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Moral Performance, Shared Humanness, and the Interrelatedness of Self and Other: A Study of Hannah Arendt's Post-Eichmann WorkShlozberg, Reuven 05 December 2012 (has links)
This thesis is a critical discussion of political thinker Hannah Arendt’s moral thought, as developed in her works from EICHMANN IN JERUSALEM onwards. Arendt, I argue, sought to respond to the moral challenge she saw posed by the phenomenon of banal evildoing, as revealed in Nazi Germany. Banal evildoers are agents who, under circumstances in which their ordinary moral triggers and guides (conscience, moral habits and norms, the behavior of their peers, etc.) are subverted, commit evil despite having no evil intent. Such subversion of ordinary moral voices would appear to absolve these agents from moral responsibility for their acts, which led most commentators to reject claims to such subversion by Nazi collaborators. Arendt, who sees the phenomenon of banal evildoing as factually substantiated, set out to show that such agents possessed other mental capacities (namely, critical and speculative thinking, reflective judging, and free willing), more appropriate for moral decision-making, on which they could have relied even under Nazi conditions. It is for their disregard of such capacities that banal evildoers can be held morally responsible.
In this thesis I critically engage with this Arendtian argument. I show how the Nazi subversion of German agents’ ordinary moral voices was achieved. I then exegetically explicate Arendt’s (unfinished) analysis of the above mental capacities and of their moral role. I then argue for the addition of the capacities of empathetic perception and practical wisdom to this understanding of moral performance. In the course of this analysis I show that in responding to this challenge, Arendt develops a powerful argument regarding the moral dangers of overreliance on mental shortcuts in decision-making, a strong argument regarding the interconnectedness between morality and humanness, and implicitly, a novel conception of selfhood that sees otherness as interrelated and interconnected with selfhood, such that concern for others is part of what constitutes, and therefore is inscribed into, care for the self. I end by critically assessing the applicability of Arendt’s moral analysis to more ordinary decisional circumstances than those of Nazi Germany, and the insight this analysis points to regarding the relationship between moral and political decision-making.
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Compassion in Schools: Life Stories of Four Holistic EducatorsKim, Young-Yie 10 January 2012 (has links)
In this study the author investigates the nature of compassion, ways of developing compassion within ourselves, and ways of bringing compassion into schools. The author sees an imbalance and disconnection in the current Ontario public school system, between education of the mind (to have) and education of the heart (to be). This is demonstrated in the heightening violence in schools, because violence in schools means that students do not feel connected to and are not happy in their schools.
To accomplish this purpose, the author explores the different ways we can connect—within ourselves, with classroom subjects, with students in the school, and with the community at large—through life stories of four holistic educators, including herself. Three have taught in Buddhist, Waldorf, and Montessori schools, which all foster compassion not only through empathy, caring, and love, but also through emotional and moral components of heart education, such as intuition, creativity, imagination, joy (Miller, 2006), and moral education (Noddings, 1992). The enquiry uses qualitative research and narrative method that includes portraiture and arts-based enquiry.
The findings in the participants’ narratives reveal that compassion comprises spirituality, empathy, and caring. We can develop compassion through contemplation in an awareness of interconnection between the I and the Other. In conclusion, we can foster compassion in schools if we use holistic education’s basic principles of balance, inclusion, and connection (Miller, 1981, 1993, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2010), and if we bring in different ways of fostering compassion that the author has explored through four holistic teachers’ narratives in this study. By nurturing and connecting to students’ hearts, rather than forcing knowledge into their heads, it is possible to create schools where students are happy and feel connected to their learning.
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Moral Performance, Shared Humanness, and the Interrelatedness of Self and Other: A Study of Hannah Arendt's Post-Eichmann WorkShlozberg, Reuven 05 December 2012 (has links)
This thesis is a critical discussion of political thinker Hannah Arendt’s moral thought, as developed in her works from EICHMANN IN JERUSALEM onwards. Arendt, I argue, sought to respond to the moral challenge she saw posed by the phenomenon of banal evildoing, as revealed in Nazi Germany. Banal evildoers are agents who, under circumstances in which their ordinary moral triggers and guides (conscience, moral habits and norms, the behavior of their peers, etc.) are subverted, commit evil despite having no evil intent. Such subversion of ordinary moral voices would appear to absolve these agents from moral responsibility for their acts, which led most commentators to reject claims to such subversion by Nazi collaborators. Arendt, who sees the phenomenon of banal evildoing as factually substantiated, set out to show that such agents possessed other mental capacities (namely, critical and speculative thinking, reflective judging, and free willing), more appropriate for moral decision-making, on which they could have relied even under Nazi conditions. It is for their disregard of such capacities that banal evildoers can be held morally responsible.
In this thesis I critically engage with this Arendtian argument. I show how the Nazi subversion of German agents’ ordinary moral voices was achieved. I then exegetically explicate Arendt’s (unfinished) analysis of the above mental capacities and of their moral role. I then argue for the addition of the capacities of empathetic perception and practical wisdom to this understanding of moral performance. In the course of this analysis I show that in responding to this challenge, Arendt develops a powerful argument regarding the moral dangers of overreliance on mental shortcuts in decision-making, a strong argument regarding the interconnectedness between morality and humanness, and implicitly, a novel conception of selfhood that sees otherness as interrelated and interconnected with selfhood, such that concern for others is part of what constitutes, and therefore is inscribed into, care for the self. I end by critically assessing the applicability of Arendt’s moral analysis to more ordinary decisional circumstances than those of Nazi Germany, and the insight this analysis points to regarding the relationship between moral and political decision-making.
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Compassion in Schools: Life Stories of Four Holistic EducatorsKim, Young-Yie 10 January 2012 (has links)
In this study the author investigates the nature of compassion, ways of developing compassion within ourselves, and ways of bringing compassion into schools. The author sees an imbalance and disconnection in the current Ontario public school system, between education of the mind (to have) and education of the heart (to be). This is demonstrated in the heightening violence in schools, because violence in schools means that students do not feel connected to and are not happy in their schools.
To accomplish this purpose, the author explores the different ways we can connect—within ourselves, with classroom subjects, with students in the school, and with the community at large—through life stories of four holistic educators, including herself. Three have taught in Buddhist, Waldorf, and Montessori schools, which all foster compassion not only through empathy, caring, and love, but also through emotional and moral components of heart education, such as intuition, creativity, imagination, joy (Miller, 2006), and moral education (Noddings, 1992). The enquiry uses qualitative research and narrative method that includes portraiture and arts-based enquiry.
The findings in the participants’ narratives reveal that compassion comprises spirituality, empathy, and caring. We can develop compassion through contemplation in an awareness of interconnection between the I and the Other. In conclusion, we can foster compassion in schools if we use holistic education’s basic principles of balance, inclusion, and connection (Miller, 1981, 1993, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2010), and if we bring in different ways of fostering compassion that the author has explored through four holistic teachers’ narratives in this study. By nurturing and connecting to students’ hearts, rather than forcing knowledge into their heads, it is possible to create schools where students are happy and feel connected to their learning.
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Två sidor av samma mynt : En studie om mötet inom ekonomiskt biståndZellmani, Yvonne, Bauer, Betty January 2012 (has links)
The overarching aim of this paper is to study the professional encounter in its complexity. The requirements for receiving welfare is set by the professional and it's the professionals decision if they are met in the proper manner. This makes the assessment of the clients conditions and the correctness of the assessment hence important. There are several levels which is necessary for the social worker to take into consideration. We have therefore made a socio-analysis by using a theoretical model of Johansson (2006) where he uses the Social Psychology of the encounter to create a model with four levels, which is always present in the professional encounter: structural, positional, relational, and experience level. Our base was that the one responsible for handling these levels was the professional which led us to search for literature concerning the professional approach. Our study is formed as a qualitative case-study. Our empirical data consist of qualitative interviews with four social workers handling social allowance.The results shows that the complexity of the professional encounter requires a professional approach. Furthermore it shows a need for more reflection of all factors of the meeting in its context. But these abilities are by no means obvious.
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"Love is all you need" : En kvalitativ studie om betydelsen av kärlek som praktiskt redskap i socialt arbete / "Love is all you need" : A qualitative study about the meaning of love as a practical tool in social workCarlsson, Cecilia, Edborg, Helena January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Kundenorientierte Wissensaufnahmefähigkeit des UnternehmensDuchmann, Christian 13 June 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Kundenorientierung ist ein maßgeblicher Erfolgsfaktor für Unternehmen. Entscheidenden Einfluss hierauf besitzen Mitarbeiter mit Kunden-Kontakt, die sich in Bedürfnisse der Kunden einfühlen können und die ihr Wissen mit anderen Mitarbeitern im Unternehmen teilen. In einem schrittweisen und systematischen Vorgehen werden in dieser Arbeit betriebswirtschaftliche und neurowissenschaftlichen Erkenntnisse zusammengeführt und hierdurch dargelegt, welche Faktoren im Unternehmen diese Gehirnleistung des Einfühlens begünstigen. Die Mehr-Ebenen-Analyse erfolgt ausgehend von der Unternehmensebene, insbesondere Phänomenen der Unternehmenskultur, über die Ebene der Beziehungen zwischen Kunden und Mitarbeitern bis hin zur Ebene des sozialen Gehirns.
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The fountainhead of innovation health : a conceptualization & investigationGlassér, Charlotte January 2010 (has links)
This thesis, addresses the convergence between several strings of current research in the quest for a better understanding of the co-dependency and co-evolution of the human being and her ability to innovate, organize and provide products and services through competitive firms. The introduction and development of the concepts “Innovation Health” and “Systems of Innovation Health” aims at capturing emerging interdisciplinary understanding of early childhood developmental health and human life-spanning developmental conditions, to the extent that they are relevant for economic change, knowledge- and innovation related theory and research. An overview and analysis of global demographic changes, as they relate to Innovation Health is provided. Further, an extended view or possible emerging Theory of the Knowing and Innovating Firm is proposed and elaborated. Furthermore, Stein’s effort in the early 20th century to create a new philosophy of the humanities and a model of the human being is revisited. Her ontology of association, community and the human being is introduced in the context of organizational economics and knowledge-based theories. Her philosophy and “emergentis” ontology is applied as the theoretical framework of Innovation Health and the entire research effort.
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L’inconscient tactile, ou, Les échos de la chair dans l’imageBlanchet, Avril 03 1900 (has links)
Dans la présente thèse, nous cherchons à comprendre comment l’image peut éclairer les questions de survivance et de transmission des traces psychiques et culturelles, à travers la notion d’un inconscient tactile. L’image n’est pas seulement simulacre, elle est présence porteuse de la trace psychique, de l’empreinte du réel, présentée à la perception pour en permettre la connaissance. Cette approche de l’image permet de mettre en lumière et d’expérimenter le lien qui existe entre mémoire et sensation, lorsque se dessine l’aptitude de l’image à conserver les traces vives d’une modification plastique imprimée dans la matière et à raviver la charge sensorielle du souvenir. Au fond de l’image, c’est principalement la persistance d’un inconscient, dans sa dimension tactile, que nous explorons. L’étude de ce médium capable d’actualiser l’inconscient tactile devient aussi une occasion, un prétexte, pour articuler une compréhension du point de contact où l’individu se relie à ses semblables et où il entre dans la vie de relation.
Nous examinons donc comment l’image occupe une fonction carrefour entre le phénomène de la représentation et celui de la présentation, puis comment le mouvement de l’image vers la matière brute du souvenir fait d’elle un vecteur de plasticité psychique, de remaniement des traces et de créativité. Par ailleurs, nous suggérons que l’appareil perceptuel de l’homme, qui le rend capable d’être ému et sensible à une image artistique, de se laisser toucher par la présence tangible d’une œuvre, est le même qui permet que l’homme s’identifie à son semblable et éprouve de l’empathie à son égard. En ce sens, un parallèle est tracé entre le travail de l’image et le travail de culture. La façon dont certaines formes d’art contemporain s’appliquent à jouer avec les modalités du sensible est cependant aussi soumise à des limites qui sont inhérentes à la matière, comme nous le démontrons dans une réflexion sur les avatars d’une certaine postmodernité. / In this thesis, we seek to understand how the image can enlighten the comprehension of the persistence and transmission of psychic and cultural imprints, through the notion of a tactile unconscious. The image is not only an illusion, it is the carrying presence of the psychic imprint - the stamp of the real - appearing to perception to allow for its awareness. Using this approach toward the image, we can shed light on and appreciate the link between memory and sensation. At the core of the image, it is primarily the persistence of a tactile dimension of the unconscious that we explore in this research. The study of this medium, which is capable of bringing forth the tactile unconscious, is hence an opportunity and a pretext to convey an understanding of the contact point where individuals connect with their fellow human beings and where they enter into relational life.
We therefore examine how the image is at the crossroads between the phenomenon of representation and that of presentation, and how the movement of the image toward the raw material of memory makes it a vector of psychic plasticity, imprint transformation, and creativity. In addition, we suggest that the human perceptual apparatus, which allows us to be moved and be sensitive to an artistic image - to be touched by the tangible presence of a work of art - also allows us to identify with and feel empathy toward others. In this sense, we trace a parallel between the effect of the image and the effect of culture. There are, however, inherent limits to the reshaping of perception brought about by certain forms of art, as we will demonstrate in an examination of the mishaps of a certain post-modernity.
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Barbaric mistakes: Western print media’s portrayal of “ethnic” conflictsRoff, Katherine Louise January 2013 (has links)
This study addressed the question: “Does Western media framing of different actors in ethnic conflict influence the likelihood of intervention being advocated in the media?” In order to answer this question, this study used a content analysis of USA, UK and Australian print media, and explored the media framing of conflicts in Rwanda, Kosovo, and East Timor. The study examined newspaper articles prior to intervention and, using Piers Robinson’s media framing model (2000), measured the quantity of “empathetic” and “distancing” coverage in relation to suggestions for intervention.
The results of this study show that simplified representations of these complex conflicts often lead to a dangerous polarisation in Western media. Ethnic conflicts are discussed either within a “barbaric” frame, where readers are presented with well-defined heroes, victims and villains and are encouraged to support intervention; or with a “native” narrative, where the situation is reported as a distant problem between “squabbling tribes”, and the media consumer is encouraged to support non-intervention.
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