The following notes represent approximately the second half of the
lectures I gave in the Nachdiplomvorlesung, in ETH, Zurich, between
October 1991 and February 1992, together with the contents of six
additional lectures I gave in ETH, in November and December 1993. Part
I, the elder brother of the present book [Part II], aimed at the
computation, as explicitly as possible, of a number of interesting
functionals of Brownian motion. It may be natural that Part II, the
younger brother, looks more into the main technique with which Part I
was "working", namely: martingales and stochastic calculus. As F. Knight
writes, in a review article on Part I, in which research on Brownian
motion is compared to gold mining: "In the days of P. Levy, and even as
late as the theorems of "Ray and Knight" (1963), it was possible for the
practiced eye to pick up valuable reward without the aid of much
technology . . . Thereafter, however, the rewards are increasingly
achieved by the application of high technology". Although one might
argue whether this golden age is really foregone, and discuss the
"height" of the technology involved, this quotation is closely related
to the main motivations of Part II: this technology, which includes
stochastic calculus for general discontinuous semi-martingales,
enlargement of filtrations, . . .