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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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Give Yourself a Nudge

Your decisions collectively empower you to create the life that you desire. If you want to improve your professional skills, enhance a relationship, eat a more healthy diet, contribute more at work, or...

Ralph L. Keeney | 11 Jun 2020

Boredom, Death, and the Meaning of Life

Boredom“How dreadful boredom is,” declared Soren Kierkegaard in Either/Or. He didn’t say whether he was referring to everyday boredom or whole-life boredom. We might regard the first as merely unpleasant—we...

Clifford Williams | 10 Jun 2020

Interactional Rituals: The typology of interactional rituals

When we examine the relationship between interactional rituals and social distancing, we need to ask ourselves what type of ritual we are dealing with. Dániel Kádár (2013) distinguished 4 types of...

Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House | 10 Jun 2020

If law is not an island, why does legal education remain so isolated?

What was once characterised as a relatively stable profession, unfettered by the influence of modernity and strongly resistant to external forces, the legal services sector has in recent years exhibited...

Catrina Denvir | 10 Jun 2020

Interactional Rituals: COVID-19 – The Historical Aspect of Social Distancing and Interactional Rituals

Why are interactional rituals such an integral part of our daily lives? This is a particularly interesting question and one which is worth investigating. Rituals have existed since the dawn of humanity...

Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House | 10 Jun 2020

Ethics in Neurosurgical Practice

Within all fields of surgery, ethical issues are encountered on a daily basis however within the field of neurosurgery there are certain considerations that require specific consideration. In the first instance...

Stephen Honeybul | 10 Jun 2020

Beyond Spacetime

One of the greatest challenges in fundamental physics is to reconcile quantum mechanics and general relativity in a full theory of “quantum gravity”. It is a challenge that has by turns excited...

Christian Wüthrich, Keizo Matsubara, Nick Huggett | 10 Jun 2020

Understanding Physical Oceanography and Climate with Kris Karnauskas

Hi, there! My name is Kris Karnauskas, and I’m a professor and ocean/climate scientist at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado, USA. Back in 2015, when I moved to Boulder from the Woods Hole...

8 Jun 2020

Catastrophe and Cultural Renewal – 1945 and today

The current pandemic and global health and economic crisis has overshadowed an event that would normally have enjoyed a lot more discussion and attention: the 75th anniversary of the end of World War...

Andreas Agocs | 8 Jun 2020

A Distant Mirror? Economic Lessons from the Black Death

Historians have long argued that the value of their field lay in its applicability to the present day. It serves society best, according to a recent formulation, as a guide that encourages broad perspective...

William Caferro | 8 Jun 2020

Precedents for a Pandemic: Reflections on Disease and Indigenous Communities

Honolulu’s Honuakaha smallpox cemetery, photographed in 2013. The first outbreak of smallpox in 1853 took as many as 6,000 lives, eight percent of the Islands’ roughly 75,000 people. Hundreds are believed to be buried under the Kaka‘ako Fire Station parking lot, at the rear of photograph.

Seth Archer | 8 Jun 2020

COVID-19 and the End of Asylum

The hard-won institution of asylum is under threat. States around the world have shut their borders in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s now near impossible for most asylum seekers to travel in...

Daniel Ghezelbash | 8 Jun 2020