948 resultados para Argue With Me
Resumo:
In this article Caroline Heim explores an avenue for the audience's contribution to the theatrical event that has emerged as increasingly important over the past decade: postperformance discussions. With the exception of theatres that actively encourage argument such as the Staatstheater Stuttgart, most extant audience discussions in Western mainstream theatres privilege the voice of the theatre expert. Caroline Heim presents case studies of post-performance discussions held after performances of Anne of the Thousand Days and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? which trialled a new model of audience co-creation. An audience text which informs the theatrical event was created, and a new role, that of audience critic, established in the process.
Resumo:
This paper continues the conversation from recent articles examining potential remedies available for incorrect decisions by sports officials. In particular, this article focuses on bringing an action against an official in negligence for pure economic loss. Using precedent cases, it determines that such an action would have a low chance of success, as a duty of care would be difficult to establish. Even if that could be overcome, an aggrieved player or team would still face further hurdles at the stages of breach, causation and defences. The article concludes by proposing some options to further reduce the small risk of liability to officials.
Resumo:
Solar Cities Congress 2008 “Energising Sustainable Communities – Options for Our Future” THEME 3: Climate Change. Impact on Society and Culture. Sub Theme: planning and implementing holistic strategies for sustainable transport Abstract Promoting the use of cycling as an environmentally and socially sustainable form of transport. We need to reduce carbon emissions. We need to reduce fuel consumption. We need to reduce pollution. We need to reduce traffic congestion. As obesity levels and associated health problems in the developed nations continue to increase we need to adopt a healthier lifestyle. Few if any would argue with these statements. In fact many would consider these problems to be amongst the most urgent that our society faces. What if we had a vehicle that uses no fossil fuel to power it, creates no pollution, takes up far less space on the roads and promotes an active, healthy lifestyle. What if this machine would have energy efficiency levels 50 times greater than the car? This is a solution that is here, now and ready to go and many of us already own one. It is the humble bicycle. Although bicycle sales in Australia now outnumber car sales, bicycle use as a form of transport (as opposed to recreation) only constitutes around 3% to 4% of all trips. So, why are bicycles the forgotten form of transport if they promise to deliver the benefits that I have just outlined? This paper examines the underlying reasons for the relatively low use of bicycles as a means of transport. It identifies the areas of greatest potential for encouraging the use of the world’s most efficient form of transport. Tim Williams - May 2007
Resumo:
The ethical conduct of professionals has been the focus of increasing scrutiny over the past several decades as members of the public, the media, professional bodies, and legislative authorities have struggled to define ethical behaviour in times of governmental change, increasing internationalisation, globalised communications, threats of terrorism, and the challenges of developments in science and medicine (e.g., Demmke & Bossaert, 2004). National governments and transnational bodies have responded to these concerns about ethics and corruption through measures such as the United Nations Convention Against Corruption (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2004), Transparency International’s annual corruption index (2010) and Queensland’s Public Sector Ethics Act 1994 (Queensland Parliament 1994). Similarly, academic interest in ethics and its application across a range of domains(e.g., business, health care, social welfare, criminal justice, law, journalism, defence, environment, and media) has also increased. To illustrate, in 1993, a non-partisan, non-profit national umbrella organisation, the Australian Association for Professional and Applied Ethics, was formed following a conference concerned with the teaching of ethics (http://www.arts.unsw.edu.au./aapae/about_aapae/about_aapae.htm), while a recent review of the Excellence in Research for Australian rankings of national and international academic journals revealed that 16 journals related to ethics had received the top ratings of A* or A (Australian Research Council, 2009). In this chapter we examine professional ethics and argue, with specific reference to the context of pre-service teacher education, that Service-learning is one way of enhancing emerging professionals’ understanding of ethics.
Resumo:
Purpose: Advocates and critics of target-setting in the workplace seem unable to reach beyond their own well-entrenched battle lines. While the advocates of goal-directed behaviour point to what they see as demonstrable advantages, the critics of target-setting highlight equally demonstrable disadvantages. Indeed, the academic literature on this topic is currently mired in controversy, with neither side seemingly capable of envisaging a better way forward. This paper seeks to break the current deadlock and move thinking forward in this important aspect of performance measurement and management by outlining a new, more fruitful approach, based on both theory and practical experience. Design/methodology/approach: The topic was approached in three phases: assembling and reading key academic and other literature on the subject of target-setting and goal-directed behaviour, with a view to understanding, in depth, the arguments advanced by the advocates and critics of target-setting; comparing these published arguments with one's own experiential findings, in order to bring the essence of disagreement into much sharper focus; and then bringing to bear the academic and practical experience to identify the essential elements of a new, more fruitful approach offering all the benefits of goal-directed behaviour with none of the typical disadvantages of target-setting. Findings: The research led to three key findings: the advocates of goal-directed behaviour and critics of target-setting each make valid points, as seen from their own current perspectives; the likelihood of these two communities, left to themselves, ever reaching a new synthesis, seems vanishingly small (with leading thinkers in the goal-directed behaviour community already acknowledging this); and, between the three authors, it was discovered that their unusual combination of academic study and practical experience enabled them to see things differently. Hence, they would like to share their new thinking more widely. Research limitations/implications: The authors fully accept that their paper is informed by extensive practical experience and, as yet, there have been no opportunities to test their findings, conclusions and recommendations through rigorous academic research. However, they hope that the paper will move thinking forward in this arena, thereby informing future academic research. Practical implications: The authors hope that the practical implications of the paper will be significant, as it outlines a novel way for organisations to capture the benefits of goal-directed behaviour with none of the disadvantages typically associated with target-setting. Social implications: Given that increased efficiency and effectiveness in the management of organisations would be good for society, the authors think the paper has interesting social implications. Originality/value: Leading thinkers in the field of goal-directed behaviour, such as Locke and Latham, and leading critics of target-setting, such as Ordóñez et al. continue to argue with one another - much like, at the turn of the nineteenth century, proponents of the "wave theory of light" and proponents of the "particle theory of light" were similarly at loggerheads. Just as this furious scientific debate was ultimately resolved by Taylor's experiment, showing that light could behave both as a particle and wave at the same time, the authors believe that the paper demonstrates that goal-directed behaviour and target-setting can successfully co-exist. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Resumo:
It is now over fifteen years since the Human Rights Act was enacted in November 1998. Although in legal terms it is difficult to argue with the proposition that the Act is working in an effective manner, in political terms the Act remains one of the most highly debated pieces of legislation on the UK statute books. In recent years there have been numerous calls for the repeal of the Act, and for its replacement with a ‘UK Bill of Rights’. Such calls led to the establishment of a Commission on a Bill of Rights, which issued its final report in December 2012. Little progress has since been made on the issue. One notable occurrence however was the introduction of the Human Rights Act 1998 (Repeal and Substitution) Bill, a Private Member’s Bill which was eventually withdrawn in March 2013. This article seeks to assess the current situation regarding the bill of rights debate, and ultimately the question of the future prospects of the Human Rights Act, an issue of immense legal significance. Overall, it will be questioned whether the enactment of a UK Bill of Rights would constitute an improvement on the current position under the Human Rights Act.
Resumo:
This article is a response to Ray Pawson’s critique of critical realism, the philosophy of science elaborated by Roy Bhaskar. I argue with Pawson’s interpretation of critical realism’s positions on both natural and social science and his charges concerning its totalizing ontology, its arrogant epistemology and its naive methodology. The differences between critical realism and realist evaluation are not as significant as Pawson contends. The main differences between the two realisms lie in their approaches to the relationship between social structures and human agency, and between facts and values. I argue that evaluation scientists need to clearly distinguish structure and agency. They should also make their values explicit. The uncritical approach of realist evaluation, combined with its underplaying of the importance of agency, leaves it open to implication in the abuses of bureaucratic instrumentalism.
Resumo:
O presente estudo teve como objectivo considerar os contributos teoréticos da teoria da argumentação no processo de ensino-aprendizagem da disciplina de Religião. Foram considerados três aspectos para fazer o enquadramento teórico do estudo realizado. Em primeiro lugar, uma reflexão sobre o conceito de processo de ensinoaprendizagem (ensino, aprendizagem e papel do professor). De seguida, procedeu-se a uma contextualização teórica sobre argumentação, na perspectiva de rever os contributos cientificamente mais relevantes e actuais. Finalmente, a descrição e análise do programa Argue With Me, desenvolvido no Teachers College da Universidade de Columbia, nos Estados Unidos da América. O estudo de caso que apresentamos prende-se exactamente com a aplicação de uma adaptação do programa Argue With Me a alunos do 7º ano de escolaridade no âmbito da disciplina de Religião de uma escola privada em Lisboa. Os alunos participaram na actividade a propósito dos conteúdos da disciplina, sendo submetidos a uma metodologia de tipo argumentativo, por oposição a outro grupo de alunos, a quem foi leccionada a mesma matéria segundo uma abordagem enunciativa. A aplicação de um Pré-Teste e de um Pós-Teste permitiram recolher e analisar os dados, e daí retirar algumas conclusões sobre as mais-valias do programa Argue With Me, como emblemático de uma mudança de paradigma nas tradicionais metodologias didácticas.
Resumo:
In the philosophical literature, self-deception is mainly approached through the analysis of paradoxes. Yet, it is agreed that self-deception is motivated by protection from distress. In this paper, we argue, with the help of findings from cognitive neuroscience and psychology, that self-deception is a type of affective coping. First, we criticize the main solutions to the paradoxes of self-deception. We then present a new approach to self-deception. Self-deception, we argue, involves three appraisals of the distressing evidence: (a) appraisal of the strength of evidence as uncertain, (b) low coping potential and (c) negative anticipation along the lines of Damasio's somatic marker hypothesis. At the same time, desire impacts the treatment of flattering evidence via dopamine. Our main proposal is that self-deception involves emotional mechanisms provoking a preference for immediate reward despite possible long-term negative repercussions. In the last part, we use this emotional model to revisit the philosophical paradoxes.
Resumo:
Ce mémoire a pour but d’explorer la littérature sur le sujet de la justice scolaire. L’étude sera divisée sous trois axes. Il sera question d’abord de l’accessibilité à l’éducation. Il y a au moins quatre grands principes au libéralisme : (1) les individus sont libres et égaux ; (2) les individus ont tous droit à des chances égales de mener à terme leur projet de vie ; (3) les individus sont détenteurs d’un ensemble de droits garantis par la société ; (4) l’État adopte une posture de neutralité. Partant de ces valeurs, nous établissons des liens avec la nécessité d’une accessibilité à l’éducation. En second lieu, ce mémoire étudiera trois modèles d’école : l’école parentale, l’école étatique, et l’école orientée vers l’autonomie. Nous argumenterons, avec Harry Brighouse, à l’effet que l’éducation orientée vers l’autonomie constitue l’objectif qui respecte le plus les valeurs du libéralisme, dont l’impératif de neutralité, et les intérêts des jeunes. Dans la dernière partie de cette étude, nous étudierons trois conceptions de l’égalité : égalité des ressources (Jean-Fabien Spitz), égalité des opportunités (Richard Arneson) de bien-être et le suffisantisme (Debra Satz). Afin de juger de leurs qualités respectives, nous tenterons de les appliquer au système éducatif afin d’en faire ressortir les forces et les faiblesses.
Resumo:
The final question is: what happens in the meantime? Is it effective to dissent while conservatives hold power and clearty are not about to make any major changes? What good does it do to repeatedly bang one's head against the wall when progress is not being made? There is no one simple answer to this question, but rather several applicable ones. The first possible answer is that dissent currently does little good. The conservative hierarchy is still the dominant force within Catholicism. This hierarchy has made a habit, evidenced by the birth control debate, of pressing its conservative agenda despite popular opposition. Many people think, that if this hierarchy has not given in to the mass of opinion against it yet, dissent is futile and useless. Why argue with someone who does not listen to your argument?
Resumo:
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
Resumo:
Kathleen Akins argues that "the traditional view" of sensory systems assumes too quickly that their function is detecting features of the outside environment. Instead, some systems are "narcissistic"--their signals tell their own states--and others may send signals that are not about anything at all. But Akins overlooks that "traditionalists" may argue, with Millikan, that the function of sensory systems may be steering motor routines. Aboutness comes in as how the systems have steered in ways evolution liked--by gearing steering to external features. Color vision and olfaction, for example, are thus, about external features.
Resumo:
En este trabajo, nos proponemos polemizar con la interpretación de Paul Ricoeur según la cual en la obra de Hannah Arendt puede encontrarse una concepción narrativa de la identidad. En primer lugar, indagamos en torno del peculiar carácter fragmentario de la narración en Arendt. En segundo lugar,destacamos el vínculo que Arendt establece entre la identidad y el discurso,por lo que entendemos que podría concebirse una articulación que no seanecesariamente narrativa. Por último, consideramos que la identidad poseeuna dimensión fenoménica en Arendt, que se manifiesta en el hecho de que el quién se muestra y aparece ante los otros. Estas singularidades resultan a su vez esclarecidas remitiendo al abordaje de la historia de Walter Benjamin y a su noción de imagen dialéctica
Resumo:
En este trabajo, nos proponemos polemizar con la interpretación de Paul Ricoeur según la cual en la obra de Hannah Arendt puede encontrarse una concepción narrativa de la identidad. En primer lugar, indagamos en torno del peculiar carácter fragmentario de la narración en Arendt. En segundo lugar,destacamos el vínculo que Arendt establece entre la identidad y el discurso,por lo que entendemos que podría concebirse una articulación que no seanecesariamente narrativa. Por último, consideramos que la identidad poseeuna dimensión fenoménica en Arendt, que se manifiesta en el hecho de que el quién se muestra y aparece ante los otros. Estas singularidades resultan a su vez esclarecidas remitiendo al abordaje de la historia de Walter Benjamin y a su noción de imagen dialéctica