the mass psychology of fascism
... manoeuvre. It will fall victim to the natural organization of work, love and knowledge on an international scale. In our society, love and knowledge still do not have the power at their disposal to regulate human existence. In fact, these great forces of the positive principle of life are not consci ...
... manoeuvre. It will fall victim to the natural organization of work, love and knowledge on an international scale. In our society, love and knowledge still do not have the power at their disposal to regulate human existence. In fact, these great forces of the positive principle of life are not consci ...
The Avatars in the Machine - Dreaming as a - Open
... something rather peculiar is going on in there, especially during the darkest hours of the night. As we sleep and our bodies cease to interact behaviourally with the surrounding physical world, our conscious experiences do not entirely disappear. On the contrary, during sleep we often find ourselves ...
... something rather peculiar is going on in there, especially during the darkest hours of the night. As we sleep and our bodies cease to interact behaviourally with the surrounding physical world, our conscious experiences do not entirely disappear. On the contrary, during sleep we often find ourselves ...
The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical
... thoughts turned to erecting a ‘perimeter’ around the North American continent to filter out undesirables who might be terrorists from entering; and it linked terrorism with a territorial state, Afghanistan, and an individual leader, Osama Bin Laden, who might be found there. ...
... thoughts turned to erecting a ‘perimeter’ around the North American continent to filter out undesirables who might be terrorists from entering; and it linked terrorism with a territorial state, Afghanistan, and an individual leader, Osama Bin Laden, who might be found there. ...
The discourses of OERs: how flat is this world?
... the practices in the social world. Discourses operate together and are inherently dependent upon each other. For the sake of this paper, however, I discuss the collaboration and institutional discourses independently, by looking at their advertisement strategies and policy documents mostly. Discours ...
... the practices in the social world. Discourses operate together and are inherently dependent upon each other. For the sake of this paper, however, I discuss the collaboration and institutional discourses independently, by looking at their advertisement strategies and policy documents mostly. Discours ...
Imagination and Organization: A Review of Cornelius Castoriadis`s
... legendary journal Socialisme ou Barbarie (which he co-founded with Claude Lefort in 1949), now generally credited with providing the intellectual inspiration for the May 1968 uprising. It furnished a theoretical outline for Castoriadis’s break with the Communist Party as he realised that the states ...
... legendary journal Socialisme ou Barbarie (which he co-founded with Claude Lefort in 1949), now generally credited with providing the intellectual inspiration for the May 1968 uprising. It furnished a theoretical outline for Castoriadis’s break with the Communist Party as he realised that the states ...
The Possibility of Naturalism: A Philosophical Critique of the
... In this book I want to situate, resolve and explain an old question that dominates philosophical discussions on the social sciences and invariably crops up, in one guise or other, in methodological controversies within them: to what extent can society be studied in the same way as nature? Without ex ...
... In this book I want to situate, resolve and explain an old question that dominates philosophical discussions on the social sciences and invariably crops up, in one guise or other, in methodological controversies within them: to what extent can society be studied in the same way as nature? Without ex ...
Jean Baudrillard
... crucial feature of modernity - an image of its contradictions. But at the interior of this time, which is indefinite, and no longer knows any eternity, one thing distinguishes modernity : it always wants to be 'contemporary,' i.e ., it seeks global simultaneity. After first privileging the dimension ...
... crucial feature of modernity - an image of its contradictions. But at the interior of this time, which is indefinite, and no longer knows any eternity, one thing distinguishes modernity : it always wants to be 'contemporary,' i.e ., it seeks global simultaneity. After first privileging the dimension ...
Notes on the Ontology of Design
... field; one of the key concepts of the rising profession was that of diseño cultural (the design of cultures), which was applied to literacy, popular art, and for thinking about alternative development wi ...
... field; one of the key concepts of the rising profession was that of diseño cultural (the design of cultures), which was applied to literacy, popular art, and for thinking about alternative development wi ...
Social dominance theory and the dynamics of intergroup relations
... Social dominance theory argues that societies producing stable economic surplus contain three qualitatively distinct systems of group-based hierarchy: (1) an age system, in which adults have disproportionate social power over children; (2) a gender system, in which men have disproportionate social, ...
... Social dominance theory argues that societies producing stable economic surplus contain three qualitatively distinct systems of group-based hierarchy: (1) an age system, in which adults have disproportionate social power over children; (2) a gender system, in which men have disproportionate social, ...
Social Capital: Prospects for a New Concept
... "the web of cooperative relationships between citizens that facilitate resolutionof collective action problems"(1997:999). "Social capital is defined by its function.It is not a single entity, but a variety of different entities having two characteristicsin common:They all consist of some aspect of ...
... "the web of cooperative relationships between citizens that facilitate resolutionof collective action problems"(1997:999). "Social capital is defined by its function.It is not a single entity, but a variety of different entities having two characteristicsin common:They all consist of some aspect of ...
285 pdf - Hans L Zetterberg`s Archive
... nations, these strings provide distinct hints about the Zeitgeist prevailing in humankind’s spaces and times. Moving to a microscopic view of single symbols and sentences, we find three recurrent usages: descriptions, evaluations, and prescriptions. We propose that these usages should enter into the ...
... nations, these strings provide distinct hints about the Zeitgeist prevailing in humankind’s spaces and times. Moving to a microscopic view of single symbols and sentences, we find three recurrent usages: descriptions, evaluations, and prescriptions. We propose that these usages should enter into the ...
GEORGE HERBERT MEAD AS AN EMPIRICALLY RESPONSIBLE
... experience of the individual must be brought into relation with the natural, socio-biological activities of the brain in order to render an acceptable account of mind possible at all; and this can be done only if the social nature of mind is recognized. ...
... experience of the individual must be brought into relation with the natural, socio-biological activities of the brain in order to render an acceptable account of mind possible at all; and this can be done only if the social nature of mind is recognized. ...
Hegel and Institutional Rationality:
... “objective” sense noted above.5 Whatever else he means by this, he must mean thereby that “having justifiable reasons” is going to look a lot different than we might expect, since it won’t only be a matter of having maxims of a certain form or beliefs about the good, and the role of practical and mo ...
... “objective” sense noted above.5 Whatever else he means by this, he must mean thereby that “having justifiable reasons” is going to look a lot different than we might expect, since it won’t only be a matter of having maxims of a certain form or beliefs about the good, and the role of practical and mo ...
this article - International Journal of Mass Emergencies
... accumulation is achieved and capacity is decreased when faced with disasters. Risks are different for everyone even in the face of the same hazard and depend on the capacity of each family (and even individual members) to absorb its impact. In other words, how people’s circumstances (their pasts) ha ...
... accumulation is achieved and capacity is decreased when faced with disasters. Risks are different for everyone even in the face of the same hazard and depend on the capacity of each family (and even individual members) to absorb its impact. In other words, how people’s circumstances (their pasts) ha ...
Causality and Complexity in the Works of Pierre Bourdieu
... determined and can be described by general laws, whereas others are governed by the principle of chance (see e.g. Fuchs 2002a, Laszlo 1987, Wallerstein 1991, 1998a, 1998b, 1999). Ervin Laszlo (1987) has argued that the evolution of nature and society takes place in such a way that complex systems ag ...
... determined and can be described by general laws, whereas others are governed by the principle of chance (see e.g. Fuchs 2002a, Laszlo 1987, Wallerstein 1991, 1998a, 1998b, 1999). Ervin Laszlo (1987) has argued that the evolution of nature and society takes place in such a way that complex systems ag ...
Social discord as the foundation of republicanism in Machiavelli`s
... foundation of government in a society whose every further development represents a step toward both greater contestatory, as well as participatory2 powers for the people. The resulting constitution is that of a mixed government, which, while being inherently advantageous for upper classes, still all ...
... foundation of government in a society whose every further development represents a step toward both greater contestatory, as well as participatory2 powers for the people. The resulting constitution is that of a mixed government, which, while being inherently advantageous for upper classes, still all ...
Three simple models of social capital and economic growth
... 2. The concept of social capital 2.1. Defining social capital Like many sociological concepts, social capital encompasses many different meanings. While some researchers define social capital in terms of trust and norms of civic cooperation, others characterize it in terms of cultural values such as ...
... 2. The concept of social capital 2.1. Defining social capital Like many sociological concepts, social capital encompasses many different meanings. While some researchers define social capital in terms of trust and norms of civic cooperation, others characterize it in terms of cultural values such as ...
Chapter for Handbook of Research in Small Business and
... Kant and duty based ethics, and Jeremy Bentham’s consequentialist perspective of utilitarianism. Other common approaches are Aristotle’s virtue theory which looks at the character of the individual, social contract theory, discourse ethics and postmodern ethics. These key ethical theories are summar ...
... Kant and duty based ethics, and Jeremy Bentham’s consequentialist perspective of utilitarianism. Other common approaches are Aristotle’s virtue theory which looks at the character of the individual, social contract theory, discourse ethics and postmodern ethics. These key ethical theories are summar ...
The European Universal Welfare State: Democratic Relational
... “would not follow that states and nations ought to vanish, that borders ought to be erased or peoples dissolved” (p. 650). Ultimately, instead of desperately holding on to them to prevent inevitable globalization, it should be considered how nation-states and borders “can best be constrained, reconf ...
... “would not follow that states and nations ought to vanish, that borders ought to be erased or peoples dissolved” (p. 650). Ultimately, instead of desperately holding on to them to prevent inevitable globalization, it should be considered how nation-states and borders “can best be constrained, reconf ...
the liberalism of karl popper
... conclusions from the collapse of induction: rather, appealing to a principle of transference from validity in logic to efficacy in psychology, he rehabilitates rationality in thought and action with the conjecture that learning occurs in human beings and all other problem-solving organisms, not thro ...
... conclusions from the collapse of induction: rather, appealing to a principle of transference from validity in logic to efficacy in psychology, he rehabilitates rationality in thought and action with the conjecture that learning occurs in human beings and all other problem-solving organisms, not thro ...
ssptvol20 [PDF 1.25MB]
... “ideality” and “materiality”; capital as an ideal totality subsumes within its own form-determinations all otherness, including living labour and natural forces. In situating all otherness merely as a moment of its own absolute reality, capital proclaims itself a self-identical totality. All that is ...
... “ideality” and “materiality”; capital as an ideal totality subsumes within its own form-determinations all otherness, including living labour and natural forces. In situating all otherness merely as a moment of its own absolute reality, capital proclaims itself a self-identical totality. All that is ...
The Discourses of OERs: how flat is this world?
... discourses carry contextual, ideological and historical perspectives. They regulate social practices to the extent that they define what is part of a domain of practice and what is not. Discourses are the particular ways in which people think, talk and act about things – they are constitutive of the ...
... discourses carry contextual, ideological and historical perspectives. They regulate social practices to the extent that they define what is part of a domain of practice and what is not. Discourses are the particular ways in which people think, talk and act about things – they are constitutive of the ...
George Herbert Mead Final
... discrete past moments from an equally infinite stream of discrete future moments (Capek, 1961). This approach to time is abundantly evident in the organization studies literature, where its influence may be traced back to the industrial revolution and the deliberate management of time to maximise p ...
... discrete past moments from an equally infinite stream of discrete future moments (Capek, 1961). This approach to time is abundantly evident in the organization studies literature, where its influence may be traced back to the industrial revolution and the deliberate management of time to maximise p ...
Norms and Values
... appreciation of values through information pooling and deliberative refinement (Cohen 1989; Goodin 2000a). Formal mechanisms of command and control can also tell us what to do; and formal institutions of sanctions and incentives can help motivate us to comply with those collective prescriptions. Bu ...
... appreciation of values through information pooling and deliberative refinement (Cohen 1989; Goodin 2000a). Formal mechanisms of command and control can also tell us what to do; and formal institutions of sanctions and incentives can help motivate us to comply with those collective prescriptions. Bu ...
THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF AESTHETICS: A CROSS
... appreciation is neither universal nor even wholly Western, but the product of the existence of an elite class accustomed to the luxury of having disposable time and resources. For Bourdieu, the working classes of Western, or any stratified, state society regard each thing in terms of its function, a ...
... appreciation is neither universal nor even wholly Western, but the product of the existence of an elite class accustomed to the luxury of having disposable time and resources. For Bourdieu, the working classes of Western, or any stratified, state society regard each thing in terms of its function, a ...