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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND: THE EFFECT OF SOCIAL EXCLUSION ON MIND ASCRIPTION AND AGGRESSION

Moreno, Ryan M. 08 July 2019 (has links)
No description available.
2

Self-Consciousness, Self-Ascription, and the Mental Self

Cheng, Chieh-ling 12 August 2016 (has links)
Galen Strawson argues that we have a sense of mental selves, which are entities that have mental features but do not have bodily features. In particular, he argues that there is a form of self-consciousness that involves a conception of the mental self. His mental self view is opposed to the embodied self view, the view that the self must be conceived of as an entity that has both mental and bodily features. In this paper, I will argue against Strawson’s mental self view and for the embodied self view. I will draw on P. F. Strawson’s theory of persons and Gareth Evans’ Generality Constraint to argue that Galen Strawson fails to provide a satisfactory account of the mental self that can counter the embodied self view.
3

Learning from reliable and unreliable speakers / Early development and underlying mechanisms

Schmid, Benjamin 05 December 2018 (has links)
No description available.
4

Influence of Culture and Communication Practices in Team Functioning<em></em> : <em>Case Studies on Japanese and Philippine Financial Project Teams</em>

Andaya, Arleigh January 2010 (has links)
<p>This research paper was aimed at analysing the influence of culture and communication practices in team functioning.  The scope of the study was limited to the project teams in the financial sector in Japan and the Philippines. The study was a qualitative research through the application of case studies whilst the primary data were gathered from semi-structured interviews. The findings of the study revealed that the project teams were collectivist with a noticeable degree of power distance, bestowment of status through ascription and the strong need for harmony in the project team environment. The communication practices were also affected by the hierarchical, relational, societal and regulatory dictates and expectations. However, there were some differences noted in Japanese and Philippine project teams as the latter exhibited more flexibility towards hierarchical relationship where position was not seen as hindrance in developing convivial and professional relationships. In so doing, culture and communication practices influenced team functioning in the aforementioned research context. Finally, the results of the study will allow project members, leaders and other key stakeholders in understanding the influence of culture and communication practices to team functioning in a more in-depth manner. This will lead to better policies and practices in helping them realise their goals and objectives.</p>
5

Influence of Culture and Communication Practices in Team Functioning : Case Studies on Japanese and Philippine Financial Project Teams

Andaya, Arleigh January 2010 (has links)
This research paper was aimed at analysing the influence of culture and communication practices in team functioning.  The scope of the study was limited to the project teams in the financial sector in Japan and the Philippines. The study was a qualitative research through the application of case studies whilst the primary data were gathered from semi-structured interviews. The findings of the study revealed that the project teams were collectivist with a noticeable degree of power distance, bestowment of status through ascription and the strong need for harmony in the project team environment. The communication practices were also affected by the hierarchical, relational, societal and regulatory dictates and expectations. However, there were some differences noted in Japanese and Philippine project teams as the latter exhibited more flexibility towards hierarchical relationship where position was not seen as hindrance in developing convivial and professional relationships. In so doing, culture and communication practices influenced team functioning in the aforementioned research context. Finally, the results of the study will allow project members, leaders and other key stakeholders in understanding the influence of culture and communication practices to team functioning in a more in-depth manner. This will lead to better policies and practices in helping them realise their goals and objectives.
6

Belief & Linguistic Agency

Richardson, Carolyn 17 February 2011 (has links)
This dissertation consists in a defence of the claim that belief is a state on which its bearer can reflect only deliberatively. That partial characterization of the concept is intended to throw light on the status of belief as a rational phenomenon. I defend it by appeal to features of our actual and imagined practices of ascribing belief linguistically, both to others and ourselves. Having set out the characterization in the first of four chapters, in the second chapter I survey the ways of learning from words: evidentially, by report, and by belief-expression. I go on to propose that where a person’s words afford belief of his belief, they do so through the belief-expressive character of assertoric speech. In the third chapter, I defend that claim as it applies to the case of ascribing belief to another. I argue that my characterization best explains the fact that we do not ordinarily report our beliefs or invite others to do so. I explain our ordinarily ascribing belief from the expressive character of assertoric speech by appeal to the relation between assertion and belief. In the fourth chapter, I turn to the prospect of ascribing oneself belief based on one’s own words. I argue that self-ascribing belief through the expressive character of words is alone consistent with the self-ascriber’s basic psychological and linguistic integrity. I recommend my characterization of belief for its capacity to explain the disintegrating effects of self-ascribing belief by one’s own report. I again appeal to the relation between assertoric speech and belief to explain the feasibility of self-ascribing belief through the expressive character of one’s words.
7

Belief & Linguistic Agency

Richardson, Carolyn 17 February 2011 (has links)
This dissertation consists in a defence of the claim that belief is a state on which its bearer can reflect only deliberatively. That partial characterization of the concept is intended to throw light on the status of belief as a rational phenomenon. I defend it by appeal to features of our actual and imagined practices of ascribing belief linguistically, both to others and ourselves. Having set out the characterization in the first of four chapters, in the second chapter I survey the ways of learning from words: evidentially, by report, and by belief-expression. I go on to propose that where a person’s words afford belief of his belief, they do so through the belief-expressive character of assertoric speech. In the third chapter, I defend that claim as it applies to the case of ascribing belief to another. I argue that my characterization best explains the fact that we do not ordinarily report our beliefs or invite others to do so. I explain our ordinarily ascribing belief from the expressive character of assertoric speech by appeal to the relation between assertion and belief. In the fourth chapter, I turn to the prospect of ascribing oneself belief based on one’s own words. I argue that self-ascribing belief through the expressive character of words is alone consistent with the self-ascriber’s basic psychological and linguistic integrity. I recommend my characterization of belief for its capacity to explain the disintegrating effects of self-ascribing belief by one’s own report. I again appeal to the relation between assertoric speech and belief to explain the feasibility of self-ascribing belief through the expressive character of one’s words.
8

Das mutet besonders gegenwartsnah an - anmuten mit (deverbalem) Adjektiv als nonagentive Konstruktion

Lasch, Alexander 31 August 2022 (has links)
Der Beitrag stellt das System passivischer als nonagentiver Konstruktionen des Deutschen als Gegenstand einer gebrauchsbasierten Konstruktionsgrammatik und Diskussionsangebot (im Anschluss an Lasch 2016a) vor. Die Konstruktionen der ASKRIPTION, der KOMMUTATION und der AKZEPTATION werden im Hin blick auf die ihnen eigene Perspektivierungsleistung ausfuhrlich vorgestellt und am Beispiel der Einbettung von anmuten in die Konstruktion der ASKRIPTION einer qualitativen Analyse unterzogen, die bezüglich des Verhältnisses zwischen kognitiver und kommunikativer Perspektivität einen interessanten Sonderfall dar stellt. Eine Einfuhrung in die Konstruktionsgrammatik des Deutschen und eine Würdigung der Forschung zu passivischen Strukturen des Deutschen kann der Beitrag nicht ersetzen. / This article introduces the System of passive non-agentive constructions in German in the framework of a usage-based construction grammar as a contribution to the debate on the subject (following Lasch 2016a). The constructions of ASCRIPTION, COMMUTATION and ACCEPTATION are discussed in detail with regard to their effect on perspectivation and are subjected to a qualitative analysis using the example of the embedding of anmuten in the construction of ASCRIPTION, which represents an interesting Special case of the relationship between cognitive and communicative perspectivity. The article cannot replace an introduction to a constructive grammar of German and an awareness of the research on passive structures in German.
9

Acting and understanding

Blomberg Stathopoulos, Alexander C. January 2016 (has links)
This thesis concerns the question of what it is for a subject to act. It answers this question in three steps. The first step is taken by arguing that any satisfactory answer must build on the idea that an action is something predicable of the acting subject. The second step is taken by arguing in support of an answer which does build on this idea, and does so by introducing the idea that acting is doing something which is an exercise of a particular kind of disposition on the part of the acting subject. The third step is taken by arguing that the disposition in question must be of a kind which is exercised in conditions in which the acting subject thinks they are acting. From this vantage point the thesis develops many further commitments: That action is constitutively subject to a mode of explanation that mentions the kind of disposition just mentioned; that any case of acting requires a veridical representation of a means by which the action is performed; and that a problem about the underspecified nature of desire ascriptions can be solved by appeal to the conceptual materials made available by these investigations. The thesis finally develops several objections to the account it gives, both substantive and methodological, and explains why these objections ought to be rejected.
10

社經背景、教育因素與職業成就關係之研究

符碧真, FU, BI-ZHEN Unknown Date (has links)
本研究旨在探討依屬因素(ascription factors,以社經背景為代表)與獲致因素( achievement facrors ,以教育因素為代表)兩者對個人職業成就影響的相對性,以 瞭解我國社會階層化過程的情形。 本文共一冊,分五章撰寫,各章要點如下: 第一章緒論,敘述本研究的動機、目的與重要名詞解釋。 第二章文獻探討,探究社會階層化的現象,社經背景、教育因素與職業成就的關係及 變項的向度問題。 第三章研究設計,說明研究對象、工具、實施過程及統計方法。 第四章敘述研究結果。 第五章根據研究結果予以討論。

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