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http://webct6.valenciacc.edu/webct/RelativeResourceManager
http://webct6.valenciacc.edu/webct/RelativeResourceManager

... outside world. The only persons who can really “know” the source that drives the action are those who commit the act. Whether one rescues a child from a burning building because he/she is expected to (Slave moralist) or because he/she has decided that his/her doing so is good in itself (Master moral ...
this PDF file - International Public Administration Review
this PDF file - International Public Administration Review

... often minimal or even absent. It seems to make more sense to focus on the influence of peers, i.e. middle management, or experienced organization members on individual employees because the frequency and intensity of their relations is usually greater and therefore might be more influential. It is f ...
1 A theory of collegiality and its relevance for understanding
1 A theory of collegiality and its relevance for understanding

... document in which partners put in writing the terms by which they govern their business affairs and organization. It provides rules for the conduct of the firm and guidelines for individual behaviour. It seeks to promote efficiency in many ways, and is therefore a powerful organizational device. The ...
Click here to Moira Laidlaw`s final paper for action
Click here to Moira Laidlaw`s final paper for action

... living relationships with their own knowledge-creation. I am making the assumption here, that knowledge-creation is an educational process. However, as my understanding of what it means to take responsibility for my own actions in the name of education has grown, so has my ability to find creative s ...
shared reality and the relational underpinnings of system
shared reality and the relational underpinnings of system

... lower taxes, the death penalty, and the Iraq War and opposes welfare spending, gay marriage, and abortion rights. These inferences are more likely to be made by those who are relatively educated and knowledgeable about politics (e.g., Converse, 1964; Delli Carpini & Keeter, 1996; Judd & Krosnick, 19 ...
Kohlberg Stages of Moral Development
Kohlberg Stages of Moral Development

... show. Even thought he could sneak a cookie out of the cupboard, he decides to obey in order to avoid having to go to bed early and miss his favorite television show. The second stage in this level is called individualism and exchange. Individuals in this stage make decisions based on what is in it ...
IDENTITY: ETHICS OF DIGNITY
IDENTITY: ETHICS OF DIGNITY

... Christians are reminded of their faith in physical and spiritual death and rebirth. Human dignity is also a strong value of Christians. Jesus used to eat with the outcasts of society- and calls his people to be humble and act as servants to each other. Peter Maurin, founder of the Catholic Worker Mo ...
Belief vs. Skepticism
Belief vs. Skepticism

... Clinton supporters, in contrast to Sanders’s supporters, score slightly below the national mean. This may be one of the most important differences between the two candidates: Clinton attracts voters less concerned about individual autonomy. For instance, Clinton opposes legalizing recreational marij ...
Psychology and Morality in Genocide and Violent Conflict:
Psychology and Morality in Genocide and Violent Conflict:

... probable, a characteristic of a system, a group—or a person. In such cases, we can regard the society, group, or individual actors as evil” (Staub, 2010a ). We can use the world evil when actions create extreme harm; this is an extreme form of immorality. In an immoral society, where actions that ha ...
Fromm, “Critiques of Freud and Marx”
Fromm, “Critiques of Freud and Marx”

... which, in their social character, the passion for cooperation and harmony dominates - for instance, the Zuni Indians of North America … Detailed analysis of the social character typical of any given society is required in order to understand how economic, geographical, historical and genetic condit ...
Deviance - Sociology
Deviance - Sociology

... – When a society socializes large numbers of people to desire a cultural goal (success), but withholds from some the approved means of reaching that goal; – One adaptation to the strain is crime, the choice of an innovative means (one outside the approved system) to attain the cultural ...
The Social Contract
The Social Contract

... obligation lay in our obligation to obey God absolutely. According to this view, then, political obligation is subsumed under religious obligation. On the other hand, Hobbes also rejects the early democratic view, taken up by the Parliamentarians, that power ought to be shared between Parliament and ...
Relation between Individual and Society
Relation between Individual and Society

... between the individual and society; one can imagine that social systems function better when they have considerable control over their individual members, but that this is a mixed blessing for the system’s members. Likewise can competition with other societies strengthen the social system, while wea ...
ch-3
ch-3

...  Realize that turnover has both costs and benefits for an organization and that you need to evaluate both. In particular, before becoming concerned about worker turnover, examine the performance levels of those who quit.  If workers do only what they are told and rarely, if ever, exhibit organizat ...
Ontological Materialism and the Problem of Politics
Ontological Materialism and the Problem of Politics

... to be found in Spinoza's thought. Spinoza can only write an ethics and a politics on the basis of his analysis of substance. In this analysis the thesis of 'parallelism' occupies a central position such that his theory of the wlivocity of being itself rests on this principle. This project of the aff ...
Identity as Adaptation to Social, Cultural, and Historical Context
Identity as Adaptation to Social, Cultural, and Historical Context

... pluralistic diversity in its values. In periods of state religions and consensual moralities, the basic values were seen by many as objective facts rather than as personal choices. In modern Western society, however, the concept of personal values means that people can hold different values and basi ...
Unavoidable Today? Is  Protagoras' Moral Relativism
Unavoidable Today? Is Protagoras' Moral Relativism

... critica I approach led to highly critical and even sceptical views on religion. So it was in these times in Greece. "The universal tendency of th at philosophy was to find natural causes for what had been hitherto been ascribed to the action of the divine powers, and this could not but have an under ...
Sociology as an Individual Pastime It
Sociology as an Individual Pastime It

... presence, feeling that he is poaching on their preserves. In some places the sociologist will meet up with the economist, in others rvith the political scientist, in yet others with the psychologist or the ethnologist. Yet chances are that the questions that have brought him to these same places are ...
Amr Khaled Message of Hope
Amr Khaled Message of Hope

... factors, not the least of which is his ability to project the image of a modern Islam. He was able to attract young people with moderate Islamic views from the middle and upper classes of society. Many of the more affluent consider the conservative Islamic approach backward. They see in Khaled’s mes ...
Dealing with Ethical Dilemmas in Public Administration
Dealing with Ethical Dilemmas in Public Administration

... and to the extent that contrasted values or decisional premises could apply in the situation, one is entering the world of ethical dilemmas or that of 'hard choices' (Hart, 196 1). A dilemma is something wider and more demanding than a problem, however difficult or complex the latter may be (Rapopor ...
A Relational Orientation to Communication: Origins, Foundations
A Relational Orientation to Communication: Origins, Foundations

... goals. Within vague social relationships, a chaotic situation may dominate (Pan, 1996). On the other hand, when there is Li without Jen in a social group, individuals in the group tend to develop a tension between each other. There will be more control and more crises due to the lack of social struc ...
Geopolitics of Democracy and Dynamics of Emotions (Positive and
Geopolitics of Democracy and Dynamics of Emotions (Positive and

... To begin with, we have to be aware of the fact that at the international level the commitment of democracy to democracy and its values and emotions of empathy is very limited; we have to be aware of the fact that the geopolitics of national interest and self-centered values and emotions prevail. Mor ...
Liberals and conservatives are (geographically) dividing
Liberals and conservatives are (geographically) dividing

... conservative Americans wanted to live in more suburban or rural communities with low population density, larger single-family homes, good parking for their personally-owned vehicles, many religious institutions, and less ethnic diversity. Emily Badger, journalist at the Washington Post, concluded th ...
[Title] Constructivism [Author] Adam Cureton [Main text] The term
[Title] Constructivism [Author] Adam Cureton [Main text] The term

... religious and philosophical views. The context of this problem, Rawls suggests, is something like our own constitutional democracy in which, despite disagreement on many issues, there is a set of deeply held political convictions and values that we tend to share (e.g. slavery is unjust, religious pe ...
Republican Independence as Equality and Virtue
Republican Independence as Equality and Virtue

... example, how their lack of a legal standing of their own placed women under the control of their husbands or fathers. Legal and political equality, she adds, would be of little advantage to women if they were also financial dependent on men for their basic needs. Economic rights, in turn, would not ...
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Familialism

Familialism is an ideology that promotes the family of the Western tradition as an institution. Familialism views the nuclear family of one father, one mother, and their child or children as the central and primary social unit of human ordering and the principal unit of a functioning society and civilization. Accordingly, this unit is also the basis of a multi-generational extended family, which is embedded in socially as well as genetically inter-related communities, nations, etc., and ultimately in the whole human family past, present and future.Familialism advocates Western ""family values"" and usually opposes other social forms and models that are chosen as alternatives (i.e. single-parent, polygamy, LGBT parenting, etc.). A typical trait of familialism is the insistence that normality resides in the patriarchal nuclear family.Familialism is usually considered conservative or reactionary by its critics who argue that it is limited, outmoded and unproductive in modern Western society. As a social construct imposed on non-Western cultures, it has been criticized as being destructive. Its prevalence in psychoanalysis has been criticized, and its antagonistic relationship with LGBT culture has been noted.
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