[3] viXra:2008.0174 [pdf] submitted on 2020-08-23 10:36:19
Authors: Yansha Yu-Sandstrom
Comments: 14 Pages.
一.立“务虚”为贵党研究转型创建理论之本,存在以“虚”盖全的重大偏误。因为有“虚”就有“实”,且“虚”和“实”均为人类从自身立场属性出发复合对应展现展开三位一体/三位约一体的存在方式和存在关系。二.立“务虚”助贵党研究转型成为宗教信仰组织将会是人类一场大劫难 三.为人生死和上述第四类“零/灵魂”/“灵魂”之“虚”的存在方式和存在关系
Category: Social Science
[2] viXra:2008.0077 [pdf] replaced on 2025-09-22 07:41:46
Authors: Anindya Kumar Biswas
Comments: 17 Pages. A mistake in plotting BW(c=0.01) has been rectified
We study the Oxford Dictionary Of Social Work and Social Care. We draw the natural logarithm of the number of entries, normalised, starting with a letter vs the natural logarithm of the rank of the letter, normalised. We conclude that the Dictionary can be characterised by BP(4,βH = 0.01) i.e. a magnetisation curve for the Bethe-Peierls approximation of the Isingmodel with four nearest neighbours with βH = 0.01. β is 1/(k_B T) where, T is temperature, H is external magnetic field and k_B is the tiny Boltzmann constant.
Category: Social Science
[1] viXra:2008.0040 [pdf] submitted on 2020-08-07 08:23:40
Authors: Xianbo Wu
Comments: 29 Pages.
The purpose of this article is to discuss about the potential impact of the Internet, as an indispensable part embedded in today’s human society, upon the international politics. There are two key points to emphasize on: How the Internet might influence the macroscopic power distribution, and how the Internet might exert its impact upon the domestic politics of a state, then influence its foreign-orientation. The article takes China as a case for study. On the one side, China’s military-based cyber-power has been developing at a fast speed estimated by some scholars, and the information technology is well utilized to support conventional military power, both of which lead to the suspect and countermeasures by other countries, and there might be a security dilemma based on the information technology, similar as any other technologies in the history influencing power distribution. On the other side, the Internet also motivates China’s development of economy. However, it makes less impact upon China’s domestic politics, as the public tends to be accustomed to the narratives and images projected by the government, whose mechanism will be focused on and illustrated in detail in the article. The situation of the Chinese Internet determines that an “information-driven democratization” is not likely to happen in China. The authoritarian operation of the Internet guarantees China’s political order to a degree, but it might reinforce the divergence of the identity and interests between China and democratic countries represented by the United States. In China’s special case, the Internet plays a pessimistic role in its foreign relations on the whole, referring to three major theoretical frameworks of international relations research.
Category: Social Science