32 resultados para dualities
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Tese de doutoramento, Estudos de Literatura e de Cultura (Estudos Comparatistas), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2014
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Exploring the new science of emergence allows us to create a very different classroom than how the modern classroom has been conceptualised under the mentality of efficiency and output. Working on the whole person, and not just the mind, we see a shift from the epistemic pillars of truth to more ontological concerns as regards student achievement in our post-Modern and critical discourses. It is important to understand these shifts and how we are to transition our own perception and mentality not only in our research methodologies but also our approach to conceptualisations of issues in education and sustainability. We can no longer think linearly to approach complex problems or advocate for education and disregard our interconnectedness insofar as it enhances our children’s education. We must, therefore, contemplate and transition to a world that is ecological and not mechanical, complex and not complicated—in essence, we must work to link mind-body with self-environment and transcend these in order to bring about an integration toward a sustainable future. A fundamental shift in consciousness and perception may implicate our nature of creating dichotomous entities in our own microcosms, yet postmodern theorists assume, a priori, that these dualities can be bridged in naturalism alone. I, on the other hand, embrace metaphysics to understand the implicated modern classroom in a hierarchical context and ask: is not the very omission of metaphysics in postmodern discourse a symptom from an education whose foundation was built in its absence? The very dereliction of ancient wisdom in education is very peculiar indeed. Western mindfulness may play a vital component in consummating pragmatic idealism, but only under circumstances admitting metaphysics can we truly transcend our limitations, thereby placing Eastern Mindfulness not as an ecological component, but as an ecological and metaphysical foundation.
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"Thèse présentée à la Faculté des études supérieures en vue de l'obtention du grade de Docteur en droit (LL.D.)"
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We show that tree level superstring theories on certain supersymmetric backgrounds admit a symmetry which we call "fermionic T-duality". This is a non-local redefinition of the fermionic worldsheet fields similar to the redefinition we perform on bosonic variables when we do an ordinary T-duality. This duality maps a supersymmetric background to another supersymmetric background with different RR fields and a different dilaton. We show that a certain combination of bosonic and fermionic T-dualities maps the full superstring theory on AdS(5) x S-5 back to itself in such a way that gluon scattering amplitudes in the original theory map to something very close to Wilson loops in the dual theory. This duality maps the "dual superconformal symmetry" of the original theory to the ordinary superconformal symmetry of the dual model. This explains the dual superconformal invariance of planar scattering amplitudes of N = 4 super Yang Mills and also sheds some light on the connection between amplitudes and Wilson loops. In the appendix, we propose a simple prescription for open superstring MHV tree amplitudes in a flat background.
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O presente artigo busca compreender o processo da Construção Social da Saúde levando-se em consideração que a saúde, no decorrer da historia dos homens, foi sempre considerada um bem e, por isso, mereceu constante preocupação, no sentido de tornar-se geradora de modas, de modos de fazer e de existir, de conflitos, dualidades e controle social. No decorrer desse tempo, modelos de saúde foram sendo criados, interpretados e recriados, quando necessário, provocando igual processo de transformação nas maneiras de sentir, pensar e agir da população usuária dos mais variados recursos de saúde disponíveis, segundo as relações entre o mágico e o necessário , estabelecendo, entre os que serviam e os que eram servidos, uma relação também tão mágica quanto necessária, intermediada pelo corpo, destes sujeitos, depositário do estado de saúde ou de doença. Além do processo de transformação das mentalidades, são ainda levados em consideração os processos de construção, desconstrução e de evolução do imaginário e das representações sociais vivenciados pelos sujeitos e seus corpos. A evolução dos conhecimentos e o avanço científico-tecnológico são enfocados também como fontes modelares e comunicativas no sentido de ditar regras ao corpo que a humanidade porta socialmente neste século.
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Esta investigación se ocupa de comprobar la viabilidad de un término, un concepto que se detecta como posible instrumento para nombrar algunas operaciones en arquitectura. Ese concepto es Lo Neutro. Frente al sistema de dualidades con el que enunciamos lo real, lo Neutro se sitúa, no tanto en el punto medio, como en el punto opuesto a ambos términos. No es la conjunción de contrarios, sino aquello que desvía la propia pregunta que obliga a elegir. Próximo a los conceptos de indefinición, indiferencia e inacción, lo Neutro se revela como un mecanismo fundamental de disolución. Reconociendo en la lengua varios sentidos para el término, con cada capítulo, la tesis va construyendo una definición ampliada de lo Neutro hasta configurar un conjunto de significados aplicables a la arquitectura. El primero de ellos es el que se deriva del concepto de indiferencia funcional. Tras un análisis del contexto teórico sobre el que se asienta la dialéctica bi-direccional forma-función, su consolidación en los primeros años del siglo XX y también su puesta en crisis mediante la introducción de nociones multi-relacionales como ‘entorno’ y ‘sistema’, la investigación propone tres modelos de estudio: la Planta Tipo, la Planta Única y la Planta de Equivalencias. En cada uno de estos casos, aunque el tema fundamental es la neutralidad programática, se reconoce también la presencia de los mecanismos geométricos y operaciones conceptuales que lo Neutro utiliza para generar respectivamente condiciones de ‘soporte’, de ‘marco’ o de ‘campo’. Estas tres condiciones espaciales apuntan a un entendimiento de lo Neutro que asocia su fórmula de doble negación (ni lo uno, ni lo otro) con el estado más incipiente de la materia, aquel en el que todavía no es pero que contiene ya todos los elementos de posibilidad de ser: lo Neutro como potencia. Aquello que la lógica nos impide afirmar, que una cosa es y no-es al mismo tiempo, nos lo concede la categoría aristotélica de la potencia. Por ello, en la última parte de la tesis se desarrollan de forma más autónoma aquellos temas vinculados con estos tres tipos de espacio que se basan en la renuncia, abordando la cuestión de la potencialidad desde la negación. Partiendo de dos condiciones superficiales básicas, la del muro vertical y la del suelo horizontal, se analizan algunos discursos basados en una restricción radical a estos dos elementos. Así, el muro ciego encuentra su precedente artístico en el lienzo en blanco y la tabula rasa se pone en relación con el concepto de ‘terrain vague’. Por último, la posibilidad de toda potencia de no actualizarse lleva a explorar el no-hacer como renuncia voluntaria y su capacidad de transformarse en acto de resistencia. ABSTRACT The concern of this research is to test the feasibility of a term, a concept that has been detected as a potential tool to name some architectural operations. That concept is the Neutral. In front of the dualities system with which we enounce the real, the Neutral places itself, not so much in the midpoint as in the opposite point of both terms. It is not the conjunction of the contraries, but that which deflects the question itself that compels us to make a choice. Recognizing the multiple interpretations of the term in the common language, with each chapter, the thesis builds an expanded definition of the Neutral to configure a set of meanings applicable to architecture. The first of them is the one that derives from the concept of functional indifference. After an analysis of the theoretical context in which the two-way dialectic between form and function lies, its consolidation in the early twentieth century and its call into crisis by the introduction of multi-relational concepts such as 'environment' and 'system', the research suggests three study models: the Typical Plan, the Single Plan and the Equivalents Plan. In each of these cases, although the fundamental issue is programmatic neutrality, it also recognizes the presence of geometric mechanisms and conceptual operations that the Neutral uses to generate respectively 'support', 'frame' or 'field' conditions. These three spatial conditions point to an understanding of the Neutral which associates its double negation formula (neither one nor the other) with the most incipient state of matter, that in which it not yet is, but already contains every element of the possibility of being: the neutral as potentiality. That which logic does not allow us to affirm, that one thing is and is-not at the same time, it is granted by the Aristotelian category of potentiality. Therefore, in the last part of the thesis, the topics relating these three types of space which are based on renouncement are more autonomously developed, addressing the issue of potentiality from the standpoint of denial. Starting from two basic surface conditions, the vertical wall and the horizontal floor, some speeches based on a radical restriction on these two elements are analyzed. Thus, the blind wall finds its artistic precedent in the blank canvas and the tabula rasa attitude gets in relation to the concept of ‘terrain vague’. Finally, the possibility of any potency of not being updated leads to explore the not-doing as voluntary resignation and its ability to transform itself into an act of resistance.
Resumo:
Esta investigación se ocupa de comprobar la viabilidad de un término, un concepto que se detecta como posible instrumento para nombrar algunas operaciones en arquitectura. Ese concepto es Lo Neutro. Frente al sistema de dualidades con el que enunciamos lo real, lo Neutro se sitúa, no tanto en el punto medio, como en el punto opuesto a ambos términos. No es la conjunción de contrarios, sino aquello que desvía la propia pregunta que obliga a elegir. Próximo a los conceptos de indefinición, indiferencia e inacción, lo Neutro se revela como un mecanismo fundamental de disolución. Reconociendo en la lengua varios sentidos para el término, con cada capítulo, la tesis va construyendo una definición ampliada de lo Neutro hasta configurar un conjunto de significados aplicables a la arquitectura. El primero de ellos es el que se deriva del concepto de indiferencia funcional. Tras un análisis del contexto teórico sobre el que se asienta la dialéctica bi-direccional forma-función, su consolidación en los primeros años del siglo XX y también su puesta en crisis mediante la introducción de nociones multi-relacionales como ‘entorno’ y ‘sistema’, la investigación propone tres modelos de estudio: la Planta Tipo, la Planta Única y la Planta de Equivalencias. En cada uno de estos casos, aunque el tema fundamental es la neutralidad programática, se reconoce también la presencia de los mecanismos geométricos y operaciones conceptuales que lo Neutro utiliza para generar respectivamente condiciones de ‘soporte’, de ‘marco’ o de ‘campo’. Estas tres condiciones espaciales apuntan a un entendimiento de lo Neutro que asocia su fórmula de doble negación (ni lo uno, ni lo otro) con el estado más incipiente de la materia, aquel en el que todavía no es pero que contiene ya todos los elementos de posibilidad de ser: lo Neutro como potencia. Aquello que la lógica nos impide afirmar, que una cosa es y no-es al mismo tiempo, nos lo concede la categoría aristotélica de la potencia. Por ello, en la última parte de la tesis se desarrollan de forma más autónoma aquellos temas vinculados con estos tres tipos de espacio que se basan en la renuncia, abordando la cuestión de la potencialidad desde la negación. Partiendo de dos condiciones superficiales básicas, la del muro vertical y la del suelo horizontal, se analizan algunos discursos basados en una restricción radical a estos dos elementos. Así, el muro ciego encuentra su precedente artístico en el lienzo en blanco y la tabula rasa se pone en relación con el concepto de ‘terrain vague’. Por último, la posibilidad de toda potencia de no actualizarse lleva a explorar el no-hacer como renuncia voluntaria y su capacidad de transformarse en acto de resistencia. ABSTRACT The concern of this research is to test the feasibility of a term, a concept that has been detected as a potential tool to name some architectural operations. That concept is the Neutral. In front of the dualities system with which we enounce the real, the Neutral places itself, not so much in the midpoint as in the opposite point of both terms. It is not the conjunction of the contraries, but that which deflects the question itself that compels us to make a choice. Recognizing the multiple interpretations of the term in the common language, with each chapter, the thesis builds an expanded definition of the Neutral to configure a set of meanings applicable to architecture. The first of them is the one that derives from the concept of functional indifference. After an analysis of the theoretical context in which the two-way dialectic between form and function lies, its consolidation in the early twentieth century and its call into crisis by the introduction of multi-relational concepts such as 'environment' and 'system', the research suggests three study models: the Typical Plan, the Single Plan and the Equivalents Plan. In each of these cases, although the fundamental issue is programmatic neutrality, it also recognizes the presence of geometric mechanisms and conceptual operations that the Neutral uses to generate respectively 'support', 'frame' or 'field' conditions. These three spatial conditions point to an understanding of the Neutral which associates its double negation formula (neither one nor the other) with the most incipient state of matter, that in which it not yet is, but already contains every element of the possibility of being: the neutral as potentiality. That which logic does not allow us to affirm, that one thing is and is-not at the same time, it is granted by the Aristotelian category of potentiality. Therefore, in the last part of the thesis, the topics relating these three types of space which are based on renouncement are more autonomously developed, addressing the issue of potentiality from the standpoint of denial. Starting from two basic surface conditions, the vertical wall and the horizontal floor, some speeches based on a radical restriction on these two elements are analyzed. Thus, the blind wall finds its artistic precedent in the blank canvas and the tabula rasa attitude gets in relation to the concept of ‘terrain vague’. Finally, the possibility of any potency of not being updated leads to explore the not-doing as voluntary resignation and its ability to transform itself into an act of resistance.
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La referencia a la tradición como una fuerza capaz de aportar unidad, al abarcar tanto la continuidad como los cambios en las expresiones al margen de la época o las técnicas empleadas, ha sido siempre un componente muy importante de las manifestaciones artísticas de Japón y es la sutil ligazón que las conecta desde el pasado hasta la actualidad. Se entiende aquí que tradición no equivale simplemente a preservación, sino que se trata de una transmisión con una vertiente dual, pues permite una constante evolución sin que se altere su esencia básica. Es de esta forma que la cultura japonesa de la era Edo (1600-1868), con su alto grado de innovación, riqueza y sofisticación, pero además como epílogo histórico previo a la Restauración Meiji de 1868, ha sido la referencia clave en lo relativo a esa mirada a la tradición nipona para el desarrollo de esta tesis. A partir de la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, todas estas características tan genuinas del período Edo quedaron en suspenso y, desde entonces, Japón ha seguido la vía de la modernización (que en muchos aspectos ha sido también la de la occidentalización). Los entrelazamientos de otras dualidades provocados en Japón por los ataques nucleares de 1945 condujeron a una inevitable fusión de aquel mundo físico con el mundo metafísico, de aquella terrible presencia con un tremendo sentimiento de ausencia y, en definitiva, de Oriente con Occidente. El consiguiente impacto sobre la cultura de la nación tuvo una especial repercusión en el ámbito arquitectónico. En este sentido, el pensamiento francés ha desempeñado un papel fundamental en el replanteamiento radical de muchos supuestos esenciales, de muchos conceptos y valores de la cultura occidental, incluyendo los procedentes de la Ilustración, en este mundo contemporáneo que es cada vez más complejo y plural. Éstos y otros hechos otorgan a la cultura japonesa tradicional una cualidad multidimensional (frente a la marcada bidimensionalidad que suele caracterizar a las culturas occidentales) que, tal y como esta tesis doctoral pretende poner de manifiesto, podría revelarse como una «síntesis de contradicciones» en la obra de los arquitectos japoneses Tadao Ando (Osaka, 1941-) y Toyo Ito (Keijo, actual Seúl, 1941-). En el pensamiento oriental una dualidad es entendida como la complementariedad entre dos polos, sólo en apariencia opuestos, que integra dos vertientes de un único concepto. Al igual que la idea de «parejas» budista, concebida según esta doctrina como una unidad entre dos extremos inevitablemente interrelacionados, el objetivo principal sería el de poner de manifiesto cómo la obra de ambos arquitectos trata de resolver los mismos conflictos partiendo de puntos de vista polarizados. ABSTRACT The reference to tradition as a force for unity, encompassing both continuity and changes in expressions regardless of the time or techniques used, has always been a very important component of the artistic manifestations of Japan and it is the subtle link that connects them from the past to the present. It is understood here that tradition does not mean simply preservation, but it is a transmission with a dual aspect, because it allows a constant evolution without altering its basic essence. It is thus that the Japanese culture of the Edo era (1600-1868), with its high degree of innovation, wealth and sophistication, but also as a historical epilogue prior to the Meiji Restoration of 1868 has been the key reference concerning that look to the Japanese tradition for the development of this thesis. From the second half of the 19th century, all these as genuine features of the Edo period remained at a standstill and, since then, Japan has followed the path of modernization (which has also been that of Westernization in many ways). The interlacements of other dualities caused in Japan by the 1945 nuclear attacks led to an inevitable fusion of the physical with the metaphysical world, of that terrible presence with a tremendous sense of absence and, eventually, of East with West. The resulting impact on the culture of the nation had a special repercussion on the architectural field. In this sense, the French thought has played a key role in the radical rethinking of many core assumptions, many concepts and values of Western thought, including those from the Age of Enlightenment, in this contemporary world that is increasingly complex and plural. These and other facts give the traditional Japanese culture a multidimensional quality (opposed to the marked two-dimensionality that usually characterizes Western cultures). As this thesis aims to highlight, this could prove to be a «synthesis of contradictions» in the work of Japanese architects Tadao Ando (Osaka, 1941-) and Toyo Ito (Keijo, current Seoul, 1941-). In the Eastern thought a duality is understood as the complementarity between two poles, only apparently opposite, which integrates two aspects of a single concept. Like the Buddhist notion of «couples» (conceived according to this doctrine as a unity between two inevitably interlinked extremes) the main objective would be to show how the work of both architects tries to resolve the same conflicts starting with polarized viewpoints.
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Ambivalent Sovereignty inquires into the subject of political realism. This subject, sovereign authority, appears to have a dual foundation. It appears divided against itself, but how can realism nonetheless observe legitimate modes of sovereignty emerge? Against the liberal idea that a "synthesis" of both material-coercive and ideal-persuasive powers should be accomplished, within the world of international relations, realism gives meaning to a structural type of state power that is also constitutionally and legitimately dividing itself--against itself. Machiavelli but particularly also other realists such as Hannah Arendt, Max Weber, and Aristotle are being reinterpreted to demonstrate why each state's ultimate authority may symbiotically emerge from its self-divisions, rather than from one synthetic unity. Whereas liberal theorists, from Montesquieu to John Rawls and Alexander Wendt, err too far in assuming the presence of the state's monistic authority, the realist theorists further advance an answer to how sovereign states may begin to both recognize and include only the most-legitimate manifestations of their common dualist authority. Ambivalent Sovereignty is relevant in this sense as it transcends-and-yet-includes these common dualities: freedom/necessity; emergence/causation; self-organization/power structures.
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Recently, resilience has become a catchall solution for some of the world’s most pressing ecological, economic and social problems. This dissertation analyzes the cultural politics of resilience in Kingston, Jamaica by examining them through their purported universal principles of adaptation and flexibility. On the one hand, mainstream development regimes conceptualize resilience as a necessary and positive attribute of economies, societies and cultures if we are to survive any number of disasters or disturbances. Therefore, in Jamaican cultural and development policy resilience is championed as both a means and an end of development. On the other hand, critics of resilience see the new rollout of resilience projects as deepening neoliberalism, capitalism and new forms of governmentality because resilience projects provide the terrain for new forms of securitization and surveillance practices. These scholars argue that resilience often forecloses the possibilities to resist that which threatens us. However, rather than dismissing resilience as solely a sign of domination and governmentality, this dissertation argues that resilience must be understood as much more ambiguous and complex, rather than within binaries such as subversion vs. neoliberal and resistance vs. resilience. Overly simplistic dualities of this nature have been the dominant approach in the scholarship thus far. This dissertation provides a close analysis of resilience in both multilateral and Jamaican government policy documents, while exploring the historical and contemporary production of resilience in the lives of marginalized populations. Through three sites within Kingston, Jamaica—namely dancehall and street dances, WMW-Jamaica and the activist platform SO((U))L HQ—this dissertation demonstrates that “resilience” is best understood as an ambiguous site of power negotiations, social reproduction and survival in Jamaica today. It is often precisely this ambiguous power of ordinary resilience that is capitalized on and exploited to the detriment of vulnerable groups. At once demonstrating creative negotiation and reproduction of colonial capitalist social relations within the realms of NGO, activist work and cultural production, this dissertation demonstrates the complexity of resilience. Ultimately, this dissertation draws attention to the importance of studying spaces of cultural production in order to understand the power and limits of contemporary policy discourses and political economy.
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We have devised a general scheme that reveals multiple duality relations valid for all multi-channel Luttinger Liquids. The relations are universal and should be used for establishing phase diagrams and searching for new non-trivial phases in low-dimensional strongly correlated systems. The technique developed provides universal correspondence between scaling dimensions of local perturbations in different phases. These multiple relations between scaling dimensions lead to a connection between different inter-phase boundaries on the phase diagram. The dualities, in particular, constrain phase diagram and allow predictions of emergence and observation of new phases without explicit model-dependent calculations. As an example, we demonstrate the impossibility of non-trivial phase existence for fermions coupled to phonons in one dimension. © 2013 EPLA.
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Apple is a collection of poems that explores the connection between human relationships and the evolution of an identity. Multiple speakers investigate gender and sexuality, plentitude and poverty, atheism and Christianity in order to better understand some of the forces that affect a woman's consciousness. An awareness of perceived dualities, such as self and other, reason and faith, nature and technology, socialization and loneliness are central to this exploration. The poems employ various forms, such as ultra-talk narratives, lyrical meditations, prose poetry, epistolary poems and hypertext. The variety of structure and form in the collection mirrors the variety of approaches the speakers employ to move closer and further away from the subjects at hand. The rhetorical posture employed in each poem is directly linked to the speaker's relationship with the audience, which is an excellent example of a human relationship affecting the evolution of an identity.
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Recently, resilience has become a catchall solution for some of the world’s most pressing ecological, economic and social problems. This dissertation analyzes the cultural politics of resilience in Kingston, Jamaica by examining them through their purported universal principles of adaptation and flexibility. On the one hand, mainstream development regimes conceptualize resilience as a necessary and positive attribute of economies, societies and cultures if we are to survive any number of disasters or disturbances. Therefore, in Jamaican cultural and development policy resilience is championed as both a means and an end of development. On the other hand, critics of resilience see the new rollout of resilience projects as deepening neoliberalism, capitalism and new forms of governmentality because resilience projects provide the terrain for new forms of securitization and surveillance practices. These scholars argue that resilience often forecloses the possibilities to resist that which threatens us. However, rather than dismissing resilience as solely a sign of domination and governmentality, this dissertation argues that resilience must be understood as much more ambiguous and complex, rather than within binaries such as subversion vs. neoliberal and resistance vs. resilience. Overly simplistic dualities of this nature have been the dominant approach in the scholarship thus far. This dissertation provides a close analysis of resilience in both multilateral and Jamaican government policy documents, while exploring the historical and contemporary production of resilience in the lives of marginalized populations. Through three sites within Kingston, Jamaica—namely dancehall and street dances, WMW-Jamaica and the activist platform SO((U))L HQ—this dissertation demonstrates that “resilience” is best understood as an ambiguous site of power negotiations, social reproduction and survival in Jamaica today. It is often precisely this ambiguous power of ordinary resilience that is capitalized on and exploited to the detriment of vulnerable groups. At once demonstrating creative negotiation and reproduction of colonial capitalist social relations within the realms of NGO, activist work and cultural production, this dissertation demonstrates the complexity of resilience. Ultimately, this dissertation draws attention to the importance of studying spaces of cultural production in order to understand the power and limits of contemporary policy discourses and political economy.
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Catalogue and invitation card for Exhibition at Eagle Gallery, London. 16 June – 16 July 2016 “My paintings are like ghost schema, assemblages of images and surfaces that generate spectral encounters.” James Fisher’s paintings are carefully calibrated. They explore dualities and employ complex visual palimpsests to construct images that are rich with association. Abstract and figurative motifs are laid on different layers of their surfaces, covered over, and re-discovered through sanding back the paint. As a former British School at Rome Scholar, Fisher’s early work was influenced by the study of fresco painting and he retains an approach that allows for time and chance to enter the process of painting. Fabrication – in the sense both of making things and making things up – produces enigmatic and mysterious results. Many of Fisher’s recent paintings are titled after notable, now forgotten women, or after characters from folklore and comic books. The range of subject matter allows him to conflate biography with fiction, and to borrow from a wide range of visual sources for patterned elements that formally hold in place the more fugitive suggestions of the images. Fisher’s fourth solo exhibition at the Eagle Gallery coincides with the selection of two works in this year’s Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, and his inclusion in Towards Night – a forthcoming exhibition at the Towner, Eastbourne.
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We present a generalization of the complete intersection in products of projective space (CICY) construction of Calabi–Yau manifolds. CICY three-folds and four-folds have been studied extensively in the physics literature. Their utility stems from the fact that they can be simply described in terms of a ‘configuration matrix’, a matrix of integers from which many of the details of the geometries can be easily extracted. The generalization we present is to allow negative integers in the configuration matrices which were previously taken to have positive semi-definite entries. This broadening of the complete intersection construction leads to a larger class of Calabi–Yau manifolds than that considered in previous work, which nevertheless enjoys much of the same degree of calculational control. These new Calabi–Yau manifolds are complete intersections in (not necessarily Fano) ambient spaces with an effective anticanonical class. We find examples with topology distinct from any that has appeared in the literature to date. The new manifolds thus obtained have many interesting features. For example, they can have smaller Hodge numbers than ordinary CICYs and lead to many examples with elliptic and K3-fibration structures relevant to F-theory and string dualities.