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Time and space in cyber social reality
Time and space in cyber social reality

... experience of time and space in modernity. However, trying to find concrete examples leads us away from Giddens, especially when the focus is on the role of the media and the rather new communication technology. Castells (1996, 2000), on the other hand, takes into consideration the rising network so ...
State_and_Civil_Society_in_Social_Policy_Discourse_MacMaster
State_and_Civil_Society_in_Social_Policy_Discourse_MacMaster

... these states can be considered either as not being viable, “failing, failed or weak” states (Herbst, 2000). Another school of thought says the majority of African countries are at peace and ethnic cooperation is far more prevalent than conflict. Democracy is prospering in some and promising for othe ...
LEARNING TO BE HUMAN: THE IMPLICATIONS OF CONFUCIAN
LEARNING TO BE HUMAN: THE IMPLICATIONS OF CONFUCIAN

... death does the road come to an end" (L.Y., VIII, 7). Jun Zi differs from common people because "he or she has Ren and Li in mind." These characteristics, therefore, will manifest in almost every aspect of life no matter what conflicts or situations he or she is in. In summery, Jun Zi is the end of a ...
File
File

... influenced by my environment. My influences were consistent with Albert Bandura’s Social Learning Theory. Bandura’s social learning theory stated that people are influenced and learn from one another other. That learning comes from observation of others attitudes and behaviors and the outcomes of ac ...
1 Border Crossing, Democracy, and Deweyan Growth Border
1 Border Crossing, Democracy, and Deweyan Growth Border

... points of commonality, despite differences and historical resentments that otherwise would foreclose cooperation. Further, thinking of border crossers as vanguards of democratic progress dovetails with Dewey’s insistence that responsibility for initiating social change rests with those who directly ...
Ch 3
Ch 3

... whether or not to do something that, although beneficial to oneself or the organization, may be considered unethical and perhaps illegal. ...
Shankara
Shankara

... 5 arguments in support of Yogacara idealism (248) Shankara’s general response (including rejections of the five arguments for idealism) (248-250) ...
Screening for Medicaid Eligibility Under the Pickle Amendment
Screening for Medicaid Eligibility Under the Pickle Amendment

... month of entitlement. It is common for a person to receive SSI while awaiting receipt of OASDI payments. Once her monthly OASDI begins, if it exceeds the SSI rate, she receives just OASDI thereafter. In such circumstances, even though the person never actually received simultaneously payments from b ...
Values Versus Interests in the Explanation of Social Conflict
Values Versus Interests in the Explanation of Social Conflict

... individual at the center of these studies is not a rational maximizer who takes any position and follows any course that increases his personal welfare, but rather a much less flexible creature of political socialization and conformity, whose views reflect deep-seated personality characteristics, th ...
SFR12_06 Jordan et al GR01.indd
SFR12_06 Jordan et al GR01.indd

... 1999; Wiessner 1986; Yengoyan 1968). Thus at some time during hominin evolution, individuals became more likely to encounter strangers who were the kin or partners of their partners, but not directly known to them; that is, in-group strangers (Hill et al. 2011). At this point the interaction history ...
Can the Subaltern Speak?
Can the Subaltern Speak?

... even of the people as such but of the floating buffer zone of the regional elite-subaltern, is a deviation from an ideal - the people or subaltern - which is itself defined as a difference from the elite. It is toward this structure that the research is oriented, a predicament rather different from ...
Cultural evolution of the structure of human groups
Cultural evolution of the structure of human groups

... 1999; Wiessner 1986; Yengoyan 1968). Thus at some time during hominin evolution, individuals became more likely to encounter strangers who were the kin or partners of their partners, but not directly known to them; that is, in-group strangers (Hill et al. 2011). At this point the interaction history ...
an ontology for the ethnographic analysis of social processes
an ontology for the ethnographic analysis of social processes

... Although ritual is an important source for the maintenance of social formations, it is by no means the only or even the most important one. The fourth characteristic of social formations is that they can be, and very often are, maintained as the effect of diverse sets of action-reaction sequences. A ...
Building Social Work Knowledge: Some Issues
Building Social Work Knowledge: Some Issues

... psychology, anthropology, sociology... and so on in light of the nature of one's tasks and the ways people change' (Compton and Galaway, 1979:49). Problems in Borrowing Knowledge It is true that social and behavioural sciences provide an essential foundation to social work practice and without them ...
Dear Virgil
Dear Virgil

... Bracketing the Real World It must always be remembered that the reductions proposed by Husserl starts from the real world, it is its starting point as well as the condition for reductions (cf. Husserl 1981:337). As mentioned, Husserl addresses the Kantian question of how knowledge is possible, and h ...
Group Patterns, Joint Action and Social Cognition: the
Group Patterns, Joint Action and Social Cognition: the

... intention). A social group is the result of reciprocal actions of peoples doing things together. Joint mutual action can be seen as a unique constitutive mechanism for generating both pair bonds and larger groups. What is important here is not the size of the group but the nature of the coordination ...
Divine Origin of Gender
Divine Origin of Gender

... She compares the creation of woman, as emanating from the side of Adam with the relationship of the Holy Trinity, where God the Son “issues” from the Father: God created man in His own image. But God is three in one; and just as the Son issues from the Father, and the Holy Spirit from the Father an ...
1 The Enlightenment and the development of social theory
1 The Enlightenment and the development of social theory

... members of Western society – the heirs to a humane tradition more than two centuries old – almost necessarily judge the political and social movements of their own time. (S. H. Hughes 1979: 27) Even postmodernists, who challenge the dominance and assumptions of modernism, are forced to engage with i ...
METHODOLOGY OF HUMANITIES BA ENGLISH
METHODOLOGY OF HUMANITIES BA ENGLISH

... bad is received from these. Such belief systems come from various sources but largely from religious systems. They decide how we organize our lives. ...
School of Distance Education
School of Distance Education

... bad is received from these. Such belief systems come from various sources but largely from religious systems. They decide how we organize our lives. ...
The Challenge of Creativity: a Diagnosis of our Times
The Challenge of Creativity: a Diagnosis of our Times

... them, may come together and overlap in multiple ways. The ontology of creative imagenary drawn up by C. Castoriadis looks at a notion of being that is defined by indeterminacy and by a capacity for semantic self-alteration that generates social orders. Unlike the deterministic, closed vision of real ...
Person, Eros, Critical Ontology
Person, Eros, Critical Ontology

... intellectual faculties.’1 ‘Signifiers allow us to share our common reference to reality and experience, but cannot replace the cognitive experience itself. This obvious difference can only take place [...] when the criterion of the critical function is the communal verification of knowledge.’2 For Y ...
Can Cultural Worldviews Influence Network
Can Cultural Worldviews Influence Network

... of culture in shaping the character of social relations (see also Smith 2003).2 Second, network theory relies on assumptions about the culture-action link that are rarely made explicit. DiMaggio argues that this implicit framework “bears an affinity to a perspective on action… that is distinct both ...
Metaphors of Nature in Political Science Political Metaphor: A
Metaphors of Nature in Political Science Political Metaphor: A

... production of knowledge. Metaphors are dependent upon the same structures in the production of knowledge, functioning in this respect as myths, rendering unintelligible about this world intelligible, unempirical empirical. It is through metaphors that the abstract field of political becomes empirica ...
Social Constructivism
Social Constructivism

... logic dictates that other states will balance against the US because offsetting US power is a means of guaranteeing one’s own security; such balancing will lead to the emergence of new great powers in a multipolar system. But since the end of the Cold War, this has not happened; Waltz argues that it ...
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