[5] viXra:2409.0092 [pdf] replaced on 2025-08-31 08:30:06
Authors: Anindya Kumar Biswas
Comments: 18 Pages. A mistake in plotting BW(c=0.01) has been rectified
We study the names of the places in the Political Map of Northeast India. We draw the naturallogarithm of the number of names, normalised, starting with a letter vs the natural logarithm of the rank of the letter, normalised. We conclude that the Political Map of Northeast India can be characterised by the magnetisation curve, BW(c=0.005), of the Ising Model in the Bragg-Williams approximation in the presence of external magnetic field, H, with c=H/γε= 0.005. ε is the strength of coupling between two neighbouring spins in the Ising Model, γ representing the number ofnearest neighbours of a spin, which is very large.
Category: Social Science
[4] viXra:2409.0072 [pdf] submitted on 2024-09-13 21:07:41
Authors: Gennady Shkliarevsky
Comments: 49 Pages.
Tensions and rivalries are proliferating in the contemporary world at an unprecedented rate. There are many signs that human civilization faces a real possibility of a new global conflict. Some observers even claim that the Third World War has already began. There are few other times in human history when the need to bring order and peace to the troubled world has been more urgent than it is today. The creation of the new world order is the main subject of this article. The article examines four major perspectives on world order: Western, Chinese, Russia, and Islamic. The analysis shows that none of these perspectives offer a possibility to create an enduring global order. The creation of such order requires a solution of the problem of difference. This problem is a result of the clashes of differences that appear to be intrinsic to reality. The study shows that clashes among differences are not inevitable, and that the problem of differences is resolvable. The article outlines the approach that makes possible to solve the problem of difference and attain perpetual peace.
Category: Social Science
[3] viXra:2409.0049 [pdf] replaced on 2025-09-01 14:11:41
Authors: Anindya Kumar Biswas
Comments: 20 Pages. A mistake in plotting BW(c=0.01) has been rectified
We study Dictionary of American Family Names by Elsdon C. Smith. We draw the naturallogarithm of the number of entries, normalised, starting with a letter vs the natural logarithmof 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 Ising model with four nearest neighbours in the presence of external magnetic field, H, with βH = 0.01. β is 1/(k_B T), where, T is temperature and k_B is the tiny Boltzmann constant.
Category: Social Science
[2] viXra:2409.0042 [pdf] submitted on 2024-09-09 01:58:31
Authors: Sunil Sondhi
Comments: 20 Pages. This Research is funded by Indira Gandhi National Center for Arts, Minstry of Cullture, Govt. of India
The idea that justice and good conscience must prevail over law reflects the notion of superiority of higher moral law over the limitations of man-made law. In India this is rooted in the fundamental Vedic principle that there is connection between the form and the formless, mundane and the divine, the means and the ends. As the Rig Veda says, amidst the undifferentiated source, great warmth of creation was born; and the sages who searched in the far reaches of their mind discovered the umbilical connection of manifest with the unmanifest. This holistic, creative and contextual view of Dharma and Dharmasastra is also evident in the countries which were influenced by the Indian Dharmasastra tradition. In Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia, the Dharmasastra tradition was accepted largely in its original form, although as the Kutara Manava Dharmasastra of Java shows, some modifications were made. In Tibet, Burma, Thailand, and Ceylon, the indigenous texts were an attempt to use the Indian tradition as a model in an environment entirely given over to the Buddhist faith. They retained the textual classification of contentious matters into Vyavaharapada or eighteen types; but the content of the texts was very much a matter of local rules. Thus, the Dharmasastra were not transplanted in other countries by the force of arms; rather, these were accepted as a guide to form and sustain indigenous traditions of ethics and law. On the basis of the considerable evidence from ephigraphical, and textual sources, it is possible to suggest that by the time Indian-inspired temples, statues and epigraphy appeared in Southeast Asia, sometime between the third and the fifth century CE, the relationship between Southeast Asian and Indian societies had probably already come a very long way through mutual interaction and awareness of the universal nature of India’s knowledge tradition. We need to go beyond the imagined vision of a sudden imposition of Indian culture, and Indianisation or Colonisation of South and Southeast Asia by warriors and sages. In a way, this paper raises the question as to whether Greater India was culturally Indianised through dissemination of India’s knowledge tradition before social and political ‘Indianisation?’
Category: Social Science
[1] viXra:2409.0014 [pdf] replaced on 2025-09-01 14:33:43
Authors: Anindya Kumar Biswas
Comments: 20 Pages. A mistake in plotting BW(c=0.01) has been rectified
We study Dictionary of Sports by Dr. S.K.Srivastava and Ms. Tanvangi Singh. 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 Ising model with four nearest neighbours in the presence of external magnetic field, H, with βH = 0.01. β is 1/(k_B T), where, T is temperature and k B is the tiny Boltzmann constant.
Category: Social Science