Presentazione di PowerPoint
... resulted in the species seen today. Georges Cuvier (paleontologist) Catastrophes caused evolution to occur. ...
... resulted in the species seen today. Georges Cuvier (paleontologist) Catastrophes caused evolution to occur. ...
Critical Discourse Analysis
... incarceration in the late 1920s and early 1930s. It is in this work that he outlines his notion of hegemony, widely considered to be his most significant contribution to political philosophy. Gramsci conceived the term hegemony in two ways: negatively, to describe the mechanisms of power that operat ...
... incarceration in the late 1920s and early 1930s. It is in this work that he outlines his notion of hegemony, widely considered to be his most significant contribution to political philosophy. Gramsci conceived the term hegemony in two ways: negatively, to describe the mechanisms of power that operat ...
Chapter 13 Notes - Anderson County Schools
... Last paragraph from Origin of Species • Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object of which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals, directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been or ...
... Last paragraph from Origin of Species • Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object of which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals, directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been or ...
Methodological Conclusions and Other Definitions of Coyuntura
... made the basic text of this edition possible. From his document we try to be loyal to the methodological process he plants in a difficult theme, but essential for those who carry out a labor of education and accompaniment to social processes and the reality of our country. These materials are aimed ...
... made the basic text of this edition possible. From his document we try to be loyal to the methodological process he plants in a difficult theme, but essential for those who carry out a labor of education and accompaniment to social processes and the reality of our country. These materials are aimed ...
TWO WRONGS (James MacAllister) On April 2011, University of
... emotions and motivations to evolution: sinister adaptation, altruism, selfish genes? Is this science? Margulis often pointed out that parasitism, commensualism and mututalism were examples of “misplaced concreteness:” terms that gave the user the sense that they were accurately and precisely describ ...
... emotions and motivations to evolution: sinister adaptation, altruism, selfish genes? Is this science? Margulis often pointed out that parasitism, commensualism and mututalism were examples of “misplaced concreteness:” terms that gave the user the sense that they were accurately and precisely describ ...
TWO WRONGS (James MacAllister) On April 2011, University of
... emotions and motivations to evolution: sinister adaptation, altruism, selfish genes? Is this science? Margulis often pointed out that parasitism, commensualism and mututalism were examples of “misplaced concreteness:” terms that gave the user the sense that they were accurately and precisely describ ...
... emotions and motivations to evolution: sinister adaptation, altruism, selfish genes? Is this science? Margulis often pointed out that parasitism, commensualism and mututalism were examples of “misplaced concreteness:” terms that gave the user the sense that they were accurately and precisely describ ...
The Rules of Sociological Method
... biology and the physical and chemical sciences. Consequently, every time a social phenomenon is directly explained by a psycho logical phenomenon, we may rest assured that the explanation is false'. 35 In arguing thus, Durkheim was seeking to demarcate sociology from four (not necessarily exclusive ...
... biology and the physical and chemical sciences. Consequently, every time a social phenomenon is directly explained by a psycho logical phenomenon, we may rest assured that the explanation is false'. 35 In arguing thus, Durkheim was seeking to demarcate sociology from four (not necessarily exclusive ...
Social networking for zebras.
... Rubenstein was thrilled to see that network theory revealed patterns he wouldn't have seen otherwise, and he started thinking of all the other questions network theory might help him answer. In a harem society, is there a change in the zebras' interactions just before a bachelor overthrows a stallio ...
... Rubenstein was thrilled to see that network theory revealed patterns he wouldn't have seen otherwise, and he started thinking of all the other questions network theory might help him answer. In a harem society, is there a change in the zebras' interactions just before a bachelor overthrows a stallio ...
Pedagogy – a holistic, personal approach to work with children services
... As used in continental Europe, the word ‘pedagogy’ can relate to the overall support of children’s development. In pedagogy, care and education meet. To put it another way, pedagogy is about bringing up children, it is ‘education’ in the broadest sense of that word. Indeed, in French and other langu ...
... As used in continental Europe, the word ‘pedagogy’ can relate to the overall support of children’s development. In pedagogy, care and education meet. To put it another way, pedagogy is about bringing up children, it is ‘education’ in the broadest sense of that word. Indeed, in French and other langu ...
on modernity
... are widely appreciated as the landmark analyses of modernity in classical sociological theory. Simmel is another important figure in the classical tradition, but his discussion of modernity is excluded from this section since his analysis will be treated later, in my phenomenological approach to mode ...
... are widely appreciated as the landmark analyses of modernity in classical sociological theory. Simmel is another important figure in the classical tradition, but his discussion of modernity is excluded from this section since his analysis will be treated later, in my phenomenological approach to mode ...
SPACE AND CONTENTIOUS POLITICS Deborah
... space, or spatial practice, encompasses the material spaces of daily life where social production and reproduction occurs. Everyday life in the city, with its shops and factories, neighborhoods and houses, parks and places of worship, walls and fences, etc., exemplifies perceived space. This is a ta ...
... space, or spatial practice, encompasses the material spaces of daily life where social production and reproduction occurs. Everyday life in the city, with its shops and factories, neighborhoods and houses, parks and places of worship, walls and fences, etc., exemplifies perceived space. This is a ta ...
John Dewey and American Social Science
... America provided the nearly perfect conditions for the modern idea of the social sciences.7 There was, first of all, "the social problem" produced during the Gilded Age by rapid industrialization, urbanization and massive immigration. Second, America had a "weak state" in the sense that it lacked bo ...
... America provided the nearly perfect conditions for the modern idea of the social sciences.7 There was, first of all, "the social problem" produced during the Gilded Age by rapid industrialization, urbanization and massive immigration. Second, America had a "weak state" in the sense that it lacked bo ...
Experimental Evolution and Its Role in
... ary physiology is not technologically driven the necessity of incorporating a more disin this manner. What is novel about this ap- tantly related "out group" into any comproach is not the type of characters exam- parison, a minimum of three different taxa ined or the methods used for their investi- ...
... ary physiology is not technologically driven the necessity of incorporating a more disin this manner. What is novel about this ap- tantly related "out group" into any comproach is not the type of characters exam- parison, a minimum of three different taxa ined or the methods used for their investi- ...
Reinterpreting the Historicity of the Nordic Model
... Here, as in general, “regulation” should be conceived as an integral factor in the conceptual and practical construction of its own targets (Jessop 1995). It is worth noting that interests are not, any more than rights, completely pre-given phenomena simply waiting for regulation. In the Nordic coun ...
... Here, as in general, “regulation” should be conceived as an integral factor in the conceptual and practical construction of its own targets (Jessop 1995). It is worth noting that interests are not, any more than rights, completely pre-given phenomena simply waiting for regulation. In the Nordic coun ...
- roar@UEL - University of East London
... narrower and more dogmatic focus upon natural selection as the predominant evolutionary force. This is the stage Gould is most critical of and he can be seen as an early pioneer of the EES movement. Gould describes the transition from stage one to two as one from a pluralist view that simply saw tha ...
... narrower and more dogmatic focus upon natural selection as the predominant evolutionary force. This is the stage Gould is most critical of and he can be seen as an early pioneer of the EES movement. Gould describes the transition from stage one to two as one from a pluralist view that simply saw tha ...
Cladistic Parsimony, Historical Linguistics, and Cultural
... character traits. In addition to parsimony, these other phylogenetic methods have also been applied to language data (e.g. Gray and Atkinson 2003; Gray, Drummond, and Greenhill 2009; Dunn et al. 2011; Bouckaert et al. 2012) to infer the structure of major language families. As discussed in the previ ...
... character traits. In addition to parsimony, these other phylogenetic methods have also been applied to language data (e.g. Gray and Atkinson 2003; Gray, Drummond, and Greenhill 2009; Dunn et al. 2011; Bouckaert et al. 2012) to infer the structure of major language families. As discussed in the previ ...