theoretical framework and genesis of cultural materialism
... epistemologists, not of the scientific materialists: “thoughts about things and events are separable from things and events” [3, p. 30]. Materialists therefore must get scientific knowledge not by setting “real” against “unreal,” but by dividing social life into mental and behavioral events, in othe ...
... epistemologists, not of the scientific materialists: “thoughts about things and events are separable from things and events” [3, p. 30]. Materialists therefore must get scientific knowledge not by setting “real” against “unreal,” but by dividing social life into mental and behavioral events, in othe ...
The Origins of Human Modernity
... population’s supremacy [27] as proposed for Eve’s progeny. Already at this point the hypothesis begins to falter, because while the replacement model is untenable without a bottleneck, it implicitly rejects the tenets of genetic drift by creating the genetic trees its claims are based on. These unfa ...
... population’s supremacy [27] as proposed for Eve’s progeny. Already at this point the hypothesis begins to falter, because while the replacement model is untenable without a bottleneck, it implicitly rejects the tenets of genetic drift by creating the genetic trees its claims are based on. These unfa ...
learn more - Martha Heineman Pieper, Ph.D.
... According to the prevailing model of social work research, data which are assumed to be "empirical" or "objective," that is, thought both to mirror reality and to appear similar to all normal people, straightforwardly "ground" theoretical constructs in reality." In consequence, atheoretical research ...
... According to the prevailing model of social work research, data which are assumed to be "empirical" or "objective," that is, thought both to mirror reality and to appear similar to all normal people, straightforwardly "ground" theoretical constructs in reality." In consequence, atheoretical research ...
Ch. 15 Hominin Evolution
... Africa and then migrated to other continents where they competed with and out-lived more primitive populations ...
... Africa and then migrated to other continents where they competed with and out-lived more primitive populations ...
6. Words as Moral Badges. A Continuous Flow of Buzzwords in
... all political rhetoric, they are abstract in the sense that they allow for extended interpretation and multi-layered references, based on the need for enrolling large support by linking specific issues to encompassing programmes. Arguments about their vagueness or difficulties of definition are com ...
... all political rhetoric, they are abstract in the sense that they allow for extended interpretation and multi-layered references, based on the need for enrolling large support by linking specific issues to encompassing programmes. Arguments about their vagueness or difficulties of definition are com ...
Beyond the crisis: the social economy, prop of a new model of
... The term social economy appeared in economics literature, probably for the first time, in 1830. In that year the French liberal economist Charles Dunoyer published a Treatise on social economy that advocated a moral approach to economics. Over the 1820–1860 period, a heterogeneous current of thought ...
... The term social economy appeared in economics literature, probably for the first time, in 1830. In that year the French liberal economist Charles Dunoyer published a Treatise on social economy that advocated a moral approach to economics. Over the 1820–1860 period, a heterogeneous current of thought ...
empirical and realistic approaches of research
... signs with no cognitive content; known as a metaphysical proposition, as they are not directly observable and hence cannot be tested. The problem of the external world is an example; this problem consists of such questions as; is there a world (or realm of objects) which exists external to our minds ...
... signs with no cognitive content; known as a metaphysical proposition, as they are not directly observable and hence cannot be tested. The problem of the external world is an example; this problem consists of such questions as; is there a world (or realm of objects) which exists external to our minds ...
Aromorphoses in Biological and Social Evolution
... We tend to agree with Claessen's proposal to consider macroevolution as ‘the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form’ (Claessen 2000b: 2). Though this definition belongs to ...
... We tend to agree with Claessen's proposal to consider macroevolution as ‘the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form’ (Claessen 2000b: 2). Though this definition belongs to ...
Idealism, Materialism, and Biology in the Analysis of Cultural Evolution
... We tend to agree with Claessen's proposal to consider macroevolution as ‘the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form’ (Claessen 2000b: 2). Though this definition belongs to ...
... We tend to agree with Claessen's proposal to consider macroevolution as ‘the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form’ (Claessen 2000b: 2). Though this definition belongs to ...
Freedom and Security
... park because I am disabled, then this is a constraint on my positive freedom, but there is no indication that anyone acted violently towards my negative freedom. If, however, it is not on account of my disability that I cannot walk in the park, but because hooligans beat me up if I do so, then this ...
... park because I am disabled, then this is a constraint on my positive freedom, but there is no indication that anyone acted violently towards my negative freedom. If, however, it is not on account of my disability that I cannot walk in the park, but because hooligans beat me up if I do so, then this ...
Aromorphoses in Biological and Social Evolution
... We tend to agree with Claessen's proposal to consider macroevolution as ‘the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form’ (Claessen 2000b: 2). Though this definition belongs to ...
... We tend to agree with Claessen's proposal to consider macroevolution as ‘the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form’ (Claessen 2000b: 2). Though this definition belongs to ...
myWorld History Early Ages
... human communities. a. Examine a variety of scientific methods used by archaeologists, geologists, and anthropologists to determine the dates of early human communities. (DOK 2) b. Investigate the approximate chronology and sequence of early hominid evolution in Africa from the Australopithecines to ...
... human communities. a. Examine a variety of scientific methods used by archaeologists, geologists, and anthropologists to determine the dates of early human communities. (DOK 2) b. Investigate the approximate chronology and sequence of early hominid evolution in Africa from the Australopithecines to ...