Globalization and its effects on community, work and household
... and class backgrounds for instance - and more on degrees of objectively defined merit and competition. This is not to deny the obvious benefits of ascription but to emphasise a relative (and increasing) shift in favour of merit and competition. Increasingly sophisticated technology and knowledge pre ...
... and class backgrounds for instance - and more on degrees of objectively defined merit and competition. This is not to deny the obvious benefits of ascription but to emphasise a relative (and increasing) shift in favour of merit and competition. Increasingly sophisticated technology and knowledge pre ...
The Social - Duke Sociology
... and alienation? Why? • What is the general will? • Explain the notion that someone can be “forced to be free.” • What is the difference between natural liberty and civil liberty? What is the tradeoff involved here? • Can we use anything from Rousseau to define international human rights? Are such ri ...
... and alienation? Why? • What is the general will? • Explain the notion that someone can be “forced to be free.” • What is the difference between natural liberty and civil liberty? What is the tradeoff involved here? • Can we use anything from Rousseau to define international human rights? Are such ri ...
emergence and the logic of explanation an argument for the unity of
... To put it in other words: continuity is taken into account, because the evolution of the new does not cut the system free from the old and the whole of the system does not evade the composition of its parts. At the same time, discontinuity is considered in saying that in evolution the new and the ol ...
... To put it in other words: continuity is taken into account, because the evolution of the new does not cut the system free from the old and the whole of the system does not evade the composition of its parts. At the same time, discontinuity is considered in saying that in evolution the new and the ol ...
Why a philosophy of social science File
... Even if there are questions the sciences cannot answer, and further questions about why the sciences cannot answer them, why should a scientist, and in particular a behavioral or social scientist take any interest in them? The reason is simple. Though the individual sciences cannot answer these ques ...
... Even if there are questions the sciences cannot answer, and further questions about why the sciences cannot answer them, why should a scientist, and in particular a behavioral or social scientist take any interest in them? The reason is simple. Though the individual sciences cannot answer these ques ...
The Construction of Music as a Social Phenomenon
... in at least two respects. On the one hand, all existing musical works and practices end up being implicitly or explicitly rated; usually, the higher echelons of this scale are restricted to so-called Western classical musics [a term whose presumed generality is in fact misleading : see Tagg (1985) a ...
... in at least two respects. On the one hand, all existing musical works and practices end up being implicitly or explicitly rated; usually, the higher echelons of this scale are restricted to so-called Western classical musics [a term whose presumed generality is in fact misleading : see Tagg (1985) a ...
SOCIAL HISTORY AND AFRIKANER HISTORIOGRAPHY IN A
... approach (without the flexibility which is, for example, characteristic of the work of certain British social historians who proceed from a historical-materialistic perspective, but are sensitive to individual agency and cultural considerations in the context of political developments) led to an eli ...
... approach (without the flexibility which is, for example, characteristic of the work of certain British social historians who proceed from a historical-materialistic perspective, but are sensitive to individual agency and cultural considerations in the context of political developments) led to an eli ...
text as laboratory
... logical theories are challenged by moving current theoretical problems into another territory, the one of the thought experiment. But which ‘science-fiction works’ do we actually have in mind when stating that they can be of anthropological interest? In 1968 the International Encyclopedia of Social ...
... logical theories are challenged by moving current theoretical problems into another territory, the one of the thought experiment. But which ‘science-fiction works’ do we actually have in mind when stating that they can be of anthropological interest? In 1968 the International Encyclopedia of Social ...
Social Anthropology and Applied Research
... taken of her work by overseas administrators: the Government anthr0poiogist could hope for a relatively free hand (within the context of a regionally limited and possibly problem-solving brief) to produce good quality academic work with general applicability. This, at any rate, is how social anthrop ...
... taken of her work by overseas administrators: the Government anthr0poiogist could hope for a relatively free hand (within the context of a regionally limited and possibly problem-solving brief) to produce good quality academic work with general applicability. This, at any rate, is how social anthrop ...