237 research outputs found
The Aksumite Collection or Codex Σ (Sinodos of Qǝfrǝyā , MS C3-IV-71/C3-IV-73, Ethio- SPaRe UM-039): Codicological and Palaeographical Observations. With a Note on Material Analysis of Inks
The manuscript known as the Aksumite Collection (Sinodos of Qǝfrǝyā, MS C3-IV-71/C3-IV-73, Ethio-SPaRe UM-039) is one of the most important—if not the most important—Gǝʿǝz manuscripts which have come to scholarly attention in the last twenty years. While its textual content—primarily the complex canonical-liturgical collection, closely depending on late antique models, which it attests—has already been
the subject of several contributions, a description of physical and material features of the manuscript has not yet been published. The present note takes advantage of the work and competence of scholars, conservators, and scientists in order to fill this gap, offering a comprehensive material, codicological, and palaeographical description of the codex
Overall synthesis and conclusions
This chapter first systematically summarizes the most important findings and policy implications of each of the chapters included in this book volume. Next it synthesizes the overall findings and policy implications, and discusses future avenues for policy making and research. A first conclusion is that the chapters make clear that the ranges in policy relevant implications of AVs, within the scope of each chapter/topic, are still relatively broad. Secondly we conclude that research that is conceptually rich is more valuable for policy making. Thirdly we hypothesize that context matters for the uptake, impacts, and specific system design characteristics of real world AV implementation. Fourth we conclude that research on the global south has been limited so far. Fifth we argue that AVs, shared vehicles and electric vehicles (EVs) might stimulate each other in a positive way, in all directions. Finally we conclude that AVs will have wider societal implications, such as in the area of land use, accessibility, social exclusion, governmental expenditures, the labor market, and the environment. The more indirect the effects of AVs are, the more difficult they are to understand. For policy making a first conclusion is that the issues of ethics, cyber security and data protection deserve way more attention than they currently get. We also conclude that future motorway network extensions might not be no-regret anymore, because of possible congestion reductions due to AVs, but also because of decreasing marginal values of time. Finally we argue that countries that introduce AVs later than other countries can learn a lot from the real world experiences elsewhere.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Transport and Logistic
Post hos nostra terra est: mapping the Late Roman ecumene with the Expositio totius mundi et gentium
This paper studies the landscape of the Late Roman ecumene as depicted by the Expositio totius mundi et gentium (Expos. mundi),1 written by an anonymous author in the middle of the 4th century CE. It will first contextualise the text and assess its structure, language and genre. The contribution will then focus on the distinction between Rome, the Sasanids and utopic societies in the east near Eden, the political and military organization of the Imperium Romanum as well as its economic framework and varying expressions of its culture. As
this paper will show, the anonymous author does not present detailed descriptions of Rome’s geographical landscape. Instead, the primary focus is on material resources of the Roman Empire, their potential for economic exploitation and the trading opportunities resulting from it. Rome’s cultivated landscapes are thereby regarded as important preconditions for its success on an economic, political and cultural level
Confessionalization and/as Knowledge Transfer in the Greek Orthodox Church
This volume examines the potential of the confessionalization concept for the purposes of a history of knowledge regarding the clerical milieus of the early modern Greek Orthodox Church. Its point of departure is an understanding of confessionalization processes as an epistemic challenge that opened up a field of inter-confessional communication. On the one hand, communication born out of this epistemic challenge – and Orthodoxy’s need to articulate novel, authoritative positions in order to respond – resulted in epistemic movements that shaped confessional boundaries, intellectual profiles and academic curricula. In this sense, confessionalization functioned as knowledge transfer. On the other hand, confessionalization may be perceived as the very context of an unfolding communication process that triggered knowledge mobility in a wide range of epistemic fields, beyond the strictly theological: confessionalization and knowledge transfer. The volume comprises studies on conflict, negotiation and modification of knowledge, on interpersonal networks and networks of books, on genres and discourses in motion, on materialities and medialities of knowledge transfer, on accommodation strategies and institution-building processes in the Greek Orthodox Church, and, last but not least, on fluent confessional identities and trans-confessional discourses in clerical milieus
Classification of Finishing Tools in Greek Bookbinding: Establishing links from the Library of St Catherine's Monastery, Sinai, Egypt
The thesis examines the decoration of Greek bookbinding, through the study of the leather-covered bindings from the monastery of Saint Catherine in Sinai, Egypt.
The manuscript collection is remarkable for the variety of binding styles that represent mainly Greek but also other bookbinding traditions, including Georgian. Syrian and Eastern European. The examination of the decorative motifs tooled on the leather covered bindings aims to identify the style and characteristics of bookbinding at the monastery. Moreover, links between and evidence for specific bindings and the manuscripts they contain are established by grouping them and relating them to specific binders and bookbinding workshops. The workshops of the monastery are examined in parallel with groups of bindings that were imported into the monastery. The extent to which the trade in books and the circulation of binding techniques between the monastery and the west was a reflection of the relations of the monastery with its dependencies is also explored.
Rubbings of the approximately 5500 tool impressions on the 1195 decorated bindings have provided the core research material. They have been identified, classified and organized into a descriptive electronic database. Imaging techniques have been developed to compare the scanned impressions, which permitted the identification of impressions of the same finishing tools. Based on the identity of their decorative tools and on the process of comparison of their structural features, a number of the bindings have been ascribed to a total of 70 specific workshops, whose dates and origins are explored. 16 of these workshops - nine from the monastery of St Catherine and seven from elsewhere, which produced bindings imported to the monastery, are discussed analytically. In addition to that, 40 original bookbinding finishing tools were discovered at the monastery during this research, which have provided invaluable material for our understanding of the tooling methods and particularities of decorated book covers at the monastery.
The largest corpus of finishing tools used on Greek bindings to date has been compiled to provide a reference tool which will aid future research on Greek bookbinding.
Supervisors: Nicholas Pickwoad and Mirjam Foot
Walking as Do-It-Yourself Urbansim
This article develops a series of theoretical notions arising in the context of an urban art project that took place in London in the summer of 2004 under the title “Where do you breathe?”1 As a participatory urban intervention, the project challenged the notion of authorship in public space by casting the act of walking as a transformation of urban space, and examined the potentials for a practice of photography based on interaction rather than passive representation
Spinal anaesthesia for brachytherapy for carcinoma of the cervix a comparison of two dose regimes of hypebaric bupivacaine
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references.The main purpose of the study was to help establish the best dose regimen of hyperbaric bupivacaine, when combined with intrathecal fentanyl, for spinal anaesthesia for brachytherapy for carcinoma of the cervix. This procedure is performed as a day case at Groote Schuur Hospital
Policy implications of the potential carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) emission and energy impacts of highly automated vehicles
This chapter explores the extent to which the adoption of highly automated vehicles (AVs) will lead to carbon dioxide (CO2) emission reduction in the future. Additionally, policy implications are given. Based on existing literature, this chapter shows that the adoption of AVs will result in a modest improvement of CO2 emission per kilometer traveled compared to non-autonomous vehicles in the future. Combined with the expectations that AVs will lead to a modest to, even, high growth in vehicle kilometers traveled (VKT) compared to business as usual, the net energy and CO2 emission balance for AVs seems, at its best, to be neutral, but is probably negative. The potential accelerating role of AVs in relation to the uptake of electric vehicles might have the largest positive impacts on the CO2 emissions per kilometer driven, but this accelerating role of AV technology in relation to the uptake of electric vehicles is uncertain. For the time being the most useful policy implication to curb road transport CO2 emissions seems to be to continue with policies that promote the use of alternatives for fossil fuels, such as electricity.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Transport and Logistic
Creativity in co-Design for Physical Education: Comparing Contributions of Children and Professionals
This study is carried out within the context of a research and innovationproject Co-design with Kids that aims to support teaching of broad so-called ‘21stcentury’ skills. In this project, design toolboxes for use within primary educationare developed and studied, with real life clients and assignments. In the casedescribed in this paper, the assignment was to create new concepts for physicaleducation (PE). To be able to assess the value of design outcomes created in aco-design trajectory by children, we compared their design outcomes to thosecreated in a similar design process by professionals. Six teams of children (n=21,11-12 years old) and three teams of professionals (n=10, with a background indesign, sports or physical education) developed concepts in separate co-creationsessions. We present a first assessment of the differences and similarities increativity of the design outcomes of the two groups. This assessment of textualsummaries shows no remarkable differences between design outcomes ofchildren and those of professionals in terms of elaboration, originality andrelevance. This indicates that children could be involved as design partners.Further research is needed to gain insight into the specific value of involvingchildren as design partners.Accepted author manuscriptDesign Conceptualization and CommunicationScience Education and Communicatio
A biopolítica como a política da vida e da vitalidade humana : aproximações, discrepâncias, comensurabilidades e avanços conceituais nas propostas de Michel Foucault e Nikolas Rose
This Master's Dissertation proposes to analyze the notion of biopolitics and its derived concepts as conceptualized, in the 1970s, by the French philosopher Michel Foucault. At the same time, it also intends to analyze the same notion, biopolitics, proposed in the first decade of the 21st century, by the English sociologist Nikolas Rose. Both approaches have their own characteristics. Biopolitics theorized by Michel Foucault refers to the entry of life into the political strategies of States, which occurred between the 17th and 18th centuries, when sovereign power assumed the role of managing the life and vitality of man-species, aiming to, above all, to increase the population’s level of health. The conception of biopolitics formulated by Nikolas Rose concerns the politics of life that has taken shape in the last three decades. It is not delimited by the poles of health and illness, it is concerned with optimizing human vitality and is put into practice by social actors themselves in conjunction with medical authorities. Furthermore, 21st century biopolitics is related to the formation of social relations based on shared somatic statuses. This research seeks, through Content Analysis, to identify the approximations, discrepancies and advances in relation to these concepts from one author and the other, enabling us to draw a parallel between the biopolitics defined by both authors. The results point to the coexistence and specific complementarities between the two notions of biopolitics.A presente Dissertação de Mestrado busca analisar a noção de biopolítica tal como conceituada, na década de 1970, pelo filósofo francês Michel Foucault e, na primeira década do século XXI, pelo sociólogo inglês Nikolas Rose. Ambas as abordagens guardam características próprias. A biopolítica teorizada por Michel Foucault refere-se a entrada da vida nas estratégias políticas dos Estados, o que se deu entre os séculos XVII e XVIII, quando o poder soberano assume o papel de gerenciar a vida e a vitalidade do homem-espécie, objetivando, sobretudo, aumentar o nível de saúde da população. A concepção de biopolítica formulada por Nikolas Rose diz respeito à política da vida que tomou forma nas últimas três décadas. Ela não está delimitada pelos polos da saúde e da doença, está preocupada com a otimização da vitalidade humana e é posta em prática pelos próprios atores sociais em conjunto com autoridades médicas. Além disso, a biopolítica do século XXI está relacionada à formação de relações sociais a partir de status somáticos partilhados. Essa pesquisa busca, através da Análise de Conteúdo, identificar as aproximações, discrepâncias e avanços com relação a esses conceitos de um e de outro autor, possibilitando-nos traçar um paralelo entre a biopolítica definida por ambos os autores. Os resultados apontam para a coexistência e a complementaridades específicas entre as duas noções de biopolítica
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