

With these results as a tool, the author advances the theory of singular integral equations with constant coefficients and variable coefficients on the hypersphere in Chapter two.

The author’s conclusion shows that, quite differently from the case of one complex variable, there are many ways to define the principal value of the Cauchy integral, and accordingly, various forms of the Plemelj formula are obtained. In the first chapter, the author starts from the most important simply connected irreducible domain, i.e., the ball in ℂ n, and makes an extensive investigation of the integral of Cauchy type on the hypersphere. preliminary in the introduction of the book. A brief description of these kernels is given as a. The kernels that give rise to such singular integrals on the boundaries of the domains are the Cauchy-Fantappiè kernels and Szegő kernels. This book, the English version of the author’s Chinese monograph, from the early 1980’s, collects the works of the author and his colleagues in singular integrals of several complex variables since 1964. The review concludes by offering some examples of ways in which public health problems and practice have influenced political norms. While applauding Coggon’s demonstration that normative debates surrounding public health depend upon broader conceptions of the good, this review argues that Coggon fails to appreciate the impact that public health, in its varied means, may have in informing one’s understanding of the good, and ultimately one’s political theory. This review explores Coggon’s argument, including his discussion of the terms “health,” “public health,” “public health ethics,” and “public health law,” and his attempt in the final third of the book to develop his own liberal theory. the development of a “complete” political theory. In this rich and rigorously argued monograph, Coggon argues that questions of public health ethics, including the fundamental question of when health is a matter of public rather than private concern, depend for their resolution on. This is a review of John Coggon’s What Makes Health Public? A Critical Evaluation of Moral, Legal, and Political Claims in Public Health (Cambridge Univ.
