plead for a reconceptualisation of
constitutionalism or a discussion of its functional equivalents.
'Transnational governance' is neither public nor private, nor
purely international, supranational nor totally denationalised. It
is neither arbitrary nor accidental that we present our inquiries
into this phenomenon in the series of International Studies on
Private Law Theory.
This volume presents the first thorough sociologically-informed
legal analysis of the financial crisis which unfolded in 2008. It
combines a multitude of theoretically informed analyses of the
causes, dynamics and reactions to the crisis and contextualises
these within the general structural transformations characterising
contemporary society. It furthermore explores the constitutional
implications of the crisis and suggests concrete changes to the
constitutional set-up of contemporary society. Although the
question of individual responsibility is of crucial importance, the
central idea animating the volume is that the crisis cannot be
reduced to a mere failure of risk perception and management for
which individual and collective actors within and outside of
financial organisations are responsible. The 2008 crisis should
rather be understood as a symptom of far deeper structural
transformations. For example contemporary society is characterised
by massive accelerations in the speed with which societal processes
are reproduced as well as radical expansions in the level of
globalisation. These transformations have, however, been
asymmetrical in nature insofar as the economic system has outpaced
its legal and political counterparts. The future capability of
legal and political systems to influence economic reproduction
processes is therefore conditioned by equally radical
transformations of their respective operational forms and
self-understanding. Potentially the 2008 crisis, therefore, has
far-reaching constitutional implications.
In recent years a series of scandals have challenged the
traditional political reliance on public constitutional law and
human rights as a safeguard of human well-being. Multinational
corporations have violated human rights; private intermediaries in
the internet have threatened freedom of opinion, and the global
capital markets unleashed catastrophic risks. All of these
phenomena call for a response from traditional constitutionalism.
Yet it is outside the limits of the nation-state in transnational
politics and outside institutionalized politics, in the 'private'
sectors of global society that these constitutional problems arise.
It is widely accepted that there is a crisis in traditional
constitutionalism caused by transnationalization and privatization.
How the crisis can be overcome is one of the major controversies of
modern political and constitutional theory. This book sets out an
answer to that problem. It argues that the obstinate
state-and-politics-centricity of traditional constitutionalism
needs to be counteracted by a sociological approach which, so far,
has remained neglected in the constitutional debate. Constitutional
sociology projects the questions of constitutionalism not only onto
the relationship between public politics and law, but onto the
whole society. It argues that constitutionalism has the potential
to counteract the expansionist tendencies of social systems outside
the state world, particularly of the globalized economy, science
and technology, and the information media, when they endanger
individual or institutional autonomy. The book identifies
transnational regimes, particularly in the private area, as the new
constitutional subjects in a global society, rivals to the order
and power of nation states. It presents a model of transnational,
societal constitutional fragments that could bring the values of
constitutionalism to bear on these private networks, examining the
potential horizontal application of human rights in the private
sphere, and how such fragments could interact. An original and
provocative contribution to the literature on modern
constitutionalism, Constitutional Fragments is essential reading
for all those engaged in transnational political theory.
This volume collects and revises the key essays of Gunther Teubner,
one of the world's leading sociologists of law. Written over the
past twenty years, these essays examine the 'dark side' of
functional differentiation and the prospects of societal
constitutionalism as a possible remedy. Teubner's claim is that
critical accounts of law and society require reformulation in the
light of the sophisticated diagnoses of late modernity in the
writings of Niklas Luhmann, Jacques Derrida and select examples of
modernist literature. Autopoiesis, deconstruction and other
post-foundational epistemological and political realities compel us
to confront the fact that fundamental democratic concepts such as
law and justice can no longer be based on theories of stringent
argumentation or analytical philosophy. We must now approach law in
terms of contingency and self-subversion rather than in terms of
logical consistency and rational coherence. -- .
This book proposes three liability regimes to combat the wide
responsibility gaps caused by AI systems – vicarious liability
for autonomous software agents (actants); enterprise liability for
inseparable human-AI interactions (hybrids); and collective fund
liability for interconnected AI systems (crowds). Based on
information technology studies, the book first develops a threefold
typology that distinguishes individual, hybrid and collective
machine behaviour. A subsequent social science analysis specifies
the socio-digital institutions related to this threefold typology.
Then it determines the social risks that emerge when algorithms
operate within these institutions. Actants raise the risk of
digital autonomy, hybrids the risk of double contingency in
human-algorithm encounters, crowds the risk of opaque
interconnections. The book demonstrates that the law needs to
respond to these specific risks, by recognising personified
algorithms as vicarious agents, human-machine associations as
collective enterprises, and interconnected systems as risk pools
– and by developing corresponding liability rules. The book
relies on a unique combination of information technology studies,
sociological institution and risk analysis, and comparative law.
This approach uncovers recursive relations between types of machine
behaviour, emergent socio-digital institutions, their concomitant
risks, legal conditions of liability rules, and ascription of legal
status to the algorithms involved.
|
You may like...
Widows
Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, …
Blu-ray disc
R22
R19
Discovery Miles 190
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
|