Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Mathematical Events of the Twentieth Century
† A. A. Bolibruch ; Yu. S. Osipov ; Ya. G. Sinai ; V. I. Arnold ; A. A. Bolibruch ; A. M. Vershik ; Yu. I. Manin ; Yu. S. Osipov ; Ya.G. Sinai ; V.M. Tikhomirov ; L.D. Faddeev ; V. B. Philippov (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2006 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-23235-3
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-29462-7
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2006
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Dynamical Systems in the 1960s: The Hyperbolic Revolution
D. V. Anosov
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 1-17
From Hilbert’s Superposition Problem to Dynamical Systems
V. I. Arnold
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 19-47
Inverse Monodromy Problems of the Analytic Theory of Differential Equations
A. A. Bolibruch
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 49-74
What Modern Mathematical Physics Is Supposed to Be
L. D. Faddeev
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 75-84
Discovery of the Maximum Principle
R. V. Gamkrelidze
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 85-99
The Qualitative Theory of Differential Equations in the Plane
Yu. S. Il’yashenko
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 101-132
Computerization… Let’s Be Careful
P. S. Krasnoshchekov
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 133-143
The Generalized Shift, Transformation Operators, and Inverse Problems
V. A. Marchenko
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 145-162
Mathematics and the Trajectories of Typhoons
V. P. Maslov
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 163-183
Hilbert’s Tenth Problem: Diophantine Equations in the Twentieth Century
Yu. V. Matiyasevich
This contribution describes the principal forms of solidarity in the healthcare sector. We discuss the concept of solidarity and its diverse roles as well as the design of the existing solidarity framework and trends for the future. Solidarity in healthcare is under pressure: the costs are rising and the distribution of solidarity transfers is becoming increasingly uneven, socio-cultural trends are sending out mixed signals and many think it is fair to ask people with unhealthy lifestyles to pay more. However, a fully funded system is less suited to healthcare than to supplementary pensions. In healthcare, more so than in the pension sector, solidarity is nurtured by feelings of community and justice. At the same time, egalitarian outcomes are increasingly difficult to achieve due to the evermore uneven distribution of the health cost burden, the enormous supply of healthcare products and the large mutual differences in the production process.
Pp. 185-213