this article - International Journal of Mass Emergencies
... gender roles, taboos, land use, leadership roles, led to increased ‘urbanization’, and to the monetarization of this isolated atoll. More importantly he was able to compare the 1960 typhoon with a previous event in 1907 that apparently caused no such appreciable effects and to theorize that disaster ...
... gender roles, taboos, land use, leadership roles, led to increased ‘urbanization’, and to the monetarization of this isolated atoll. More importantly he was able to compare the 1960 typhoon with a previous event in 1907 that apparently caused no such appreciable effects and to theorize that disaster ...
The Avatars in the Machine - Dreaming as a - Open
... The idea that dreaming is a simulation of the waking world is currently becoming a far more widely shared and accepted view among dream researchers. Several philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists have recently characterized dreaming in terms of virtual reality, immersive spatiotemporal sim ...
... The idea that dreaming is a simulation of the waking world is currently becoming a far more widely shared and accepted view among dream researchers. Several philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists have recently characterized dreaming in terms of virtual reality, immersive spatiotemporal sim ...
1 what is anthropology? - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... wolves, and even ants. Culture, however, is distinctly human. Cultures are traditions and customs, transmitted through learning, that govern the beliefs and behavior of the people exposed to them. Children learn such a tradition by growing up in a particular society, through a process called encultu ...
... wolves, and even ants. Culture, however, is distinctly human. Cultures are traditions and customs, transmitted through learning, that govern the beliefs and behavior of the people exposed to them. Children learn such a tradition by growing up in a particular society, through a process called encultu ...
this PDF file
... services through mass media (Purwantari 1998: 39). In the era of the 1990s, when the development of the advertising is increasingly becoming private television sprung, so it becomes "fine cuisine" for advertisers. Here, advertising affects people in two ways. First, as an instrument of marketing com ...
... services through mass media (Purwantari 1998: 39). In the era of the 1990s, when the development of the advertising is increasingly becoming private television sprung, so it becomes "fine cuisine" for advertisers. Here, advertising affects people in two ways. First, as an instrument of marketing com ...
Social Darwinism in Anglophone Academic
... impact of Darwinism on social science and political ideology.2 I ask: who used the term and what did they mean by it? I trace the uses of the term “Social Darwinism” within the academic journals of the Anglo-American academic community, whose scientific literature became dominant over all others by ...
... impact of Darwinism on social science and political ideology.2 I ask: who used the term and what did they mean by it? I trace the uses of the term “Social Darwinism” within the academic journals of the Anglo-American academic community, whose scientific literature became dominant over all others by ...
The effects of perceived dominance in persuasion
... incomplete, or these other factors loose their rightful place in being defining for credibility. Secondly, it can never be concluded for certain that the effects of these three variables are not moderated or mediated by still other variables. Finally, Berlo, Lemert and Mertz (1969) criticisms of the ...
... incomplete, or these other factors loose their rightful place in being defining for credibility. Secondly, it can never be concluded for certain that the effects of these three variables are not moderated or mediated by still other variables. Finally, Berlo, Lemert and Mertz (1969) criticisms of the ...
Jean Baudrillard, Selected Writings
... This system of signs cannot become intelligible if each sign is related to each object, but only through the play of difference between the signs. In some of the most remarkable pages he has written, he indicates how consumer objects are like hysterical symptoms; they are best understood not as a re ...
... This system of signs cannot become intelligible if each sign is related to each object, but only through the play of difference between the signs. In some of the most remarkable pages he has written, he indicates how consumer objects are like hysterical symptoms; they are best understood not as a re ...
Tinbergen`s business cycle analysis
... these days less dreams and more statistics. We, the statisticians, are called upon by business-cycle theorists and empiricists to provide the necessary information. Our statistics allow theorists and empiricists to discuss the business-cycle phenomenon in many ways: on the basis of reference cycles ...
... these days less dreams and more statistics. We, the statisticians, are called upon by business-cycle theorists and empiricists to provide the necessary information. Our statistics allow theorists and empiricists to discuss the business-cycle phenomenon in many ways: on the basis of reference cycles ...
Between Sociology and the B School
... understanding of the ways in which British sociology was being articulated in opposition to power, constraint and inauthenticity. For those studying sociology in Britain from (say) 1965 to 1985, this was the intellectual milieu into which they were socialised. In terms of the sociology of work, empl ...
... understanding of the ways in which British sociology was being articulated in opposition to power, constraint and inauthenticity. For those studying sociology in Britain from (say) 1965 to 1985, this was the intellectual milieu into which they were socialised. In terms of the sociology of work, empl ...
SOCY4400 Contemporary Social Theory
... 10. Remember Blumer’s three basic premises for understanding human behavior: 1) Humans acto toward things on the basis of the meanings that those things have for ...
... 10. Remember Blumer’s three basic premises for understanding human behavior: 1) Humans acto toward things on the basis of the meanings that those things have for ...
Test Bank for Sociology in Our Times, 9th
... __________ is the relative location of a person or group within the larger society, based on wealth, power, prestige, or other valued resources. a. b. c. d. ...
... __________ is the relative location of a person or group within the larger society, based on wealth, power, prestige, or other valued resources. a. b. c. d. ...
The Wicked Nature of Social Systems
... valuable remarks and comments. I would particularly like to thank Mattias Wahlström, Abby Peterson, Håkan Thörn, and Bengt Larsson. Two other people that have been essential for this thesis are my two intellectually flexible complexity gurus; Claes Andersson at Physical Resource Theory at Chalmers T ...
... valuable remarks and comments. I would particularly like to thank Mattias Wahlström, Abby Peterson, Håkan Thörn, and Bengt Larsson. Two other people that have been essential for this thesis are my two intellectually flexible complexity gurus; Claes Andersson at Physical Resource Theory at Chalmers T ...
Weber Lecture 2013 - University of Warwick
... his rather diverse publications. On top of that his writing are difficult to understand; his style is complicated and he tends to bury the main points of the argument in a jungle of statements that require detailed analysis, or in long analyses of special topics that are not clearly related to eithe ...
... his rather diverse publications. On top of that his writing are difficult to understand; his style is complicated and he tends to bury the main points of the argument in a jungle of statements that require detailed analysis, or in long analyses of special topics that are not clearly related to eithe ...