1,723,683 research outputs found
Thomas R. Michl
Social Security in a Classical Growth Model by Thomas R. Michl and Duncan K. Foley JEL E1, E6 Keywords: Overlapping generations growth, social security, Pasinetti paradox
Wo Fuchs und Hase sich Gute Nacht sagen: Tiergeschichten und -gedichte
This book is the original version of "Das Hausbuch der Tiergeschichten" in 2012. The format of both covers is slightly different and the place of publication is Belgium and not Germany. Otherwise it may be puzzling why the publisher simply changed the title and kept the book as is. As I wrote of that copy, the book divides up its fifty fables by areas, starting with "Von Tieren im Wasser." The range of stories includes Märchen as well as fables and extends to various kinds of stories and poems. The array of authors is truly stunning! I enjoy, for example, Goethe's poem "Die Frösche" (25). Under the ice of the frozen pond, the frogs promised that, if they ever again got into the fresh air, they would sing like nightingales. Spring came, they got into the open air, and "quakten wie vor alter Zeit." I also enjoy Theodor Fontane's German version of "The Twa Corbies" (41). Michl's art is various, from full double pages for titles of sections to various portions of pages with text. The art is simple, big, bold, and sometimes appropriately playful, as in "Gruselett" (43). Text and art are wonderfully matched in "Wettstreit" (46-47). A great example of this book's playful character is Hans Adolf Halbey's untitled poem on 178 with its facing illustration. It begins "Ein geapfelter Schimmel." It is all here, from Aesop to Munro Leaf's "Ferdinand" (183).Language note: GermanFirst printingVarious; texts by Reinhard Michl, Caroline Jacobi, and Petra Alber
Das Hausbuch der Tiergeschichten
This book has a very pleasant history. I found it by stopping in this children's bookshop in the Plöck in Heidelberg on my way elsewhere. I was surprised to find a fable book I had not yet found in German. Now as I review the book in Omaha, I have found out that it is a re-edition of the earlier "Wo Fuchs und Hase sich Gute Nacht sagen" from the same publisher in 2002. A quick search found that book on sale on Ebay for almost the same price. This is a case, then, of finding the later edition first and going back to the earlier one. The book divides up its fifty fables by areas, starting with "Von Tieren im Wasser." The range of stories includes Märchen as well as fables and extends to various kinds of stories and poems. The array of authors is truly stunning! I enjoy, for example, Goethe's poem "Die Frösche" (25). Under the ice of the frozen pond, the frogs promised that, if they ever again got into the fresh air, they would sing like nightingales. Spring came, they got into the open air, and "quakten wie vor alter Zeit." I also enjoy Theodor Fontane's German version of "The Twa Corbies" (41). Michl's art is various, from full double pages for titles of sections to various portions of pages with text. The art is simple, big, bold, and sometimes appropriately playful, as in "Gruselett" (43). Text and art are wonderfully matched in "Wettstreit" (46-47). A great example of this book's playful character is Hans Adolf Halbey's untitled poem on 178 with its facing illustration. It begins "Ein geapfelter Schimmel." It is all here, from Aesop to Munro Leaf's "Ferdinand" (183).Language note: GermanErste AuflageVarious; texts by Reinhard Michl, Caroline Jacobi, and Petra Alber
A reply to Michl
Sergio Cesaratto* In his ‘Comments’, Tom Michl defends the proposal for a fully funded pension scheme based on a saving-led ‘classical growth model ’ against my Keynesian contention that a higher saving supply would be deflationary in both the short run and the long run. Michl adds a further argument that an increase in the saving rate associated with a lower interest rate may speed up the accumulation process. I remark that the thesis that a lower interest rate has a positive influence on investment is empirically and theoretically controversial, while the idea that an increase in investment requires a larger saving supply is open to further Keynesian objections
A Reply to Michl
In his ‘Comments’, Tom Michl defends the proposal for a fully funded pension
scheme based on a saving-led ‘classical growth model’ against my Keynesian
contention that a higher saving supply would be deflationary in both the short run
and the long run. Michl adds a further argument that an increase in the saving rate
associated with a lower interest rate may speed up the accumulation process. I
remark that the thesis that a lower interest rate has a positive influence on
investment is empirically and theoretically controversial, while the idea that an
increase in investment requires a larger saving supply is open to further Keynesian
objections
Cheilosia longicornis , Michl 1911
<i>Cheilosia longicornis</i> Michl, 1911 <p> <b>Notes.</b> Reported from: Austria. In the original description of <i>C</i>. <i>longicornis</i>, Michl stated that the distribution area of the species is unknown. On the voucher specimen only “old collection” is noted (Michl 1911: 291). This record was later transmitted by Franz (1989). The voucher specimen is kept in the Natural History Museum Wien and was re-examined by Claus Claussen some years ago. He found out that the specimen belongs to the genus <i>Hiatomyia</i> Shannon, 1922. Omitted because, to date, <i>Hiatomyia</i> is so far only known from North America.</p>Published as part of <i>Heimburg, Helge, Doczkal, Dieter & Holzinger, Werner E., 2022, A checklist of the hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) of Austria, pp. 151-209 in Zootaxa 5115 (2)</i> on page 174, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5115.2.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/6352373">http://zenodo.org/record/6352373</a>
Tribute to Josef Michl
It is our great pleasure to introduce the Festschrift of Chemistry to honor professor Josef Michl (Figure 1) on the occasion of his 80th birthday and to recognize his exceptional contributions to the fields of organic photochemistry, quantum chemistry, biradicals and biradicaloids, electronic and vibrational spectroscopy, magnetic circular dichroism, silicon and boron chemistry, supramolecular chemistry, singlet fission, and molecular machines [...
Studies about genealogy, biography und work of Joseph Willibald Michl (1745-1816)
„Joseph Willibald Michl – Ein Komponist von vielem Kopfe“, so schrieb einst Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart über den wohl bedeutendsten Spross einer Musikerfamilie, die über mindestens vier Generationen das Musikgeschehen der Oberpfalz, Bayerns und darüber hinaus mitgestaltete. Neben dem deutschen Dichter, Organisten, Komponisten und Journalisten Schubart, sprechen sich auch andere Zeitgenossen wie der englische Musikforscher Charles Burney oder der Historiker und Schriftsteller Lorenz von Westenrieder sprechen sich lobend über den „Churfürstlichen Kammer-Compositeur“ von Maximilian III. Joseph aus. Diese Studie untersucht die Genealogie, die Biographie und das Werk von Joseph Willibald Michl anhand neuer Quellen und schließt darüber hinaus Lücken in seinem Curriculum Vitae. Erstmals wird ein systematisch-thematisches Werkverzeichnis des Komponisten vorgelegt, um das heute noch greifbare musikalische Œuvre zu erfassen bzw. zur Klärung fraglicher oder offensichtlicher Falschzuweisungen beizutragen. In einer Analyse repräsentativ ausgewählter Werke der von Michl verwenden musikalischen Gattungen wird die Kompositionsart und Musiksprache Michls näher betrachtetA compser with a clever mind - was the verdict of Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart about Joseph Willibald Michl who was probably the most famous sprout of a musician’s dynasty. Over four generations Michl’s family influenced the musical scene of the time from the Upper Palatinate to Bavaria and beyond. Next to Schubart who was not only a German poet but also an organist, a composer and a journalist Michl, electoral chamber music composer of Maximilian III, was also praised by the English musicologist Charles Burney and the historian and author Lorenz von Westenrieder. By means of new sources this study researches the genealogy, biography and work of Michl and apart from that completes his curriculum vitae. The study includes the first entire list of Michl’s works recording his musical oeuvre or resolving doubtfully or obviously mistaken classification. Michl’s manner of composition and his musical language is analysed at representatively selected works of different genre
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