Spelling suggestions: "subject:"csrknowledge, theory off."" "subject:"csrknowledge, theory oof.""
581 |
A study of the mental health knowledge and attitudes of preservice and inservice elementary school teachers /Morris, Edwin F. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2002. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 81-85). Also available on the Internet.
|
582 |
A study of the mental health knowledge and attitudes of preservice and inservice elementary school teachersMorris, Edwin F. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2002. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 81-85). Also available on the Internet.
|
583 |
Scientific progress and its metaphysical foundationsMcLaughlin, Amy LeeAnn 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
|
584 |
A minimalist approach to epistemologyKelp, Christoph F. F. January 2007 (has links)
This thesis addresses the problem of the analysis of knowledge. The persistent failure of analyses of knowledge in terms of necessary and sufficient conditions is used to motivate exploring alternative approaches to the analytical problem. In parallel to a similar development in the theory of truth, in which the persistent failure to provide a satisfactory answer to the question as to what the nature of truth is has led to the exploration of deflationary and minimalist approaches to the theory of truth, the prospects for deflationary and minimalist approaches to the theory of knowledge are investigated. While it is argued that deflationary approaches are ultimately unsatisfactory, a minimalist approach to epistemology, which characterises the concept of knowledge by a set of platitudes about knowledge, is defended. The first version of a minimalist framework for the theory of knowledge is developed. Two more substantive developments of the minimalist framework are discussed. In the first development a safety condition on knowledge is derived from the minimalist framework. Problems for this development are discussed and solved. In the second development, an ability condition is derived from the minimalist framework. Reason is provided to believe that, arguably, the ability condition can avoid the problems that beset traditional analyses of knowledge. It is also shown that even if this argument fails, minimalist approaches to epistemology may serve to provide a functional definition of knowledge. Reason is thus provided to believe that minimalist approaches to epistemology can make progress towards addressing the problem of the analysis of knowledge.
|
585 |
Epistemological beliefs and approaches to learning of university students in Hong KongPan, De-en, Austin. January 2000 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
|
586 |
Kierkegaard on knowledgePiety, Marilyn Gaye January 1994 (has links)
Almost no work has been done on the substance of Kierkegaard's epistemology. I argue, however, that knowledge plays a much more important role in Kierkegaard's thought than has traditionally been appreciated. / There are two basic types of knowledge, according to Kierkegaard: "objective knowledge" and "subjective knowledge." I argue that both types of knowledge are associated by Kierkegaard with "certainty" and may be defined as justified true mental representation (forestilling). I also argue, however, that the meaning of 'certainty,' 'justified' and 'true' is derivative of the object of knowledge. That is, I argue that Kierkegaard employs these expressions in both an objective and subjective sense and that the latter sense is not, as it has often been interpreted to be, subjectivist. / Finally, I argue that an appreciation of the substance of Kierkegaard's epistemology reveals that the charges of irrationalism which have often been made against him, are without foundation.
|
587 |
The reconstruction of self and society in early postwar Japan 1945-1949Griffiths, Owen 05 1900 (has links)
This dissertation examines a moment of unprecedented crisis in Japan's modern
history - the crisis of defeat - and the impact it had on the Japanese self-image. Defeat
unleashed a wide range of responses, from profound despair (kyodatsu) to a sense of
new life (shinsei). Just as the material destruction of defeat defined the landscape of
Japan's cities, so too did the coexistence of these two emotions create the
psychological ground from which public discussion about Japan's past, present, and
future emerged. From these discussions arose two interrelated debates, one
concerning who was responsible for war and defeat, and the other focusing on the
defects in the national character. In both cases, many Japanese believed that the
resolution of these debates was a necessary first step in constructing a peace-loving,
democratic nation.
The deconstruction of the national character was akin to the process of negation
through which many Japanese people believed they could discard the "sins of the
past" and move smoothly forward into the new postwar world order. It is in this
context that Tanabe Hajime's "philosophy of repentance" (zangedd) is relevant, both
as a model and a metaphor for the Japanese attempt to overcome the past.
Ultimately, however, Tanabe's road to salvation was not taken by many, partly due
to the intellectual difficulty of his message, but also due to the re-emergence of the
Emperor whose reconstruction as a symbol of new life circumscribed the public
debates over war responsibility and the deconstruction of the national character,
leaving unresolved fundamental questions concerning the Japanese peoples'
relationship with their own past.
Drawing on a broad variety of primary sources, this study explores these debates and
the Emperor's resurrection in a brief but intense four-year period after Japan's defeat.
Any appreciation of later postwar history must begin from this era. Through the
experiences and memories of the "generation of the scorched earth" (yakeato jidai)
we can gain new insights into Japan's re-emergence as an economic power, the
preoccupation with "new," and the enduring sense of particularism that
predominates in Japan today.
|
588 |
A journey in metaxis : been, being, becoming, imag(in)ing drama facilitationLinds, Warren 05 1900 (has links)
A journey in metaxis explores the facilitation of drama workshops using an adaptation of Theatre
of the Oppressed, a participatory drama process used with high school students, teachers and
others in the community. New possibilities of engagement open up as knowing emerges through a
variety o f forms of dramatic action which are simultaneously the medium, subject and
re-presentation of research.
As a theatre pedagogue I explore how knowing and meaning emerge through theatre and in the
interplay between my life and my work. Writing, then reading, narratives of my practice engages
me in a conversation that helps me draw attention to my practice. Diverse roles and points of view
of the drama facilitator begin to become apparent as these narratives speak through a spiralling
process of shared experiences. Commentaries on these experiences lead to discussions of the
implications of this inquiry for other forms of reflective leadership practice in drama and in
education.
Particular attention is placed on the role of the body and mind (bodymind) of facilitator and
participants as they journey into an increasing awareness of senses, histories, the landscapes
worked in, and the relationships that intertwine through the constant ebb and flow of the drama
workshop. Using a framework that parallels the drama workshop I facilitate, I play with forms of
texts, languages and styles to enter into the text(ure) of the worlds of facilitation so that we may
come face to face with kinaesthetic and discursive experiences remembered and reconsidered.
Writing my body into this exploration enables me to become mindfully aware of, and extends and
transforms, my practice. I re-awaken the memory of my senses and re-connect with them in the
moments of "performing" my teaching. Such poetic and expressive writing enables an evocation
of the world of drama. Writing from and through a sensing body means that reflection on practice
becomes not merely reporting experiences, but also celebrating and expressing the multi-vocal,
multi-layered events that develop drama facilitation skills.
Writing, then reading, about this process of coming to know my identity-in-process as a drama
facilitator enables the interpretation, interrogation and transformation of how one becomes
facilitator, "making the way as we go," (re)writing/performing our presence.
|
589 |
Hume, history and the science of human naturePerinetti, Dario January 2002 (has links)
This thesis sets out to show that a philosophical reflection on history is, in the strongest possible way, an essential feature of Hume's project of a science of human nature: a philosophical investigation of human nature, for Hume, cannot be successful independently of an understanding of the relation of human beings to their history. Hume intended to criticize traditional metaphysics by referring all knowledge to experience. But it is almost always assumed that Hume means by "experience" the result of an individual's past sense perception or personal observation. Accordingly, Hume's criticism of traditional metaphysics is taken to lead to an individualistic conception of knowledge and human nature. In this thesis I claim that this picture of Hume's "empiricism" is simply wrong. He is not a philosopher who reduces "experience" to the merely private happenings within a personal psychology. On the contrary, Hume has a wider notion of experience, one that includes not only personal observation and memory, but, fundamentally, one that includes implicit knowledge of human history. Experience, so understood, brings about what I term a historical point of view, namely, the point of view of someone who seeks to extend his experience as far as it is possible in order to acquire the capacity to produce more nuanced and impartial judgments in any given practice. It is precisely this historical point of view that enables us to depart from the individualistic perspective that we would otherwise be bound to adopt not only in epistemology but, most significantly, in politics, in social life, in religion, etc. / Chapter 1 presents the historical background against which Hume elaborates his views of history's role in philosophy. Chapter 2 discusses and criticizes the individualist reading of Hume by showing that he had a satisfactory account of beliefs formed via human testimony. Chapter 3 presents a view of Hume on explanation that underscores his interest in practical and informal explanations as those of history. Chapter 4 provides a discussion of Hume's notion of historical experience in relation both to his theory of perception and to his project of a "science of man."
|
590 |
Mhande dance in kurova guva and mutoro rituals : an efficacious and symbolic enactment of Karanga epistemology.Rutsate, Jerry. January 2011 (has links)
This thesis is an ethnography of mhande dance as a dynamic phenomenon that enunciates
Karanga belief and normative values that are enacted through performance of mhande dance
in its chief indigenous contexts: the kurova guva (settling the spirit of the dead) and the
mutoro (rain making) rituals. Approached from an emic perspective, the study draws data
from field research conducted between 2008 and 2010 among the rural Karanga of Shurugwi
District in Zimbabwe. This study is an explication of mhande dance which provides the
reader with cognitive understanding of the indigenous spiritual dance that embraces music,
dance and gestures. The dance features both symbolize and spiritualize Karanga culture.
Karanga scheme of reality (chivanhu) embodies two worlds: the natural and the supernatural
in which the natural is explained by the supernatural. The supernatural is the world of the
spirits with God (Mwari) being the Supreme Spirit. According to the Karanga, the deceased
become spirit beings that maintain the quality of life of their human nature. Thus the Karanga
spiritual world is populated with good and bad spirits where the good are referred to as
ancestors (vadzimu) and the bad are identified differently; for example, sorcerers (varoyi) ,
alien (mashavi) and avenging spirits (ngozi). The Karanga believe in God who they venerate
through their ancestors. Ancestors are empowered to overcome bad spirits and hence their
siblings appease them in order that the spirits assist the humans to deal with challenges of life
for which the natural world provides no solution. Karanga reality of the existence of spiritual
beings is made to be a part of everyday life through the conduct of spiritual ritual ceremonies:
kurova guva and mutoro wherein the performance of mhande dance occasions spirit
possession. Thus, through its efficacious and symbolic features, mhande dance is experienced reality of Karanga epistemology (chikaranga). / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.
|
Page generated in 0.0572 seconds