ANTHROPOLOGY 4400E ANTHROPOLOGICAL THOUGHT (HOW
... how we know (epistemology) and the status of superficially incommensurable belief systems as reality (ontology). The reading of these ethnographies will set up the second term work of integrating interdisciplinary theory with anthropological thought by means of the ethnographic enterprise at the cor ...
... how we know (epistemology) and the status of superficially incommensurable belief systems as reality (ontology). The reading of these ethnographies will set up the second term work of integrating interdisciplinary theory with anthropological thought by means of the ethnographic enterprise at the cor ...
Value-Freedom and Socialist Theory
... In this respect, then, my view of the place of values in social theory departs from Weber’s. For he seems to have believed that the requirement of ‘objectivity’ could be met only by purging the social sciences of all normatively loaded concepts. He also argued that it was wrong for social scientists ...
... In this respect, then, my view of the place of values in social theory departs from Weber’s. For he seems to have believed that the requirement of ‘objectivity’ could be met only by purging the social sciences of all normatively loaded concepts. He also argued that it was wrong for social scientists ...
Joachim Hirsch Globalization of Capital, Democrazy and Citizenship
... is based in the capitalist mode of societalization. This social relationship makes men to class subjects and free market individuals at the same time. The contradiction between “bourgeois” and “citoyen” is fundamental to all political processes and conflicts in capitalist society, as Marx impressing ...
... is based in the capitalist mode of societalization. This social relationship makes men to class subjects and free market individuals at the same time. The contradiction between “bourgeois” and “citoyen” is fundamental to all political processes and conflicts in capitalist society, as Marx impressing ...
Hypothetical Cognition and Coalition Enforcement Language, Morality, and Violence Lorenzo Magnani ()
... have to gain the cooperation of other potential punishers. This explains altruistic behavior (and the related cognitive endowments which make it possible, such as affectivity, empathy and other non violent aspects of moral inclinations) which can be used in order to reach cooperation. To control fre ...
... have to gain the cooperation of other potential punishers. This explains altruistic behavior (and the related cognitive endowments which make it possible, such as affectivity, empathy and other non violent aspects of moral inclinations) which can be used in order to reach cooperation. To control fre ...
A Science of Context: The Qualitative Approach as Fundamental to
... lack of predictive power makes its value seem weak to commanders tasked to ‘do something’ and ‘do it now’. Like other large bureaucratic organizations the modern Army adopted quantitative methods to guide its expansion. Those methods reflected the larger dominance of the so-called rational-scientifi ...
... lack of predictive power makes its value seem weak to commanders tasked to ‘do something’ and ‘do it now’. Like other large bureaucratic organizations the modern Army adopted quantitative methods to guide its expansion. Those methods reflected the larger dominance of the so-called rational-scientifi ...
Music, journalism, and the study of cultural change
... Contributions coming from cultural studies feature a similar national bias. In this field, a great deal of attention has been given to the so-called rock journalism, studying its emergence in US and UK and the ways it reshaped distinctions between high and popular culture since the late 1960s (Lindb ...
... Contributions coming from cultural studies feature a similar national bias. In this field, a great deal of attention has been given to the so-called rock journalism, studying its emergence in US and UK and the ways it reshaped distinctions between high and popular culture since the late 1960s (Lindb ...
Hello, I`m Ron Strickland
... challenge existing conceptions of reality, and thus threaten the Christian system of belief. One example of this Galileo’s theory of the heliocentric universe—the idea that the earth goes around the sun. When Galileo published this theory in the early seventeenth ...
... challenge existing conceptions of reality, and thus threaten the Christian system of belief. One example of this Galileo’s theory of the heliocentric universe—the idea that the earth goes around the sun. When Galileo published this theory in the early seventeenth ...
Pedagogy and Politics: Democracy in the Classroom Franke Wilmer
... itself with constructing the argument to counter what is being said as it is being said, but by demonstrating a willingness to take others’ points of view seriously and to treat them respectfully. And in this, the teacher is a leader by example. But the issue of democratizing the classroom is not qu ...
... itself with constructing the argument to counter what is being said as it is being said, but by demonstrating a willingness to take others’ points of view seriously and to treat them respectfully. And in this, the teacher is a leader by example. But the issue of democratizing the classroom is not qu ...
SCIENCE AND ART IN SOCIAL WORK: AN OLD QUESTION IN THE
... possible for the social work field to continue to fix micro problems while simultaneously affecting macro, social policy issues in a way that respects both the art and the science of the field. This point of view stresses the idea that tools of logical empiricism (traditionally used in medical scie ...
... possible for the social work field to continue to fix micro problems while simultaneously affecting macro, social policy issues in a way that respects both the art and the science of the field. This point of view stresses the idea that tools of logical empiricism (traditionally used in medical scie ...
Understanding Ideology
... -- “irrelevant to and detracting from the aesthetic value” In a general framework of assumptions that shapes both political and literary language -- negative value -- no relation with positively valued terms of “common sense” and “creativity” Understanding Ideology’s history and usage in critical th ...
... -- “irrelevant to and detracting from the aesthetic value” In a general framework of assumptions that shapes both political and literary language -- negative value -- no relation with positively valued terms of “common sense” and “creativity” Understanding Ideology’s history and usage in critical th ...
Social Problems Research
... Elements of Social Structure and Culture Elements of Social Structure • A social group is defined as two or more people who have a common identity, interact, and form a social relationship. – Primary groups are characterized by intimate and informal interaction. – Secondary groups are task oriented ...
... Elements of Social Structure and Culture Elements of Social Structure • A social group is defined as two or more people who have a common identity, interact, and form a social relationship. – Primary groups are characterized by intimate and informal interaction. – Secondary groups are task oriented ...
theoretical framework and genesis of cultural materialism
... the external stimuli as causes of human behavior. Seeking to adopt the unity of science, which could not be provided by the so-called “first positivism,” Friedrich Engels interpreted social development as the highest form of motion of the matter (mechanical, physical, chemical, and organic), which e ...
... the external stimuli as causes of human behavior. Seeking to adopt the unity of science, which could not be provided by the so-called “first positivism,” Friedrich Engels interpreted social development as the highest form of motion of the matter (mechanical, physical, chemical, and organic), which e ...
References - The University of Auckland
... ‘scientific’ concepts. Spontaneous concepts are bogus concepts (of the type studied by Piaget), that the child develops naturally in the process of construction which emerge from the child’s own reflections on everyday experience. Vygostsky proposed that scientific concepts originate in the structur ...
... ‘scientific’ concepts. Spontaneous concepts are bogus concepts (of the type studied by Piaget), that the child develops naturally in the process of construction which emerge from the child’s own reflections on everyday experience. Vygostsky proposed that scientific concepts originate in the structur ...