Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Consciousness: Continuum or
... ‘stance-theoretic’ view doesn’t seem to suffice – a heterophenomenological view may go quite a long way towards capturing the complexity of such states; – but on (my interpretation of) the enactive view, our conception of such states (in another) essentially involves an empathetic co-identification ...
... ‘stance-theoretic’ view doesn’t seem to suffice – a heterophenomenological view may go quite a long way towards capturing the complexity of such states; – but on (my interpretation of) the enactive view, our conception of such states (in another) essentially involves an empathetic co-identification ...
Social Problems Research
... change disrupts norms in society. – When norms become weak, unclear, or are in conflict with each other, society is in a state of anomie, or normlessness. ...
... change disrupts norms in society. – When norms become weak, unclear, or are in conflict with each other, society is in a state of anomie, or normlessness. ...
Paper Complexity, mobility, migration
... 3. Examples of Current Research 3.1. A neglected socio-communicative element in an asylum seeking procedure Asylum seeking has become one of the dominant modes of migration in the age of superdiversity. For the sake of those who are foreign to the argument here, we should spend a few words on the p ...
... 3. Examples of Current Research 3.1. A neglected socio-communicative element in an asylum seeking procedure Asylum seeking has become one of the dominant modes of migration in the age of superdiversity. For the sake of those who are foreign to the argument here, we should spend a few words on the p ...
Individual and Society - University of the Punjab
... Iqbal’s View According to Iqbal individual and society are part and parcel of each other. Individual depends on society for his survival and society plays a supportive role. Iqbal states: “This self is personality woven of individuality and sociality both of which develop side by side.”(Habib, 1985, ...
... Iqbal’s View According to Iqbal individual and society are part and parcel of each other. Individual depends on society for his survival and society plays a supportive role. Iqbal states: “This self is personality woven of individuality and sociality both of which develop side by side.”(Habib, 1985, ...
InterCultural Futures
... economics, who 20 years ago claimed that ‘the role of humans as the most important factor of production is bound to diminish in the same way that the role of horses in agricultural production was first diminished and then eliminated by the introduction of tractors.’ Significantly, Lanchester (2015) ...
... economics, who 20 years ago claimed that ‘the role of humans as the most important factor of production is bound to diminish in the same way that the role of horses in agricultural production was first diminished and then eliminated by the introduction of tractors.’ Significantly, Lanchester (2015) ...
Book Review Living an Impossible Living in a Transborder World
... glue leading to the creation of networks of support and cooperation. Future works can build on Vélez-Ibáñez’ contribution by seeking to understand the limitations of social networks, whether institutionalization or formalization limits their efficiency, and the broader social contexts that allow and ...
... glue leading to the creation of networks of support and cooperation. Future works can build on Vélez-Ibáñez’ contribution by seeking to understand the limitations of social networks, whether institutionalization or formalization limits their efficiency, and the broader social contexts that allow and ...
Every contact leaves a trace: IPA as a method for Social Work research
... An IPA study is about exploring the individuals’ lived experience, what Van Manen (1990) regard as tapping into the unique nature of each human situation. Dilthey (as cited in Van Manen, 1990) suggested that at its most basic level, lived experience is about “our immediate, pre‐reflective consci ...
... An IPA study is about exploring the individuals’ lived experience, what Van Manen (1990) regard as tapping into the unique nature of each human situation. Dilthey (as cited in Van Manen, 1990) suggested that at its most basic level, lived experience is about “our immediate, pre‐reflective consci ...
Celebrating risk: The politics of self
... themselves, but from the way in which the character (moral, social, competence) of the stigmatized is impuned. Third, such attributions are arbitrary and subjective, so they can only be properly understood with reference to their historical and cultural context. Fourth, Goffman observed that, discar ...
... themselves, but from the way in which the character (moral, social, competence) of the stigmatized is impuned. Third, such attributions are arbitrary and subjective, so they can only be properly understood with reference to their historical and cultural context. Fourth, Goffman observed that, discar ...
R A - faculty.fairfield.edu
... and auditory mediation might continue to be important. Through such effects as the telescoping of news into audio-video bytes , through the tension between the public spaces of cinema and the more exclusive spaces of video watching, through the immediacy of their absorption into public discourse , a ...
... and auditory mediation might continue to be important. Through such effects as the telescoping of news into audio-video bytes , through the tension between the public spaces of cinema and the more exclusive spaces of video watching, through the immediacy of their absorption into public discourse , a ...
Inquiry Systems of Upanishads: A Comment
... mind or the intellect. Is it enough to know that halva is sweet? You must experience its sweetness by eating it. How are the Upanishads different from other philosophical systems? They (the Upanishads) consist of mantras, sacred syllables, and their sound is instinct with power. This power transform ...
... mind or the intellect. Is it enough to know that halva is sweet? You must experience its sweetness by eating it. How are the Upanishads different from other philosophical systems? They (the Upanishads) consist of mantras, sacred syllables, and their sound is instinct with power. This power transform ...
Cover Sheet - Ciem-UCR
... Following Mignolo and decolonial theories, the concentration of decision-making power in the sphere of economy, especially in the polycentricity of capital accumulation – that characterizes neoliberalism – has brought a more devastating cost for the planet (Mignolo, 2011; Quijano, 2009) in environme ...
... Following Mignolo and decolonial theories, the concentration of decision-making power in the sphere of economy, especially in the polycentricity of capital accumulation – that characterizes neoliberalism – has brought a more devastating cost for the planet (Mignolo, 2011; Quijano, 2009) in environme ...
1 Building from Marx: Reflections on “race”, gender and class
... Yet, speaking of experience, both non-white and white people living in Canada/the West know that this social experience is not, as lived, a matter of intersectionality. Their sense of being in the world, textured through myriad social relations and cultural forms, is lived or felt or perceived as be ...
... Yet, speaking of experience, both non-white and white people living in Canada/the West know that this social experience is not, as lived, a matter of intersectionality. Their sense of being in the world, textured through myriad social relations and cultural forms, is lived or felt or perceived as be ...
FunctionalismWeb
... Look at what people do, not what they say. "....functionalism was not exhausted by its docrinre: it was also, if you ike a practice or mewthod, and this aspect of it was far less often subject to criti\cism than the theories that apparently underpinned that method." Jarvie 1973: 1973. Perhaps this i ...
... Look at what people do, not what they say. "....functionalism was not exhausted by its docrinre: it was also, if you ike a practice or mewthod, and this aspect of it was far less often subject to criti\cism than the theories that apparently underpinned that method." Jarvie 1973: 1973. Perhaps this i ...
... Venezuela, where the independence struggle ended with intellectuals largely relagated to the sidelines, the creation of an effective and stable civil counterbalance to military power is still short of consolidation. The antipathy between military men and men of letters in the last century is aptly p ...
This material is Copyright 1995 by Brett Dellinger
... economically" to go against their "best interests...." Therefore, in contrast with many Marxist or other critics who interpret the role of the media in modern societies deterministically, Van Dijk does not suggest that ideologies are "essentially 'false' forms of consciousness, as in the case of man ...
... economically" to go against their "best interests...." Therefore, in contrast with many Marxist or other critics who interpret the role of the media in modern societies deterministically, Van Dijk does not suggest that ideologies are "essentially 'false' forms of consciousness, as in the case of man ...
Shifts and Drifts in Nomad-Sedentary Relations - Beck-Shop
... alternative” convey values and perceptions which are often used for identity constructions in specific historical and social contexts. The dynamics of nomad-sedentary relations cause boundaries to move between both groups, and entail overlapping and intersection. Fluctuation to and fro between peopl ...
... alternative” convey values and perceptions which are often used for identity constructions in specific historical and social contexts. The dynamics of nomad-sedentary relations cause boundaries to move between both groups, and entail overlapping and intersection. Fluctuation to and fro between peopl ...
The Buddhist Notion of Emptiness and its Potential Contribution to
... habits of mind and concepts overlaid on the bare world of experience, is another. Daniel Dennett, with his notion of the mind as having no continuity or unchanging self (see Rao, 2002) would be a third. So why has the West run screaming from this idea? How is it that Buddhism approaches non-self in ...
... habits of mind and concepts overlaid on the bare world of experience, is another. Daniel Dennett, with his notion of the mind as having no continuity or unchanging self (see Rao, 2002) would be a third. So why has the West run screaming from this idea? How is it that Buddhism approaches non-self in ...
why social sciences are natural
... 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 attained just by using the ‘c ...
... 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 attained just by using the ‘c ...
Prodanciuc, R. Social Institutions
... and actions that transform the individual. The latter actions are instructive-educative, medical and health protecting. All the actions mentioned so far are direct social actions because they produce efficiency directly. There are also indirect social actions that potentiate the efficiency of the fi ...
... and actions that transform the individual. The latter actions are instructive-educative, medical and health protecting. All the actions mentioned so far are direct social actions because they produce efficiency directly. There are also indirect social actions that potentiate the efficiency of the fi ...
Social Welfare: Context for Social Control
... Even the value of "wanting to help the less fortunate," the reason expressed by many for choosing social work as a career, is a power statement. It implies that clients lack something, and need to be brought up to our, or society's, levels or standards of functioning. Though wanting to help, in pur ...
... Even the value of "wanting to help the less fortunate," the reason expressed by many for choosing social work as a career, is a power statement. It implies that clients lack something, and need to be brought up to our, or society's, levels or standards of functioning. Though wanting to help, in pur ...
Putting some (artificial) life into models of musical creativity
... Creating music is a social activity. My composition teachers impressed on me the feeling that, if you cut a tree down in the forest and there's no-one else there to hear it, then it’s not (fully) music; but if you have an audience listening and responding to the tree-felling, then it can be a symph ...
... Creating music is a social activity. My composition teachers impressed on me the feeling that, if you cut a tree down in the forest and there's no-one else there to hear it, then it’s not (fully) music; but if you have an audience listening and responding to the tree-felling, then it can be a symph ...
Available - Guru Ghasidas Vishwavidyalaya
... Contribution of different social reformers, saints, bhakti movement, etc. 1936 – Sir.Dorabji Tata Graduate School of Social Work set up. Sir Clifford Manshardt Was The First Director. Now this School is now known as s The Tata Institute of Social Sciences. School was initiated in the NagpadaNeig ...
... Contribution of different social reformers, saints, bhakti movement, etc. 1936 – Sir.Dorabji Tata Graduate School of Social Work set up. Sir Clifford Manshardt Was The First Director. Now this School is now known as s The Tata Institute of Social Sciences. School was initiated in the NagpadaNeig ...
Musings on the Emptiness and Dreariness of Postmodern Critique
... of such personalist poets as Gerard Manley Hopkins seems in part a reaction to the celebratory technodiscourses of the Industrial Revolution; the turn-of-the-century art movements attacked naturalism and mythic momumentalism; existentialism responded to the positivistic philosophies and sciences of ...
... of such personalist poets as Gerard Manley Hopkins seems in part a reaction to the celebratory technodiscourses of the Industrial Revolution; the turn-of-the-century art movements attacked naturalism and mythic momumentalism; existentialism responded to the positivistic philosophies and sciences of ...
Death - Philosophy
... breakfast. The mother did not respond. Eventually my friend became concerned and checked more closely. She found that her mother had been dead all the while. If TT were true, the object in the chair that morning was not my friend’s mother. My friend’s mother would have gone out of existence sometime ...
... breakfast. The mother did not respond. Eventually my friend became concerned and checked more closely. She found that her mother had been dead all the while. If TT were true, the object in the chair that morning was not my friend’s mother. My friend’s mother would have gone out of existence sometime ...