On the Distinctions between Semantics and Pragmatics
... In order to assign reference and to determine truth conditions for these sentences we need among other things the following information: For sentence (ii): (1) the universe of quantification for everyone, (2) the location of the speaker to determine the deictic reference required by came, (3) the ve ...
... In order to assign reference and to determine truth conditions for these sentences we need among other things the following information: For sentence (ii): (1) the universe of quantification for everyone, (2) the location of the speaker to determine the deictic reference required by came, (3) the ve ...
Right Wing Autoritharism, Social Dominance Orientation
... ported also more implicit AFA (O’Brien, Hunter, & Banks, 2007). Again, it was found that individuals who reported high scores on the SDO scale were more inclined to blame victims (see, Pratto et al., 1994; Sidanius & Pratto, 1999). This result suggests that SDO is related with the tendency to assume ...
... ported also more implicit AFA (O’Brien, Hunter, & Banks, 2007). Again, it was found that individuals who reported high scores on the SDO scale were more inclined to blame victims (see, Pratto et al., 1994; Sidanius & Pratto, 1999). This result suggests that SDO is related with the tendency to assume ...
Ideological systems and its validation: a neutrosophic approach University of New Mexico
... concrete individuals as subjects (Althusser, [3]). Conventional conceptions of author (authority, originator) and individual agent are replaced by the ideologically constituted actor subject. Stereotypes, that actor subject rely on to understand and respond to events. As much if the Philosophy, Poli ...
... concrete individuals as subjects (Althusser, [3]). Conventional conceptions of author (authority, originator) and individual agent are replaced by the ideologically constituted actor subject. Stereotypes, that actor subject rely on to understand and respond to events. As much if the Philosophy, Poli ...
39 Pervasive Social Context - Taxonomy and Survey
... In this definition we use the term Social Network Service in the same way as [Quan 2011] and other authors, i.e., naming any service delivering social networking functionality. It is furthermore important to mention, that Dey’s definition of Context is broad enough to still contain Pervasive Social ...
... In this definition we use the term Social Network Service in the same way as [Quan 2011] and other authors, i.e., naming any service delivering social networking functionality. It is furthermore important to mention, that Dey’s definition of Context is broad enough to still contain Pervasive Social ...
alliteration and sound change in early english - Assets
... closed nor entirely spiritual. Young noblemen and lay scholars also lived in the monasteries.6 In a very material way some manuscripts themselves bespeak a collective effort in the creation of verse; they often fall short of being coherent texts generated within a single nervous system. Instead, the ...
... closed nor entirely spiritual. Young noblemen and lay scholars also lived in the monasteries.6 In a very material way some manuscripts themselves bespeak a collective effort in the creation of verse; they often fall short of being coherent texts generated within a single nervous system. Instead, the ...
quantitative and qualitative - BU Blogs
... As we said, quantitative statements are both more precise (at least potentially) and more explicit. This is because the very act of creating a numerical scale requires a set of explicit comparisons and an explicit comparison-set – a domain. Scales cannot be developed in highly specific contexts. Im ...
... As we said, quantitative statements are both more precise (at least potentially) and more explicit. This is because the very act of creating a numerical scale requires a set of explicit comparisons and an explicit comparison-set – a domain. Scales cannot be developed in highly specific contexts. Im ...
LINKAGES BETWEEN INFORMAL AND FORMAL SOCIAL CAPITAL
... in networks and especially in formal associations, cooperation and trust resulting from participative behaviors can enhance the flourishing of democracy and civic life. The two approaches, the individual and macro-level assessment of social capital, were integrated by many scholars, especially in th ...
... in networks and especially in formal associations, cooperation and trust resulting from participative behaviors can enhance the flourishing of democracy and civic life. The two approaches, the individual and macro-level assessment of social capital, were integrated by many scholars, especially in th ...
quantitative and qualitative - BU Blogs
... software, Computer Assisted Qualitative Data Analysis Software (CAQDAS), various narrative-based methods, as well as more generic forms of content analysis. There is no such thing as a non-quantifiable observation because any single statement that can be made about one phenomenon could also be made ...
... software, Computer Assisted Qualitative Data Analysis Software (CAQDAS), various narrative-based methods, as well as more generic forms of content analysis. There is no such thing as a non-quantifiable observation because any single statement that can be made about one phenomenon could also be made ...
Vitality entry in Wiley encyclopedia
... Social Proximity is what Joshua Fishman calls home-family-neighbourhoodcommunity nexus and what in the standard model is accounted for by the component of demographic factors. This is the setting where the primary socialisation and intergenerational transmission of language happens. The component of ...
... Social Proximity is what Joshua Fishman calls home-family-neighbourhoodcommunity nexus and what in the standard model is accounted for by the component of demographic factors. This is the setting where the primary socialisation and intergenerational transmission of language happens. The component of ...
social capital and the equilibrium number of
... a model of market equilibrium from occupational choices and our proxy variable is the number of employees per employer-manager, not the size of the firm3. ...
... a model of market equilibrium from occupational choices and our proxy variable is the number of employees per employer-manager, not the size of the firm3. ...
From Critical Social Theory to a Social Theory of
... they are participating in the reproduction of social arrangements that are objectively against their own interests. Since the practice-guiding and embodied systems of beliefs and dispositions that Bourdieu substitutes for the more cognitivist notion of ideology are inherently legitimatory and thereb ...
... they are participating in the reproduction of social arrangements that are objectively against their own interests. Since the practice-guiding and embodied systems of beliefs and dispositions that Bourdieu substitutes for the more cognitivist notion of ideology are inherently legitimatory and thereb ...
- Digital Commons @ New Haven
... may thus undergo deviant ‘careers’ in which they learn deviance and eventually adopt or even embrace a stigmatized identity. This identity may crystallize over time as others reinforce the deviant youths’ perception of themselves as deviant through further transaction. Following from this explanato ...
... may thus undergo deviant ‘careers’ in which they learn deviance and eventually adopt or even embrace a stigmatized identity. This identity may crystallize over time as others reinforce the deviant youths’ perception of themselves as deviant through further transaction. Following from this explanato ...
Building a Corpus in Linguistic Anthropology
... In anthropology and linguistics, the term corpus refers to a collection of data sets used to tackle a particular research question. This can be a collection of passive sentences used for a research on the passive of a certain language, or a collection of photos, interview recordings and their transc ...
... In anthropology and linguistics, the term corpus refers to a collection of data sets used to tackle a particular research question. This can be a collection of passive sentences used for a research on the passive of a certain language, or a collection of photos, interview recordings and their transc ...
Seeking Social Capital in World Values Survey
... inquiries. It needs to be derived or deduced, once again, from individual level information which directly or indirectly capture some qualities which are conducive to or results from the emergence and persistence of unenforced cooperation. It is not a difficult exercise to identify such individual f ...
... inquiries. It needs to be derived or deduced, once again, from individual level information which directly or indirectly capture some qualities which are conducive to or results from the emergence and persistence of unenforced cooperation. It is not a difficult exercise to identify such individual f ...
“Code Switching” in Sociocultural Linguistics
... on one occasion and English on another, and that on certain occasions bilinguals will alternate, without apparent cause, from one language to another?” (1947:18586). Barker suggested that interactions among family members or other intimates were most likely to be conducted in Spanish, while formal t ...
... on one occasion and English on another, and that on certain occasions bilinguals will alternate, without apparent cause, from one language to another?” (1947:18586). Barker suggested that interactions among family members or other intimates were most likely to be conducted in Spanish, while formal t ...
Phraseology and linguistic theory
... As to the third criterion, it is probably fair to say that there is little work which has defined phraseologisms solely on the basis of some quantitative criterion based on their frequency of occurrence (and/or additional frequency information). True, some scholars have used a threshold of absolute ...
... As to the third criterion, it is probably fair to say that there is little work which has defined phraseologisms solely on the basis of some quantitative criterion based on their frequency of occurrence (and/or additional frequency information). True, some scholars have used a threshold of absolute ...
Interpretivist Approaches to Organizational Discourse
... and several scholars emphasize this point. For Weber (1922), for example, the search for generalizations derived inductively from first-order data was compatible with, and indeed dependent on, the need for meaningful understanding of social action. His ideal types were aimed inductively to derive se ...
... and several scholars emphasize this point. For Weber (1922), for example, the search for generalizations derived inductively from first-order data was compatible with, and indeed dependent on, the need for meaningful understanding of social action. His ideal types were aimed inductively to derive se ...
Critical Discourse Analysis
... they cause certain perspectives and states of affairs to come to seem or be taken as 'normal' or 'natural' and others to seem or be taken as 'deviant' or 'marginal' (e.g., what counts as a 'normal' prisoner, hospital patient, or student, or a 'normal' prison, hospital, or school, at a given time and ...
... they cause certain perspectives and states of affairs to come to seem or be taken as 'normal' or 'natural' and others to seem or be taken as 'deviant' or 'marginal' (e.g., what counts as a 'normal' prisoner, hospital patient, or student, or a 'normal' prison, hospital, or school, at a given time and ...
Methodological & Epistemological Foundations of EAP
... terminology has yet been developed for this task. The properties are sometimes called aspects or attributes, and often the “variable” is borrowed from mathematics as most general category.” (Lazarsfeld, 1955, P. 15) ...
... terminology has yet been developed for this task. The properties are sometimes called aspects or attributes, and often the “variable” is borrowed from mathematics as most general category.” (Lazarsfeld, 1955, P. 15) ...
galaxia 17.indd - Revistas Eletrônicas da PUC-SP
... one wants, but that there are factors of reality that influence our thoughts from outside. The idealist side defends the position that nothing can exist that is not “thought-like”, since ideas can only resemble other ideas (Daniel, 1984, p. 16). The dynamic quality of both semeiosic processes and re ...
... one wants, but that there are factors of reality that influence our thoughts from outside. The idealist side defends the position that nothing can exist that is not “thought-like”, since ideas can only resemble other ideas (Daniel, 1984, p. 16). The dynamic quality of both semeiosic processes and re ...
CONTEXT AND COGNITION: KNOWLEDGE FRAMES AND
... Strategies and schemata are the basis of the normal processes of hypothetical interpretation: given a certain textual and contextual structure they allow fast assumptions about probable meaning and intention even if the rules at a later moment may lead to a rejection of the hypotheses. One of the mo ...
... Strategies and schemata are the basis of the normal processes of hypothetical interpretation: given a certain textual and contextual structure they allow fast assumptions about probable meaning and intention even if the rules at a later moment may lead to a rejection of the hypotheses. One of the mo ...
Causal Inference and Statistical Fallacies
... design of experiments, the assumption of unit-treatment additivity. Now these last two assumptions are clearly not directly testable and can be objected to on that account. The assumptions are indirectly testable, to a limited extent at least. If the individuals are divided into groups, for example ...
... design of experiments, the assumption of unit-treatment additivity. Now these last two assumptions are clearly not directly testable and can be objected to on that account. The assumptions are indirectly testable, to a limited extent at least. If the individuals are divided into groups, for example ...
Argument Processes in Israeli-Palestinian Encounter Groups
... Murphy, 2000). Speakers may choose to insert and express these speech styles, which are characteristic of their culture, in one context but not another. Minorities, for example, intensely claim their identity in some situations ...
... Murphy, 2000). Speakers may choose to insert and express these speech styles, which are characteristic of their culture, in one context but not another. Minorities, for example, intensely claim their identity in some situations ...
Ideology - Ashton Southard
... Consideration of the ways in which the ability to promote certain forms of social understanding of social life is bound up with the economic, social, and institutional power of some groups over others brings us directly to the territory of ideology ...
... Consideration of the ways in which the ability to promote certain forms of social understanding of social life is bound up with the economic, social, and institutional power of some groups over others brings us directly to the territory of ideology ...
Introduction - University of Idaho
... important attributes of people who commit crimes. The relationship of happiness and frustration is likely negatively correlated since low frustration may result in more happiness and high frustration may result in less happiness. As would be expected, much of the documented causes of frustration app ...
... important attributes of people who commit crimes. The relationship of happiness and frustration is likely negatively correlated since low frustration may result in more happiness and high frustration may result in less happiness. As would be expected, much of the documented causes of frustration app ...