Paradoxes of the Popular
Title | Paradoxes of the Popular PDF eBook |
Author | Nusrat Sabina Chowdhury |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Pages | 265 |
Release | 2019-08-27 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1503609480 |
Few places are as politically precarious as Bangladesh, even fewer as crowded. Its 57,000 or so square miles are some of the world's most inhabited. Often described as a definitive case of the bankruptcy of postcolonial governance, it is also one of the poorest among the most densely populated nations. In spite of an overriding anxiety of exhaustion, there are a few important caveats to the familiar feelings of despair—a growing economy, and an uneven, yet robust, nationalist sentiment—which, together, generate revealing paradoxes. In this book, Nusrat Sabina Chowdhury offers insight into what she calls "the paradoxes of the popular," or the constitutive contradictions of popular politics. The focus here is on mass protests, long considered the primary medium of meaningful change in this part of the world. Chowdhury writes provocatively about political life in Bangladesh in a rich ethnography that studies some of the most consequential protests of the last decade, spanning both rural and urban Bangladesh. By making the crowd its starting point and analytical locus, this book tacks between multiple sites of public political gatherings and pays attention to the ephemeral and often accidental configurations of the crowd. Ultimately, Chowdhury makes an original case for the crowd as a defining feature and a foundational force of democratic practices in South Asia and beyond.
On the Brink of Paradox
Title | On the Brink of Paradox PDF eBook |
Author | Agustin Rayo |
Publisher | MIT Press |
Pages | 321 |
Release | 2019-04-02 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 0262039419 |
An introduction to awe-inspiring ideas at the brink of paradox: infinities of different sizes, time travel, probability and measure theory, and computability theory. This book introduces the reader to awe-inspiring issues at the intersection of philosophy and mathematics. It explores ideas at the brink of paradox: infinities of different sizes, time travel, probability and measure theory, computability theory, the Grandfather Paradox, Newcomb's Problem, the Principle of Countable Additivity. The goal is to present some exceptionally beautiful ideas in enough detail to enable readers to understand the ideas themselves (rather than watered-down approximations), but without supplying so much detail that they abandon the effort. The philosophical content requires a mind attuned to subtlety; the most demanding of the mathematical ideas require familiarity with college-level mathematics or mathematical proof. The book covers Cantor's revolutionary thinking about infinity, which leads to the result that some infinities are bigger than others; time travel and free will, decision theory, probability, and the Banach-Tarski Theorem, which states that it is possible to decompose a ball into a finite number of pieces and reassemble the pieces so as to get two balls that are each the same size as the original. Its investigation of computability theory leads to a proof of Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem, which yields the amazing result that arithmetic is so complex that no computer could be programmed to output every arithmetical truth and no falsehood. Each chapter is followed by an appendix with answers to exercises. A list of recommended reading points readers to more advanced discussions. The book is based on a popular course (and MOOC) taught by the author at MIT.
Paradoxes of Time Travel
Title | Paradoxes of Time Travel PDF eBook |
Author | Ryan Wasserman |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 261 |
Release | 2018 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 0198793332 |
Ryan Wasserman explores a range of fascinating puzzles raised by the possibility of time travel, with entertaining examples from physics, science fiction, and popular culture, and he draws out their implications for our understanding of time, tense, freedom, fatalism, causation, counterfactuals, laws of nature, persistence, change, and mereology.
Paradoxes of Populism
Title | Paradoxes of Populism PDF eBook |
Author | Ulf Hedetoft |
Publisher | Anthem Press |
Pages | 218 |
Release | 2020-02-29 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1785272152 |
“Paradoxes of Populism” argues that populism, far-from-random similarities with ordinary manifestations of nationalism, should be approached not as a venture into the classical structures of nation-states and identities, but as a disruptive and destabilizing consequence of some of the constituent elements of sovereign nation-states becoming eroded and prised apart by contextual global processes and their agents. The book demonstrates that populism, in its many varieties, is riddled with even more paradoxes and inconsistencies than mainstream nationalism itself––confusing causes and appearances, realities and fantasies and turning the world inside out. This book definitively engages with real-world challenges that the age of populism, the Second Coming of Nationalism, poses in liberal democracies states as well as their political and cultural interpretations in the populist fantasia.
Paradoxes of Peace
Title | Paradoxes of Peace PDF eBook |
Author | Alice Holmes Cooper |
Publisher | University of Michigan Press |
Pages | 358 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780472106240 |
Thoughtfully examines the paradox of peace activism in postwar Germany
A Plague of Paradoxes
Title | A Plague of Paradoxes PDF eBook |
Author | Philip Setel |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 328 |
Release | 1999 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 9780226748856 |
Presents an extended case study of the 20th-century AIDS epidemic and the cultural circumstances from which it emerged. The book brings together anthropology, demography and epidemiology to explain how the Chagga people of Tanzania in Africa experience AIDS.
Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes
Title | Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes PDF eBook |
Author | Bryan Bunch |
Publisher | Courier Corporation |
Pages | 228 |
Release | 2012-10-16 |
Genre | Mathematics |
ISBN | 0486137937 |
Stimulating, thought-provoking analysis of the most interesting intellectual inconsistencies in mathematics, physics, and language, including being led astray by algebra (De Morgan's paradox). 1982 edition.