781 resultados para Realism
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Resumen: A simple vista, la zoología monstruosa podría verse como una fauna de carácter real, en oposición a otros seres que evidencian su monstruosidad. Sin embargo, bajo ese manto aparente de realismo, se esconde el principio mágico que ha movido a esos animales a un desplazamiento de la más pura realidad a la otredad monstruosa, sea a causa de la metamorfosis, de las profecías o de cualquier otro elemento que no se corresponda directamente con su naturaleza animal, sino que provenga de un principio exterior —la magia— o interior —su propia naturaleza monstruosa/prodigiosa—. Es el caso de los leones del Palmerín de Olivia (Salamanca, Juan de Porras, 1511), que debe enfrentar el héroe en tierras de moros
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Resumen: El presente trabajo propone elementos para una reformulación de la enseñanza del Derecho Civil en la Argentina del Bicentenario. Parte del análisis del estado actual de la enseñanza en esta rama jurídica, con especial referencia a sus etapas históricas. Considera luego lo que se denomina “el modelo del cententario”, con particular atención a la influencia de la modernidad ilustrada y la cultura del Código. Evalúa luego la cuestión a partir de la tensión entre modernidad ilustrada y posmodernidad, proponiendo una alternativa al modelo de enseñanza surgido de la posmodernidad. Como hipótesis de trabajo propone una lectura de la denominada cultura jurídica desde los principios del derecho, y aportar así una alternativa desde la perspectiva del realismo jurídico clásico.
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Resumen: El conocimiento técnico parece estar sobrevalorado. Esta situación puede provenir de una consideración aislada de aquel tipo de conocimiento. Una correcta integración de los saberes, incluida la técnica, tiende a un desarrollo más armónico de los fines del ser humano.
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Resumen: Mucho antes de que San Agustín y Santo Tomás afirmaran que las cosas son buenas por el mero hecho de ser, ya en el siglo II de nuestra era Ireneo expresaba su confianza en la bondad fundamental de la materia. En los últimos seis capítulos del Adversus haereses (V, 31-36), el Obispo de Lyon plantea una verdadera teología de la historia que tiene como centro al hombre plasmado por Dios y llamado a su plenificación definitiva en la temporalidad y en el mismo mundo que lo vio caer. Al describir este tramo final y decisivo de la experiencia humana en la historia, nuestro autor nos revela su peculiar concepción del tiempo a la par que despliega un realismo escatológico totalmente opuesto al gnosticismo espiritualista de la época, que consideraba todo lo material como proveniente del error y la defección. A su vez, esta concepción de Ireneo supera tanto a los milenarismos ingenuos de su tiempo como a las utopías posteriores, en que el realismo escatológico es trocado en escatologismo radical. Se trata, en definitiva, de un optimismo metafísico propio de la visión cristiana que resultó novedoso para el ambiente espiritual de la época en que se gestó y que alienta a una prometedora relación del hombre con la naturaleza, ya sea desde la perspectiva del trabajo humano como fuerza transformadora de la misma, o desde un enfoque ecológico sin compromiso con posturas extremas, tales como el panteísmo o la explotación y sojuzgamiento brutal de los recursos naturales.
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Resumen: Este trabajo pretende exponer de manera sintética y no exhaustiva siete de las notas que un iusnaturalismo realista en clave antropológica ha de tener para responder tanto a las inquietudes legítimas del hombre contemporáneo como a una fundamentación de las dimensiones indisponibles de justicia natural de todo ordenamiento jurídico. Se trata de lo siguiente: a) encontrar un punto de partida en la realidad entendida metafísicamente, b) desarrollar una gnoseología integral sobre la integralidad del derecho, c) esclarecer la relación intrínseca entre justicia y derecho, d) plantear un ordenamiento jurídico con dimensiones naturales y positivas, e) proponer un derecho natural permanente y a la vez dinámico, f) fundamentar el derecho en un antropocentrismo teologal y g) proponer una apertura a los aportes de diferentes perspectivas iusfilosóficas.
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Resumen: El artículo aborda el “derecho a la jurisdicción” desde una perspectiva iusfilosófica. Para tal fin define su concepto, describe las diferentes perspectivas teóricas tales como la positiva o necesaria del realismo, la negativa y contingente del marxismo y la irrelevante del liberalismo. Luego aborda sus fundamentos, alcances y obstáculos para su ejercicio apropiado. El abordaje de estas cuestiones permite advertir que el derecho a la jurisdicción no es sólo una problemática del derecho procesal sino que constituye una pieza clave del Estado de Derecho Constitucional.
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Resumen: El artículo analiza el Capítulo Cuarto titulado “La ley natural y la ciudad”, del Documento de la Comisión Teológica Internacional sobre la ley natural y considera sus grandes temas centrales: el bien común, con particular atención a la naturaleza social de la persona humana, el principio de finalidad, la relación entre bien común y bien individual y el contenido del bien común político; la ley natural, con una referencia a la nueva escuela anglosajona del derecho natural; la cuestión de la moral y el derecho natural, considerando la noción de derecho, lo natural del derecho y los derechos humanos; las relaciones entre derecho natural y derecho positivo, con referencia a la prudencia jurídica y el orden político y el orden escatológico. Se analizan las grandes notas del capítulo, vinculadas con las enseñanzas del realismo jurídico clásico, se muestran otras lecturas para fundar la actualidad y riqueza del Documento y se formulan conexiones con autores de actualidad.
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Abstract: Nancy Cartwright understands scientific explanation in terms of stable causes which she calls “capacities” or “natures”. She has been criticized for her interpretation of Mill’s tendencies, for her stress on individual causes, for the contrast between her empiricism and her metaphysical approach, and for her “local realism”. This paper will analyze those criticisms and will argue that a greater reliance on Aristotle might help to answer them and consolidate her proposals. Note that Cartwright is more skeptical about the possibilities of causal explanation in the social realm than about its possibilities in natural science. The paper thus also examines Aristotelian social capacities and provides some Aristotelian arguments for Cartwright’s skepticism about our knowledge of them and our using them to arrive at social scientific explanations.
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Revista DOAJ, bajo la Licencia Creative Commons 3.0.Reconocimiento-No comercial-Sin Obra Derivada
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363 p.
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In the quest for a descriptive theory of decision-making, the rational actor model in economics imposes rather unrealistic expectations and abilities on human decision makers. The further we move from idealized scenarios, such as perfectly competitive markets, and ambitiously extend the reach of the theory to describe everyday decision making situations, the less sense these assumptions make. Behavioural economics has instead proposed models based on assumptions that are more psychologically realistic, with the aim of gaining more precision and descriptive power. Increased psychological realism, however, comes at the cost of a greater number of parameters and model complexity. Now there are a plethora of models, based on different assumptions, applicable in differing contextual settings, and selecting the right model to use tends to be an ad-hoc process. In this thesis, we develop optimal experimental design methods and evaluate different behavioral theories against evidence from lab and field experiments.
We look at evidence from controlled laboratory experiments. Subjects are presented with choices between monetary gambles or lotteries. Different decision-making theories evaluate the choices differently and would make distinct predictions about the subjects' choices. Theories whose predictions are inconsistent with the actual choices can be systematically eliminated. Behavioural theories can have multiple parameters requiring complex experimental designs with a very large number of possible choice tests. This imposes computational and economic constraints on using classical experimental design methods. We develop a methodology of adaptive tests: Bayesian Rapid Optimal Adaptive Designs (BROAD) that sequentially chooses the "most informative" test at each stage, and based on the response updates its posterior beliefs over the theories, which informs the next most informative test to run. BROAD utilizes the Equivalent Class Edge Cutting (EC2) criteria to select tests. We prove that the EC2 criteria is adaptively submodular, which allows us to prove theoretical guarantees against the Bayes-optimal testing sequence even in the presence of noisy responses. In simulated ground-truth experiments, we find that the EC2 criteria recovers the true hypotheses with significantly fewer tests than more widely used criteria such as Information Gain and Generalized Binary Search. We show, theoretically as well as experimentally, that surprisingly these popular criteria can perform poorly in the presence of noise, or subject errors. Furthermore, we use the adaptive submodular property of EC2 to implement an accelerated greedy version of BROAD which leads to orders of magnitude speedup over other methods.
We use BROAD to perform two experiments. First, we compare the main classes of theories for decision-making under risk, namely: expected value, prospect theory, constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) and moments models. Subjects are given an initial endowment, and sequentially presented choices between two lotteries, with the possibility of losses. The lotteries are selected using BROAD, and 57 subjects from Caltech and UCLA are incentivized by randomly realizing one of the lotteries chosen. Aggregate posterior probabilities over the theories show limited evidence in favour of CRRA and moments' models. Classifying the subjects into types showed that most subjects are described by prospect theory, followed by expected value. Adaptive experimental design raises the possibility that subjects could engage in strategic manipulation, i.e. subjects could mask their true preferences and choose differently in order to obtain more favourable tests in later rounds thereby increasing their payoffs. We pay close attention to this problem; strategic manipulation is ruled out since it is infeasible in practice, and also since we do not find any signatures of it in our data.
In the second experiment, we compare the main theories of time preference: exponential discounting, hyperbolic discounting, "present bias" models: quasi-hyperbolic (α, β) discounting and fixed cost discounting, and generalized-hyperbolic discounting. 40 subjects from UCLA were given choices between 2 options: a smaller but more immediate payoff versus a larger but later payoff. We found very limited evidence for present bias models and hyperbolic discounting, and most subjects were classified as generalized hyperbolic discounting types, followed by exponential discounting.
In these models the passage of time is linear. We instead consider a psychological model where the perception of time is subjective. We prove that when the biological (subjective) time is positively dependent, it gives rise to hyperbolic discounting and temporal choice inconsistency.
We also test the predictions of behavioral theories in the "wild". We pay attention to prospect theory, which emerged as the dominant theory in our lab experiments of risky choice. Loss aversion and reference dependence predicts that consumers will behave in a uniquely distinct way than the standard rational model predicts. Specifically, loss aversion predicts that when an item is being offered at a discount, the demand for it will be greater than that explained by its price elasticity. Even more importantly, when the item is no longer discounted, demand for its close substitute would increase excessively. We tested this prediction using a discrete choice model with loss-averse utility function on data from a large eCommerce retailer. Not only did we identify loss aversion, but we also found that the effect decreased with consumers' experience. We outline the policy implications that consumer loss aversion entails, and strategies for competitive pricing.
In future work, BROAD can be widely applicable for testing different behavioural models, e.g. in social preference and game theory, and in different contextual settings. Additional measurements beyond choice data, including biological measurements such as skin conductance, can be used to more rapidly eliminate hypothesis and speed up model comparison. Discrete choice models also provide a framework for testing behavioural models with field data, and encourage combined lab-field experiments.
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A obra romanesca de Mia Couto é o objeto da investigação desta tese, ponto de partida para tentar compreender a contribuição do autor na afirmação do romance africano e na reconstrução da identidade de seu país, Moçambique. Para tanto, o estudo discute a importância da revelação de uma paisagem oculta ao leitor, de matriz cultural e complexo entendimento. O capítulo que traz esta análise mostra como a obra retrata as condições históricas e políticas de dominação, desigualdade, identificando aqui e lá um tom levemente engajado na escrita miacoutiana, tanto quanto suas posições ideológicas, suas denúncias. Entre os temas mais destacados na obra está o animismo africano que dá origem a uma série de circunstâncias sobrenaturais nos enredos, como uma lembrança constante: em África, os espíritos estão por toda a parte, mantendo intensa relação com os vivos. Em torno da questão, a tese discute o fato de parte da crítica classificar a obra por gêneros como o Realismo Mágico, o Maravilhoso e o Fantástico. Também são investigadas as estratégias narrativas deste autor, suas opções regulares na composição de enredos, personagens, nomes de personagens e epígrafes. Com base nessas marcas e em outros traços comuns a todos os seus romances talvez presentes igualmente em seus contos descobre-se a adequação entre a criação de um sistema de pensamento dicotômico, que atravessa a obra, e estruturas frasais que revelam algo significativo: os romances de Mia Couto são propositivos, especialmente quando convidam o leitor ao movimento constante de questionamento de suas próprias certezas
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Este trabalho apresenta uma leitura das manifestações do insólito ficcional, a partir de mitos e do maravilhoso moçambicano, em Vinte e zinco, de Mia Couto. Essas manifestações podem ser vistas como pertencentes ao Realismo Maravilhoso, Mágico ou Animista, uma vez que podem ser observadas através da representação literária de mitos que perpassam o continente africano como um todo, permitindo, assim, repensar a origem de lendas, crenças, folclore, religiosidade e tradições nacionais. Dessa forma, os eventos insólitos presentes em Vinte e zinco são utilizados por Mia Couto com a intenção, explicitada em seus artigos de opinião, de resgatar e recuperar aspectos dispersos da mosaica e híbrida identidade moçambicana, contribuindo para sua construção na contemporaneidade, ultrapassadas as guerras de descolonização -frente a Portugal - e civil -entre os próprios moçambicanos
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Neste estudo é analisado o conto da paulistana Lygia Fagundes Telles sob dois enfoques principais: a investigação a respeito do narrador e o exame das técnicas utilizadas na escritura lygiana em si. Em relação ao narrador, examinam-se as inovações trazidas pela escritora a partir do diálogo com a tradição machadiana de narrativa. Toma-se como ponto de partida da análise o conto Missa do Galo: variações sobre o mesmo tema (1977), escrito por Lygia Fagundes Telles sobre o conto homônimo de Machado de Assis. No que concerne ao segundo aspecto, a escrita lygiana em si, são examinadas técnicas que resultam no que se chamará de palavra-bolha, ou seja, uma escritura na qual a característica primordial é a leveza narrativa, mesmo nos contos onde está presente a tragicidade, e investiga-se, através dessa técnica, o tipo de realismo presente no conto lygiano. A expressão palavra-bolha foi escolhida a partir do título de um dos contos da autora, A estrutura da bolha de sabão. Com o objetivo de analisar a palavra-bolha, ou seja, as técnicas lygianas de escritura, foi realizada uma divisão didática em quatro grupos de temas, nos quais foram encaixados e examinados os contos escolhidos como amostragens
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Part 1. Many interesting visual and mechanical phenomena occur in the critical region of fluids, both for the gas-liquid and liquid-liquid transitions. The precise thermodynamic and transport behavior here has some broad consequences for the molecular theory of liquids. Previous studies in this laboratory on a liquid-liquid critical mixture via ultrasonics supported a basically classical analysis of fluid behavior by M. Fixman (e. g., the free energy is assumed analytic in intensive variables in the thermodynamics)--at least when the fluid is not too close to critical. A breakdown in classical concepts is evidenced close to critical, in some well-defined ways. We have studied herein a liquid-liquid critical system of complementary nature (possessing a lower critical mixing or consolute temperature) to all previous mixtures, to look for new qualitative critical behavior. We did not find such new behavior in the ultrasonic absorption ascribable to the critical fluctuations, but we did find extra absorption due to chemical processes (yet these are related to the mixing behavior generating the lower consolute point). We rederived, corrected, and extended Fixman's analysis to interpret our experimental results in these more complex circumstances. The entire account of theory and experiment is prefaced by an extensive introduction recounting the general status of liquid state theory. The introduction provides a context for our present work, and also points out problems deserving attention. Interest in these problems was stimulated by this work but also by work in Part 3.
Part 2. Among variational theories of electronic structure, the Hartree-Fock theory has proved particularly valuable for a practical understanding of such properties as chemical binding, electric multipole moments, and X-ray scattering intensity. It also provides the most tractable method of calculating first-order properties under external or internal one-electron perturbations, either developed explicitly in orders of perturbation theory or in the fully self-consistent method. The accuracy and consistency of first-order properties are poorer than those of zero-order properties, but this is most often due to the use of explicit approximations in solving the perturbed equations, or to inadequacy of the variational basis in size or composition. We have calculated the electric polarizabilities of H2, He, Li, Be, LiH, and N2 by Hartree-Fock theory, using exact perturbation theory or the fully self-consistent method, as dictated by convenience. By careful studies on total basis set composition, we obtained good approximations to limiting Hartree-Fock values of polarizabilities with bases of reasonable size. The values for all species, and for each direction in the molecular cases, are within 8% of experiment, or of best theoretical values in the absence of the former. Our results support the use of unadorned Hartree-Pock theory for static polarizabilities needed in interpreting electron-molecule scattering data, collision-induced light scattering experiments, and other phenomena involving experimentally inaccessible polarizabilities.
Part 3. Numerical integration of the close-coupled scattering equations has been carried out to obtain vibrational transition probabilities for some models of the electronically adiabatic H2-H2 collision. All the models use a Lennard-Jones interaction potential between nearest atoms in the collision partners. We have analyzed the results for some insight into the vibrational excitation process in its dependence on the energy of collision, the nature of the vibrational binding potential, and other factors. We conclude also that replacement of earlier, simpler models of the interaction potential by the Lennard-Jones form adds very little realism for all the complication it introduces. A brief introduction precedes the presentation of our work and places it in the context of attempts to understand the collisional activation process in chemical reactions as well as some other chemical dynamics.