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Ethical
Ethical

...  Is the application of ethical principles and standards ...
The First-Person Perspective: A Test for Naturalism
The First-Person Perspective: A Test for Naturalism

... not making any kind of Cartesian argument for a spooky “I” entity, but it’s important to see that she is still keying on the special ability to occupy the firstperson perspective as what threatens a fully naturalistic account of human cognition. So in this limited sense her argument is continuous wi ...
2.1. Culture - Council of Europe
2.1. Culture - Council of Europe

... tolerance suggests the need for people of different cultural backgrounds to develop the ability at least to endure the fact that others believe and live differently within a particular society, or in the wider world, even though they might share some core values. In addition to being an individual a ...
Social Exclusion and Ethnic Groups: The
Social Exclusion and Ethnic Groups: The

... does from the assumption that individual preferences among alternative courses of action are given and lie beyond the scope of respectable intellectual discussion. An alternative view, however, takes the principal objective of policy to be altering individuals’ views about how to live their lives. T ...
social interaction
social interaction

... • Sustained microlevel interaction often gives rise to higherlevel structures—mesostructures, such as networks, groups, and organizations  These intermediate-level structures can form macrolevel structures known as institutions • Society fits together like set of nested Russian dolls, with faceto-f ...
social interaction
social interaction

... • Sustained microlevel interaction often gives rise to higherlevel structures—mesostructures, such as networks, groups, and organizations  These intermediate-level structures can form macrolevel structures known as institutions • Society fits together like set of nested Russian dolls, with faceto-f ...
this PDF file
this PDF file

... to conventional roles and rules, and, at the final Level, on decision making in terms of purely abstract principles. It is worth noting that he had difficulty finding adequate empirical evidence of individuals who reached that final level. Carol Gilligan’s In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory ...
From the Viewpoint of Development Sociology
From the Viewpoint of Development Sociology

... can therefore be said that sociology is equipped with the theoretical foundation for understanding changes brought on by international development. Social theories in the 19th century had less normative elements. Theories that perceived social change as a process of social evolution through technolo ...
The Self
The Self

... recurring theme is the idea that, in the words of Jean-Paul Sartre, “existence precedes essence.” Before humans form a subjective set of truths or values, we simply exist. If existence precedes essence, all essence is created by humanity after our existence. This would mean that there is no absolute ...
Emerging Welfare Blueprints for Hong Kong: A Contribution
Emerging Welfare Blueprints for Hong Kong: A Contribution

... Dr. Fung’s ideas are reminiscent of the social rights approach that was first expounded by T. H. Marshall (See Sociology at the Crossroads and Other Essays, 1963). Marshall was a supporter of an egalitarian notion of social provision, but he was concerned with the potential conflict between a regime ...
Struttura del volume
Struttura del volume

... children in different societies, and by the far from universal recognition of childhood as a distinct social category. Superseding individualistic and developmental perspectives, Ariès opened the door to a new conceptualization of childhood as a permanent structure of modern society (Sgritta 1988). ...
Inequality in Capitalist Societies - Der WWW2
Inequality in Capitalist Societies - Der WWW2

... in the mechanistic enquiry of natural laws (Freudenthal 1986). These laws are based on forces embodied in the smallest units, in the case of society, in the individual’s self-interest. Under the conditions of a free market guaranteed and regulated by the state, the individuals can best pursue their ...
Five Faces of Oppression
Five Faces of Oppression

... also differentiate groups within a single society. The sexual division of labor, for example, has created social groups of women and men in all known societies. Members of each gender have a certain affinity with others in their group because of what they do or experience, and differentiate themselv ...
The Sacred Canopy, Chap 1
The Sacred Canopy, Chap 1

... instability. Man does not have a given relationship to the world. He must ongoingly establish a relationship with it. The same instability marks man's relationship to his own body (7). In a curious way, man is "out of balance" with himself. He cannot rest within himself, but must continuously come t ...
Containment or Emergence? A Theory of American Literature
Containment or Emergence? A Theory of American Literature

... pathfinder. Simms, on the other hand, solves the challenge of temporary dehierarchization even more cleverly (but also more conventionally): In The Yemassee, his rough outdoor hero is really a disguised aristocrat who returns to his true identity and rightful social status after the attack of the 's ...
Por qué las ciencias sociales son naturales, y por qué no pueden
Por qué las ciencias sociales son naturales, y por qué no pueden

... ‘common sense’ and ‘local’ notions, the same happens with ‘scientific’ concepts in the social sciences; real scientists start at the point they can with the concepts and meanings they have, and try to critically improve them in order to offer better explanations of social facts than what could be at ...
preliminary paper #130 conceptualizing disasters from a
preliminary paper #130 conceptualizing disasters from a

... part of social change dynamics rather than social pkoblems. The latter conception tends to emphasize dysfunctional aspects. But it should be a matter of empirical determination, not definition, as to what consequences, if any, are negative. In actual fact, there has been enough disaster research to ...
– how to implement a Social policy innovation social investment approach
– how to implement a Social policy innovation social investment approach

... Strategy that encourages Member States to take measures for active inclusion of people left out from the labour market (the other pillars being namely adequate income support and inclusive labour markets). In recent years there has been a growing focus on the need to promote innovation in the social ...
social policy guidelines
social policy guidelines

... Social policy work is about bringing issues to the attention of public policy makers and those who have responsibility for the administration of services. Citizens Information Centres (CICs), because they are involved in the provision of information and advice on social services or on civil and soci ...
Justice and the value of the family - Goethe
Justice and the value of the family - Goethe

... what – if anything – we should value about the family.3 After a short reflection on an appropriate definition of the family in view of changing social conditions (1.) I will ask in how far we might consider the family an obstacle of justice (2.). It is against this heavy burden that arguments for th ...
Philosophy of Social Robotics: Abundance Economics
Philosophy of Social Robotics: Abundance Economics

... Computing platforms such as social robotics are fundamentally different from humans, but share many properties among themselves. Each species of computing technology can be seen much more extensively than within the confines of its form factor. Most technology is Internet-connected, and each specie ...
Chapter 1 Exemplars and rules - Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit
Chapter 1 Exemplars and rules - Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit

... human qualities. The combination of terms used by the Mongols to translate the European idea, yos surtakhuun, seems to be of rather recent origin. I shall argue that each of these two terms does, however, denote an area of moral activity which is important in Mongolian culture. Yos means the commonl ...
Social Theory - Universidad de Murcia
Social Theory - Universidad de Murcia

... Franz Oppenheimer (1864-1943) argued that the state came about as a result of conquest and plunder. He claims that every state in history has been a state of classes, that is a polity of superior and inferior social groups, based on distinctions either of rank or of property. The State may be defin ...
Paper - Saint Mary`s College
Paper - Saint Mary`s College

... with their cause and, ultimately, join with them in order to combat a social problem. Through this constructionist perspective a social condition, such as a political message in music, can be assessed sociologically. Loseke’s model of social construction theory can be applied to song lyrics to analy ...
social inequality: a short history of an idea
social inequality: a short history of an idea

... The idea of social inequality refers to differences between groups of people that are hierarchical in nature. At its most basic, it refers to the hierarchical distribution of social, political, economic and cultural resources. A closely related concept is that of stratification, a more specific and ...
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