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13 pages, 214 KB  
Article
The Black Panther (1973–1976): Rewriting “The Black Experience” in Panther’s Rage and The Black Panther Takes on the Klan
by Michael T. Williamson
Humanities 2026, 15(4), 56; https://doi.org/10.3390/h15040056 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 957
Abstract
Produced at a point of significant change in literary representations of what was called “the black experience,” the comic book series Panther’s Rage and The Black Panther Takes on the Klan each represent an ambitious collaboration between Don McGregor, the white writer of [...] Read more.
Produced at a point of significant change in literary representations of what was called “the black experience,” the comic book series Panther’s Rage and The Black Panther Takes on the Klan each represent an ambitious collaboration between Don McGregor, the white writer of the series, and Billy Graham, the black series artist. As a revision of “black experience” novels published by Holloway House during the early 1970s, this comic book series significantly alters the ways in which mourning, memory, and mental fortitude are represented in a world of almost entirely black characters. Fighting villains who create phantasmic illusions that evoke self-doubt, The Black Panther, one of three black superheroes introduced by Marvel comics during the 1960s and 1970s, brings to light and then revises traumatic historical memories. The hero’s journey around the provinces of Wakanda, a black kingdom in Western Africa, requires the Panther to defeat a variety of villains and their proxies and to posit an alternative to revolutionary self-hatred. We learn from this journey that tradition and modernity can coexist and that traumatic memories need not repeat themselves endlessly. Instead, they can be revised and incorporated into narratives that celebrate the power of the disciplined imagination to imagine a better future. Full article
25 pages, 2194 KB  
Article
Analysis of Competitive Strategies and Cost Effects in the Digitalization of the Shipping Industry
by Minghui Wu, Shibo Zhang, Xinying Zhou, Yingru Wang and Shengying Zhao
Mathematics 2025, 13(23), 3802; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13233802 - 27 Nov 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1381
Abstract
The digital transformation of the shipping industry presents both strategic opportunities and cost challenges. This study employs a Cournot duopoly model to analyze how digital technology adoption affects freight pricing, market demand, and profit dynamics under varying cost structures. Methodologically, we integrate operational [...] Read more.
The digital transformation of the shipping industry presents both strategic opportunities and cost challenges. This study employs a Cournot duopoly model to analyze how digital technology adoption affects freight pricing, market demand, and profit dynamics under varying cost structures. Methodologically, we integrate operational efficiency and carbon reduction effects into a competitive framework—a novel approach that reveals a tripartite prisoner’s dilemma in technology adoption, a phenomenon seldom explored in shipping literature. Our findings indicate that digitalization can lower freight rates when implementation costs are low, but may lead to price increases under high-cost conditions. Strategic asymmetries often result in winner-takes-all outcomes, while bilateral adoption may erode collective profits. For practitioners, this study offers a dynamic decision-making framework to help shipping firms align digital investments with cost-benefit realities and sustainability goals, thereby avoiding suboptimal competitive equilibria. Full article
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22 pages, 497 KB  
Article
Trauma-Informed and Healing Architecture in Young People’s Correctional Facilities: A Comparative Case Study on Design, Well-Being, and Reintegration
by Nadereh Afzhool and Ayten Özsavaş Akçay
Buildings 2025, 15(20), 3687; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203687 - 13 Oct 2025
Viewed by 5317
Abstract
This study investigates how trauma-informed and healing-centred architectural design is associated with rehabilitation and reintegration outcomes in young people’s correctional facilities. Drawing on international case studies, the analysis demonstrates that architecture is not a neutral backdrop but a contributing determinant within broader justice [...] Read more.
This study investigates how trauma-informed and healing-centred architectural design is associated with rehabilitation and reintegration outcomes in young people’s correctional facilities. Drawing on international case studies, the analysis demonstrates that architecture is not a neutral backdrop but a contributing determinant within broader justice ecosystems. Trauma-informed environments are consistently linked to reductions in re-traumatisation and improvements in emotional regulation, while small-scale, community-oriented facilities are associated with enhanced skill development, autonomy, and reintegration potential. Culturally responsive designs that incorporate Indigenous practices and symbolic architecture are observed to support identity, resilience, and community belonging, underscoring the importance of cultural continuity in rehabilitation processes. In parallel, sustainable features such as biophilic design, renewable energy systems, and natural light are correlated with improvements in ecological performance and psychosocial well-being, indicating that sustainability and rehabilitation may be mutually reinforcing goals. Notably, the analysis highlights that supportive environments are also associated with staff well-being and institutional stability, underscoring the broader organisational benefits of healing architecture. The findings suggest that young people’s correctional facilities should not replicate adult prisons but instead provide safe, developmental, and culturally grounded spaces that respond to adolescents’ unique needs. This study contributes a novel conceptual model—the Trauma-Informed Healing Architecture (TIHA) framework—that integrates trauma-informed, cultural, and ecological design strategies within the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The framework defines global standards as universal principles—safety, dignity, cultural responsiveness, and natural light—while remaining adaptable to local resources and justice systems. In this way, it provides internationally relevant yet context-sensitive guidance for young people’s correctional reform. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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17 pages, 697 KB  
Article
Mapping Oral Health and Tobacco Risk Profiles Among Incarcerated Populations in a Central Prison of Navi Mumbai Using a Novel TRACE Framework—A Cross-Sectional Study
by Kavita Pol, Vaibhav Kumar, Meghna Vandekar, Deepa Das, Manjiri Deshmukh, Aysha Sayed, Ziad D. Baghdadi, Nazeem Muhajarine, Mrunal Ujjainkar and Renu Taywade
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(10), 1547; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101547 - 11 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1152
Abstract
Objectives: Tobacco-related habits, including both smoked and smokeless forms, remain a public health concern among incarcerated populations, where stress, stigma, and limited healthcare access contribute to high prevalence rates. This cross-sectional study was conducted among inmates in a central prison in Navi Mumbai, [...] Read more.
Objectives: Tobacco-related habits, including both smoked and smokeless forms, remain a public health concern among incarcerated populations, where stress, stigma, and limited healthcare access contribute to high prevalence rates. This cross-sectional study was conducted among inmates in a central prison in Navi Mumbai, India and aimed to evaluate tobacco-use patterns, cessation motivation, and oral health outcomes among prison inmates in Navi Mumbai. Methods: A total population sampling technique was employed, which included 3321 out of 3333 inmates with varying durations of incarceration. Data were collected using a novel TRACE (Tobacco Use, Risk Factors, Assessment, Cessation, and Effects through Epidemiology) framework, incorporating the MTSS (Motivation to Stop Scale) and clinical assessments using the DMFT (Decayed, Missing, and Filled Teeth) index and OHI-S (Oral Hygiene Index-Simplified). Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS version 21 to explore associations between tobacco use and oral health outcomes in this vulnerable population. Results: Tobacco use was reported by 53.1% of inmates, with 39.5% using smokeless forms. Dental caries affected 43% and periodontal disease 46.0% of participants, both significantly associated with tobacco use (p < 0.001). Oral mucosal lesions were observed in 2.6% of inmates. While 76.3% of tobacco users expressed willingness to quit, access to cessation support remained minimal. Conclusion: These findings underscore the need for targeted interventions, such as in-house tobacco cessation programs and oral health services, in correctional facilities. Integrating cessation counseling into prison healthcare policies could improve outcomes among incarcerated populations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Health Care Sciences)
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16 pages, 297 KB  
Article
How to Disappear Completely
by Dominik Zechner
Humanities 2025, 14(8), 161; https://doi.org/10.3390/h14080161 - 4 Aug 2025
Viewed by 3966
Abstract
This article investigates the paradox of disappearance as both an aesthetic and a political phenomenon. Taking inspiration from Radiohead’s song “How to Disappear Completely,” it argues that aesthetic representations of disappearance never achieve total erasure; instead, they give rise to new forms of [...] Read more.
This article investigates the paradox of disappearance as both an aesthetic and a political phenomenon. Taking inspiration from Radiohead’s song “How to Disappear Completely,” it argues that aesthetic representations of disappearance never achieve total erasure; instead, they give rise to new forms of visibility. A true aesthetics of disappearance does not exist. Through case studies such as H.G. Wells’s The Invisible Man and Guy Debord’s Society of the Spectacle, the article demonstrates that disappearance is always mediated: the invisible man becomes hyper-visible through his clothing, bandages, and mask, while the spectacle conceals marginalized lives only to expose them through mechanisms of institutional control (e.g., prisons, medical facilities, schools—as analyzed in Michel Foucault’s work). An investigation of the “novel of the institution” (Campe), especially as it appears in the works of Franz Kafka and Robert Walser, eventually explores the nexus between aesthetic representation and institutionalized forms of coerced visibility. Ultimately, the essay argues that disappearance, as an aesthetic and political event, destabilizes regimes of visibility—not by erasure alone, but by exposing the fragility of appearance itself. The tension between opacity and exposure suggests that resistance lies not in pure absence but in subverting the very mechanisms of representation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cultural Studies & Critical Theory in the Humanities)
32 pages, 1163 KB  
Article
A Novel Exploration of Women’s Pathways Through Prison and the Roles of Trauma, Addiction, and Mental Health
by Rain Carei, Mollee K. Steely Smith, Matthew Landon, Haley Church, Courtney Bagdon-Cox, Chee Kay Cheong and Melissa J. Zielinski
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(2), 105; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14020105 - 12 Feb 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 6468
Abstract
Trauma, mental illnesses, and substance use disorders (SUD) are well-documented contributors leading to women’s incarceration; however, less is known about how these factors also influence women’s pathways through prison once incarcerated. To address this gap, we examined (1) women’s pathways to and through [...] Read more.
Trauma, mental illnesses, and substance use disorders (SUD) are well-documented contributors leading to women’s incarceration; however, less is known about how these factors also influence women’s pathways through prison once incarcerated. To address this gap, we examined (1) women’s pathways to and through prison-based mental health services, (2) summarized their sociodemographic and diagnostic profiles, and (3) examined how mental health and addiction relate to indicators of within-prison functioning, intervention receipt, and recidivism. Data derived from routine administrative and treatment records of women incarcerated between January 2015 and December 2023 in the Washington Corrections Center for Women (WCCW). The full sample comprised 5775 women who entered WCCW during the study period. The majority (53.2%) of women admitted to prison in the study period had at least one mental health diagnosis requiring at least moderate mental health intervention. Substance use (62.73%), trauma-related (61.11%), and mood (47.71%) disorders were most common. Individuals with at least a diagnosis of psychosis, neurocognitive disorders, and personality disorders had greater rates of close observation stays, crisis events, and non-suicidal self-injury risk assessments. Psychosis was associated with the highest rate of crisis events, while personality disorders were associated with the highest rate of non-suicidal self-injury risk assessments. Three-year recidivism rates were highest amongst those with a diagnosis of psychosis or ADHD. Trauma-focused and substance use treatments were associated with lower rates of crisis interventions and other critical incidents in their post-treatment period, but no relationship was observed for reductions in post-release recidivism. Overwhelmingly, women enter prison with significant mental health care needs and require a high-level of care that is largely reflective of the nearly ubiquitous nature of trauma, psychological distress, and addiction. The level of care needed, in response to the varied and complicated diagnostic profile of incarcerated women (e.g., ADHD, psychosis, trauma), as well as the number of critical incidents stemming from symptoms, reflects the need for more clinical staff to expand reach along with training in a wide range of modalities. Full article
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22 pages, 381 KB  
Article
Work as a Sense of Intra-Prison Community Insertion: The Social and Symbolic Resources That Pentecostal Communities Provide to Converts inside Prisons (1950–1970)
by Miguel Angel Mansilla, Johanna Corrine Slootweg and Alicia Agurto Calderón
Religions 2024, 15(9), 1081; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091081 - 5 Sep 2024
Viewed by 2092
Abstract
The objective of this article is to analyze the social and symbolic resources that intra-prison Pentecostalism provides to converted inmates for their intra- and then extra-prison community reintegration. To conduct this analysis, we present two sections. Firstly, we present a characterization of two [...] Read more.
The objective of this article is to analyze the social and symbolic resources that intra-prison Pentecostalism provides to converted inmates for their intra- and then extra-prison community reintegration. To conduct this analysis, we present two sections. Firstly, we present a characterization of two prison spaces between 1950 and 1970: the Public Prison and the Santiago Penitentiary, both located in the city of Santiago de Chile. In them, Pentecostal communities developed and adjusted to the prison contexts with different proposals. Secondly, we see religious work as an organizer of meaning based on the three most important religious rituals of prison spaces: the invocation ritual, which is prayer as sacred work; music, which is sung work; and preaching, which is the work that makes the community grow. The theoretical framework we employ is that of structuralism, to adapt to the era explored in this article, complemented by the phenomenological proposal of René Girard. Methodologically, this study is a qualitative vision focused on the autobiography of a religious leader, to which two autobiographical novels of the time are added, in addition to institutional magazines (Pentecostal) and a magazine of journalistic reportage, to contextualize the information provided by the autobiography. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion and Social Transformation)
17 pages, 2603 KB  
Article
Encouraging the Submission of Information by Reducing Confirming Costs
by Saori Iwanaga, Masao Kubo and Hiroshi Sato
Electronics 2024, 13(17), 3495; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13173495 - 3 Sep 2024
Viewed by 1089
Abstract
When a landslide occurs, the person who discovers it will likely report the disaster; however, a person who receives this report will likely need someone on site to check, since the reporter may have misread the information. This allows third parties to make [...] Read more.
When a landslide occurs, the person who discovers it will likely report the disaster; however, a person who receives this report will likely need someone on site to check, since the reporter may have misread the information. This allows third parties to make use of the confirmed information. Facilitating such mechanisms for reporting, confirming, and utilizing disaster information is considered to be necessary for sharing details about one. In this paper, we proposed and analyzed an agent-based model that incorporates disaster behavior into the model of Toriumi et al. The reporting of a disaster refers to submitting articles, the confirmation of the information by another person refers to commenting on the articles, and utilizing the information refers to comments responding to the aforementioned comment using the framework of meta-reward games, based on the prisoner’s dilemma game. We then analyze the costs and rewards to encourage cooperation in several social networks. It is found that reducing the cost of commenting (conforming) encourages the submission of information. The properties of the results do not depend on network structure, which is novel and unexpected, and it is expected that the properties of real social networks will be predictable. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Advances in Multi-agent Systems: Control and Modelling)
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20 pages, 317 KB  
Article
Crime and Punishment: A Rethink
by Ognjen Arandjelović
Philosophies 2023, 8(3), 47; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies8030047 - 26 May 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 12026
Abstract
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At the same time, the management of prisons and of the prison population has become a major real-world challenge, with growing concerns about overcrowding, the offenders’ well-being, and the failure [...] Read more.
Incarceration remains the foremost form of sentence for serious crimes in Western democracies. At the same time, the management of prisons and of the prison population has become a major real-world challenge, with growing concerns about overcrowding, the offenders’ well-being, and the failure of achieving the distal desideratum of reduced criminality, all of which have a moral dimension. In no small part motivated by these practical problems, the focus of the present article is on the ethical framework that we use in thinking about and administering criminal justice. I start with an analysis of imprisonment and its permissibility as a punitive tool of justice. In particular, I present a novel argument against punitive imprisonment, showing it to fall short in meeting two key criteria of just punishment, namely (i) that the appropriate individual is being punished, and (ii) that the punishment can be adequately moderated to reflect the seriousness of the crime. The principles I argue for and that the aforementioned analysis brings to the fore, rooted in the sentient experience, firstly of victims, and not only of victims but also of the offenders as well as the society at large, then lead me to elucidate the broader framework of jurisprudence that I then apply more widely. Hence, while rejecting punitive imprisonment, I use its identified shortcomings to argue for the reinstitution of forms of punishment that are, incongruently, presently not seen as permissible, such as corporal punishment and punishments dismissed on the basis of being seen as humiliating. I also present a novel view of capital punishment, which, in contradiction to its name, I reject for punitive aims, but which I argue is permissible on compassionate grounds. Full article
9 pages, 220 KB  
Article
‘A Whole Other World than What I Live in’: Reading Chester Himes, on Campus and at the County Jail
by Ed Wiltse
Humanities 2023, 12(1), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/h12010011 - 16 Jan 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3290
Abstract
This essay first briefly examines African American novelist Chester Himes’ genre-defying position as prison writer turned detective writer, whose influence is clear not only in the usual suspects such as Walter Mosley but also in the Blaxploitation films of the early 1970s, and [...] Read more.
This essay first briefly examines African American novelist Chester Himes’ genre-defying position as prison writer turned detective writer, whose influence is clear not only in the usual suspects such as Walter Mosley but also in the Blaxploitation films of the early 1970s, and in the urban fiction tradition from Donald Goines and Iceberg Slim on down through today’s Triple Crown books and others. I then look at how Himes’ work has been received by the college students and incarcerated people who each spring for the past 20 years have worked together in reading groups set at the local county jail in a project linked to a class I teach, in order to raise questions about genre, audience and pedagogy. The two groups of readers, who may come to see each other as one group over the series of meetings, often develop readings of Himes’ novel that push back against the analysis I present in the classroom. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Twentieth-Century American Literature)
16 pages, 1481 KB  
Article
Adherence Improves Cooperation in Sequential Social Dilemmas
by Yuyu Yuan, Ting Guo, Pengqian Zhao and Hongpu Jiang
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(16), 8004; https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168004 - 10 Aug 2022
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3787
Abstract
Social dilemmas have guided research on mutual cooperation for decades, especially the two-person social dilemma. Most famously, Tit-for-Tat performs very well in tournaments of the Prisoner’s Dilemma. Nevertheless, they treat the options to cooperate or defect only as an atomic action, which cannot [...] Read more.
Social dilemmas have guided research on mutual cooperation for decades, especially the two-person social dilemma. Most famously, Tit-for-Tat performs very well in tournaments of the Prisoner’s Dilemma. Nevertheless, they treat the options to cooperate or defect only as an atomic action, which cannot satisfy the complexity of the real world. In recent research, these options to cooperate or defect were temporally extended. Here, we propose a novel adherence-based multi-agent reinforcement learning algorithm for achieving cooperation and coordination by rewarding agents who adhere to other agents. The evaluation of adherence is based on counterfactual reasoning. During training, each agent observes the changes in the actions of other agents by replacing its current action, thereby calculating the degree of adherence of other agents to its behavior. Using adherence as an intrinsic reward enables agents to consider the collective, thus promoting cooperation. In addition, the adherence rewards of all agents are calculated in a decentralized way. We experiment in sequential social dilemma environments, and the results demonstrate the potential for the algorithm to enhance cooperation and coordination and significantly increase the scores of the deep RL agents. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Deep Reinforcement Learning for Robots and Agents)
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15 pages, 499 KB  
Article
Identifying Key Selection Criteria for Smart Building Technologies in the United Arab Emirates Prisons
by Mohammed Abdulla Mohammed Mesfer Aldhaheri, Bo Xia and Madhav Nepal
Buildings 2022, 12(8), 1171; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12081171 - 5 Aug 2022
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 4122
Abstract
The selection of an appropriate smart building technology has been a challenge for stakeholders, because no specific selection criteria are currently available. This study aimed to identify the potential selection criteria for the selection of smart building technologies for prison buildings in the [...] Read more.
The selection of an appropriate smart building technology has been a challenge for stakeholders, because no specific selection criteria are currently available. This study aimed to identify the potential selection criteria for the selection of smart building technologies for prison buildings in the United Arab Emirates. A questionnaire survey was conducted to evaluate the relative importance of smart building technologies and the specific selection criteria. 238 experts from the public and the private sector with rich experience in the construction and prison industry participated in the survey. The data obtained were analyzed for descriptive statistics and the Mann-Whitney U test was conducted to compare the responses of the government and private sector respondents. Cronbach’s coefficient was estimated using reliability analysis. Finally, exploratory factor analysis was performed by Principal Axis Factoring (PAF) to extract the contributing factors and was further improved by varimax rotation using SPSS. To evaluate the appropriateness of the factor extraction, the Kaiser-Mayer-Olkin (KMO) measure of sampling accuracy and Barlett’s test of sphericity were conducted. The results demonstrated that most participants thought that the safety and security, anti-hacking capability, high working efficiency, and durability of the new smart building technology were very important. 14 listed selection criteria were extracted into three factors by factor analysis explaining 50.585% total variation. Regarding smart building technologies, fire protection was mostly voted by the participants followed by video surveillance and heat, ventilation, and air-conditioning system (HVAC). This study is a novel research study identifying the key selection criteria for the selection of important smart building technologies and would be helpful for a broad audience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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18 pages, 349 KB  
Article
Heterotopic Proliferation in E. S. Thomson’s Jem Flockhart Series
by Marie-Luise Kohlke
Humanities 2022, 11(1), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11010015 - 13 Jan 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3790
Abstract
This article explores the convergence, inversion, and collapse of heterotopic spaces in E. S. Thomson’s neo-Victorian Jem Flockhart series about a cross-dressing female apothecary in mid-nineteenth-century London. The eponymous first-person narrator becomes embroiled in the detection of horrific murder cases, with the action [...] Read more.
This article explores the convergence, inversion, and collapse of heterotopic spaces in E. S. Thomson’s neo-Victorian Jem Flockhart series about a cross-dressing female apothecary in mid-nineteenth-century London. The eponymous first-person narrator becomes embroiled in the detection of horrific murder cases, with the action traversing a wide range of Michel Foucault’s exemplary Other spaces, including hospitals, graveyards, brothels, prisons, asylums, and colonies, with the series substituting the garden for Foucault’s ship as the paradigmatic heterotopia. These myriad juxtaposed sites, which facilitate divergence from societal norms while seemingly sequestering forms of alterity and resistance, repeatedly merge into one another in Thomson’s novels, destabilising distinct kinds of heterotopias and heterotopic functions. Jem’s doubled queerness as a cross-dressing lesbian beloved by their Watsonean side-kick, the junior architect William Quartermain, complicates the protagonist’s role in helping readers negotiate the re-imagined Victorian metropolis and its unequal power structures. Simultaneously defending/reaffirming and contesting/subverting the status quo, Jem’s body itself becomes a microcosmic heterotopia, problematising the elision of agency in Foucault’s conceptualisation of the term. The proliferation of heterotopias in Thomson’s series suggests that neo-Victorian fiction reconfigures the nineteenth century into a vast network of confining, contested, and liberating Other spaces. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Neo-Victorian Heterotopias)
14 pages, 288 KB  
Article
“At Home with Zoe”: Becoming Animal in Charlotte Wood’s The Natural Way of Things
by Bárbara Arizti
Humanities 2020, 9(3), 96; https://doi.org/10.3390/h9030096 - 28 Aug 2020
Viewed by 8638
Abstract
This paper focuses on Charlotte Wood’s 2015 dystopian novel The Natural Way of Things. Set in an unnamed place in the Australian outback, it recounts the story of 10 girls in their late teens and early twenties who are kept prisoners by [...] Read more.
This paper focuses on Charlotte Wood’s 2015 dystopian novel The Natural Way of Things. Set in an unnamed place in the Australian outback, it recounts the story of 10 girls in their late teens and early twenties who are kept prisoners by a mysterious corporate organisation for their sexual involvement with an array of powerful men. The novel’s title invites two main readings: the first, and perhaps more obvious, along gender lines; and the second, which will provide the backbone to my analysis, within the framework of the natural world, the animal kingdom in particular. The Natural Way of Things has been described as a study in contemporary misogyny and the workings of patriarchy. The ingrained sexism of society—the insidious, normalised violence against females, often blamed on them, glossing over male responsibility—is undoubtedly the central topic of Wood’s work. Without losing sight of gender issues, my approach to Wood’s novel is inspired by Rosi Braidotti’s posthuman theories on the continuum nature–culture and the primacy of zoe—“the non-human, vital force of life”—over bios, or life as “the prerogative of Anthropos” (Rosi Braidotti). According to Braidotti, the current challenges to anthropocentrism question the distinction between these two forms of life, highlighting instead the seamless connection between the natural world and culture and favouring a consideration of the subject as embodied, nomadic and relational. My reading of The Natural Way of Things in light of Braidotti’s insights will be supplemented by an analysis of the novel in the context of transmodernity, both a period term and a distinct way of being in the world theorised by critics such as Rosa M. Rodríguez Magda and Marc Luyckx, who emphasise the relational, interdependent nature of contemporary times from a more human-centred perspective. The Natural Way of Things is also a story of female empowerment. This is especially the case with Yolanda Kovacs and Verla Learmont, the two protagonist women, who step out of their roles as victims and stand up to their guards. My analysis of the novel will revolve around these two characters and their different reactions to confinement and degradation. I conclude that although a more zoe-centred conception of the human subject that acknowledges the human–animal continuum should definitely be welcomed, literally “becoming animal”, as Yolanda does, deprives one of meaningful human relationality, embodied in the novel in Verla’s memories of her caring, empathic relationship with her father. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Dystopian Scenarios in Contemporary Australian Narrative)
26 pages, 2751 KB  
Article
Balanced Quantum-Like Bayesian Networks
by Andreas Wichert, Catarina Moreira and Peter Bruza
Entropy 2020, 22(2), 170; https://doi.org/10.3390/e22020170 - 2 Feb 2020
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 4993
Abstract
Empirical findings from cognitive psychology indicate that, in scenarios under high levels of uncertainty, many people tend to make irrational decisions. To address this problem, models based on quantum probability theory, such as the quantum-like Bayesian networks, have been proposed. However, this model [...] Read more.
Empirical findings from cognitive psychology indicate that, in scenarios under high levels of uncertainty, many people tend to make irrational decisions. To address this problem, models based on quantum probability theory, such as the quantum-like Bayesian networks, have been proposed. However, this model makes use of a Bayes normalisation factor during probabilistic inference to convert the likelihoods that result from quantum interference effects into probability values. The interpretation of this operation is not clear and leads to extremely skewed intensity waves that make the task of prediction of these irrational decisions challenging. This article proposes the law of balance, a novel mathematical formalism for probabilistic inferences in quantum-like Bayesian networks, based on the notion of balanced intensity waves. The general idea is to balance the intensity waves resulting from quantum interference in such a way that, during Bayes normalisation, they cancel each other. With this representation, we also propose the law of maximum uncertainty, which is a method to predict these paradoxes by selecting the amplitudes of the wave with the highest entropy. Empirical results show that the law of balance together with the law of maximum uncertainty were able to accurately predict different experiments from cognitive psychology showing paradoxical or irrational decisions, namely in the Prisoner’s Dilemma game and the Two-Stage Gambling Game. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quantum Information Revolution: Impact to Foundations)
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