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  1. Transcending Modernity? Individualism, Ethics and Japanese Discourses of Difference in the Post-War World.John Clammer - 1999 - Thesis Eleven 57 (1):65-80.
    Intense debates have taken place in Japan about the country's role in the post-war world system and the question of whether Japan has achieved the modernity that makes it a member of and player in that system. These debates, however, have largely centred on a discourse of uniqueness, defined in cultural (and culturalist) terms. This domination of a single interpretative framework has suppressed alternative analyses of Japanese modernity. Some of the most significant of these alternative voices take the central question (...)
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  • The individual in the middle ages and the renaissance: Introduction.Sverre Bagge - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (8):1305-1312.
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  • From brahma to a blade of grass.Alfred Collins - 1991 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 19 (2):143-189.
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  • Twisted thinking: Technology, values and critical thinking.Lavinia Marin & Steinert Steffen - 2022 - Prometheus. Critical Studies in Innovation 38 (1):124-140.
    Technology should be aligned with our values. We make the case that attempts to align emerging technologies with our values should reflect critically on these values. Critical thinking seems like a natural starting point for the critical assessment of our values. However, extant conceptualizations of critical thinking carve out no space for the critical scrutiny of values. We will argue that we need critical thinking that focuses on values instead of taking them as unexamined starting points. In order to play (...)
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  • Live empirical issues in debates over objectivity in the social sciences.Harold Kincaid - 2020 - Synthese 199 (1-2):1935-1954.
    Questions of objectivity involve many general philosophy of science issues; when directed toward the social sciences, even more complex issues surface about the status of the social sciences, e.g. can they be sciences as are the natural sciences? This paper does not take on this mass of issues directly, but instead argues for more restricted theses, in particular that questions about objectivity in the social sciences are often usefully seen as local empirical issues. I look at arguments around underdetermination, value (...)
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  • Debating the Reality of Race, Caste, and Ethnicity.Harold Kincaid - 2017 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 48 (2):139-167.
    There is a lively ongoing debate among philosophers and social scientists about the reality of race and among social scientists about the reality of caste and ethnicity. This paper tries to sort out what the issues are and makes some preliminary suggestions about what the evidence shows. Standard philosophical analyses try to find the necessary and sufficient conditions of our concept of race. I argue that this is not the best way to approach the issue and that the reality of (...)
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  • What Hindu Sati can teach us about the sociocultural and social psychological dynamics of suicide.Seth Abrutyn - 2017 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 47 (4):522-539.
    By leveraging the case of Hindu sati, this paper elucidates the ways in which structure and culture condition suicidal behavior by way of social psychological and emotional dynamics. Conventionally, sati falls under Durkheim's discussion of altruistic suicides, or the self-sacrifice of underindividuated or excessively integrated peoples like widows in traditional societies. In light of the fact that Durkheim's interpretation was based on uneven data, nineteenth century Eurocentric beliefs, and a theoretical framework that can no longer resist modification and elaboration, by (...)
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  • Culture and the self: Implications for cognition, emotion, and motivation.Hazel R. Markus & Shinobu Kitayama - 1991 - Psychological Review 98 (2):224-253.
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  • Some reflections on the epistemological fundaments of an Italian action-research experience.F. Garibaldo & E. Rebecchi - 2004 - AI and Society 18 (1):44-67.
    In this paper the authors, starting from the experience described and commented on in earlier work by Mancini and Sbordone, deal with the three main epistemological problems that the research group they participated in had to face:The conflicting and ambiguous relationship between psychoanalysis and social researchThe classical epistemological problem of the relationship between the subject and object of research within the perspective of action researchThe problem arising from their experience, i.e., the risk of manipulation, and the way to deal with (...)
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  • A Social Epistemology of Reputation.Gloria Origgi - 2012 - Social Epistemology 26 (3-4):399-418.
    We monitor the informational environment and catch reputational cues, gather signals from our informants and develop our trustful attitudes in context. I present an epistemology of reputation as a way of using social configurations to acquire information. I review the definitions of reputation that exist in the social sciences, stress the importance of the relational/social dimension of reputation as a property of entities, and put forward a definition of reputation suitable for epistemology. I then sketch social configurations that allow us (...)
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  • (1 other version)Two ideals of the śvetāmbar mūrtipūjak Jain Layman.John E. Cort - 1991 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 19 (4):391-420.
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  • Interpretive sociology: The theoretical significance of verstehen in the constitution of social reality. [REVIEW]Arthur S. Parsons - 1978 - Human Studies 1 (1):111 - 137.
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  • Figurational Sociology as a Counter-Paradigm.Johann Arnason - 1987 - Theory, Culture and Society 4 (2-3):429-456.
    Two key themes in contemporary social theory are particularly relevant to the interpretation and critique of figurational sociology. On the one hand, some recent critiques of the sociological tradition — Touraine's attempt to deconstruct the received image of society is the most important example — have called into question a dominant paradigm that underlies both Marxist and structural-functional theories. Norbert Elias has not only anticipated some of the most important criticisms but also suggested correctives to some of the currently fashionable (...)
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  • The Southeast Asian Labyrinth: Historical and Comparative Perspectives.Johann P. Arnason - 1997 - Thesis Eleven 50 (1):99-122.
    In the Southeast Asian context, the questions of civilizational identity and civilizational premises of modernity cannot be posed in the same way as with regard to China or India. From a long-term perspective, the most salient features of the region have to do with intercivilizational encounters and their local ramifications. As the debate on `Indianization' has shown, Southeast Asian traditions took shape in active interaction with dominant external models, and it is a flexible combination of imported and local patterns that (...)
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  • Moral Saints, Hindu Sages, and the Good Life.Christopher G. Framarin - unknown
    Roy W. Perrett argues that the Hindu sage, like the western moral saint, seems precluded from pursuing non-moral ends for their own sakes. If he is precluded from pursuing non-moral ends for their own sakes, then he is precluded from pursuing non-moral virtues, interests, activities, relationships, and so on for their own sakes. A life devoid of every such pursuit seems deficient. Hence, the Hindu sage seems to forsake the good life. In response, I adapt a reply that Vanessa Carbonell (...)
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  • Moral conflict in agriculture: Conquest or moral coevolution? [REVIEW]Philip T. Shepard - 1984 - Agriculture and Human Values 1 (4):17-25.
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  • Differential Geometry, the Informational Surface and Oceanic Art: The Role of Pattern in Knowledge Economies.Susanne Küchler - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (7-8):75-97.
    Graphic pattern (e.g. geometric design) and number-based code (e.g. digital sequencing) can store and transmit complex information more efficiently than referential modes of representation. The analysis of the two genres and their relation to one another has not advanced significantly beyond a general classification based on motion-centred geometries of symmetry. This article examines an intriguing example of patchwork coverlets from the maritime societies of Oceania, where information referencing a complex genealogical system is lodged in geometric designs. By drawing attention to (...)
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  • Educational Equality: A Politico‐Temporal Approach.Tomas Wedin - 2019 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 53 (2):248-272.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  • Talcott Parsons and the enigma of secularization. [REVIEW]Raf Vanderstraeten - 2013 - European Journal of Social Theory 16 (1):69-84.
    During the last ten or fifteen years of his life, Talcott Parsons (1902–79) discussed religion and secularization in a number of papers and essays. This work was left unfinished; in the last book that he saw into print, Parsons depicted these papers and essays as work-in-progress. This article focuses on Parsons’ approach to secularization in this late work. Building upon his AGIL-scheme, Parsons analyzed the relation between processes of inclusion and increasing differentiation, on the one hand, and secularization at the (...)
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  • Toward a Psychoanalytical Psychology of Hierarchical Relationships in Hindu India.Alan Roland - 1982 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 10 (3):232-253.
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  • Culture, Brain Transplants and Implicit Theories of Identity.Ramaswami Mahalingam & Joel Rodriguez - 2006 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 6 (3-4):453-462.
    Using a brain transplant paradigm, we examined the role of culture and status on beliefs about social and personal identity among Indians and American participants. Participants were presented a vignette about a hypothetical BT between members of two different ethnic groups and asked the following two questions: whether a BT would change how the recipient would act; whether the BT would change the social identity of the recipient. Americans believed that the BT recipient would act as the ethnicity of the (...)
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  • Individualism and Solidarity Today: Twelve Theses.Christian Lalive D'Epinay - 1991 - Theory, Culture and Society 8 (2):57-74.
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  • Power, Prestige, and the Corcyrean Affair in Thucydides 1.Gregory Crane - 1992 - Classical Antiquity 11 (1):1-27.
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  • "El don de dar vida": Análisis de la producción de la mujer como persona en culturas híbridas.Karla Alejandra Contreras Tinoco & Liliana Ibeth Castañeda Rentería - 2021 - Endoxa 48:275-296.
    En este ensayo respondemos a la pregunta: ¿Qué posibilidades, obstáculos y tensiones ofrece “el don de dar vida” a la producción de la mujer como persona en México?, para ello analizamos una expresión común y de uso popular en México: “el don de dar vida”. Identificamos que la expresión tiene similitudes, aunque también diferencias con “el don” del que habló Marcel Mauss. Una de las diferencias es que actualmente la expresión “el don de dar vida” se usa en las culturas (...)
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