00767nam0 2200241 450 00000706020090330102224.00-415-36968-120060405d2004----km-y0itay50------baengGBy-------001yyBooms, bubbles and busts in US stock marketsDavid L. WesternLondonNew YorkRoutledgec2004237 p.graf. e tab.24 cmBooms, bubbles and busts in US stock markets37915Fluttuazioni economicheWestern,David L.630491ITUNIPARTHENOPERICAUNIMARC000007060131/7837NAVA22006Booms, bubbles and busts in US stock markets37915UNIPARTHENOPE01623nam0 2200325 i 450 SUN005374020180502090411.987978-27-05-66049-90.0020060929d1989 |0frec50 bafreFR|||| |||||Le *formalisme des six opérations de Grothendieck pour les Dx-modules cohérentssystemes différentielsZ. MebkhoutParis, Hermann1989253 p.24 cm.001SUN00497702001 Travaux en cours35210 ParisHermann.14-XXAlgebraic geometry [MSC 2020]MFSUNC01970214F10Differentials and other special sheaves; D-modules; Bernstein-Sato ideals and polynomials [MSC 2020]MFSUNC02384714F40de Rham cohomology and algebraic geometry [MSC 2020]MFSUNC02389732C37Duality theorems for analytic spaces [MSC 2020]MFSUNC02391032-XXSeveral complex variables and analytic spaces [MSC 2020]MFSUNC02499932C38Sheaves of differential operators and their modules, $D$-modules [MSC 2020]MFSUNC029017ParisSUNL000046Mebkhout, Z.SUNV042450726124HermannSUNV001226650ITSOL20201019RICASUN0053740UFFICIO DI BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI MATEMATICA E FISICA08PREST 14-XX 2665 08 2841 I 20060929 Formalisme des six operations de Grothendieck pour les Dx-modules coherents1427102UNICAMPANIA05321nam 2200649Ia 450 99620165070331620170814164419.00-19-049098-51-280-59528-097866136251130-19-974251-0(CKB)2670000000161209(EBL)886693(OCoLC)781629095(SSID)ssj0000622716(PQKBManifestationID)11440843(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000622716(PQKBWorkID)10642850(PQKB)10612590(StDuBDS)EDZ0000077424(MiAaPQ)EBC886693(EXLCZ)99267000000016120920110701d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe cosmic viewpoint[electronic resource] a study of Seneca's Natural questions /Gareth WilliamsOxford Oxford University Press20121 online resource (408 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-19-993311-1 0-19-973158-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Preface; Contents; Abbreviations; Introduction; 1. Interiority and Cosmic Consciousness in the Natural Questions; I. Seneca's Totalizing Worldview; II. The Senecan Worldview Defined by Contrast with Cicero; III. Interiorization in the Preface to Book 3; IV. The Differing World Outlooks of Seneca and Pliny; V. The Natural Questions in Sociopolitical Context; 2. Seneca's Moralizing Interludes; I. The Problem; II. Hostius Quadra as the Anti-Sapiens; III. The Unified World as Drawn in Books 1 and 2.1-11; IV. Hostius Quadra and Seneca's Interlocutor in Book 1V. Of Subterranean Fish and Degenerate Diners in 3.17-18VI. Further Transgressions in 5.15 and 7.31-32; VII. The Textual Containment of Vice; 3. The Cataclysm and the Nile; I. Introduction; II. The Vice of Flattery; III. Lucilius in the Preface; IV. The Cataclysm of 3.27-30; V. Into Egypt; VI. The Nile, the Cataclysm and Ovid; VII. The Missing Link, and Other Theories of the Nile Flood; 4. The Rhetoric of Science; I. Introduction; II. 4b.13 in Context; III. The Rhetoric of Science; IV. Strategies of Argument in 4b.3-7; A. Reliance on Influential Authority; B. Argument by AnalogyC. Argument by Bold InferenceD. Competing Arguments; E. Superstition in Contention with Reason; V. The Better Argument; VI. Book 4b in Context; 5. Seneca on Winds; I. Introduction; II. Pre-Stoic and Stoic Theories of Wind; III. Seneca's Typology of Winds; IV. Mapping the Winds; A. The Cardinal Winds in Ovid; B. The Varronian Compass Card; C. The Twelve Sectors; D. Local Winds; V. Wind Direction, Human Misdirection; VI. The Roman Dimension; 6. Earthquakes, Consolation and the Senecan Sublime; I. Introduction; II. Consolatory Amplification Before Reduction; III. Sublime Superiority over NatureIV. The Two Verse Quotations at 6.2.1-3 and 6.2.9V. Controlling Nature in the Senecan Inventory (6.4-26); A. Taking Stock of Earlier Seismological Investigation; B. From Sight to Insight; C. From Analogical Inference to Abstract Speculation; D. The Living Cosmos; E. Elemental Interchangeability Revisited; F. The Normalization of Seismic Experience; VI. The Totum in Book 6; VII. The Campanian Earthquake in Perspective; 7. Seneca on Comets and Ancient Cometary Theory; I. Introduction; II. Seneca on Progress, on Hostius Quadra and on Nature's MysteriesIII. Sub- and Supralunary Interpretation of CometsIV. The Whirlwind Theory; V. The Optical Illusion Theory; VI. The Planetary Theory; VII. The Senecan Theory; 8. Seneca on Lightning and Divination; I. Introduction; II. Coordination Between 2.12-30 and 2.54-58; III. The Totalizing Worldview: Strategies of Unification in 2.1, 2.12-30 and 2.54-58; A. 2.1-11; B. 2.12-30 and 2.54-58; C. 2.32-51; IV. Seneca on Divination in 2.32-51; A. Reconciling Prayer and Expiation with a Deterministic View of Fate (2.35-38); B. The "Scientific" Classification of Lightning (2.39-40)C. Seneca's Rationalization of Etruscan Belief (2.42-46)Seneca's Natural Questions is an eight-book disquisition on the nature of meteorological phenomena, ranging inter alia from rainbows to earthquakes, from comets to the winds, from the causes of snow and hail to the reasons why the Nile floods in summer. Much of this material had been treated in the earlier Greco-Roman meteorological tradition, but what notoriously sets Seneca's writing apart is his insertion of extended moralizing sections within his technical discourse. How, if at all, are these outbursts against the luxury and vice that are apparently rampant in Seneca's first-century CE RomScience, AncientHistoriographyMeteorologyHistoriographyElectronic books.Science, AncientHistoriography.MeteorologyHistoriography.188500Williams Gareth D182982MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996201650703316The cosmic viewpoint2304330UNISA