Interdisciplinary Approaches to Intimate Violence

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Quelle: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623528.2019.1695325?ai=z4&mi=3fqos0&af=R

Introduction: Anti-Jewish Violence between the “Antisemitism of Men” and the “Antisemitism of Things”

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Quelle: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623528.2019.1695310?ai=z4&mi=3fqos0&af=R

Introduction: Anti-Jewish Violence between the “Antisemitism of Men” and the “Antisemitism of Things”

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Quelle: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623528.2019.1695310?ai=z4&mi=3fqos0&af=R

Votes and Pogroms: The Electoral Politics of Anti-Jewish Violence

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Quelle: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623528.2019.1695311?ai=z4&mi=3fqos0&af=R

Votes and Pogroms: The Electoral Politics of Anti-Jewish Violence

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Quelle: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623528.2019.1695311?ai=z4&mi=3fqos0&af=R

Convergence in Cold War Physics: Coinventing the Maser in the Postwar Soviet Union

Abstract

At the height of the Cold War, in the 1950s, the process of parallel invention of masers and lasers took place on the opposing sides of the Iron Curtain. While the American part of the story has been investigated by historians in much penetrating detail, comparable Soviet developments were described more superficially. This study aims at, to some extent, repairing this discrepancy by analyzing the Soviet path towards the maser from a comparative angle. It identifies, on the one hand, significant differences between the two projects regarding their heuristics, the relationship between theory and experiment, grounding in different academic cultures, and the resulting conceptualization of the maser principle. At the same time, the case also illustrates more fundamental transformations in the practices of postwar research that can be characterized as a convergence between the Soviet and the American science of the period.

Quelle: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/bewi.201900009?af=R

Quantum Cultures during the Prehistory of Quantum Gravity: Léon Rosenfeld’s Early Contributions to Quantum Gravity

Abstract

In this paper we consider the prehistory of quantum gravity (1916–1930) from two perspectives. First, we investigate how this research field constituted itself and we propose for the first time a red thread to trace its evolution in this earliest period. Second, we focus on a case study: the earliest work of Léon Rosenfeld. In 1927 he tried to merge wave mechanics with general relativity in the context of a five‐dimensional universe. We describe how Oskar Klein, Louis de Broglie, and Théophile De Donder influenced Rosenfeld's work and analyze how and why Rosenfeld attempted to reconcile Einstein's theory with quantum phenomena. We argue that Rosenfeld investigated for the first time the corrections to a classical space‐time metric generated by a quantum source. As far as we know, Rosenfeld's approach has been largely ignored until today: he himself considered it “an accident.” After having reconsidered its connection with de Broglie's ideas and Rosenfeld's interpretation of the wave function in 1927, we argue that Rosenfeld's work can be interpreted as a first attempt to introduce the pilot‐wave theory in the context of quantum gravity and we infer that this was one of the reasons that ruled it out.

Quelle: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/bewi.201900011?af=R

The Statistical Style of Reasoning and the Invention of Bose‐Einstein Statistics

Abstract

This paper is a preliminary exploration of the connections between the statistical style of reasoning and the research practices of statistical mechanics in the early period of the long quantum revolution. It suggests that before 1925 the instantiations of the statistical style in physics went through two phases. The first phase consisted of the formulation of the Maxwell‐Boltzmann statistics on the basis of the population‐gas analogy. The second phase was characterized by the generalization of the Maxwell‐Boltzmann statistics through analogies between ideal gas molecules and other microphysical entities, analogies that shaped and were shaped by the rise of quantum theory. Einstein's invention of the Bose‐Einstein statistics started a third phase and created the conditions of possibility for a new classification of microphysical entities according to their different statistics.

Quelle: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/bewi.201900015?af=R

Schooling the Quantum Generations: Textbooks and Quantum Cultures from the 1910s to the 1930s

Abstract

Ever since Thomas Kuhn's influential The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962), textbooks have suffered a bad reputation. They have been accused of distorting—at times purportedly—history and of feeding students with an unacceptably simplified and optimistic view of science. This attitude started to change only in recent times. With the increase of attention paid not only to how theories are conceived, but also how they are practiced, disseminated, and appropriated, historians have rehabilitated textbooks as a legitimate site of knowledge production. In this paper, I adopt textbooks as an instrument to unfold multiple facets of the culture that allowed quantum physics to flourish between 1900 and the early 1930s. I organize the article around two stories about two major textbooks, i.e., Sommerfeld′s Atombau und Spektrallinien and Dirac′s Principles of Quantum Mechanics. I explore the complex pedagogical cultures underlying these two masterpieces and how they intersect local agendas.

Quelle: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/bewi.201900010?af=R

The Postholocaust Landscape of Chelmno on the Ner (Kulmhof an der Nehr): An Ecological Perspective

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Quelle: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623528.2019.1696027?ai=z4&mi=3fqos0&af=R