chapter 7 ethics, diversity, and respect in multicultural counselling
... Professional codes are gradually beginning to articulate a moral framework before launching into the behavioural standards, but this in itself does not remove unintentional bias. The literature is beginning to demonstrate a reaction against rule-oriented ethics (Gergen, 2001; Jordan & Meara, 1999; R ...
... Professional codes are gradually beginning to articulate a moral framework before launching into the behavioural standards, but this in itself does not remove unintentional bias. The literature is beginning to demonstrate a reaction against rule-oriented ethics (Gergen, 2001; Jordan & Meara, 1999; R ...
The Concept of Self-Identity and Moral Conflicts
... understood as possession: ends are of a person, not the person itself. As Sandel’s interpretation suggests (Sandel, 1982: 8), Rawls also seems to be employing a conceptual argument to back up his understanding of the self, which consists in saying that we could not imagine self-knowledge without pos ...
... understood as possession: ends are of a person, not the person itself. As Sandel’s interpretation suggests (Sandel, 1982: 8), Rawls also seems to be employing a conceptual argument to back up his understanding of the self, which consists in saying that we could not imagine self-knowledge without pos ...
Advances in Environmental Biology
... study of thought within the context (history). According to him, to have a problem in mind it must be first be a problem in our life. Mannheim argues that there is a relation between thought on the one hand and economic interests and way of life of different social groups and classes, in the other h ...
... study of thought within the context (history). According to him, to have a problem in mind it must be first be a problem in our life. Mannheim argues that there is a relation between thought on the one hand and economic interests and way of life of different social groups and classes, in the other h ...
Investigating social entrepreneurship: A multidimensional
... Contributions of SEs: job creation, training provision, provide services that the state does not, finance source, generate social capital benefit, provide physical resources, combat exclusion None ...
... Contributions of SEs: job creation, training provision, provide services that the state does not, finance source, generate social capital benefit, provide physical resources, combat exclusion None ...
Social Science and Its Methods - Distant Production House University
... another begins. Not only are the individual social sciences interrelated, but the social sciences as a whole body are also related to the natural sciences and the humanities. The strains of the old song, “The hip bone’s connected to the thigh bone, . . .” are appropriate to the social sciences. To u ...
... another begins. Not only are the individual social sciences interrelated, but the social sciences as a whole body are also related to the natural sciences and the humanities. The strains of the old song, “The hip bone’s connected to the thigh bone, . . .” are appropriate to the social sciences. To u ...
SPACE AND CONTENTIOUS POLITICS Deborah
... space, or spatial practice, encompasses the material spaces of daily life where social production and reproduction occurs. Everyday life in the city, with its shops and factories, neighborhoods and houses, parks and places of worship, walls and fences, etc., exemplifies perceived space. This is a ta ...
... space, or spatial practice, encompasses the material spaces of daily life where social production and reproduction occurs. Everyday life in the city, with its shops and factories, neighborhoods and houses, parks and places of worship, walls and fences, etc., exemplifies perceived space. This is a ta ...
Structuration Theory and Self-Organization
... one knows to a large extent the parts of such systems and the connections between the parts (Heylighen, 1996, 1997; Edmonds, 1999). The complexity of a system depends on the number of its elements and the connections between the elements (the system’s structure). According to this assumption, Kauffm ...
... one knows to a large extent the parts of such systems and the connections between the parts (Heylighen, 1996, 1997; Edmonds, 1999). The complexity of a system depends on the number of its elements and the connections between the elements (the system’s structure). According to this assumption, Kauffm ...
Annotations to Bhaskar`s Possibility of Naturalism Hans G. Ehrbar
... any intentional act, that their pre-existence establishes their autonomy as possible objects of scientific investigation and that their causal power establishes their reality. The pre-existence of social forms will be seen to entail a transformational model of social activity, from which a number of ...
... any intentional act, that their pre-existence establishes their autonomy as possible objects of scientific investigation and that their causal power establishes their reality. The pre-existence of social forms will be seen to entail a transformational model of social activity, from which a number of ...
THE WELFARE (SOCIAL) STATE, EUROPEAN UNION AND
... we must realize also that the concept of power in these relations does not involve only state power, but also the actual political, economic and in modern times also information power which could be called more adequately as influence. In the very relations of power, law and poverty, this influence ...
... we must realize also that the concept of power in these relations does not involve only state power, but also the actual political, economic and in modern times also information power which could be called more adequately as influence. In the very relations of power, law and poverty, this influence ...
Vitality entry in Wiley encyclopedia
... degree that a group has organized itself as a pressure group to safeguard its interests in social institutions such as education, culture and administration. Status factors are the social prestige ...
... degree that a group has organized itself as a pressure group to safeguard its interests in social institutions such as education, culture and administration. Status factors are the social prestige ...
On the affective ambivalence of living with cultural diversity
... be perceived as an existential threat because he or she does not reflect the field of tacit expectations of normality that form an orienting framework. This is related to the fact that human understanding depends on external confirmation. Because such confirmation is weak or absent in encounters wit ...
... be perceived as an existential threat because he or she does not reflect the field of tacit expectations of normality that form an orienting framework. This is related to the fact that human understanding depends on external confirmation. Because such confirmation is weak or absent in encounters wit ...
Normalcy-preface
... is not determined by predictive value, but rather by “strategic value in relation to the question raised” (Lyotard, 2004, p. 7). From a philosophical point of view, normality is a meta-concept created by people in order to regulate a structure of a civil society and as such it should be always used ...
... is not determined by predictive value, but rather by “strategic value in relation to the question raised” (Lyotard, 2004, p. 7). From a philosophical point of view, normality is a meta-concept created by people in order to regulate a structure of a civil society and as such it should be always used ...
Understanding Social Problems
... As we move well into the second decade of the twenty-first century, the United States and the rest of the world face many social problems: poverty and hunger, racism and sexism, drug use and violence, and climate change, to name just a few. Why do these problems exist? What are their effects? What c ...
... As we move well into the second decade of the twenty-first century, the United States and the rest of the world face many social problems: poverty and hunger, racism and sexism, drug use and violence, and climate change, to name just a few. Why do these problems exist? What are their effects? What c ...
Whose Lives? How History, Societies, and Institutions Define and
... outmoded perspectives. One line of argument goes back to Immanuel Kant, who insisted in his philosophy of the mind that determinism and autonomy, constraint and choice, are regulative principles of potential knowledge and moral behavior that do not rule each other out but rather constitute different ...
... outmoded perspectives. One line of argument goes back to Immanuel Kant, who insisted in his philosophy of the mind that determinism and autonomy, constraint and choice, are regulative principles of potential knowledge and moral behavior that do not rule each other out but rather constitute different ...
方法論讀書心得四 : The Nature of Meaningful Behavior (Chap 2) and
... that have reason with other which have not intended motives but which still have sense, point from where Winch asks about the criteria to decide if an action has a sense or not, which according to Weber is linked to the commitment of its agent in the future, which lead Winch to his explanation of th ...
... that have reason with other which have not intended motives but which still have sense, point from where Winch asks about the criteria to decide if an action has a sense or not, which according to Weber is linked to the commitment of its agent in the future, which lead Winch to his explanation of th ...
Understanding Cultural Differences to Identify People - IC
... both represent a consensus of two people over a certain topic and context, that is, they said the same things differently. The use of common search engines, e.g. Google API or the system of recommendation from people of Chen et.al. [3] does not support the identification of similarities among these ...
... both represent a consensus of two people over a certain topic and context, that is, they said the same things differently. The use of common search engines, e.g. Google API or the system of recommendation from people of Chen et.al. [3] does not support the identification of similarities among these ...
Methodological Conclusions and Other Definitions of Coyuntura
... This material that you have in your hands is the product of a practice and reflection of many years of work. As a product of this process, we in SIPRO arrived to this systemization with the contribution of many people and with the valuable collaboration of Enrique Valencia who made the basic text of ...
... This material that you have in your hands is the product of a practice and reflection of many years of work. As a product of this process, we in SIPRO arrived to this systemization with the contribution of many people and with the valuable collaboration of Enrique Valencia who made the basic text of ...
historical materialism k
... method of analysis have impeded their capacity to think about IR in terms of historical process . As I have stressed in the first section, its anti-foundationalist conception of power, its endeavour to analyse power relations on the basis of de-centring of ...
... method of analysis have impeded their capacity to think about IR in terms of historical process . As I have stressed in the first section, its anti-foundationalist conception of power, its endeavour to analyse power relations on the basis of de-centring of ...
A Conception of Ontology - The Cambridge Social Ontology Group
... ontology (in conjunction very often with ontographology/opology) serves not as a substitute for science or substantive theorising but as a Lockean under-labourer for such activity8. Its essential contribution lies in helping clear the ground a little so that substantive theorising can proceed more f ...
... ontology (in conjunction very often with ontographology/opology) serves not as a substitute for science or substantive theorising but as a Lockean under-labourer for such activity8. Its essential contribution lies in helping clear the ground a little so that substantive theorising can proceed more f ...
Discourse and Wolves: Science, Society, and Ethics
... latrans) of North America or the Golden jackal (Canis aureus) of Africa and Eurasia. Nevertheless, new information continues to alter our assessment of the evolution of the dog family and its subsequent speciation. For example, there is some evidence of a newly discovered species in eastern Canada, ...
... latrans) of North America or the Golden jackal (Canis aureus) of Africa and Eurasia. Nevertheless, new information continues to alter our assessment of the evolution of the dog family and its subsequent speciation. For example, there is some evidence of a newly discovered species in eastern Canada, ...
5. Change is Central to Sociology
... and theories of evolution. Nineteenth-century sociology and proto-sociology incorporated a strong sense of human progress and elaborated corresponding typologies of the evolutionary development of society, for example, suggesting that there has been a transition from more simple to complex social st ...
... and theories of evolution. Nineteenth-century sociology and proto-sociology incorporated a strong sense of human progress and elaborated corresponding typologies of the evolutionary development of society, for example, suggesting that there has been a transition from more simple to complex social st ...
Disability Among Equals
... reject full-time work, and to identify with her role as an active mother who personally cares for her children. The costs to her (and to her children, although that is a further issue) of taking this job, it can be argued, outweigh the costs to the taxpayer of continuing to support her. This takes a ...
... reject full-time work, and to identify with her role as an active mother who personally cares for her children. The costs to her (and to her children, although that is a further issue) of taking this job, it can be argued, outweigh the costs to the taxpayer of continuing to support her. This takes a ...
Causal Mechanisms in Comparative Historical Sociology
... social entities—institutions, organizations, states, economies, and the like. So this approach advances a general ontological stance and research strategy: the causal mechanisms that create causal relations among social phenomena are compounded from the structured circumstances of choice and behavio ...
... social entities—institutions, organizations, states, economies, and the like. So this approach advances a general ontological stance and research strategy: the causal mechanisms that create causal relations among social phenomena are compounded from the structured circumstances of choice and behavio ...
Agency-Structure Relation in Social Sciences
... In addition, Sewell indicates agency varies due to their occupancy of different social positions in society. Some individuals due to their positions have more access to resources and exercise more influence over others. Occupancy of different social positions can be by social prestige, wealth, class ...
... In addition, Sewell indicates agency varies due to their occupancy of different social positions in society. Some individuals due to their positions have more access to resources and exercise more influence over others. Occupancy of different social positions can be by social prestige, wealth, class ...
First Name Surname Nationality Key Theories Key
... Attempted to reconcile ancient stoicism with Christianity in light of the religious wars caused after the Reformation of the Protestant church. Took a sceptical stance on strongly held public beliefs in favour of individualism. Politician and champion of the new scientific methods of empirical obser ...
... Attempted to reconcile ancient stoicism with Christianity in light of the religious wars caused after the Reformation of the Protestant church. Took a sceptical stance on strongly held public beliefs in favour of individualism. Politician and champion of the new scientific methods of empirical obser ...