Political: Patriarchy
... BCE. The code has two hundred eighty two laws which are based on social class status. For example, in regards to degree of punishment, individuals living their lives as slaves would have to pay a much higher price than elites who committed the same injustice. However, these laws were accepted becaus ...
... BCE. The code has two hundred eighty two laws which are based on social class status. For example, in regards to degree of punishment, individuals living their lives as slaves would have to pay a much higher price than elites who committed the same injustice. However, these laws were accepted becaus ...
On the Optimal Social Contract: Agency Costs of Self
... exogenous reason, the quality of the public projects is improved. This change increases the value of being a citizen, i.e. increases the opportunity cost of violating the laws of the society. Hence, now a smaller amount of resources is required to incentivise the citizens; in other words, the state ...
... exogenous reason, the quality of the public projects is improved. This change increases the value of being a citizen, i.e. increases the opportunity cost of violating the laws of the society. Hence, now a smaller amount of resources is required to incentivise the citizens; in other words, the state ...
Agency between humanism and posthumanism
... early work, Latour never argued that because scientific facts were constructed that they were necessarily false. He simply insisted that the objects science investigates do not speak for themselves. The facts that they are held to establish must be made through the efforts of the scientists themselv ...
... early work, Latour never argued that because scientific facts were constructed that they were necessarily false. He simply insisted that the objects science investigates do not speak for themselves. The facts that they are held to establish must be made through the efforts of the scientists themselv ...
World History
... development of civilizations? (SSWH1a,b; SSWH2a,b,c,d) How did the role of religion in society change with the rise of the major world religions and ethical systems of Hinduism, Judaism, Confucianism, Buddhism, and Christianity? (SSWH1c; SSWH2b,d; SSWH3d) The movement of people and ideas through t ...
... development of civilizations? (SSWH1a,b; SSWH2a,b,c,d) How did the role of religion in society change with the rise of the major world religions and ethical systems of Hinduism, Judaism, Confucianism, Buddhism, and Christianity? (SSWH1c; SSWH2b,d; SSWH3d) The movement of people and ideas through t ...
Normalcy-preface
... between their own reality and that one which is expected. Drawing upon sociological definitions of normality and its discoursive articulation, we are aware that our hypothesis is not determined by predictive value, but rather by “strategic value in relation to the question raised” (Lyotard, 2004, p. ...
... between their own reality and that one which is expected. Drawing upon sociological definitions of normality and its discoursive articulation, we are aware that our hypothesis is not determined by predictive value, but rather by “strategic value in relation to the question raised” (Lyotard, 2004, p. ...
Kantianism and Emile Durkheim`s Ethical Theory
... somewhat parallel Kant's notion of duty and adherence to the moral law, but there are some aspects of these concepts which I do not believe Kant would accept. By "regularity of conduct", Durkheim means: [M]orality consists of a system of rules which predetermine conduct. They state how one must act ...
... somewhat parallel Kant's notion of duty and adherence to the moral law, but there are some aspects of these concepts which I do not believe Kant would accept. By "regularity of conduct", Durkheim means: [M]orality consists of a system of rules which predetermine conduct. They state how one must act ...
The Human Origins Progam Resource Guide to Paleoanthropology
... participate in social bonding activities, such as grooming, feeding, and hunting; and form strategic coalitions with each other in order to increase their status and power. Early humans also probably had this kind of elaborate social life. However, modern humans fundamentally differ from apes in man ...
... participate in social bonding activities, such as grooming, feeding, and hunting; and form strategic coalitions with each other in order to increase their status and power. Early humans also probably had this kind of elaborate social life. However, modern humans fundamentally differ from apes in man ...
Preface - Pearson Higher Education
... should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. To obtain permission(s) to use material from this work, please submit a written reques ...
... should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. To obtain permission(s) to use material from this work, please submit a written reques ...
Testing Searle`s Argument against Laws in the Social Sciences
... sets of laws make the same predictions”. Now, they argue, it would seem implausible if there would be causal connections between the physical features of money and its monetary features (461). But for Searle, “people count the object as an instance of the social phenomenon by applying what Searle ca ...
... sets of laws make the same predictions”. Now, they argue, it would seem implausible if there would be causal connections between the physical features of money and its monetary features (461). But for Searle, “people count the object as an instance of the social phenomenon by applying what Searle ca ...
FV Slaby, Haueis, and Choudhury for Routledge - PH
... works in the service of interests that can easily shape construals of nature or naturalness. These notions of nature or of what counts as natural, whether referring to constructs of gender, mental disorder or human development, require unpacking. Without reflection on their histories and formative a ...
... works in the service of interests that can easily shape construals of nature or naturalness. These notions of nature or of what counts as natural, whether referring to constructs of gender, mental disorder or human development, require unpacking. Without reflection on their histories and formative a ...
A new kind of symmetry: Actor-network theories
... development. Recognising that some literacy practices achieve dominance through power relationships and social institutions, NLS brings to our attention the diversity of other' literacy events and practices that can be identified in different social contexts. The New Literacy Studies shares with ANT ...
... development. Recognising that some literacy practices achieve dominance through power relationships and social institutions, NLS brings to our attention the diversity of other' literacy events and practices that can be identified in different social contexts. The New Literacy Studies shares with ANT ...