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The (Surplus) Value of Scientific Communication Gerhard Fröhlich
The (Surplus) Value of Scientific Communication Gerhard Fröhlich

... their relative position within this space, and to be sure on the basis of (according to volumes and structure in the course of time) different action resources (capital). This space can also be described as a field of forces, "as an ensemble of objective relationships of forces which imposes itself ...
Why is integration so difficult? Shifting roles of ethics and
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... This paper analyses the normative reasons for integration. Integration is understood here as a deliberate attempt to bring the works of the humanities and social sciences into productive relationships with today’s complex and multi-faceted technological and scientific research, because this research ...
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... are based on appropriate moral rules. • To determine when a moral rule is appropriate Kant proposed two Categorical Imperatives ...
Building Social Work Knowledge: Some Issues
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... multidisciplinary knowledge, thus acquired, enabled the social workers to have a comprehensive understanding of human functioning. ...
La nozione di cultura appartiene alla storia occidentale
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... We observe that the human being is an historic being whose mode of social action transforms his own nature thanks to the reflection of the historical-social as personal memory. In other words: in the human being there doesn’t exist a human “nature”, if there is somehting “natural” in the human bein ...
The Theoretical Base of Clinical Sociology
The Theoretical Base of Clinical Sociology

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THREE COMPONENTS INVOLVED IN A DESIGN Philosophical

... More recent writers who have summarized this position are Lincoln and Guba (2000), Schwandt (2007), Neuman (2000), and Crotty (1998), among others. Social constructivists hold assumptions that individuals seek understanding of the world in which they live and work. Individuals develop subjective mea ...
The future of the social sciences and humanities in the science of
The future of the social sciences and humanities in the science of

Justice and the value of the family - Goethe
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... They assume an uneasy alliance between the increasing role of public educational institutions and the requirements of an accelerated, flexible capitalism (Lessenich 2008: 97-108). It is this context in which the necessity of a critical reflection on the value of the family arises. In what follows I ...
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... Words of Encouragement “I would add one word for any student beginning economic study who may be discouraged by the severity of the effort which the study, as he will find it exemplified here, seems to require of him. The complicated analyses which economists endeavour to carry through are n ...
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... same stimulus. Now although to say of a man that he is following a rule in what he does also entails saying of him that he always acts in the same way in a particular sort of situation, nevertheless the word " same " carries here a sense which differs importantly from that which it carried in its pr ...
FLACSO ISA - Buenos Aires
FLACSO ISA - Buenos Aires

... against the government of Salvador Allende, promoted and sponsored by the U.S. through strategic agencies such as CIA. Despite the immediate benefits of restructuring based on the neoliberal state, in 1982, with the Debt Crisis, ideological assumptions of neoliberalism distanced themselves from pra ...
Revision Worksheet: Managing Ethnic Diversity
Revision Worksheet: Managing Ethnic Diversity

... Singapore. As a result, if the races feel that they are one people with a common identity then they will be able to form an identity or mindset based on national rather than racial unity. Other than developing common practices, another way to build national identity is to pursue a policy of multi-ra ...
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... care often enough or thoroughly enough, even though they impact on the quality and success of health care delivery. The obvious component to the practice of medicine in space involves the biomedical focus. However, the fact that humans represent the target of medical practice in itself places limits ...
The Nature of Social Reality - Cambridge Scholars Publishing
The Nature of Social Reality - Cambridge Scholars Publishing

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Wooddell Information and Truth
Wooddell Information and Truth

Testing Searle`s Argument against Laws in the Social Sciences
Testing Searle`s Argument against Laws in the Social Sciences

... How then to argue against Searle? D'Amico (1997: 319-324) suggests a different strategy. According to him, Searle claims that the intentional states could not be systematically connected to the physical phenomena because the sensations that partly constitute them cannot be reduced – since, as Searle ...
Social Exclusion and Ethnic Groups: The
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... are engaged in a value-neutral enterprise-one with a clear separation between subject and object, as in physics or chemistry-I believe we are gravely misled. Formal rigor cannot substitute for taking responsibility for the inescapable normative dimensions of our work. This methodological point can b ...
61 RAGE AGAINST REASON: ADDRESSING CRITICAL CRITICS
61 RAGE AGAINST REASON: ADDRESSING CRITICAL CRITICS

... world of philosophical speculation and brought it into the world of synthetic science. Although his geocentric model was wrong, it was useful because it encouraged others to think on its imperfections. In this sense, Ptolemy served as the impetus for scientific advancement. As the history of cosmolo ...
- Philsci
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... models which rely fundamentally on consensus as the axis of critique. Thus, the feminist innovation is the turn to dissensus between “different groups and individuals with different social and cultural assumptions and different stakes.” For Popper, on the contrary, critique is limited to critiques b ...
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History of the social sciences

The history of the social sciences has origin in the common stock of Western philosophy and shares various precursors, but began most intentionally in the early 19th century with the positivist philosophy of science. Since the mid-20th century, the term ""social science"" has come to refer more generally, not just to sociology, but to all those disciplines which analyse society and culture; from anthropology to linguistics to media studies.The idea that society may be studied in a standardized and objective manner, with scholarly rules and methodology, is comparatively recent. While there is evidence of early sociology in medieval Islam, and while philosophers such as Confucius had long since theorised on topics such as social roles, the scientific analysis of ""Man"" is peculiar to the intellectual break away from the Age of Enlightenment and toward the discourses of Modernity. Social sciences came forth from the moral philosophy of the time and was influenced by the Age of Revolutions, such as the Industrial revolution and the French revolution. The beginnings of the social sciences in the 18th century are reflected in the grand encyclopedia of Diderot, with articles from Rousseau and other pioneers. Around the start of the 20th century, Enlightenment philosophy was challenged in various quarters. After the use of classical theories since the end of the scientific revolution, various fields substituted mathematics studies for experimental studies and examining equations to build a theoretical structure. The development of social science subfields became very quantitative in methodology. Conversely, the interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary nature of scientific inquiry into human behavior and social and environmental factors affecting it made many of the natural sciences interested in some aspects of social science methodology. Examples of boundary blurring include emerging disciplines like social studies of medicine, sociobiology, neuropsychology, bioeconomics and the history and sociology of science. Increasingly, quantitative and qualitative methods are being integrated in the study of human action and its implications and consequences. In the first half of the 20th century, statistics became a free-standing discipline of applied mathematics. Statistical methods were used confidently.In the contemporary period, there continues to be little movement toward consensus on what methodology might have the power and refinement to connect a proposed ""grand theory"" with the various midrange theories that, with considerable success, continue to provide usable frameworks for massive, growing data banks. See consilience.
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