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2 ch._4_
2 ch._4_

... You can choose from many different physical activities and exercises to improve your fitness level, but most fall into one of two categories: 1. Aerobic exercise Anaerobic exercise Examples: Running, cycling,involves swimming, and short dancing intense bursts of activity in which 2. Anaerobic exerci ...
Aromorphoses in Biological and Social Evolution
Aromorphoses in Biological and Social Evolution

... the opposite camp insists that the cultural evolution demonstrates all the key Darwinian evolutionary traits and that is why the structure of the research in cultural evolution should share all the fundamental traits of the structure of the research in biological evolution (Mesoudi, Whiten, and Lala ...
Idealism, Materialism, and Biology in the Analysis of Cultural Evolution
Idealism, Materialism, and Biology in the Analysis of Cultural Evolution

... the opposite camp insists that the cultural evolution demonstrates all the key Darwinian evolutionary traits and that is why the structure of the research in cultural evolution should share all the fundamental traits of the structure of the research in biological evolution (Mesoudi, Whiten, and Lala ...
Aromorphoses in Biological and Social Evolution
Aromorphoses in Biological and Social Evolution

... the opposite camp insists that the cultural evolution demonstrates all the key Darwinian evolutionary traits and that is why the structure of the research in cultural evolution should share all the fundamental traits of the structure of the research in biological evolution (Mesoudi, Whiten, and Lala ...
Theory European Journal of Political
Theory European Journal of Political

... ‘unified work activity, autonomously planned and carried out by the working subject’ – which was to an extent embodied in craft labour – continued to inform the moral experience of work under capitalism, albeit negatively in the alienation suffered by those contributing to the labour process.11 Acco ...
Structuration Theory and Self-Organization
Structuration Theory and Self-Organization

... freedom is granted to the category that is considered as the one being determined by a determining instance. Phenomena in one system are completely reduced to events in other systems. Determinism argues that causes and effects can be mapped linearly—each cause has one and only one effect, similar ca ...
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... Western models of kinship have a predictable unpredictability built into them. The predictably unpredictable sequences of kinship may be read - especially when looking backwards - as comforting teleologies, but this is not necessarily so. Western kinship models have a dynamic and diversifying qualit ...
How much do genetic covariances alter the rate of adaptation?
How much do genetic covariances alter the rate of adaptation?

... variance in one or more directions can occur even when all genetic correlations are less than unity in magnitude when nO2. If one of these directions with no genetic variation matches the direction of selection (b), then there will be no evolution. In such a case, we can say that genetic correlation ...
Causal Mechanisms and Process Patterns
Causal Mechanisms and Process Patterns

... See George and Bennett 2005. It is perhaps important to note that process tracing can support ...
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(CAETS) in the history of British social anthropology

... central to the formation of the British school in the 20th century, with the added twist that he was never wholly specialised in anthropology. The way he constructed the relationship between anthropology and psychology went through some significant shifts over time; and this makes his example instru ...
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... The use of anthropology in practical contexts. What anthropological practice is, how it originated, how it can be applied in non- academic and interdisciplinary contexts and careers. The main contemporary issues surrounding anthropological practice, including training, ethics, relevance, and rigor. ...
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Translations on the Move

... about the things (i.e. concepts) we were just trying to throw out of the window. It may be that the work of translation is not really the magic trick that, reflexive critiques would have you believe, enables anthropologists to explain difference and similarity. The objects of translation, we will su ...
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... The "performative turn" in the methodology of qualitative social research draws on a shift from the paradigm of "representation" to techniques of art/performance. A performance takes place as a staging in front of an audience or with an audience at a particular time. For a short time a performance a ...
UCL Anthropology PGT Options 2016/17
UCL Anthropology PGT Options 2016/17

... Digital data is becoming an inevitable part of everyday life, mediating and instantiating our relationships with other people, the natural world, the past and the future. What can the study of data tell us about emergent forms of social life? And what can anthropology bring to the study of digital d ...
Working Paper 126
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... discourse and have been ‘listened in’ by me during private conversations of other people. These cases are very interesting because they present examples of a certain tension between the diaspora’s self-presentation and what goes on in the privacy of a community’s introspection. My knowledge of the K ...
Methodological & Epistemological Foundations of EAP
Methodological & Epistemological Foundations of EAP

... the two set of social properties simply by observations. As a result two other working assumption are needed. ...
Anthropological Theory and Intelligence
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... he attitudes, expectations, and needs of intelligence professionals must be considered. A quick review of the literature suggests that military intelligence units and military schools and training centers have shown more overt interest in anthropological insight than national agencies, although the ...
The evolution of trade‐offs: where are we?
The evolution of trade‐offs: where are we?

... the genetic correlation between traits is exactly )1. This condition is also specified, as noted above, by one of the eigenvalues of the matrix being zero. To obtain a visual understanding of this condition consider what happens if we rotate the axes such that they now fall along the major and minor ...
Video Information Cultural Anthropology: Our Diverse World Anthropology 102
Video Information Cultural Anthropology: Our Diverse World Anthropology 102

... more complex social and political structures. The most common form of horticulture is slash‐and‐burn cultivation, which  relies on human power and has limited productivity yield. A third subsistence system is pastoralism, the managing of herds of  animals. Many pastoralist societies live at such hig ...
B.F. SKINNER
B.F. SKINNER

... major differences in the acceptance of mediating structures and the role of emotions ...
chapter 1 - MHHE.com
chapter 1 - MHHE.com

... 1. “Culture shock” is alienation that results from stepping outside one's own cultural frame and into a different one. 2. The example of Kottak’s work among the Arembepe suggests that culture shock eases once we begin to grasp the logic of a culture that is new to us. C. Archaeological anthropology ...
A Refinement of the Concept of Household: Families, Co
A Refinement of the Concept of Household: Families, Co

... distinct. I n this sense, the same problem now exists with the concept of the household that existed with the concept of the family before the two were distinguished. Just as families and households can and do vary somewhat independently of each other, so households contain aspects that can and do v ...
Culture, evolution and the puzzle of human cooperation
Culture, evolution and the puzzle of human cooperation

... should refrain from recycling. Yet, if everyone did this, the environment would suffer. Recycling, like voting, is an example of a public goods problem. In a public goods problem any given individual has an incentive to refrain from cooperating even though in the long run everyone will suffer from the ...
Formation of vestigial organs
Formation of vestigial organs

... than be directed, as long as those changes do not affect the organism’s fitness. It is possible that the reduction of vestigial structures could be the result of this build-up of random genetic mutation because all that is needed for it to occur is something that all vestigial structures have in com ...
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Inclusive fitness in humans

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