Lecture Note 3: Historical-Hermeneutic Studies
... Formation of individual subjective meanings: … Concepts of perception, retention and reproduction: Perception: It refers to the “now-apprehension” granted to an experience by human minds during the immediate encounter. Retention: It refers to the “primary remembrance” or “primary impression” ...
... Formation of individual subjective meanings: … Concepts of perception, retention and reproduction: Perception: It refers to the “now-apprehension” granted to an experience by human minds during the immediate encounter. Retention: It refers to the “primary remembrance” or “primary impression” ...
Social representations of value: An empirical investigation Abstract:
... centrality were esteem, rate, respect, regard, and honour with a centrality of 414, 367, 362, 321 and 285 respectively. The representativeness and connective of the leading concepts were signified when ‘noise’ was removed from these networks: Exp2 had a network density of 8.08 via its 859 concepts a ...
... centrality were esteem, rate, respect, regard, and honour with a centrality of 414, 367, 362, 321 and 285 respectively. The representativeness and connective of the leading concepts were signified when ‘noise’ was removed from these networks: Exp2 had a network density of 8.08 via its 859 concepts a ...
Monologue or Dialogue. Challenges of Communication in Latin
... The overall aim of development work is to improve the lives of the individuals and communities in need. Development projects are varied, including those that aim to diminish poverty, create new opportunities, increase citizen participation, and strengthen knowledge and capacities in critical areas s ...
... The overall aim of development work is to improve the lives of the individuals and communities in need. Development projects are varied, including those that aim to diminish poverty, create new opportunities, increase citizen participation, and strengthen knowledge and capacities in critical areas s ...
- NIILM University
... The Study Society was instrumental in setting up the Maharishi‘s seminal lecture to 5000 people at the Royal Albert Hall in 1961 which greatly raised his profile in Europe. Nevertheless, it was not until Dr Roles was introduced to Swami Shantanand Saraswati, Shankaracharya of Jyotirmath—the head of ...
... The Study Society was instrumental in setting up the Maharishi‘s seminal lecture to 5000 people at the Royal Albert Hall in 1961 which greatly raised his profile in Europe. Nevertheless, it was not until Dr Roles was introduced to Swami Shantanand Saraswati, Shankaracharya of Jyotirmath—the head of ...
0495 sociology - Beacon Papers
... they may not provide an accurate account of a particular trend. Other sources of secondary data may also be used in sociological research. These include letters, historical documents, newspaper reports and television programmes. These sources are useful for the collection of qualitative data. This t ...
... they may not provide an accurate account of a particular trend. Other sources of secondary data may also be used in sociological research. These include letters, historical documents, newspaper reports and television programmes. These sources are useful for the collection of qualitative data. This t ...
0495 sociology - Past Papers Of Home
... they may not provide an accurate account of a particular trend. Other sources of secondary data may also be used in sociological research. These include letters, historical documents, newspaper reports and television programmes. These sources are useful for the collection of qualitative data. This t ...
... they may not provide an accurate account of a particular trend. Other sources of secondary data may also be used in sociological research. These include letters, historical documents, newspaper reports and television programmes. These sources are useful for the collection of qualitative data. This t ...
How social representations of attitudes have informed attitude theories
... racist representations of blackness that thereby construct Brixton as black, dangerous and ‘other’ (Howarth, 2002a). These inform not only how outsiders ‘see’ and experience Brixton, but also inform insiders’ understanding and experience of their own community and so themselves. Another function of ...
... racist representations of blackness that thereby construct Brixton as black, dangerous and ‘other’ (Howarth, 2002a). These inform not only how outsiders ‘see’ and experience Brixton, but also inform insiders’ understanding and experience of their own community and so themselves. Another function of ...
The Social World of Bulgarian Larp Players
... pass trials worthy of recognition’. Acceptance in the clan according to one’s merits reinforces personal motivation and loyalty among group members; at the same time, it presents belonging to the clan as a desirable goal for all larp players, which can, however, be attained only by the few elect. So ...
... pass trials worthy of recognition’. Acceptance in the clan according to one’s merits reinforces personal motivation and loyalty among group members; at the same time, it presents belonging to the clan as a desirable goal for all larp players, which can, however, be attained only by the few elect. So ...
Contextualizing Social Science in Nepal
... as well as their adaptation to the ecology and their practice of natural resource management to a great extent, while, the issue of ethnic identity, social boundaries have just come up very recently. For Levine (1987), Humla experience suggested the incidence of semi-permeable boundaries, particular ...
... as well as their adaptation to the ecology and their practice of natural resource management to a great extent, while, the issue of ethnic identity, social boundaries have just come up very recently. For Levine (1987), Humla experience suggested the incidence of semi-permeable boundaries, particular ...
The Anthropological Questions
... identify which factors are most significant at any particular time. ...
... identify which factors are most significant at any particular time. ...
Book review: citizenship, nationality and ethnicity. by T. K. Oommen
... This is the case, for instance, with “system,” not just national or micro systems but also world-system analysis. Albrow emphasizes that the conditions of the global age are not equivalent to global systems—and that the categories of society and system have never been as antithetical as they are tod ...
... This is the case, for instance, with “system,” not just national or micro systems but also world-system analysis. Albrow emphasizes that the conditions of the global age are not equivalent to global systems—and that the categories of society and system have never been as antithetical as they are tod ...
JEANNE FAVRET-SAADA ABOUT PARTICIPATION Let us begin by
... back home, I would write a sort of chronicle of these enigmatic events. (But sometimes the situations were so overwhelmingly intense that I couldn't even take notes afterwards.) This field diary, which for a long time was my only material, had two goals. The first very short-term goal was to try to ...
... back home, I would write a sort of chronicle of these enigmatic events. (But sometimes the situations were so overwhelmingly intense that I couldn't even take notes afterwards.) This field diary, which for a long time was my only material, had two goals. The first very short-term goal was to try to ...
Social, Societal, Social Work and Psychological as Understood by
... three studies were realized in contextual frame. A phenomena-based orientation is one orientation to the theme that we consider inspiring. The theoretical arguments for a phenomena-based orientation stem from the phenomenological way of thinking. In phenomenology, a phenomenon means the ways reality ...
... three studies were realized in contextual frame. A phenomena-based orientation is one orientation to the theme that we consider inspiring. The theoretical arguments for a phenomena-based orientation stem from the phenomenological way of thinking. In phenomenology, a phenomenon means the ways reality ...
PDF
... with industries developing new products and new technologies driven by their wish to maximise profit. At the same time, technological innovation is increasingly met by scepticism and concern about for instance their potential risks for human safety and the environment. The on-going controversy aroun ...
... with industries developing new products and new technologies driven by their wish to maximise profit. At the same time, technological innovation is increasingly met by scepticism and concern about for instance their potential risks for human safety and the environment. The on-going controversy aroun ...
1 The Future in Max Weber`s Methodological Writings Barbara Adam
... gives guidance about technical (present-based) means to pre-given ends and provides (past-based) causal analysis. As a cultural enterprise the social sciences have to square the circle of also dealing with the (future-based) realm of ideas, visions and values, of taking a stance on the normative dim ...
... gives guidance about technical (present-based) means to pre-given ends and provides (past-based) causal analysis. As a cultural enterprise the social sciences have to square the circle of also dealing with the (future-based) realm of ideas, visions and values, of taking a stance on the normative dim ...
Discussion Paper - Economics E
... populations of different sizes are compared. The model admits the discounted utilitarian model as a special case. It is also explicit about the meaning of the different parameters, so that they can be precisely discussed. Doing so, we endorse a normative approach. We believe that this approach is ap ...
... populations of different sizes are compared. The model admits the discounted utilitarian model as a special case. It is also explicit about the meaning of the different parameters, so that they can be precisely discussed. Doing so, we endorse a normative approach. We believe that this approach is ap ...
Dear Virgil
... central question was epistemic. His starting point, however, was man living in real life—the lifeworld. Husserl argues that each person lives in a world, in the natural attitude, as a “human person living among others in the world” (Husserl 1989:411). The world I experience in the natural attitude, ...
... central question was epistemic. His starting point, however, was man living in real life—the lifeworld. Husserl argues that each person lives in a world, in the natural attitude, as a “human person living among others in the world” (Husserl 1989:411). The world I experience in the natural attitude, ...
Read the introduction - Duke University Press
... to which we claim allegiance, as well as to imagine and experiment with new socialities and social identifications at the limits of present arrangements. To embrace a social aesthetics, then, is to believe that aesthetics matters in ways far beyond those previously assumed, for a social aesthetics r ...
... to which we claim allegiance, as well as to imagine and experiment with new socialities and social identifications at the limits of present arrangements. To embrace a social aesthetics, then, is to believe that aesthetics matters in ways far beyond those previously assumed, for a social aesthetics r ...
Slajd 1 - University of Białystok
... An Indian anthropologist, Chandra Thapar, made a study of foreign cultures which had customs similar to those of his native land. One culture in particular fascinated him because it reveres one animal as sacred, much as the people in India revere the cow. The tribe Dr. Thapar studied is called the A ...
... An Indian anthropologist, Chandra Thapar, made a study of foreign cultures which had customs similar to those of his native land. One culture in particular fascinated him because it reveres one animal as sacred, much as the people in India revere the cow. The tribe Dr. Thapar studied is called the A ...
Understanding children and childhood
... What is a ‘social construction’? Throughout this document we will be referring to the idea of ‘constructions’ or ‘social constructions’. A social construction might be defined as ‘a theoretical perspective that explores the ways in which “reality” is negotiated in everyday life th ...
... What is a ‘social construction’? Throughout this document we will be referring to the idea of ‘constructions’ or ‘social constructions’. A social construction might be defined as ‘a theoretical perspective that explores the ways in which “reality” is negotiated in everyday life th ...
Understanding children and childhood
... What is a ‘social construction’? Throughout this document we will be referring to the idea of ‘constructions’ or ‘social constructions’. A social construction might be defined as ‘a theoretical perspective that explores the ways in which “reality” is negotiated in everyday life th ...
... What is a ‘social construction’? Throughout this document we will be referring to the idea of ‘constructions’ or ‘social constructions’. A social construction might be defined as ‘a theoretical perspective that explores the ways in which “reality” is negotiated in everyday life th ...
PDF sample
... It may not come amiss to say something about the nature of this book, for a dictionary of a growing science poses special problems. In common with the other social sciences, anthropology demands for itself a broad mandate—it is about “man”—but its subdivisions and special interests are more defined ...
... It may not come amiss to say something about the nature of this book, for a dictionary of a growing science poses special problems. In common with the other social sciences, anthropology demands for itself a broad mandate—it is about “man”—but its subdivisions and special interests are more defined ...
Transatlantic issues in social pedagogy: What the United
... language and British culture can be assumed to have more in common with Germanic cultures than with Iberic cultures. The UK and the USA are famously separated by a common language (George Bernard Shaw). This approach thus promises to deliver evidence including ‘most similar’ as well as ‘most differe ...
... language and British culture can be assumed to have more in common with Germanic cultures than with Iberic cultures. The UK and the USA are famously separated by a common language (George Bernard Shaw). This approach thus promises to deliver evidence including ‘most similar’ as well as ‘most differe ...
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
... potential impact on single individuals, groups of people sharing common interests and/or habits and, as a final goal, all the members of society. For this reason there are several application domains in which both research organizations and IT companies are investing by developing even more sophisti ...
... potential impact on single individuals, groups of people sharing common interests and/or habits and, as a final goal, all the members of society. For this reason there are several application domains in which both research organizations and IT companies are investing by developing even more sophisti ...
Political Agency in the Digital Age Media, Participation
... tensions of combining activism with academic research. She will discuss the challenges of conducting qualitative research in social movements, particularly with regards to the ways in which we position ourselves in the study. Is there ever a strategic need to distinguish between the two identities? ...
... tensions of combining activism with academic research. She will discuss the challenges of conducting qualitative research in social movements, particularly with regards to the ways in which we position ourselves in the study. Is there ever a strategic need to distinguish between the two identities? ...
Tribe (Internet)
The term tribe or digital tribe is used as a slang term for an unofficial community of people who share a common interest, and usually who are loosely affiliated with each other through social media or other internet mechanisms. The term is related to ""tribe,"" which traditionally refers to people closely associated in both geography and genealogy.The concept is closely related to social networking, and dates back to at least 2003, when tribe.net was launched. Cory Doctorow wrote a science fiction novel that expounds on this concept released in 2004 called Eastern Standard Tribe.