04869nam 2200661 450 991046496010332120200520144314.01-118-52975-81-118-52976-61-118-52965-0(CKB)3710000000093493(EBL)1650823(SSID)ssj0001212170(PQKBManifestationID)11831814(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001212170(PQKBWorkID)11206574(PQKB)10690844(MiAaPQ)EBC1650823(MiAaPQ)EBC4387359(DLC) 2014011501(Au-PeEL)EBL1650823(CaPaEBR)ebr10849302(OCoLC)874321778(EXLCZ)99371000000009349320140327h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe justification of religious violence /Steve ClarkeChichester, England :Wiley-Blackwell,2014.©20141 online resource (273 p.)Blackwell Public PhilosophyIncludes bibliographical references and indexes.1-118-52968-5 1-118-52972-3 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Chapter 1 Justification, Religion, and Violence; September 11 (1857); Religion and Violence; Violence; Justification; Nothing Bad; Between "Anything and Everything" and "Nothing Bad"; Nature and Supernature; Notes; Chapter 2 Religion; Generalizing about Religion; Supernatural Beings; Ritual; The Evolution of Religion; Memes and Religious Memeplexes; Religion as an Evolutionary By-product; Religion as an Evolutionary Adaptation; Social Solidarity and Religion; Defining Religion; Notes; Chapter 3 Morality; Introduction; Evolved MoralityMorality, Evolution, and CultureConsequentialism, Deontology, and the Neuroscience of Moral Cognition; Reasoning and Intuiting; Morality and Religion; Notes; Chapter 4 Justifying Violence, War, and Cosmic War; Justifying Violence; Justice, War, and Just War Theory; Pacifism; Religious War and Cosmic War; Cosmic War; Cosmic War and the Supreme Emergency Exception; Cosmic War and the Superior Orders Plea; Cosmic War and Non-Combatant Immunity; Notes; Chapter 5 The Afterlife; Afterlife Beliefs; Christianity, Violence, and Salvation; Buddhism, Violence, and ReincarnationSuicide, Suicide Cults, and the AfterlifeNotes; Chapter 6 The Sacred; The Sacred and the Holy; Durkheim; Sacred Values; Sacralization; Justification and the Sacred; Notes; Chapter 7 Recent Justifications of Religious Violence; Introduction; The Gatekeepers and Deific Decree; Aum Shinrikyo; Heaven's Gate; The Killing of George Tiller; Meir Kahane and the Kach Party; Al-Qaeda; Concluding Remarks; Notes; Chapter 8 Tolerance; Liberal Democracy and Religious Tolerance; What Tolerance Is; Justifying Religious Tolerance; Religion, Toleration, and CausationViolent Religious Groups, Tolerance, and the Liberal StateNotes; Chapter 9 Reducing Religious Violence; Religion, Violence, Justification, and Motivation; Undermining Religious Justifications for Violence; Undermining Religion; Undermining Confidence in Religious Beliefs; Trying to Keep Religion out of the Public Sphere; Offering Incentives; Cosmic War, the Afterlife, and the Opportunity to Make Converts; Cosmic Warriors and the Opportunity to Make Converts; Afterlife Beliefs and the Opportunity to Make Converts; Avoiding Conflicts over Sacred Values; Reframing Sacred ValuesPrioritizing Sacred ValuesRituals, Threats, and the Sacred; Tolerating Violent Religious Groups; Concluding Remark; Notes; References; Name Index; Subject Index How are justifications for religious violence developed and do they differ from secular justifications for violence? Can liberal societies tolerate potentially violent religious groups? Can those who accept religious justifications for violence be dissuaded from acting violently? Including six in-depth contemporary case studies, The Justification of Religious Violence is the first book to examine the logical structure of justifications of religious violence. The first book specifically devoted to examining the logical structure of justifications of religious violence<Blackwell public philosophy.ViolenceReligious aspectsElectronic books.ViolenceReligious aspects.201/.76332Clarke Steve1964-966676MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910464960103321The justification of religious violence2193810UNINA05110nam 2200841Ia 450 991101961570332120200520144314.097866117638799781281763877128176387X9783527612154352761215797835276121473527612149(CKB)1000000000376828(EBL)481756(OCoLC)212131284(SSID)ssj0000145052(PQKBManifestationID)11169455(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000145052(PQKBWorkID)10148302(PQKB)11425623(MiAaPQ)EBC481756(MiAaPQ)EBC4956377(Au-PeEL)EBL4956377(CaONFJC)MIL176387(OCoLC)1027165791(Perlego)2758689(EXLCZ)99100000000037682819980505d1998 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrElectrochemical nanotechnology in-situ local probe techniques at electrochemical interfaces /edited by W.J. Lorenz and W. Plieth1st ed.Weinheim ;Chichester Wiley-VCHc19981 online resource (354 p.)Includes index."A publication initiated by IUPAC."9783527295203 3527295208 Electrochemical Nanotechnology; Preface; Contents; Part I General Aspects; Local Probing of Electrochemical Processes at Non-ideal Electrodes; Electrochemistry and Nanotechnology; Imaging of Electrochemical Processes and Biological Macromolecular Adsorbates by in-situ Scanning Tunneling Microscopy; Beyond the Landscapes: Imaging the Invisible; Part II Roughness and Interface Structure; Roughness Kinetics and Mechanism Derived from the Analysis of AFM and STM Imaging Data; Electrodes with a Defined Mesoscopic StructureIn-situ Stress Measurements at the Solid/liquid Interface Using a Micromechanical SensorSurface Structure and Electrochemistry: New Insight by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy; Part III Surface Modification; STM and AFM Studies of the Electrified Solid-Liquid Interface: Monolayers, Multilayers, and Organic Transformations; Scanning Probe Microscopy Studies of Molecular Redox Films; New Aspects of Iodine-modified Single-crystal Electrodes; The Growth and the Surface Properties of Polypyrrole on Single Crystal Graphite Electrodes as Studied by in-situ Electrochemical Scanning Probe MicroscopyPart IV Nucleation and ElectrodepositionNucleation and Growth at Metal Electrode Surfaces; STM Studies of Electrodeposition of Strained-Layer Metallic Superlattices; Part V Oxide Layers and Corrosion; STM Studies of Thin Anodic Oxide Layer; Local Probing of Electrochemical Interfaces in Corrosion Research; Morphology and Nucleation of Ni-Ti02 LIGA Layers; SPM Investigations on Oxide-covered Titanium Surfaces: Problems and Possibilities; Part VI Semiconductors; Electrochemical Surface Processing of Semiconductors at the Atomic LevelIn-situ Electrochemical AFM Study of Semiconductor Electrodes in Electrolyte SolutionsPart VII STM and Complementary Methods; In-situ STM and Electrochemical UHV Technique: Complementary, Noncompeting Techniques; Growth Morphology and Molecular Orientation of Additives in Electrocrystallization Studied by Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy; Instrumental Design and Prospects for NMR-Electrochemistry; List of Contributors; List of Abbreviations; Symbol List; Subject IndexA new window to local studies of interface phenomena at solid state surfaces has been opened by the development of local probe techniques such as Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) or Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and related methods during the past fifteen years. The in-situ application of local probe methods in different systems belongs to modern nanotechnology and has two aspects: an analytical aspect and a preparative aspect. The first aspect covers the application of the local probe methods to characterize thermodynamic, structural and dynamic properties of solid state surfaces aNanotechnologyAtomic force microscopyElectrochemistryScanning probe microscopyScanning tunneling microscopySurface chemistrySurfaces (Physics)Nanotechnology.Atomic force microscopy.Electrochemistry.Scanning probe microscopy.Scanning tunneling microscopy.Surface chemistry.Surfaces (Physics)620.5Lorenz W. J912235Plieth W(Waldfried)1343726International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911019615703321Electrochemical nanotechnology3068074UNINA07252nam 22008535 450 991014421310332120251116234415.03-540-40010-910.1007/b94128(CKB)1000000000212249(SSID)ssj0000322692(PQKBManifestationID)11227163(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000322692(PQKBWorkID)10289395(PQKB)11190174(DE-He213)978-3-540-40010-3(MiAaPQ)EBC3088461(PPN)155218107(BIP)9141836(EXLCZ)99100000000021224920121227d2003 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtccrDistributed Applications and Interoperable Systems 4th IFIP WG6.1 International Conference, DAIS 2003, Paris, France, November 17-21, 2003, Proceedings /edited by Jean-Bernard Stefani, Isabelle Demeure, Daniel Hagimont1st ed. 2003.Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :Imprint: Springer,2003.1 online resource (XIV, 318 p.) Lecture Notes in Computer Science,0302-9743 ;2893Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph3-540-20529-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Session I: Adaptation – Separation of Concerns -- Towards a Framework for Self-adaptive Component-Based Applications -- A Scheme for the Introduction of 3rd Party, Application-Specific Adaptation Features in Mobile Service Provision -- Brenda: Towards a Composition Framework for Non-orthogonal Non-functional Properties -- Meta-programming Middleware for Distributed Object Computing -- Session II: Deployment -- Middleware Support for Resource-Constrained Software Deployment -- Rational Server Selection for Mobile Agents -- Facilitating the Portability of User Applications in Grid Environments -- Negotiation as a Generic Component Coordination Primitive -- Session III: Security – Transactions -- Jironde: A Flexible Framework for Making Components Transactional -- A Security Architectural Approach for Risk Assessment Using Multi-agent Systems Engineering -- Middleware Support for Non-repudiable Transactional Information Sharing between Enterprises -- Adaptable Access Control Policies for Medical Information Systems -- Session IV: Replication -- Client-Side Component Caching -- A Variable Cache Consistency Protocol for Mobile Systems Using Time Locks -- DataWarp: Building Applications Which Make Progress in an Inconsistent World -- Hand-Over Video Cache Policy for Mobile Users -- Session V: Networking and Routing -- Planning for Network-Aware Paths -- Integrating the Unreliable Multicast Inter-ORB Protocol in MJaco -- A-GATE: A System of Relay and Translation Gateways for Communication among Heterogeneous Agents in Ad Hoc Wireless Environments -- Session VI: Discovery – Context-Awareness – Ontology -- Scalable Location Management for Context-Aware Systems -- CoOL: A Context Ontology Language to Enable Contextual Interoperability -- Discovering Web Services Using Behavioural Constraints and Ontology -- Requirements for Personal Information Agents in the Semantic Web -- Towards an Intuitive Interface for Tailored Service Compositions -- Session VII: Asynchronous Messaging -- Context-Based Addressing: The Concept and an Implementation for Large-Scale Mobile Agent Systems Using Publish-Subscribe Event Notification -- Exploiting Proximity in Event-Based Middleware for Collaborative Mobile Applications -- A Flexible Middleware Layer for User-to-User Messaging.This volume contains the proceedings of DAIS 2003, the 4th IFIP WG 6.1 - ternational Conference on Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems. The conference was held in Paris on November 17-21, 2003. The event was the fourth meeting of this conference series, which is held roughly every two years. Previous editions were held in 1997 in Cottbus (Germany), in 1999 in Helsinki (Finland), and in 2001 in Krakow (Poland). Following the evolution of the ?eld, DAIS2003 focused on models, techno- gies and platforms for recon'gurable, scalable and adaptable distributed app- cations. In keeping with this focus, the call for papers especially encouraged original unpublished papers addressing the following topics: - new/extendedsoftwarearchitecturesandframeworksforrecon'gurationand adaptation including component-based approaches (e.g., CORBA Com- nents, EJB, .NET), - modelling, specifying, monitoring and management of context-aware and adaptive applications, - support for recon'guration, self-organization and autonomic behavior in new/existing distributed platforms (e.g., CORBA, J2EE, .NET, WebS- vices), - integration of multi-agent distributed decision-making, - application environments that exploit characteristics of speci'c technologies (e.g., grid computing, mobile and wireless), - issues in enterprise-wide and large-scale application recon'guration, - semantic interoperability and semantic web services.Lecture Notes in Computer Science,0302-9743 ;2893Computer architectureSoftware engineeringComputer networksOperating systems (Computers)Application softwareArtificial intelligenceComputer System Implementationhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I13057Software Engineeringhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I14029Computer Communication Networkshttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I13022Operating Systemshttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I14045Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet)https://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I18040Artificial Intelligencehttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I21000Computer architecture.Software engineering.Computer networks.Operating systems (Computers)Application software.Artificial intelligence.Computer System Implementation.Software Engineering.Computer Communication Networks.Operating Systems.Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet).Artificial Intelligence.004Stefani Jean-Bernardedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtDemeure Isabelleedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtHagimont Danieledthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtInternational Federation for Information Processing.DAIS (Conference)MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910144213103321Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems772211UNINA