933 resultados para Peter Hollingworth
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[Parte 2: Filme "Day of Rest"]
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Esta dissertação trata de uma pesquisa que se centrou na análise de um problema, de natureza discursiva, na sociedade contemporânea. Tal abordagem visou compreender a contribuição de Peter Drucker na legitimação de idéias e práticas do capitalismo tardio. Para tanto, tomando um corpus composto por três textos, desenvolvi uma pesquisa balizada pela Análise Crítica do Discurso. De acordo com a proposta de Fairclough da atuação simultânea e dialética de três principais tipos de significado em textos, os textos foram analisados na perspectiva de seus significados acional, representacional e identificacional. Do significado acional, foram investigadas a estrutura genérica e a intertextualidade; do significado representacional, a interdiscursividade e a representação dos atores sociais; do significado identificacional, a modalidade e a avaliação. A análise sócio-discursiva realizada permitiu depreender o caráter ideológico dos discursos proferidos por Peter drucker a serviço da dominação, por reforçar conhecimentos, crenças e valores que contribuem para a construção fatalista da globalização neoliberal. Tal construção provoca a disjunção entre o político e o social, prega a demissão do Estado de suas funções e, conseqüentemente, o agravamento da situação de exploração e miséria, radicalizando as diferenças entre os incluídos e os excluídos.
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[parte 01: Abertura] [parte 02: Lembranças do filme/ Recusa da pesquisa em Moçambique / Processo de montagem do filme] [parte 03: Aspectos técnicos do filme] [parte 04: Aspectos Culturais] [parte 05: Cerimônias Religiosas] [parte 06: Identidade Religiosa / Agradecimentos]
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Professor Peter Spink fala de sua carreira na área de administração pública e governo
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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The present study seeks to present a historico-epistemological analysis of the development of the mathematical concept of negative number. In order to do so, we analyzed the different forms and conditions of the construction of mathematical knowledge in different mathematical communities and, thus, identified the characteristics in the establishment of this concept. By understanding the historically constructed barriers, especially, the ones having ontologicas significant, that made the concept of negative number incompatible with that of natural number, thereby hindering the development of the concept of negative, we were able to sketch the reasons for the rejection of negative numbers by the English author Peter Barlow (1776 -1862) in his An Elementary Investigation of the Theory of Numbers, published in 1811. We also show the continuity of his difficulties with the treatment of negative numbers in the middle of the nineteenth century
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This research aims to reconstruct and explain the argument proposed by Peter Singer to justify the principle of equal consideration of interests (PECI). The PECI is the basic normative principle according to people should consider the interests of all sentient beings affected when somebody taking a moral decision. It is the join that Singer proposes between universalizability and the principle of equal consideration of interests that constitutes a compelling reason to justify it. The universalizability requires to disregard the numerical differences, putting yourself in other people s shoes, and to consider preferences, interests, desires and ideals of those affected. Singer joins universalizability to normative principle and molds the form and content of his theory. The first chapter introduces the discussion will be developed in this essay. The second chapter deals the historical and philosophical viewpoint from which Singer starts his studies. The third chapter is about the Singer s critiques of naturalism, intuitionism, relativism, simple subjectivism and emotivism. The fourth chapter exposes the design of universal prescriptivism proposed by R. M. Hare. The universal prescriptivism indicates, in the Singer s viewpoint, a consistent way to create the join between the universalizability and PECI. It highlights also the criticism designed by J. L. Mackie and Singer himself to universal prescriptivism. The second part of this chapter shows briefly some of the main points of the classical conception of utilitarianism and its possible relationship with the theory of Singer. The fifth chapter introduces the Singer s thesis about the origin of ethics and the universalizability as a feature necessary to the point of view of ethic, and the way which this argument is developed to form the PECI. The sixth chapter exposes the main distinctions that characterize the PECI. Finally the seventh chapter provides a discussion about the reasons highlighted by Singer for one who wants orient his life according to the standpoint of ethics. This structure allows explaining the main ideas of the author concerning the theoretical foundations of his moral philosophy
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Pós-graduação em Letras - IBILCE
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The present text aims to evaluate some effects of the use of elements in the representation of the madness and of the absurdity in the play Marat/Sade, written by the German author Peter Weiss. To accomplish this task, the analysis is built on comparative evaluations between text elements of the absurdity and of the surrealism, pursuing its textual construction.
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Review of The Bible at Qumran: Text, Shape, and Interpretation, edited by Peter W. Flint. Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2001. Pp. xv + 266. Price: $22.00. ISBN 0-8028-4630-0. This volume is another contribution to the Eerdmans series Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature. The essays are loosely gathered around the topic "The Bible at Qumran," and the editor has divided the articles into two groups. Part 1, "The Scriptures, the Canon, and the Scrolls," includes articles by J.A. Sanders, B.W. Waltke, E. Ulrich, C.A. Evans, and the editor, P.W. Flint. The contributors to Part 2, "Biblical Interpretation and the Dead Sea Scrolls," are J.C. VanderKam, C.A. Evans, J.E. Bowley, J.M. Scott, M.G. Abegg, and R.W. Wall. Unlike other volumes of collected essays in this series, which have highlighted the work of a single author or published the proceedings of a particular conference, this collection has a more disparate origin. Some contributions were given as papers at the Dead Sea Scrolls Institute of Trinity Western University (Bowley, Ulrich, VanderKam and Wall), one (Waltke) is reprinted from The New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1997), and the rest (Abegg, Evans, Flint, Sanders and Scott) were invited for the volume.
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Among the marine invertebrate groups recorded from oceanic islands, bryozoans stand out because they can live and reproduce in suboptimal habitats, which may enhance their dispersal capabilities. This study aimed to update the checklist of bryozoans known from the Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago (ASPSP) and discusses their distribution. During the five expeditions conducted between 2007 and 2009, 22 species were found, of which 16 were new occurrences for the archipelago. The bryozoans were collected from different biotic (algae and invertebrates) and abiotic (rocks, rubble and wrecks) substrata. The bryozoan community in ASPSP includes: eight new and probably endemic species, five species that belong to widespread species complexes, three species known only from the Brazilian coast, two species reported from the Western Atlantic and one species recorded from oceanic islets in the Atlantic. Additionally, three species are widespread in tropical to subtropical waters. Margaretta buski can be highlighted as the most conspicuous and abundant species between 1045 m deep and acts as an "ecosystem engineer".