368 Courses • Aerospace / Anthropology
... Extensive use is made of descriptions of cultures from around the world. Satisfies the Social and Behavioral Sciences requirement of the University Core Curriculum. 2350. Cultural Diversity in U.S. (American) Culture. 3 hours. Culture, cultural diversity and multiculturalism constitute some of the m ...
... Extensive use is made of descriptions of cultures from around the world. Satisfies the Social and Behavioral Sciences requirement of the University Core Curriculum. 2350. Cultural Diversity in U.S. (American) Culture. 3 hours. Culture, cultural diversity and multiculturalism constitute some of the m ...
THE PRIMATOLOGY, WILDLIFE ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
... the Indian Ocean, to the dry savannas of the Laikipia plateau, to the riverine forest along the Tana River. This provides an unparalleled breadth of experience. In addition to the scientific component, student will also be exposed to specific conservation problems, current debates, and emerging inno ...
... the Indian Ocean, to the dry savannas of the Laikipia plateau, to the riverine forest along the Tana River. This provides an unparalleled breadth of experience. In addition to the scientific component, student will also be exposed to specific conservation problems, current debates, and emerging inno ...
Anthropology, Eleventh Edition
... sentence is formed or a verb conjugated. History of languages - the way languages change over time. The study of language in its social setting. ...
... sentence is formed or a verb conjugated. History of languages - the way languages change over time. The study of language in its social setting. ...
Liberal Studies Course List
... Pakistan, China, Mexico, and Peru. Case studies are drawn from the Sumerians, Egyptians, Harappans, Shang, Inca, Maya, and Aztec. ...
... Pakistan, China, Mexico, and Peru. Case studies are drawn from the Sumerians, Egyptians, Harappans, Shang, Inca, Maya, and Aztec. ...
PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND ENERGY FLOW
... energy is transferred from one trophic level to another, energy is degraded: Limited assimilation Consumer respiration Heat production ¾ Energy quality decreases with each successive trophic level – Pyramid-shaped energy distribution ...
... energy is transferred from one trophic level to another, energy is degraded: Limited assimilation Consumer respiration Heat production ¾ Energy quality decreases with each successive trophic level – Pyramid-shaped energy distribution ...
The Cultural Trauma Process and the Ethics of
... care only for those we know, for those who are near us. Therefore caring is placed in a now, and so to speak localized. Consequently, to pose the question what actually happened is only important from a moral point of view. Moral, according to Margalit, is abstract and general, when ethics is materi ...
... care only for those we know, for those who are near us. Therefore caring is placed in a now, and so to speak localized. Consequently, to pose the question what actually happened is only important from a moral point of view. Moral, according to Margalit, is abstract and general, when ethics is materi ...
The Units of Culture
... For her, cultures were the chance assemblages of culture elements (or traits) that came together through diffusion. These elements are then modified to form a relatively consistent pattern of thought and behavior. The work of both Kroeber and Benedict was heavily influenced by the thought of the ma ...
... For her, cultures were the chance assemblages of culture elements (or traits) that came together through diffusion. These elements are then modified to form a relatively consistent pattern of thought and behavior. The work of both Kroeber and Benedict was heavily influenced by the thought of the ma ...
critical political ecology
... how “human nature” was dominated by the instrumental rationality and exploitation of modern industrial society. The debates also fueled the growth of environmentalism as a “new” social movement in Europe and North America during the 1960s, which was partly premised on concerns about the instrumental ...
... how “human nature” was dominated by the instrumental rationality and exploitation of modern industrial society. The debates also fueled the growth of environmentalism as a “new” social movement in Europe and North America during the 1960s, which was partly premised on concerns about the instrumental ...
Kinship and Evolved Psychological Dispositions
... with their representations. The existence of these representations is made possible by the learning and computational potential of the human brain, but their contents, it is implicitly assumed, are not at all constrained or even influenced by genetically inherited brain “hardware.” These contents ar ...
... with their representations. The existence of these representations is made possible by the learning and computational potential of the human brain, but their contents, it is implicitly assumed, are not at all constrained or even influenced by genetically inherited brain “hardware.” These contents ar ...
Niche construction, human behavior, and the adaptive
... and fitness maximization, usually with data gathered on small communities in remote regions of the world. For example, Borgerhoff Mulder39 studied the marriage practices in the Kipsigis to investigate whether the circumstances under which women will marry an already married man can be predicted with ...
... and fitness maximization, usually with data gathered on small communities in remote regions of the world. For example, Borgerhoff Mulder39 studied the marriage practices in the Kipsigis to investigate whether the circumstances under which women will marry an already married man can be predicted with ...
Economics
... Places and Regions 2. Identify land and climatic conditions conducive to human settlement in regions of the world and describe the role of these conditions (G-1B-M1) 3. Identify physical features that influenced world historical events and describe their influence (e.g., the Nile and Tigris-Euphrate ...
... Places and Regions 2. Identify land and climatic conditions conducive to human settlement in regions of the world and describe the role of these conditions (G-1B-M1) 3. Identify physical features that influenced world historical events and describe their influence (e.g., the Nile and Tigris-Euphrate ...
Marine ecological research in seashore and seafloor systems
... are: (1) Over which dimensions of space and time do the most significant organizing processes operate? (2) Can measurements to understand these processes be scaled accordingly, or must they be? and (3) What are the patterns of generality and variation within and across processes and ecosvstems? Thes ...
... are: (1) Over which dimensions of space and time do the most significant organizing processes operate? (2) Can measurements to understand these processes be scaled accordingly, or must they be? and (3) What are the patterns of generality and variation within and across processes and ecosvstems? Thes ...
Bio 101 Intro to Ecology
... effect of interspecific interactions on community structure and organization Figure 52.2d ...
... effect of interspecific interactions on community structure and organization Figure 52.2d ...
Landscapes and Their Ecological Components
... that embrace and bring together all natural and human processes and their patterns (Naveh, 1987); it is a particular configuration of topography, plant cover, use of the soil, and human settlements that are delimited by natural and cultural processes as well as by anthropic activities (Green et al., ...
... that embrace and bring together all natural and human processes and their patterns (Naveh, 1987); it is a particular configuration of topography, plant cover, use of the soil, and human settlements that are delimited by natural and cultural processes as well as by anthropic activities (Green et al., ...
Unit 3 Human Migrations
... Unit 3 Human Migrations Introduction to Unit This unit explores both the history of human migration and the means by which scholars have begun to unravel the clues of this ancient story. The story of human migration began when the first humans picked up bundles, weapons, and children, and moved to a ...
... Unit 3 Human Migrations Introduction to Unit This unit explores both the history of human migration and the means by which scholars have begun to unravel the clues of this ancient story. The story of human migration began when the first humans picked up bundles, weapons, and children, and moved to a ...
Misleading criticisms of invasion science
... native ranges. It concerns all aspects relating to the transport, establishment and spread of organisms in a new target region, their interactions with resident organisms, and the costs and benefits of invasion with reference to human value systems. ‘Invasion science’ is a more appropriate name for ...
... native ranges. It concerns all aspects relating to the transport, establishment and spread of organisms in a new target region, their interactions with resident organisms, and the costs and benefits of invasion with reference to human value systems. ‘Invasion science’ is a more appropriate name for ...
AP Biology Summer Assignment 2011-12
... school AP Biology courses is to read the chapters on Ecology as a summer assignment. Completion of this summer assignment will allow us to cover more of the material required for the AP Bio Exam. Ecology is the scientific study of the interactions between organisms and the environment. Because ...
... school AP Biology courses is to read the chapters on Ecology as a summer assignment. Completion of this summer assignment will allow us to cover more of the material required for the AP Bio Exam. Ecology is the scientific study of the interactions between organisms and the environment. Because ...
Toward an ethical practice in the Anthropocene
... Boasian tradition has developed. The culture concept is an extension of this. Like phonetic sounds, words, meanings, and institutions are relational. What they are—their logics, their “truths”—are relative to the system that produces them. The source of this is a symbolic form of thinking that is di ...
... Boasian tradition has developed. The culture concept is an extension of this. Like phonetic sounds, words, meanings, and institutions are relational. What they are—their logics, their “truths”—are relative to the system that produces them. The source of this is a symbolic form of thinking that is di ...
Grade 7 – Science Midterm Study Guide Unit 1 – Interactions and
... What is an ecosystem? Be able to give examples or identify given ecosystems. Be able to describe wetland ecosystems and explain their importance to nature. Human Impacts on Ecosystems – Topic 2 ...
... What is an ecosystem? Be able to give examples or identify given ecosystems. Be able to describe wetland ecosystems and explain their importance to nature. Human Impacts on Ecosystems – Topic 2 ...
Ecology - Foothill Technology High School
... • Ecological Succession: End point? – Cannot be predicted – Different rates of growth & human involvement make it impossible to know if a true climax community has been reached. ...
... • Ecological Succession: End point? – Cannot be predicted – Different rates of growth & human involvement make it impossible to know if a true climax community has been reached. ...
Ecology Notes 3
... • Ecological Succession: End point? – Cannot be predicted – Different rates of growth & human involvement make it impossible to know if a true climax community has been reached. ...
... • Ecological Succession: End point? – Cannot be predicted – Different rates of growth & human involvement make it impossible to know if a true climax community has been reached. ...
Culture, Space and Everyday Life
... Mitchell, Don (2000): The End of Culture? – Culturalism and Cultural Geography in the Anglo-American ›University of Excellence‹. In: Geographische Revue ...
... Mitchell, Don (2000): The End of Culture? – Culturalism and Cultural Geography in the Anglo-American ›University of Excellence‹. In: Geographische Revue ...
History and Human Nature: Cross-cultural Universals and Cultural
... relatively easy to obviate, others not at all so. Evolutionary psychology, first, aims and to a very large extent succeeds in establishing the principal differentiae, genetic, anatomical, physiological as well as psychological, that mark out the human species as such. But what by definition falls ou ...
... relatively easy to obviate, others not at all so. Evolutionary psychology, first, aims and to a very large extent succeeds in establishing the principal differentiae, genetic, anatomical, physiological as well as psychological, that mark out the human species as such. But what by definition falls ou ...
Reynolds School District
... Lesson Objective: Analyze the significance of individuals and groups of people who made political and cultural contributions to world history before 1500. Resources: Textbook – Exploring Our World, Promethean Board Details: 1. Check Ch. 4 – Section 1 Vocabulary Terms and Questions 2-6 on P. 122. 2. ...
... Lesson Objective: Analyze the significance of individuals and groups of people who made political and cultural contributions to world history before 1500. Resources: Textbook – Exploring Our World, Promethean Board Details: 1. Check Ch. 4 – Section 1 Vocabulary Terms and Questions 2-6 on P. 122. 2. ...