Psychology and National Development
... available to individuals: of purchasing power, of quality of education, and of standard of health. But many questions remain to be addressed. For example, if there is "increased purchasing power", what goods does it make possible for people to buy? And what exactly is meant by "quality of education" ...
... available to individuals: of purchasing power, of quality of education, and of standard of health. But many questions remain to be addressed. For example, if there is "increased purchasing power", what goods does it make possible for people to buy? And what exactly is meant by "quality of education" ...
SO-grams: a personal visualisation toolkit for
... members of a community to find points of interest, and pursue them within the constraints of the effort required. Criteria for an acceptable social browser in a given context must take account of a group's hedonic calculus. We discuss these issues, albeit at a simple level. in the text which follows ...
... members of a community to find points of interest, and pursue them within the constraints of the effort required. Criteria for an acceptable social browser in a given context must take account of a group's hedonic calculus. We discuss these issues, albeit at a simple level. in the text which follows ...
Chapter 4 Sociology
... them; and they think of social institutions less as conventions that help things run more smoothly and more as well-entrenched practices that provide the underpinnings of people’s identities and preferences. These tendencies affect the relationship between sociology and political philosophy. They su ...
... them; and they think of social institutions less as conventions that help things run more smoothly and more as well-entrenched practices that provide the underpinnings of people’s identities and preferences. These tendencies affect the relationship between sociology and political philosophy. They su ...
Interview - EconStor
... would indeed have appeared as a wonder … to the generation of Adam Smith. Sure, capitalism does not promise the pleasures of eternal life and of paradise; instead it can fulfill the most important desires of mundane life, such as affluence, health, freedom, at least for those who can pay for them. S ...
... would indeed have appeared as a wonder … to the generation of Adam Smith. Sure, capitalism does not promise the pleasures of eternal life and of paradise; instead it can fulfill the most important desires of mundane life, such as affluence, health, freedom, at least for those who can pay for them. S ...
Social Problems Research
... – The origins of the conflict perspective can be traced to the works of Karl Marx. – Marx suggested that all societies go through stages of economic development. – Industrialization leads to two classes: the bourgeoisie, or the owners of the means of production; and the proletariat, or the workers w ...
... – The origins of the conflict perspective can be traced to the works of Karl Marx. – Marx suggested that all societies go through stages of economic development. – Industrialization leads to two classes: the bourgeoisie, or the owners of the means of production; and the proletariat, or the workers w ...
What is the Eros Effect?
... upheavals which dramatically transform established social orders. As I will discuss, the eros effect occurs in moments when the basic assumptions of a society--patriotic nationalism and the authority of the government; hierarchy, the division of labor, and specialization--vanish overnight. During mo ...
... upheavals which dramatically transform established social orders. As I will discuss, the eros effect occurs in moments when the basic assumptions of a society--patriotic nationalism and the authority of the government; hierarchy, the division of labor, and specialization--vanish overnight. During mo ...
Social Factors Influencing the Structural and Content
... Concerning society, it is believed that the literary work is a product of a society in which it is created while it naturally inherits some of its features from its producer and the society at the same time. These inherited features initiate some changes both in content and in the structure of the l ...
... Concerning society, it is believed that the literary work is a product of a society in which it is created while it naturally inherits some of its features from its producer and the society at the same time. These inherited features initiate some changes both in content and in the structure of the l ...