946 resultados para moral values
Resumo:
This collection explores the central importance of values and evaluative concepts in cross-cultural translational encounters. Written by a group of international scholars from a diverse range of linguistic and cultural backgrounds, the chapters in this book consider what it means to translate cultures by examining core values and their relationship to key evaluative concepts (such as authenticity, clarity, home, honour, or justice) and how they influence the complex multidimensional process of translation. This book will be of interest to academics studying cross-cultural and inter-linguistic interactions, to translators and interpreters, students of translation and of modern languages, and all those dealing with multilingual and multicultural settings.
Resumo:
Americans have been shown to attribute greater intentionality to immoral than to amoral actions in cases of causal deviance, that is, cases where a goal is satisfied in a way that deviates from initially planned means (e.g., a gunman wants to hit a target and his hand slips, but the bullet ricochets off a rock into the target). However, past research has yet to assess whether this asymmetry persists in cases of extreme causal deviance. Here, we manipulated the level of mild to extreme causal deviance of an immoral versus amoral act. The asymmetry in attributions of intentionality was observed at all but the
most extreme level of causal deviance, and, as we hypothesized, was mediated by attributions of Blame/credit and judgments of action performance. These findings are discussed as they support a multiple-concepts interpretation of the asymmetry, wherein blame renders a naïve concept of intentional action (the outcome matches the intention) more salient than a composite concept (the outcome matches the intention and was brought about by planned means), and in terms of their implications for cross-cultural research on judgments of agency.
Resumo:
Abstract
Culture has always been important for the character of the cities, as have the civic and public institutions that sustain a lifestyle and provide an identity. Substantial evidence of the unique historical, urban civilisation remains within the traditional settlements in the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal; manifested in houses, palaces, temples, rest houses, open spaces, festivals, rituals, customs and cultural institutions. Indigenous knowledge and practices prescribed the arrangement of houses, roads and urban spaces giving the city a distinctive physical form, character and a unique oriental nativeness. In technical sense, these societies did not have written rules for guiding development. In recent decades, the urban culture of the city has been changing with the forces of urbanisation and globalisation and the demand for new buildings and spaces. New residential design is increasingly dominated by distinctive patterns of Western suburban ideal comprising detached or semi-detached homes and high rise tower blocks. This architectural iconoclasm can be construed as a rather crude response to the indigenous culture and built form. The paper attempts to dismantle the current tension between traditional and contemporary ‘culture’ (and hence society) and housing (or built form) in the Kathmandu Valley by engaging in a discussion that cuts across space, time and meaning of architecture as we know it.
Resumo:
This article notes that while ethics is increasingly talked of in foreign policy, it remains a blind-spot for FPA. It argues that this must be rectified through a critical approach which conceptualises foreign policy as ethics. The first section examines how even constructivist approaches, which are highly attuned to the intersubjective sphere, still generally avoid dealing with morality. The second section looks at the possibilities and limits of one piece of constructivist theorizing that explores the translation of morality into foreign policy via ‘norms’. This demonstrates the problems that a constructivist account, with its tendency toward explanatory description without evaluation, will always face. The final section argues, through an examination of EU foreign policy (from 1999-2004) and its innovative use of ‘hospitality’, that FPA must critically reassess the value of the norms and principles by which foreign policy operates in order to suggest potentially more ethical modes of encounter.
Resumo:
This paper proposes a probabilistic principal component analysis (PCA) approach applied to islanding detection study based on wide area PMU data. The increasing probability of uncontrolled islanding operation, according to many power system operators, is one of the biggest concerns with a large penetration of distributed renewable generation. The traditional islanding detection methods, such as RoCoF and vector shift, are however extremely sensitive and may result in many unwanted trips. The proposed probabilistic PCA aims to improve islanding detection accuracy and reduce the risk of unwanted tripping based on PMU measurements, while addressing a practical issue on missing data. The reliability and accuracy of the proposed probabilistic PCA approach are demonstrated using real data recorded in the UK power system by the OpenPMU project. The results show that the proposed methods can detect islanding accurately, without being falsely triggered by generation trips, even in the presence of missing values.
Resumo:
In this paper we report a study conducted in Mongolia on the scope of morality, that is, the extent to which people moralize different social domains. Following Turiel’s moral-conventional task, we characterized moral transgressions (in contrast to conventional transgressions) in terms of two dimensions: authority independence
and generality of scope. Different moral domains are then defined by grouping such moral transgressions in terms of their content (following Haidt’s classification of morally relevant domains). There are four main results of the study. First, since all five Haidtian domains were moralized by the Mongolian participants, the study provides
evidence in favour of pluralism about moral domains. However, the study also suggests that the domain of harm can be reduced to the fairness domain. Furthermore, although the strong claim about reduction of all moral domains to the domain of fairness seems not to hold, a significant number of participants did indicate considerations of fairness across domains. Finally, a significant amount of participants moralized conventional transgressions a la Turiel, but it did not reach a statistical significance.
Resumo:
A prestação de cuidados de saúde coloca os novos enfermeiros face a situações complexas que exigem a mobilização de um conjunto de saberes próprios a fim de poderem responder de modo eficaz à diversidade, imprevisibilidade e singularidade de cada situação da prática clínica. Os ensinos clínicos são momentos determinantes na formação dos enfermeiros, pois são simultaneamente momentos de transformação de saberes, de aquisição da profissionalidade e de desenvolvimento de perfis de competências. Estas três dimensões fomentam a consciencialização do estudante para assumir novos papéis, através do confronto com situações concretas de saúde e de doença. É também neste confronto com as situações reais que surgem conflitos que envolvem valores, atitudes e emoções. Trata-se de momentos difíceis, geradores de stress, mas de importância fundamental para o desenvolvimento do processo de pensamento e construção do juízo ético. Analisar o processo global de construção do pensamento ético como sistema de desenvolvimento humano nos estudantes de enfermagem, contribuindo para a construção de saberes dirigidos para as estratégias que poderão influenciar a aprendizagem da ética no contexto da formação inicial dos enfermeiros, foi a nossa principal preocupação. Realizamos um estudo etnográfico, tipo estudo de caso, inserido numa metodologia multimétodo (quantitativa e qualitativa), na Escola Superior de Enfermagem do Porto. A investigação decorreu em três tempos distintos. Num primeiro momento, foi identificada a orientação moral dos estudantes através da aplicação de um questionário (EPQ); num segundo tempo, foi efectuada uma observação participante no sentido de identificar as formas de pensamento dos estudantes e os factores que as influenciaram ou dificultaram; num terceiro momento, foram realizadas entrevistas de forma a clarificar e aprofundar as informações recolhidas. No tratamento da informação emergiram seis dimensões de análise (contexto da prática, trajectórias da aprendizagem, influência dos modelos da prática, dinâmicas de tutoria - supervisão - e desafios de ordem ética) que nos permitiram compreender a natureza das situações éticas e os padrões de resposta dos estudantes face a essas situações, a influência do ensino da ética e também os factores influenciadores das formas de pensamento ético. A análise dos resultados revelou que, ao longo do curso de enfermagem, os estudantes desenvolvem o seu pensamento ético numa interacção recíproca de si próprios como pessoas activas (estudante) e o ambiente (contexto), onde se encontram em permanente crescimento (desenvolvimento humano), sendo que o ambiente se encontra também em constante transformação. Isto ocorre num movimento crescente, que se inicia com o “aprender a pensar” através do conhecimento acumulado (saber teórico) que lhes permite desenvolver uma actuação através do “aprender fazendo” (saber prático) de modo a atingirem com sucesso a transição para o mundo do trabalho. Tal como qualquer outro processo, o desenvolvimento do pensamento acontece em paralelo com a construção da aprendizagem, segundo etapas ou fases, que caracterizamos como: maturação, consolidação e autonomização. Ao longo do trabalho foram identificados aspectos fundamentais que carecem de reflexão e mudança nos contextos da formação inicial dos enfermeiros, cuja influência é preponderante no desenvolvimento do pensamento ético, dos quais salientamos: a nível da formação (contextos de ensino, processos supervisivos e formação de supervisores) e a nível do currículo (Plano de Estudos).
Resumo:
The increasing human activity has been responsible by profound changes and a constinuos degradation of the soil compartment in all the European territory. Some European policies are appearing focusing soil’s protection and the management of contaminated sites, in order to recover land for other uses. To regulate the risk assessment and the management of contaminated soils, many European member states adopted soil guideline values, as for example soil screnning values (SSV).These values are particularly useful for the the first tier of the Ecological Risk Assessment (ERA) processes of contaminated sites,especially for a first screening of sites requiring a more site-specific evaluation. Hence, the approriate definition of regional SSVs will have relevant economic impacts in the management of contaminated sites. Portugal is one of European Member States that still lack these soil guideline values. In this context, this study gaves a remarkable contribution in the generation of ecotoxicological data for soil microbiological parameters, terrestrial plants and invertebrates for the derivation of SSVs for uranium (U), cadmium (Cd) and copper (Cu), using a Portuguese natural soil, representative of a dominant type of soil in the Portuguese territory. SSVs were derived based on two methods proposed by the the Technical Guidance Document for Risk Assessment of the European Commission; namely the assessment factor method (AF) and the species sensitivity distribution (SSD) method (with some adaptations). The outputs of both methods were compared and discussed. Further, this study laid the foundation for a deeper reflection about the cut-off (hazard concentration for a given percentage of species - HCps) to be estimated from the SSDs, and to be selected for the derivation of SSVs, with the adequate level of protection. It was proven that this selection may vary for different contaminants, however a clear justification should be given, in each case. The SSvs proposed in this study were for: U (151.4 mg U kg-1dw), Cd (5.6 mg Cd kg-1dw), and Cu (58.5 mg Cu kg-1dw) These values should now be tested for their descriminating power of soils with different levels of contamination. However, this studies clarifies the approach that should be followed for the derivation of SSVs for other metals and organic contaminants, and for other dominant types of Portuguese natural soils.
Resumo:
La discussion des résultats expose ce qui s'avère être des éléments de continuité majeurs transversaux. Ces huit éléments de continuité majeurs, soit finalement les résultats principaux de notre recherche, se détaillent ainsi: (1) Le développement de l'individu est au coeur des préoccupations de tous les programmes; (2) Les relations interpersonnelles sont toujours travaillées; (3) Bien qu'on touche des savoirs davantage théoriques, ce sont surtout des aptitudes et des habiletés qu'on désire développer en morale et en éthique; (4) L'évaluation formative est prédominante sur l'évaluation sommative, bien que celle-ci soit également utilisée; (5) Les valeurs et les normes composent une partie du contenu de tous les programmes; (6) Le développement du jugement (moral, éthique, critique) est une constante; (7) On s'attend à ce que l'élève soit actif dans le développement de son jugement; (8) L'enseignant a plusieurs rôles, les plus importants étant d'être un motivateur, une personne ressource et un modèle. Parce qu'ils marquent une cassure certaine entre l'enseignement de l'éthique et l'enseignement de la morale, certains éléments de rupture retiennent également l'attention : (1) La place et le rôle de la religion; (2) La question du positionnement. En conclusion, cette recherche théorique permet de faire le pont entre l'enseignement moral et l'enseignement de l'éthique, exposant entre autres ce qui peut être transféré du premier vers le second.
Resumo:
Dissertação de mestrado, Psicologia Clínica e da Saúde, Faculdade de Ciências Humanas e Sociais, Universidade do Algarve, 2014
Resumo:
Relatório da prática de ensino supervisionada, Mestrado em Ensino de Filosofia, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014