Yearbook of Physical Anthropology Editor`s Report, AAPA Annual
... The editorial board makes every effort to include contributions from all the sub-areas within biological anthropology (see Fig. 1). An analysis of the past thirteen years of contributions to the Yearbook indicates that some sub-areas remain much better represented than others in the (see Fig. 1 and ...
... The editorial board makes every effort to include contributions from all the sub-areas within biological anthropology (see Fig. 1). An analysis of the past thirteen years of contributions to the Yearbook indicates that some sub-areas remain much better represented than others in the (see Fig. 1 and ...
A Kind Word for Theory X
... (figure 1). These needs must be “reasonably satisfied” before a person will turn his or her attention to the next higher order need, though “‘reasonable satisfaction’ is culturally defined. A subsistence level of satisfaction of physical needs in our society today is far higher than that, say, in th ...
... (figure 1). These needs must be “reasonably satisfied” before a person will turn his or her attention to the next higher order need, though “‘reasonable satisfaction’ is culturally defined. A subsistence level of satisfaction of physical needs in our society today is far higher than that, say, in th ...
BNP paper4.2
... Europe who trace their ancestry back to the Caribbean, Africa, the Middle East, or Asia? We focus on multilevel analyses that take as the dependent variable either prejudice or support for the extreme right. This selective review ignores cross-national differences in political institutions and party ...
... Europe who trace their ancestry back to the Caribbean, Africa, the Middle East, or Asia? We focus on multilevel analyses that take as the dependent variable either prejudice or support for the extreme right. This selective review ignores cross-national differences in political institutions and party ...
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... (including their very physicality) as historical phenomena. The module addresses five core areas of research in the human sciences: love, food and eating, children and childhood, work, and death. Whi ...
... (including their very physicality) as historical phenomena. The module addresses five core areas of research in the human sciences: love, food and eating, children and childhood, work, and death. Whi ...
Theoretical foundation of Educational Administration and Policy
... a. Ethical evaluation: It refers to desirable traits and features attributed to human behaviors, actions, and conducts at individual level. It concerns questions such as, What is a righteous character? What is a virtuous person? What is the worth in life? What is an ethical conduct? … b. Moral evalu ...
... a. Ethical evaluation: It refers to desirable traits and features attributed to human behaviors, actions, and conducts at individual level. It concerns questions such as, What is a righteous character? What is a virtuous person? What is the worth in life? What is an ethical conduct? … b. Moral evalu ...
Understanding Capital
... Modification of Fundamental Determinations by Later Ones The recreation of a concrete phenomenon by invoking the layered determinations of theory in Marx's thought creates two potentially confusing effects. First, the addition of higher order determinations may produce phenomena that appear to contr ...
... Modification of Fundamental Determinations by Later Ones The recreation of a concrete phenomenon by invoking the layered determinations of theory in Marx's thought creates two potentially confusing effects. First, the addition of higher order determinations may produce phenomena that appear to contr ...
Hosts and Hosts
... tour operators, policy-makers, and local leaders about ecotourism and its impacts on local communities and ecosystems. This is good, as anthropologists are especially well suited to focus ethnographic attention on the general but critical question of what happens when people in host destinations nea ...
... tour operators, policy-makers, and local leaders about ecotourism and its impacts on local communities and ecosystems. This is good, as anthropologists are especially well suited to focus ethnographic attention on the general but critical question of what happens when people in host destinations nea ...
AGAINST ATOMIC INDIVIDUALISM IN PLURAL SUBJECT THEORY
... places such weight on the atomic individual will be more likely to produce an individualistic ontology of society as an output. In this paper however, I focus exclusively on the “Plural Subject Theory” (PST) forwarded by Margaret Gilbert. PST is a rarity: a non-summative account of social groups ach ...
... places such weight on the atomic individual will be more likely to produce an individualistic ontology of society as an output. In this paper however, I focus exclusively on the “Plural Subject Theory” (PST) forwarded by Margaret Gilbert. PST is a rarity: a non-summative account of social groups ach ...
What does heaven ever say?
... existing curricula (e.g., Leslie 2007); and ancient Asian traditions are mined for their applicability to contemporary democratic practice, rather than explored for the questions they pose (e.g., Ackerly 2005). These examples illustrate the deep irony of much cross-cultural work in the contemporary ...
... existing curricula (e.g., Leslie 2007); and ancient Asian traditions are mined for their applicability to contemporary democratic practice, rather than explored for the questions they pose (e.g., Ackerly 2005). These examples illustrate the deep irony of much cross-cultural work in the contemporary ...
The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology
... sometimes at their apartments, sometimes in my home. We read one another’s papers critically but supportively and engaged in free wheeling argument about what might be necessary to create a sociological version of the cultural turn. The membership of what came to be called the “Culture Club” changed ...
... sometimes at their apartments, sometimes in my home. We read one another’s papers critically but supportively and engaged in free wheeling argument about what might be necessary to create a sociological version of the cultural turn. The membership of what came to be called the “Culture Club” changed ...
Regression Analysis and the Philosophy of Social Sciences --
... conditions of the mathematical theorems, and hence our ability to identify laws is always problematic and questionable. This view appears in textbooks as the only possible interpretation of the procedure. Thus, the practitioner of regression analysis who follows the textbook might unnecessarily subs ...
... conditions of the mathematical theorems, and hence our ability to identify laws is always problematic and questionable. This view appears in textbooks as the only possible interpretation of the procedure. Thus, the practitioner of regression analysis who follows the textbook might unnecessarily subs ...