
In Defence of Seeking Wisdom - Philsci
... scientific culture" is surely not alone in valuing mutual understanding, cooperation, and 2. Basic idea: when the aim of an endeavour is problematic, it needs to be represented as a hierarchy of aims and associated methods, these aims becoming less specific and problematic as one goes up the hierarc ...
... scientific culture" is surely not alone in valuing mutual understanding, cooperation, and 2. Basic idea: when the aim of an endeavour is problematic, it needs to be represented as a hierarchy of aims and associated methods, these aims becoming less specific and problematic as one goes up the hierarc ...
Sustainable Development of Natural Resource Capital
... technical progress augmenting productivity of capitals. Where “technical progress” and/or elasticities of substitution between natural and produced capitals are made high enough, models can be obtained in which the value of the economy’s capital stock may grow without limit, and thus the “sustainabl ...
... technical progress augmenting productivity of capitals. Where “technical progress” and/or elasticities of substitution between natural and produced capitals are made high enough, models can be obtained in which the value of the economy’s capital stock may grow without limit, and thus the “sustainabl ...
Destabilizing Social Communication Theory
... Luckmann and Habermas – to inform much of the human and social sciences.2 Taken at a weak, intuitive level of extension, the concept of interaction is unproblematic: people interact all the time. However, this is not the end of the story, since the term is more often than not accompanied by strong c ...
... Luckmann and Habermas – to inform much of the human and social sciences.2 Taken at a weak, intuitive level of extension, the concept of interaction is unproblematic: people interact all the time. However, this is not the end of the story, since the term is more often than not accompanied by strong c ...
Justice Criminology and Criminal
... In Wacquant’s vision, the new penal state is one designed to deal with ‘castaway categories’ of unassimilated, unwanted, and unnecessary people. The historic interest of the social state in inclusion or reintegration, however problematic and attenuated these may have been in reality, now wanes to a ...
... In Wacquant’s vision, the new penal state is one designed to deal with ‘castaway categories’ of unassimilated, unwanted, and unnecessary people. The historic interest of the social state in inclusion or reintegration, however problematic and attenuated these may have been in reality, now wanes to a ...
this PDF - HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
... meaning (said to be by analogy, and in existence in both French and English in the seventeenth century) concerns any reciprocal communication: to exchange is to address and receive reciprocally. Thus we speak of exchanges of smiles, courtesies, blows—the verb applies to all these situations. The thi ...
... meaning (said to be by analogy, and in existence in both French and English in the seventeenth century) concerns any reciprocal communication: to exchange is to address and receive reciprocally. Thus we speak of exchanges of smiles, courtesies, blows—the verb applies to all these situations. The thi ...
- Digital Commons @ New Haven
... reinterpretation of these same goods from the parent or dominant culture in an attempt to subvert their meaning and either promote a counter-discourse or to simply disrupt taken-for-granted cultural assumptions—a process referred to as bricolage (Lévi-Strauss 1966). In these ways, subcultural style ...
... reinterpretation of these same goods from the parent or dominant culture in an attempt to subvert their meaning and either promote a counter-discourse or to simply disrupt taken-for-granted cultural assumptions—a process referred to as bricolage (Lévi-Strauss 1966). In these ways, subcultural style ...
Welfare Reform in Alberta : Reflections on
... personal and social problems and to fulfill their role in life to the optimum extent in accordance with the particular social and cultural development of their society.” (p.3) The Five Year Plan for Social Welfare Development in Hong Kong Review 1995 “In particular, they recognize a responsibility t ...
... personal and social problems and to fulfill their role in life to the optimum extent in accordance with the particular social and cultural development of their society.” (p.3) The Five Year Plan for Social Welfare Development in Hong Kong Review 1995 “In particular, they recognize a responsibility t ...
On Recent Trends in the Anthropology of Foragers: Kalahari
... The prevailing general model of forager societies crystallized in the mid-1960s, dislodging an earlier, more rigdly structured view identified with RadcliffeBrown (1930), Service (1962) and others. That new and now prevailing model was based to a sipficant degree on ethnographic work conducted among ...
... The prevailing general model of forager societies crystallized in the mid-1960s, dislodging an earlier, more rigdly structured view identified with RadcliffeBrown (1930), Service (1962) and others. That new and now prevailing model was based to a sipficant degree on ethnographic work conducted among ...
ProutWorld Features Ideology Sarkar FAQ Prout in 60 minutes
... 4. What are the salient points of Prout? Based on spiritual values of life Prout aims to tackle socio-economic challenges through progressive maximum utilization and rational distribution of all types of resources - physical, mental and spiritual. The theory advocates economic democracy based on coo ...
... 4. What are the salient points of Prout? Based on spiritual values of life Prout aims to tackle socio-economic challenges through progressive maximum utilization and rational distribution of all types of resources - physical, mental and spiritual. The theory advocates economic democracy based on coo ...
Relating the philosophy and practice of ecological economics: The
... fundamental consensus that EE aims to “study how ecosystems and economic activity interrelate” (Proops, 1989: 60). Thus, the subject matter of EE is the “relationship between ecosystems and economic systems in the broadest sense” (Costanza, 1989: 1). However, the aim of EE has never merely been a fu ...
... fundamental consensus that EE aims to “study how ecosystems and economic activity interrelate” (Proops, 1989: 60). Thus, the subject matter of EE is the “relationship between ecosystems and economic systems in the broadest sense” (Costanza, 1989: 1). However, the aim of EE has never merely been a fu ...
Social Capital and Fertility Intentions: The Case of Italy, Bulgaria
... are willing and able to spend on income generating activities. However, time spent at work cannot be spent for the production of commodities at home. Moreover, time spent at home but not spent at work causes opportunity costs due to forgone income. Both trade-offs lead to a complex problem of optimi ...
... are willing and able to spend on income generating activities. However, time spent at work cannot be spent for the production of commodities at home. Moreover, time spent at home but not spent at work causes opportunity costs due to forgone income. Both trade-offs lead to a complex problem of optimi ...
Revisiting the Life Cycle Squeeze
... impact as well as providing the lifestyle models for consumption. The periods of peak expense are referred to as the “early adulthood squeeze,” the “middle adulthood squeeze” and the “retirement squeeze”. In early adulthood, a young couple engages in household formation and childbearing but earnings ...
... impact as well as providing the lifestyle models for consumption. The periods of peak expense are referred to as the “early adulthood squeeze,” the “middle adulthood squeeze” and the “retirement squeeze”. In early adulthood, a young couple engages in household formation and childbearing but earnings ...
Modern China - Semantic Scholar
... practice, he too did not recognize that knowledge about the region could be organized in ways other than that provided by the container of the physical region. Work such as Cressey’s exemplifies the ambiguities and disjunctures that result in the practice of regional geography when one attempts to a ...
... practice, he too did not recognize that knowledge about the region could be organized in ways other than that provided by the container of the physical region. Work such as Cressey’s exemplifies the ambiguities and disjunctures that result in the practice of regional geography when one attempts to a ...