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Search Results (556)

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17 pages, 273 KiB  
Article
Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
by Roy Peachey
Religions 2025, 16(5), 642; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050642 - 19 May 2025
Viewed by 56
Abstract
Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s J’enquête, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s Le [...] Read more.
Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s J’enquête, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s Le dernier dimanche, Jérôme Ferrari’s Le sermon sur la chute de Rome, and Sylvie Germain’s Tobie des marais. It argues that some of the most pressing questions of our secular age—including questions of intersubjectivity and human and divine absence—are addressed in these competing narratives of secularization. It then examines Jean-Louis Chrétien’s notion of cardiognosie, or knowledge of the heart, and his argument that profanation, rather than secularization as such, is of central importance in the modern novel’s construction of meaning before concluding with a close reading of Jérôme Ferrari’s Le sermon sur la chute de Rome and a consideration of the heart in Sylvie Germain’s Tobie des marais as a first step toward establishing the means by which profanation has been faced and overcome in recent fictional texts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Catholic Theologies of Culture)
18 pages, 296 KiB  
Article
How Does Climate Finance Affect the Ease of Doing Business in Recipient Countries?
by Monica Kabutey, Solomon Nborkan Nakouwo and John Taden
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2025, 18(5), 263; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm18050263 - 13 May 2025
Viewed by 237
Abstract
Developing countries face a disproportionate degree of threat from climate change. As such, they require and receive significant financial support to address the menace. However, little is known about the potential externalities of this form of external liquidity for the business sector. This [...] Read more.
Developing countries face a disproportionate degree of threat from climate change. As such, they require and receive significant financial support to address the menace. However, little is known about the potential externalities of this form of external liquidity for the business sector. This paper evaluates the impact of climate finance on the ease of doing business (EODB). On the one hand, climate finance might lead to an improved business environment as the funds facilitate infrastructure provision, technological innovation, and international collaboration for recipient countries. On the other hand, however, the business environment might be negatively impacted by complex new regulations, disruptive technological transitions, market distortions, and resource diversions. Countries receiving climate funds may also introduce new environmental and business regulations, implement new technologies, and divert resources to new programs to justify the receipt of aid or demonstrate a commitment to balancing economic development with environmental objectives. We theorize that given the expected disruptions to business, climate finance should negatively impact the EODB. We also argue that this negative impact will be more severe for resource-rich countries than for their resource-poor peers. Countries rich in natural resources might experience higher disruptions to business operations as they attempt to balance resource-dependent economic operations with environmental objectives mandated by climate finance. Utilizing panel data for 86 recipient countries for the 2002–2021 period, we test our hypotheses using the Generalized Methods of Moments (GMM) technique. The baseline results suggest that climate finance has a weak positive impact on the EODB. However, as argued, resource-dependence heterogeneity analysis reveals that climate finance significantly negatively disrupts the EODB in resource-rich countries. Furthermore, a sectoral comparative analysis shows that while climate finance has a significant positive impact on the growth of the service sector, it significantly slows the growth of the resource sector, affirming the argument that climate finance might attract higher disruptions to resource-dependent business operations. By implication, lowly diversified economies might realize more negative than positive effects of climate finance, and investors should consider providing support to ease the pains of transitioning from resource-intensive growth to clean energy-driven development strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Featured Papers in Climate Finance)
26 pages, 4688 KiB  
Article
How Best to Use Forest Wood for Energy: Perspectives from Energy Efficiency and Environmental Considerations
by John J. Fitzpatrick, Jack Carroll, Strahinja Macura and Neil Murphy
Eng 2025, 6(5), 95; https://doi.org/10.3390/eng6050095 - 8 May 2025
Viewed by 237
Abstract
This paper examines how best to use forest wood for energy application, considering that it is a limited natural resource. Eight systems are considered, including wood stoves, steam systems (boiler, power plant, and combined heat and power (CHP)), and gasification combined systems (gas [...] Read more.
This paper examines how best to use forest wood for energy application, considering that it is a limited natural resource. Eight systems are considered, including wood stoves, steam systems (boiler, power plant, and combined heat and power (CHP)), and gasification combined systems (gas turbine and combined cycle power plant, CHP, and Fischer–Tropsch). The methodology uses energy analysis and modelling and environmental/sustainability considerations to compare the energy systems. In terms of energy conversion efficiency, steam boilers and high-efficiency wood stoves for heating applications provide the highest efficiencies (~80 to 90%) and should be considered. Steam CHP systems provide lower overall energy conversion efficiencies (~75 to 80%) but do provide some electrical energy, and thus should be considered. The use of wood for the production of electricity on its own should not be considered due to low efficiencies (~20 to 30%). Particulate emissions hinder the application of high-efficiency stoves, especially in urban areas, whereas for industrial-scale steam boilers and CHP systems, particle separators can negate this problem. Gasification/Fischer–Tropsch systems have a lower energy efficiency (~30 to 50%); however, a sustainability argument could be made for liquid fuels that have few sustainable alternatives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Interdisciplinary Insights in Engineering Research)
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13 pages, 731 KiB  
Article
Shaped by the Supper: The Eucharist as an Identity Marker and Sustainer—A Literary Analysis of 1 Corinthians 11:17–34
by JM (Jooman) Na
Religions 2025, 16(5), 599; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050599 - 7 May 2025
Viewed by 169
Abstract
This study demonstrates that Paul presents the Eucharist in 1 Corinthians 11:17–34 as an identity-forming and identity-sustaining liturgical act. Through literary analysis, the research first highlights Paul’s deliberate fivefold use of the verb συνέρχομαι (“to come together”) to frame the passage, emphasizing the [...] Read more.
This study demonstrates that Paul presents the Eucharist in 1 Corinthians 11:17–34 as an identity-forming and identity-sustaining liturgical act. Through literary analysis, the research first highlights Paul’s deliberate fivefold use of the verb συνέρχομαι (“to come together”) to frame the passage, emphasizing the communal nature of the Eucharist. The meal is intended to mark the identity of the church as one body—set apart from the status-based divisions typical of Roman banquet culture. The current study also observes that Paul strategically places the early Christian confession of the Lord’s Supper at the center of his argument. In doing so, he calls the Corinthians to recall this tradition and re-engage in a shared act of remembrance—one that enacts the memory of Christ’s death and thereby reconstitutes them as a unified body. This understanding is rooted in Jewish conceptions of ritual memory, in which liturgical acts not only recall the past but renew and reinforce communal identity. Through such embodied remembrance, the church does not merely recall who it is; it performs and sustains that identity. Thus, the Eucharist functions both to form the church as one body distinct from the world and to maintain that identity through repeated, participatory remembrance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Worship and Faith Formation)
17 pages, 1737 KiB  
Article
Modeling the Process of Crop Yield Management in Hydroagro-Landscape Saline Soils
by Serikbay Umirzakov, Zhumakhan Mustafayev, Laura Tokhetova, Zhanuzak Baimanov, Kairat Akylbayev and Lazzat Koldasova
Sustainability 2025, 17(9), 4214; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17094214 - 7 May 2025
Viewed by 92
Abstract
To study the impact of soil salinity type and degree in irrigated lands on the process of crop yield formation, multiparametric and single-parameter mathematical models were used. The methodological basis of the study was the materialist theory of scientific knowledge (analysis and synthesis) [...] Read more.
To study the impact of soil salinity type and degree in irrigated lands on the process of crop yield formation, multiparametric and single-parameter mathematical models were used. The methodological basis of the study was the materialist theory of scientific knowledge (analysis and synthesis) and the laws of ecology, using graph-analytical methods based on artificial intelligence and the applied software product Microsoft Office. To create the database, an empirical method of generalizing research results was used to study the effect of soil salinity type and degree in irrigated lands on the yield of agricultural crops in various natural and climatic zones of Central Asia for the period from 1932 to 2020. Based on plotting graphs of the dependence of the relative yield of agricultural crops on the dimensionless (relative) value of soil salinity type and degree, based on research data, the following results were obtained: first, differential equations describing the studied process were derived; second, within the framework of a very high determination index confirming a strong correlation between the function arguments and yield, a system of exponential, logarithmic, and polynomial equations was obtained using the applied software product Microsoft Office, which enables the management of agricultural crop yields on saline soils; and third, it creates prerequisites for the design of ecologically sustainable agro-landscapes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainability in Geographic Science)
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17 pages, 242 KiB  
Article
Relationships Between Preservice Teachers’ Interest, Perceived Knowledge, and Argumentation in Socioscientific Issues: Implications for Teaching About the Complexity of Sustainability Challenges
by Pedro Daniel Cadena-Nogales, José Javier Verdugo-Perona, Joan Josep Solaz-Portolés and Vicente Sanjosé
Sustainability 2025, 17(9), 3860; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17093860 - 24 Apr 2025
Viewed by 413
Abstract
Socioscientific issues are a key aspect of science education, enhancing citizens’ understanding of the intricate relationships among global concerns and fostering their engagement in informed decision making on these problems. To this end, teachers must be able to establish connections between scientific content, [...] Read more.
Socioscientific issues are a key aspect of science education, enhancing citizens’ understanding of the intricate relationships among global concerns and fostering their engagement in informed decision making on these problems. To this end, teachers must be able to establish connections between scientific content, its application in everyday life, and its impact on social, economic, and environmental dimensions. This study analyzes the factors that influence teachers’ ability to address these topics in the classroom. It includes two studies. The first study (n = 213) examines prospective science teachers’ interest in and perceived knowledge of 14 issues related to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The second study (n = 135) analyzes the types of arguments that participants use to justify their interest. A mixed-method ex post facto design was employed, using ad hoc questionnaires. The results suggest significant differences between interest and perceived knowledge across certain specific topics. Additionally, the topic addressed tends to evoke specific dimensions within arguments, with cultural/social and ecological/environmental aspects being the most prevalent, influencing the connections teachers establish with everyday life contexts. These findings highlight how interest, perceived knowledge, and the topic itself influence the dimensions considered in argument construction when discussing socioscientific issues and may contribute to the development of teacher training programs that foster a deeper understanding of the complex nature of these sustainability-related issues. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Education and Approaches)
17 pages, 262 KiB  
Article
The Curses of Modernity: Inquisition, Censorship and Social Discipline in Italian Historical Thought
by Neil Tarrant
Histories 2025, 5(2), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories5020019 - 16 Apr 2025
Viewed by 289
Abstract
In this article, I consider the narratives framing Italian-language accounts of ecclesiastical censorship in early modern Italy and its impact on the modern Italian state. I set out Adriano Prosperi, Vittorio Frajese and Gigliola Fragnito’s interpretations of the significance of the Roman Inquisition [...] Read more.
In this article, I consider the narratives framing Italian-language accounts of ecclesiastical censorship in early modern Italy and its impact on the modern Italian state. I set out Adriano Prosperi, Vittorio Frajese and Gigliola Fragnito’s interpretations of the significance of the Roman Inquisition and the Congregation of the Index. Although each of these historians engaged with the theories of modernity developed by such scholars as Max Weber and Michel Foucault, I argue that their narratives were informed by a desire to explain a different historical problem. Weber and Foucault sought to demonstrate that the achievements of modern society were achieved through the creation of structures of social discipline that impinged upon individual liberty. The historians I consider here addressed a different question. They were seeking to consider whether the suppression of individual liberty enacted by the Catholic Church’s disciplinary structures prevented Italy’s progress to modernity and statehood. These arguments were initially formulated during the mid-to-late nineteenth century by such scholars and politicians as Bertrando Spaventa and Francesco de Sanctis, whose thought had been shaped by exposure to Hegelian historical and philosophical thought. In this paper, I argue that in Italian historical discourse, accounts of the nature and effects of ecclesiastical censorship have been framed by what is, in effect, an inverted Protestant narrative of progress. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Political, Institutional, and Economy History)
19 pages, 306 KiB  
Review
The Significance of the Entropic Measure of Time in Natural Sciences
by Leonid M. Martyushev
Entropy 2025, 27(4), 425; https://doi.org/10.3390/e27040425 - 14 Apr 2025
Viewed by 388
Abstract
The review presents arguments emphasizing the importance of using the entropic measure of time (EMT) in the study of irreversible evolving systems. The possibilities of this measure for obtaining the laws of system evolution are shown. It is demonstrated that EMT provides a [...] Read more.
The review presents arguments emphasizing the importance of using the entropic measure of time (EMT) in the study of irreversible evolving systems. The possibilities of this measure for obtaining the laws of system evolution are shown. It is demonstrated that EMT provides a novel and unified perspective on the principle of maximum entropy production (MEPP), which is established in the physics of irreversible processes, as well as on the laws of growth and evolution proposed in biology. Essentially, for irreversible processes, the proposed approach allows, in a certain sense, to identify concepts such as the duration of existence, MEPP, and natural selection. EMT has been used to generalize prior results, indicating that the intrinsic time of a system is logarithmically dependent on extrinsic (Newtonian) time. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Time)
23 pages, 286 KiB  
Article
Special Prosecutor’s Offices and Their Position in a State Governed by the Rule of Law: Is the Abolition of Office of Special Prosecution in Slovakia Unconstitutional?
by Libor Klimek and Bystrík Šramel
Laws 2025, 14(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/laws14020025 - 13 Apr 2025
Viewed by 407
Abstract
The specialization of public prosecution offices has been a growing international trend, particularly in addressing complex forms of crime such as corruption, economic crime, and organized crime. Many countries have established specialized prosecution bodies to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of law enforcement [...] Read more.
The specialization of public prosecution offices has been a growing international trend, particularly in addressing complex forms of crime such as corruption, economic crime, and organized crime. Many countries have established specialized prosecution bodies to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of law enforcement in these areas. However, Slovakia has recently taken a different approach by abolishing its Office of the Special Prosecution, a decision that contrasts sharply with prevailing global tendencies. This paper explores the reasons behind this shift, analyzing the political and legal arguments presented by both proponents and opponents of the abolition. The paper examines whether this move aligns with the rule of law and international legal obligations and considers its potential consequences for the effectiveness of criminal justice in Slovakia. While the paper is based on legal principles and comparative methods, it acknowledges the inherently political nature of decisions concerning the structure of prosecution services. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Criminal Justice Issues)
20 pages, 4176 KiB  
Article
Effects of Anti-CD20 Antibody Therapy on Immune Cell Dynamics in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
by Alice G. Willison, Ramona Hagler, Margit Weise, Saskia Elben, Niklas Huntemann, Lars Masanneck, Steffen Pfeuffer, Stefanie Lichtenberg, Kristin S. Golombeck, Lara-Maria Preuth, Leoni Rolfes, Menekse Öztürk, Tobias Ruck, Nico Melzer, Melanie Korsen, Stephen L. Hauser, Hans-Peter Hartung, Philipp A. Lang, Marc Pawlitzki, Saskia Räuber and Sven G. Meuthadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
Cells 2025, 14(7), 552; https://doi.org/10.3390/cells14070552 - 6 Apr 2025
Viewed by 732
Abstract
Introduction: The efficacy of anti-CD20 antibodies has significantly contributed to advancing our understanding of disease pathogenesis and improved treatment outcomes in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). A comprehensive analysis of the peripheral immune cell profile, combined with prospective clinical characterization, of RRMS patients treated [...] Read more.
Introduction: The efficacy of anti-CD20 antibodies has significantly contributed to advancing our understanding of disease pathogenesis and improved treatment outcomes in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). A comprehensive analysis of the peripheral immune cell profile, combined with prospective clinical characterization, of RRMS patients treated with ocrelizumab (OCR) or ofatumumab (OFA) was performed to further understand immune reconstitution following B-cell depletion. Methods: REBELLION-MS is a longitudinal analysis of RRMS patients treated with either OCR (n = 34) or OFA (n = 25). Analysis of B, T, natural killer (NK) and natural killer T (NKT) cells at baseline, month 1, and 12 was performed by multidimensional flow cytometry. Data were analyzed by conventional gating and unsupervised computational approaches. In parallel, different clinical parameters were longitudinally assessed. Twenty treatment-naïve age/sex-matched RRMS patients were included as the control cohort. Results: B-cell depletion by OCR and OFA resulted in significant reductions in CD20+ T and B cells as well as B-cell subsets, alongside an expansion of CD5+CD19+CD20 B cells, while also elevating exhaustion markers (CTLA-4, PD-1, TIGIT, TIM-3) across T, B, NK, and NKT cells. Additionally, regulatory T-cell (TREG) numbers increased, especially in OCR-treated patients, and reductions in double-negative (CD3+CD4CD8) T cells (DN T cells) were observed, with these DN T cells having higher CD20 expression compared to CD4 or CD8 positive T cells. These immune profile changes correlated with clinical parameters, suggesting pathophysiological relevance in RRMS. Conclusions: Our interim data add weight to the argumentation that the exhaustion/activation markers, notably TIGIT, may be relevant to the pathogenesis of MS. In addition, we identify a potentially interesting increase in the expression of CD5+ on B cells. Finally, we identified a population of double-negative T cells (KLRG1+HLADR+, in particular) that is associated with MS activity and decreased with CD20 depletion. Full article
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44 pages, 549 KiB  
Opinion
The PACE Trial’s GET Manual for Therapists Exposes the Fixed Incremental Nature of Graded Exercise Therapy for ME/CFS
by Mark Vink and Katarzyna Partyka-Vink
Life 2025, 15(4), 584; https://doi.org/10.3390/life15040584 - 2 Apr 2025
Viewed by 2241
Abstract
The British National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) published its updated guidelines for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) in October 2021. NICE concluded, after an extensive review of the literature, that graded exercise therapy (GET) is harmful and should not be [...] Read more.
The British National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) published its updated guidelines for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) in October 2021. NICE concluded, after an extensive review of the literature, that graded exercise therapy (GET) is harmful and should not be used, and that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is only an adjunctive and not a curative treatment. An article by White et al., which is written by 51 researchers, claims that there are eight anomalies in the review process and the interpretation of the evidence by NICE. In this article, we reviewed the evidence they used to support their claims. Their three most important claims are that NICE redefined the disease, that CBT and GET are effective, and that fixed incremental increases are not part of GET. However, our analysis shows that the disease was not redefined by NICE. Instead, it was redefined in the 1990s by a group of doctors, including a number of authors of White et al., when they erased the main characteristic of the disease (an abnormally delayed muscle recovery after trivial exertion, which, over the years, has evolved into post-exertional malaise) and replaced it with chronic disabling severe fatigue. Their own studies show that CBT and GET do not lead to a substantial improvement of the quality-of-life scores or a reduction in CFS symptom count, nor do they lead to objective improvement. Also, both treatments have a negative instead of a positive effect on work and disability status. Moreover, a recent systematic review, which included one of the authors of White et al., showed that ME/CFS patients remain severely disabled after treatment with CBT. Our analysis of, for example, the PACE trial’s GET manual for therapists exposes the fixed incremental nature of GET. Why the authors are not aware of that is unclear because eight of them were involved in the PACE trial. Three of them were centre leaders and its principal investigators, four others were also centre leaders, and another one was one of the three independent safety assessors of the trial. Moreover, many of these eight authors wrote, or were involved in writing, this manual. In conclusion, our analysis shows that the arguments that are used to claim that there are eight anomalies in the review process and the interpretation of the evidence by NICE are anomalous and highlight the absence of evidence for the claims that are made. Furthermore, our analysis not only exposes the fixed incremental nature of GET, but also of CBT for ME/CFS. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Medical Research)
20 pages, 1238 KiB  
Review
New Perspectives in Studying Type 1 Diabetes Susceptibility Biomarkers
by Yongsoo Park, Kyung Soo Ko and Byoung Doo Rhee
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(7), 3249; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26073249 - 31 Mar 2025
Viewed by 466
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is generally viewed as an etiologic subtype of diabetes caused by the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-secreting β-cells. It has been known that autoreactive T cells unfortunately destroy healthy β-cells. However, there has been a notion of etiologic heterogeneity [...] Read more.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is generally viewed as an etiologic subtype of diabetes caused by the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-secreting β-cells. It has been known that autoreactive T cells unfortunately destroy healthy β-cells. However, there has been a notion of etiologic heterogeneity around the world implicating a varying incidence of a non-autoimmune subgroup of T1D related to insulin deficiency associated with decreased β cell mass, in which the β-cell is the key contributor to the disease. Beta cell dysfunction, reduced mass, and apoptosis may lead to insufficient insulin secretion and ultimately to the development of T1D. Interestingly, Korean as well as other ethnic genetic results have also suggested that genes related with insulin deficiency, let alone those of immune regulation, were associated with the risk of T1D in the young. Genes related with insulin secretion may influence the phenotype of diabetes differentially and different genes may be working on different steps of T1D development. Although we admit the consensus that islet autoimmunity is an essential component in the pathogenesis of T1D, however, dysfunction might occur not only in the immune system but also in the β-cells, the defect of which may induce further dysfunction of the immune system. These arguments stem from the fact that the β-cell might be the trigger of an autoimmune response. This emergent view has many parallels with the fact that by their nature and function, β-cells are prone to biosynthetic stress with limited measures for self-defense. Beta cell stress may induce an immune attack that has considerable negative effects on the production of a vital hormone, insulin. If then, both β-cell stress and islet autoimmunity can be harnessed as targets for intervention strategies. This also may explain why immunotherapy at best delays the progression of T1D and suggests the use of alternative therapies to expand β-cells, in combination with immune intervention strategies, to reverse the disease. Future research should extend to further investigate β-cell biology, in addition to studies of immunologic areas, to find appropriate biomarkers of T1D susceptibility. This will help to decipher β-cell characteristics and the factors regulating their function to develop novel therapeutic approaches. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Mechanism of Diabetic Kidney Disease (2nd Edition))
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19 pages, 254 KiB  
Article
The Ecopolitical Spirituality of Miya Poetry: Resistance Against Environmental Racism of the Majoritarian State in Assam, India
by Bhargabi Das
Religions 2025, 16(4), 437; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040437 - 28 Mar 2025
Viewed by 596
Abstract
Emerging from the Bengali Muslim char-dwellers in the riverine environments of the Brahmaputra and its tributaries, the Miya Poetry movement is a unique environmentalism of the marginalized in contemporary Assam, India. Writing as a native scholar of Assam, I look at how the [...] Read more.
Emerging from the Bengali Muslim char-dwellers in the riverine environments of the Brahmaputra and its tributaries, the Miya Poetry movement is a unique environmentalism of the marginalized in contemporary Assam, India. Writing as a native scholar of Assam, I look at how the poetry movement displays the ethos of an ecopolitical spirituality that embodies the riverine ecology, environmental politics, and sacrality and how it challenges the majoritarian state’s narrative of the Bengali Muslim char-dwellers being denigrated as the “environmental waste producers”. My concept of “ecopolitical spirituality” is in tandem with Carol White’s ‘African American religious naturalism’, which elucidates the remembrance and evocation of traditional environmental relationships of and by the marginalized communities with the purpose of healing and rehumanizing themselves. I begin with a short history of the Miya Poetry movement among the Bengali Muslim char-dwellers in Assam. It narrates how the leading Miya poets adopt the local “Miya” dialect to express the traditional and continued relationships of Bengali Muslim char-dwellers who find themselves entangled with and nurtured by the land, rivers, plants, and animals. I then examine how Bengali Muslims have been framed by the majoritarian state and Assamese society as “environmental waste producers”. With climate change-induced destructive floods, along with post-colonial state’s rampant building of embankments leading to violent floods and erosion, Bengali Muslim char-dwellers are forced to migrate to nearby government grazing reserves or national parks. There, the majoritarian state projects them to be damaging the environment and issues violent evictions. In state reports too, the Bengali Muslim char-dwellers have been equated with “rats”, “crows”, and “vultures”. I use the concept of “environmental racism” to show how this state-led denigration justifies the allegation of the Muslim char-dwellers as “environmental waste producers” and how the Miya Poetry movement counters the racist allegation with new metaphors by highlighting the traditional relationships of the marginalized community with the riverine environment. In the final section, I look in detail at the characteristics and reasons that make the poetry movement ecopolitically spiritual in nature. I thus lay out an argument that the ecopolitical spirituality of the Miya Poetry movement resists the statist dehumanization and devaluation of Miya Muslims by not mocking, violating, or degrading the majoritarian Assamese but by rehumanizing themselves and their relationship with the environment. Full article
19 pages, 252 KiB  
Perspective
Environmental Humanities South: Decolonizing Nature in Highland Asia
by Dan Smyer Yü, Ambika Aiyadurai, Mamang Dai, Razzeko Delley, Rashila Deshar, Iftekhar Iqbal, Chi Huyen Truong, Bhargabi Das, Mongfing Lepcha, Thinley Dema, Madan Koirala, Zainab Khalid and Zhen Ma
Challenges 2025, 16(2), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/challe16020019 - 26 Mar 2025
Viewed by 588
Abstract
We, a group of native scholars based in the Himalayan region, co-author this article to propose an environmental humanities South—concurrently as an Asia-specific interdisciplinary field and a planetary human–nature epistemology of the Global South inextricably entwined with that of the Global North. Framed [...] Read more.
We, a group of native scholars based in the Himalayan region, co-author this article to propose an environmental humanities South—concurrently as an Asia-specific interdisciplinary field and a planetary human–nature epistemology of the Global South inextricably entwined with that of the Global North. Framed in the broader field of planetary health, this article begins with a perspectival shift by reconceptualizing the Global South and the Global North as the Planetary South and the Planetary North for the purpose of laying the epistemological groundwork for two interconnected arguments and subsequent discussions. First, the Planetary South is not merely epistemological, but is at once geographically epistemological and epistemologically geographical. Our debates with the currently dominant epistemologies of the South open up a decolonial conversation with what we call the Australian School of the environmental humanities, the initial seed bank of our interdisciplinary environmental work in Asia’s Planetary South. These multilayered epistemological debates and conversations lead to the second argument that the South and the North relate to one another simultaneously in symbiotic and paradoxical terms. Through these two arguments, the article addresses the conundrum of what we call the “postcolonial continuation of the colonial environmentality” and attempts to interweave the meaningful return of the eroding Himalayan native knowledges of nature with modern scientific findings in a way that appreciates the livingness of the earth and is inclusive of nonwestern environmental worldviews. Full article
11 pages, 479 KiB  
Article
HR 4049: A Spectroscopic Analysis of a Post-AGB Object
by Shakhida T. Nurmakhametova, Nadezhda L. Vaidman, Anatoly S. Miroshnichenko, Azamat A. Khokhlov, Aldiyar T. Agishev, Berik S. Yermekbayev, Stephen Danford and Alicia N. Aarnio
Galaxies 2025, 13(2), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies13020026 - 22 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 283
Abstract
A new spectroscopic study of HR 4049, a post-AGB star in a binary system, based on échelle spectra taken between 2019 and 2025 with the 0.81 m telescope of the Three College Observatory (North Carolina, USA) at a resolution of R ≈ 12,000 [...] Read more.
A new spectroscopic study of HR 4049, a post-AGB star in a binary system, based on échelle spectra taken between 2019 and 2025 with the 0.81 m telescope of the Three College Observatory (North Carolina, USA) at a resolution of R ≈ 12,000 is reported. A cross-correlation analysis of 73 spectra of a single C i multiplet in the 4760–4780 Å range yielded the following orbital parameters: the orbital period P=428.474±0.002 days, eccentricity e=0.29±0.01, argument of periastron ω=242.3±0.3, epoch of periastron T0=2,458,383.2±0.6, heliocentric systemic radial velocity γ=30.12±0.09 km s−1, and semi-amplitude of the radial velocity curve K1=15.52±0.13 km s−1. Phase-dependent variations of the Hα line profile indicate dynamic processes in the circumstellar environment. The luminosity of HR 4049 was refined using the Gaia EDR3 parallax (0.71±0.10 mas), corresponding to a distance of 1397±170 pc, and the average visual magnitude in the brightest state (mV=5.35 mag). The derived luminosity, log(L/L)=4.22±0.12, suggests an initial mass of 3.0–4.0 M. Analysis of the mass function and most probable orbital inclinations (60°–75°) leads to current masses of 0.75M for the primary and 0.700.82M for the secondary component. The results confirm the system’s long-term orbital stability and provide further insights for future research into the nature of post-AGB binaries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Circumstellar Matter in Hot Star Systems)
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