3,226 research outputs found
ADAM SMITH'S OPTIMISTIC TELEOLOGICAL VIEW OF HISTORY
Adam Smith's four-stage theory provides the framework for his writings on history. The fourth stage is the commercial epoch; the culmination of history in this stage is a key component in the conventional interpretation of Adam Smith as a prophet of commercialism. In two historical case studies Smith shows the capacity of commercial society to regenerate itself. This potent capacity suggests that commercial society is inevitable. At a certain point in time it also overcomes the major obstacles to its permanence. Smith's philosophy of history anticipates the end of history views of Kant and Hegel.Political Economy,
H. Schlosser, Gruindzüge der neueren Privatrechtsgasehichte — ein Studienbuch, wyd. 3
Recenzja: Hans Schlosser, Grundzüge der neueren Privatrechtsgeschichte — ein Studienbuch, wyd. 3, C. F. Müller, Verlag, Heidelberg 1979, ss. XIV, 177. Uni-Taschenbücher 882
Adam Oehlenschläger
This is a short presentation of the main works of the Danish author Adam Oehlenschläger
The Black Londoner Experience: Exploring Black Life through Records of the Court, 1720-1840
Black Londoners have lived in the city for centuries. This collection brings 10 Black London lives together in an accessible volume to share the diversity of their experiences in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries with new readers.
Drawing on the records of the Old Bailey criminal courthouse, these ten carefully selected trials have been chosen to show some of the breadth of Black experience in London during the age of enslavement (c. 1720-1840). The volume includes Black victims, witnesses, and defendants; men, women, and children; sailors, servants, and entertainers; locals, immigrants, and visitors. Some were treated well by the justice system, and others were met with cruelty. Each had their own experience.
While the volume contains details of crime and conflict, crime is not the sole focus. The sources also give us glimpses into the daily lives of these Black individuals as they interacted with the city and its inhabitants. We learn where these Black people spent their time, with whom, doing what, and sometimes even what they had in their pockets.
Each of the ten cases has been accessibly formatted for classroom use or personal study, and features illustrations by Manon Wright. The sources are arranged like plays, making them easy to read aloud as a means of better understanding the theatre of the courtroom and the power dynamics at play. Dr Crymble offers notes and reflections on tricky or foreign concepts in each case, as well as issues that he has noted through experience that students often misinterpret by making modern assumptions about the past.
John Humphreys, 1727
John Cross, 1749
Elizabeth Gift, 1755
Esther Allingham, 1782
John Thomas, 1786
James Wallis, 1801
Dolby Jackson, 1808
Thomas Johnson, 1818
'The Busker' 1831
Louis James Grant, 1840
For serious scholars of Black experience in 18th/19th century London criminal records, the author also recommends the following works:
Tim Hitchcock, Robert Shoemaker, Clive Emsley, Sharon Howard, Jamie McLaughlin, et al, the Old Bailey Proceedings Online, 1674-1913 (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 8, 2018.
Adam Crymble and Emma Azid, 'Black Lives, British Justice: Black People in London Criminal Justice Records, 1720-1841' Journal of Slavery and Data Preservation vol. 2, no 2. (2021): 1-11.
Kathleen Chater. Untold Histories: Black People in England and Wales during the Period of the British Slave Trade, c. 1660-1807 (Manchester, 2011).
Norma Myers, Reconstructing the Black Past (Frank Cass, 1996).
Marika Sherwood. ‘Blacks in the Gordon Riots’, History Today, vol. 47 (1997), 24-28
Recommended from our members
Retraction: Crystal structure of a Baeyer–Villiger flavin‐containing monooxygenase from Staphylococcus aureus MRSA strain MU50, William C. Hwang, Qingping Xu, Bainan Wu, Adam Godzik
The above article from Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics, published online on 5 August 2014 in Wiley Online Library (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/prot.24661/full), has been retracted by agreement between William C. Hwang, Qingping Xu, Bainan Wu, Adam Godzik, the Editor‐in‐Chief, Bertrand E. Garcia‐Moreno, and Wiley Periodicals, Inc. The retraction has been agreed because submission was made without agreement from co‐author Adam Godzik
Adam Smith and Roman Servitudes
This essay is a preprint of an article that appeared at: Tijdschrift voor Rechstsgeschiedenis, 72 (2004), 327–57.This essay discusses Adam Smith historical jurisprudence and his use of Roman law materials in his Lectures on Jurisprudence. It argues that Smith found it difficult to maintain his theory of legal development in the face of a highly developed body of Roman law literature
The social impacts of the heat–health watch/warning system in Phoenix, Arizona: assessing the perceived risk and response of the public
abstract: Here, 201 surveys were distributed in Metropolitan Phoenix to determine the social impacts of the heat warning system, or more specifically, to gauge risk perception and warning response.Corresponding Author:
Adam J. Kalkstein
Arizona State University
[email protected]
THE THEOLOGICAL FOUNDATION OF ADAM SMITH'S WORK
The paper will discuss the theological foundation to Smith's writings. Teleology, final causes and divine design were initially seen as central to understanding Smith's writings. Over time, this view fell out of fashion. In the period after World War II, with the rise of positivism, commentators tended to overlook or downplay this interpretation. In the last decade, or so, teleology has started to be restored to its former position as an essential element in understanding Smith. After spelling out Smith's teleology and his view of final causes, divine design and the ends of nature, we try to explain the Panglossian nature of the 'new theistic view' of Smith. While our view differs somewhat, we agree with the essence of the 'new view' claim: a theological view exists in Smith which underpins his moral and economic theories.Political Economy,
An Analogue Approach to Identify Extreme Precipitation Events: Evaluation and Application to CMIP5 Climate Models in the United States
Global warming is expected to alter the frequency, intensity, and risk of extreme precipitation events. However, global climate models in general do not correctly reproduce the frequency and intensity distribution of precipitation, especially at the regional scale. We present an analogue method to detect the occurrence of extreme precipitation events without relying on modeled precipitation. Our approach is based on the use of composites to identify the distinct large-scale atmospheric conditions associated with widespread outbreaks of extreme precipitation events across local scales. The development of composite maps, exemplified in the South-Central United States and the Western United States, is achieved through the joint analysis of 27-yr (1979–2005) CPC gridded station data and NASA's Modern Era Retrospective-analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA). Various circulation features and moisture plumes associated with extreme precipitation events are examined. This analogue method is evaluated against the MERRA reanalysis with a success rate of around 80% in detecting extreme events within one or two days. When applied to the climate model simulations of the 20th century from Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5), we find the analogues from the CMIP5 models produces more consistent (and less uncertain) total number of extreme events compared against observations as opposed to using their corresponding simulated precipitation over the three regions examined. The analogues also perform better to characterize the interannual range of extreme days with the smaller RMSE across all the models for all the descriptive statistics (minimum, lower and higher quartile, median, and maximum). These results suggest the capability of CMIP5 models to simulate the realistic large-scale atmospheric conditions associated with widespread local-scale extreme events, with a credible frequency. Collectively speaking, the presented analyses clearly highlight the comparative and enhanced nature of these results to studies that consider only modeled precipitation output to assess extreme-event frequency.This work was funded by the NASA Energy and Water Cycle Study Research Announcement
(NNH07ZDA001N) and MacroSystems Biology Program Grant (NSF-AES EF#1137306) from
the National Science Foundation. We acknowledge the modeling groups, the Program for Climate
Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison (PCMDI), and the WCRP’s Working Group on Coupled
31Modeling (WGCM) for their roles in making available the WCRP CMIP5 multimodel data set.
We thank the NOAA Climate Prediction Center for the global gridded precipitation observations
and the NASA Global Modeling and Assimilation Office for the MERRA Reanalysis data
The Potential Wind Power Resource in Australia: A New Perspective
Australia’s wind resource is considered to be very good, and the utilization of this renewable energy resource is increasing rapidly: wind power installed capacity increased by 35% from 2006 to 2011 and is predicted to account for over 12% of Australia’s electricity generation in 2030. Due to this growth in the utilization of the wind resource and the increasing importance of wind power in Australia’s energy mix, this study sets out to analyze and interpret the nature of Australia’s wind resources using robust metrics of the abundance, variability and intermittency of wind power density, and analyzes the variation of these characteristics with current and potential wind turbine hub heights. We also assess the extent to which wind intermittency, on hourly or greater timescales, can potentially be mitigated by the aggregation of geographically dispersed wind farms, and in so doing, lessen the severe impact on wind power economic viability of long lulls in wind and power generated. Our results suggest that over much of Australia, areas that have high wind intermittency coincide with large expanses in which the aggregation of turbine output does not mitigate variability. These areas are also geographically remote, some are disconnected from the east coast’s electricity grid and large population centers, which are factors that could decrease the potential economic viability of wind farms in these locations. However, on the eastern seaboard, even though the wind resource is weaker, it is less variable, much closer to large population centers, and there exists more potential to mitigate it’s intermittency through aggregation. This study forms a necessary precursor to the analysis of the impact of large-scale circulations and oscillations on the wind resource at the mesoscale.Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Joint Program on the Science & Policy of Global Chang
- …
