feminist empiricism - University of Windsor
... interplay among various forms of values or theoretical virtues: empirical values, such as predictive accuracy or testability; other epistemic values, such as simplicity; and non-epistemic values, from subjective or personal values to moral or ethical values and more broadly political or cultural val ...
... interplay among various forms of values or theoretical virtues: empirical values, such as predictive accuracy or testability; other epistemic values, such as simplicity; and non-epistemic values, from subjective or personal values to moral or ethical values and more broadly political or cultural val ...
h Penal Abolition and Prison Reform h
... are grounded in a variety of social philosophies that are primarily concerned with discussing processes of social development that can be viewed as pathological. Among these philosophies are those expressing the view that societies should support a rich plurality of activities, each valuable in its ...
... are grounded in a variety of social philosophies that are primarily concerned with discussing processes of social development that can be viewed as pathological. Among these philosophies are those expressing the view that societies should support a rich plurality of activities, each valuable in its ...
Froh, J. and Parks, A. (2012). Activities for Teaching
... This keynote lecture by David Myers addresses factors surrounding our understanding of what it is to be "happy" -- including relationships, religious faith, wealth, gender, and a variety of character traits. This is an excellent introduction to the science of happiness and well-being research. Authe ...
... This keynote lecture by David Myers addresses factors surrounding our understanding of what it is to be "happy" -- including relationships, religious faith, wealth, gender, and a variety of character traits. This is an excellent introduction to the science of happiness and well-being research. Authe ...
Nebraska Sociological Feminist Collective
... paper are derived from "A feminist ethic for social science research," Women's S t~_'!!.~.2__ !.!!!~_~I2.E1!L~ ~a LX~~!:!.!!!. V 01. 6 (1 9 83 ): 535 - 543 :------- ...
... paper are derived from "A feminist ethic for social science research," Women's S t~_'!!.~.2__ !.!!!~_~I2.E1!L~ ~a LX~~!:!.!!!. V 01. 6 (1 9 83 ): 535 - 543 :------- ...
Universal Values, Contextualization and Bioethics: Knowledge
... These developments provided bioethics not only with power and recognition, but they posed to it new challenges too. Its traditional theories and methods are not always applicable in a context in which more and more problems require global answers. At the policy level some degree of consensus has to ...
... These developments provided bioethics not only with power and recognition, but they posed to it new challenges too. Its traditional theories and methods are not always applicable in a context in which more and more problems require global answers. At the policy level some degree of consensus has to ...
Social Consciousness
... function of the person in investigation, but value judgments are also implicit in the notions of science itself and in the very identification of the various disciplines. Science is based on the belief that sense data gathered by mind can be the exclusive basis of truth—that we can discover a truth ...
... function of the person in investigation, but value judgments are also implicit in the notions of science itself and in the very identification of the various disciplines. Science is based on the belief that sense data gathered by mind can be the exclusive basis of truth—that we can discover a truth ...
Vindicating methodological triangulation
... which they argue for their preferred style of research (see Bryman 1984 for a review and Tewksbury 2009 for a recent example). Hence it is worth explicitly noting this source of support for methodological purism, as sheer preference for one method over another is plausibly what motivates many in the ...
... which they argue for their preferred style of research (see Bryman 1984 for a review and Tewksbury 2009 for a recent example). Hence it is worth explicitly noting this source of support for methodological purism, as sheer preference for one method over another is plausibly what motivates many in the ...
A Reinforcement Learning Based Strategy for the Double
... our moral campus in the course of thousands of years of increasing communication and complexity in human social organisation. The same applies to economic decisions made by corporations or governments [5], in which actions taken can have significant social and environmental implications, which are n ...
... our moral campus in the course of thousands of years of increasing communication and complexity in human social organisation. The same applies to economic decisions made by corporations or governments [5], in which actions taken can have significant social and environmental implications, which are n ...
2 - Solutions Manual | Test bank
... © 2013 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in whole or part. ...
... © 2013 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in whole or part. ...
Ruling out latent homophily in social networks
... Whereas, homophily posits that individuals form connections in the network precisely because they are already similar. Distinguishing true sources of influence is very important in situations where we might like to affect the influencer to promote a desired change as in, e.g., social policy or viral ...
... Whereas, homophily posits that individuals form connections in the network precisely because they are already similar. Distinguishing true sources of influence is very important in situations where we might like to affect the influencer to promote a desired change as in, e.g., social policy or viral ...
Rethinking Development Assistance
... of those countries. Just as there can be wealth without capabilities, so there can temporarily be capability without material wealth. For instance, the Marshall Plan is often touted as the forerunner for the later post-war development schemes in the developing world. But it is a bogus comparison bec ...
... of those countries. Just as there can be wealth without capabilities, so there can temporarily be capability without material wealth. For instance, the Marshall Plan is often touted as the forerunner for the later post-war development schemes in the developing world. But it is a bogus comparison bec ...
Welfare Reform in Alberta : Reflections on
... employable, low income earners and single parents continue to be supported by CSSA in ever increasing number, have we slowly allowed these groups to develop an unhealthy “dependency culture that has emerged in some developed industrialized societies”? ...
... employable, low income earners and single parents continue to be supported by CSSA in ever increasing number, have we slowly allowed these groups to develop an unhealthy “dependency culture that has emerged in some developed industrialized societies”? ...
authorship and origins of the seven propaganda devices
... body of powerful conceptual insights capable of enriching a grand theory of social influence. During the 1930s the term “science” was taking on an increasingly methodological cast as part of a process by which the social sciences endeavored to distinguish themselves from the humanities. In the ninet ...
... body of powerful conceptual insights capable of enriching a grand theory of social influence. During the 1930s the term “science” was taking on an increasingly methodological cast as part of a process by which the social sciences endeavored to distinguish themselves from the humanities. In the ninet ...
how to do short pres
... Participation results in more difficult goals being set because subordinates want their supervisors to believe that they are highly capable and therefore choose more difficult goals than those that may be assigned to them by the supervisor ...
... Participation results in more difficult goals being set because subordinates want their supervisors to believe that they are highly capable and therefore choose more difficult goals than those that may be assigned to them by the supervisor ...
PDF
... with industries developing new products and new technologies driven by their wish to maximise profit. At the same time, technological innovation is increasingly met by scepticism and concern about for instance their potential risks for human safety and the environment. The on-going controversy aroun ...
... with industries developing new products and new technologies driven by their wish to maximise profit. At the same time, technological innovation is increasingly met by scepticism and concern about for instance their potential risks for human safety and the environment. The on-going controversy aroun ...
Grant funding report1 - Voluntary Action Islington
... funds over shorter time spans. 3. Social impact and social value, although used by funders and policy makers as a vital component of commissioning the voluntary sector, appeared to have little specific and practical application. The value of the sector was described clearly by groups, but rarely tra ...
... funds over shorter time spans. 3. Social impact and social value, although used by funders and policy makers as a vital component of commissioning the voluntary sector, appeared to have little specific and practical application. The value of the sector was described clearly by groups, but rarely tra ...
Aalborg Universitet Representations from the past Sammut, Gordon; Tsirogianni, Stavroula; Wagoner, Brady
... meaningful social forms. Like social representations, social frameworks are interobjective, and through them the past can be transmitted beyond the lifetime of anyone. Social memories evolve to meet the particular demands of their present situation. Assman (2010) identifies two forms of memory, that ...
... meaningful social forms. Like social representations, social frameworks are interobjective, and through them the past can be transmitted beyond the lifetime of anyone. Social memories evolve to meet the particular demands of their present situation. Assman (2010) identifies two forms of memory, that ...
Working Paper - Tufts University
... between a material world that is assumed to be spiritless and a (possible) realm of meaning that is assumed to be bodiless. This feminist critique of economic methodology, then, springs not from ad hoc dissatisfaction with various aspects, but from a deep analysis of the social, historical, and psy ...
... between a material world that is assumed to be spiritless and a (possible) realm of meaning that is assumed to be bodiless. This feminist critique of economic methodology, then, springs not from ad hoc dissatisfaction with various aspects, but from a deep analysis of the social, historical, and psy ...