Results for ' adaptação biocultural'

236 found
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  1.  16
    Biocultural Creatures: Toward a New Theory of the Human.Samantha Frost - 2016 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    In _Biocultural Creatures_, Samantha Frost brings feminist and political theory together with findings in the life sciences to recuperate the category of the human for politics. Challenging the idea of human exceptionalism as well as other theories of subjectivity that rest on a distinction between biology and culture, Frost proposes that humans are biocultural creatures who quite literally are cultured within the material, social, and symbolic worlds they inhabit. Through discussions about carbon, the functions of cell membranes, the activity (...)
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  2.  25
    Biocultural Ethics: Recovering the Vital Links between the Inhabitants, Their Habits, and Habitats.Ricardo Rozzi - 2012 - Environmental Ethics 34 (1):27-50.
    A comienzos del siglo XXI, América del Sur alberga la mayor biodiversidad del mundo para la mayoría de los grupos de plantas y animales, como también una variedad de movimientos en defensa del medio ambiente, que incluyen comunidades urbanas y rurales. La filosofía académica sudamericana, sin embargo, ha prestado escasa atención a este rico contexto biocultural. Para nutrir una filosofía ambiental regional emergente, identifico tres fuentes principales. Primero, una variedad de cosmovisiones y prácticas ecológicas, ancestrales y contemporáneas ofrecen un (...)
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  3.  11
    Adaptação do programa de cessação do tabagismo para modalidade on-line: estudo piloto.Emanuely Zelir Pereira da Silva, Caio Cezar de Lessa Victor, Marcelo das Neves, Andréia Isabel Giacomozzi & Fernanda Machado Lopes - 2023 - Aletheia 56 (2):1-21.
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  4.  13
    Biocultural dialogues: Biology and culture in psychological anthropology.Daniel J. Hruschka - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 33 (1):1-19.
  5.  14
    Deadly biocultures: the ethics of life-making.Nadine Ehlers - 2019 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Edited by Shiloh R. Krupar.
    This book project intends to serve as a course adoption book unpacking theories of biopolitical life-making and death-making, with chapters dedicated to specific objects that ostensibly affirm life (and argue for life's inextricable links to capital), but that ultimately reify a politics of death and erasure. Specific objects, such as the pink Kommen Foundation-branded handgun, the 'super user' of health care resources, and fat cells allow the authors to discuss the political junctures at which determinations of healthy and unhealthy, life (...)
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  6.  34
    Biocultural evolution and the is/ought relationship.Solomon H. Katz - 1980 - Zygon 15 (2):155-168.
  7.  19
    On biocultural diversity: Linking language, knowledge, and the environment.David Rothenberg - 2004 - Environmental Ethics 26 (1):97-99.
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  8.  22
    Biocultural heritage of transhumant territories.M. H. Easdale, C. L. Michel & D. Perri - 2023 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (1):53-64.
    The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization recently declared transhumance pastoralism as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. The notion of heritage seeks to recognize the culture behind the seasonal grazing movements along herding routes, between distant and dissimilar ecosystems. The pastoral families move with their herds from pasturelands used during the winter (winter-lands) to areas pastured during the summer (summer-lands). Whereas this is a key step towards the recognition of the cultural dimension associated to this ancient practice, a (...)
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  9.  30
    Mobilising common biocultural heritage for the socioeconomic inclusion of small farmers: panarchy of two case studies on quinoa in Chile and Bolivia.Thierry Winkel, Lizbeth Núñez-Carrasco, Pablo José Cruz, Nancy Egan, Luís Sáez-Tonacca, Priscilla Cubillos-Celis, Camila Poblete-Olivera, Natalia Zavalla-Nanco, Bárbara Miño-Baes & Maria-Paz Viedma-Araya - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (2):433-447.
    Valorising the biocultural heritage of common goods could enable peasant farmers to achieve socially and economically inclusive sustainability. Increasingly appreciated by consumers, peasant heritage products offer small farmers promising opportunities for economic, social and territorial development. Identifying the obstacles and levers of this complex, multi-scale and multi-stakeholder objective requires an integrative framework. We applied the panarchy conceptual framework to two cases of participatory research with small quinoa producers: a local fair in Chile and quinoa export production in Bolivia. In (...)
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  10.  66
    Habilidades sociais e adaptação acadêmica: um estudo comparativo em instituições de ensino público e privado.Adriana Benevides Soares, Lincoln Nunes Poubel & Thatiana Valory dos Santos Mello - 2009 - Revista Aletheia 29 (29):213-227.
    Este artigo tem como objetivo estabelecer as relações entre as habilidades sociais e as vivências acadêmicas necessárias à adaptação ao contexto universitário. A pesquisa foi realizada com 200 estudantes do curso de Psicologia de instituições públicas e privadas. Os dois instrumentos utilizados (IHS-Del Prette, 2001 e QVA de Villar, 2003) foram aplicados em conjunto em consonância com as normas do QVA. Os resultados permitem aÞ rmar que os alunos de instituições públicas apresentam melhor adaptação acadêmica do que os (...)
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  11.  52
    Educação como adaptação: a experiência segundo John Dewey.José Claudio Morelli Matos - 2010 - Filosofia E Educação 2 (2):p - 481.
    John Dewey desenvolve uma filosofia da educação fortemente marcada pelo mé-todo experimental de investigação e pela adoção da atitude naturalista em filosofia. Neste sentido, sua concepção do ser humano e da sociedade tem suas bases na noção mais ampla de transmissão da vida, em um ambiente social, por meio da comunicação de hábitos, crenças e valores. O caso mais específico deste processo da vida é a educação, pela qual a experiência de um indivíduo ou cultura se renovam e se modificam. (...)
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  12.  44
    Evolved biocultural beings.Louise Barrett, Thomas V. Pollet & Gert Stulp - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
  13.  41
    Regarding biocultural heritage: in situ political ecology of agricultural biodiversity in the Peruvian Andes. [REVIEW]T. Garrett Graddy - 2013 - Agriculture and Human Values 30 (4):587-604.
    This paper emerges from and aims to contribute to conversations on agricultural biodiversity loss, value, and renewal. Standard international responses to the crisis of agrobiodiversity erosion focus mostly on ex situ preservation of germplasm, with little financial and strategic support for in situ cultivation. Yet, one agrarian collective in the Peruvian Andes—the Parque de la Papa (Parque)—has repatriated a thousand native potatoes from the gene bank in Lima so as to catalyze in situ regeneration of lost agricultural biodiversity in the (...)
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  14. Schleiermacher and the Transmission of Sin: A Biocultural Evolutionary Model.Helen De Cruz & Johan De Smedt - 2023 - Theologica 7 (2):1-28.
    Understanding the pervasiveness of sin is central to Christian theology. The question of why humans are so sinful given an omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent God presents a challenge and a puzzle. Here, we investigate Friedrich Schleiermacher’s biocultural evolutionary account of sin. We look at empirical evidence to support it and use the cultural Price equation to provide a naturalistic model of the transmission of sin. This model can help us understand how sin can be ubiquitous and unavoidable, even though (...)
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  15.  14
    Gilberto Freyre: Adaptação, Mestiçagem, Trópicos e Privacidade em 'Novo Mundo Nos Trópicos' | Gilberto Freyre: Adaptation, Miscigenation, Tropics and Privacy in 'New World in the Tropics'.Lilia Mortiz Schwarcz - 2021 - Revista Philia Filosofia, Literatura e Arte 3 (1):137-169.
    ResumoO objetivo deste artigo é produzir uma reflexão crítica sobre a produção de Gilberto Freyre, mais verticalizada em dois aspectos. Em primeiro lugar, buscar-se-á entender a seleção feita por esse antropólogo de uma certa mestiçagem e adaptação cultural, símbolos da singularidade brasileira. Em segundo lugar, procura-se entender de que maneira esse tipo de interpretação desloca a análise de fenômenos mais sociais e econômicos, investindo profundamente na esfera privada. Como se costuma dizer, Freyre teria descrito a escravidão brasileira, tendo como (...)
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  16.  12
    Adaptação e evidências de validade da versão brasileira do Questionário Revisado de Controle da Ansiedade.Luanna dos Santos Silva & André Faro - 2022 - Aletheia 55 (2):100-115.
    O Questionário de Controle de Ansiedade-Revisado ( QCA-R ) foi desenvolvido para avaliar a percepção do indivíduo quanto a sua habilidade de controle diante de reações relacionadas à ansiedade. Objetivo. Adaptar o QCA-R para o português brasileiro e reunir evidências iniciais de validade de conteúdo, estrutura interna e relação com variáveis externas. Método. Participaram 293 indivíduos,com idade superior a 18 anos. Utilizou-se o QCA-R, o Patient Health Questionnaire -4 (PHQ-4) e um questionário sociodemográfico. Resultados. A partir de análise fatorial exploratória, (...)
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  17.  40
    A Biocultural Investigation of Gender Difference in Tobacco Use in an Egalitarian Hunter-Gatherer Population.Casey J. Roulette, Edward Hagen & Barry S. Hewlett - 2016 - Huamn Nature 27 (2):105-129.
    In the developing world, the dramatic male bias in tobacco use is usually ascribed to pronounced gender disparities in social, political, or economic power. This bias might also reflect under-reporting by woman and/or over-reporting by men. To test the role of gender inequality on gender differences in tobacco use we investigated tobacco use among the Aka, a Congo Basin foraging population noted for its exceptionally high degree of gender equality. We also tested a sexual selection hypothesis—that Aka men’s tobacco use (...)
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  18.  12
    The “3Hs” of the Biocultural Ethic: A “Philosophical Lens” to Address Global Changes in the Anthropocene.Ricardo Rozzi, Francisca Massardo & Alexandria Poole - 2019 - In Luca Valera & Juan Carlos Castilla (eds.), Global Changes: Ethics, Politics and Environment in the Contemporary Technological World. Springer Verlag. pp. 153-170.
    Global culture, forms of governance, economic and development models have become drastically dissociated from biological and cultural diversity and their interrelationships. Global society is exposed to globally homogeneously governed life habits that tend to build globally homogeneous technological and urban habitats in the heterogeneous regions of the planet. Concurrently, these globally homogeneous habitats reinforce globally homogeneous life habits. These feedbacks between globalized habits and habitats generate processes of biocultural homogenization, which represents an overlooked dimension of global changes in the (...)
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  19.  22
    A Biocultural Investigation of Gender Differences in Tobacco Use in an Egalitarian Hunter-Gatherer Population.Casey J. Roulette, Edward Hagen & Barry S. Hewlett - 2016 - Human Nature 27 (2):105-129.
    In the developing world, the dramatic male bias in tobacco use is usually ascribed to pronounced gender disparities in social, political, or economic power. This bias might also reflect under-reporting by woman and/or over-reporting by men. To test the role of gender inequality on gender differences in tobacco use we investigated tobacco use among the Aka, a Congo Basin foraging population noted for its exceptionally high degree of gender equality. We also tested a sexual selection hypothesis—that Aka men’s tobacco use (...)
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  20. Biocultural and linguistic diversity.R. Rozzi & A. Poole - 2008 - In Baird Callicott & Robert Frodeman (eds.), Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy: Abbey to Israel. Macmillan Reference. pp. 1--100.
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  21.  14
    Educação, adaptação e emancipação: entre Dewey e Adorno.Karina de Matos Nunes Colla & Lauro de Matos Nunes Filho - 2013 - Griot : Revista de Filosofia 8 (2):93-107.
    Este artigo busca aliar as leituras de Adorno e Dewey acerca do papel da educação frente o fenômeno da alienação social, focando principalmente a experiência dentro do processo de emancipação. Ao final, busca-se identificar os ideais de coletividade e compromisso como premissas falsas dos processos educacionais.
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  22.  47
    Where is Goal 18? The Need for Biocultural Heritage in the Sustainable Development Goals.Alexandria K. Poole - 2018 - Environmental Values 27 (1):55-80.
    On 25 September 2015, the seventieth session of the General Assembly in the United Nations approved new Sustainable Development Goals building upon the vision of the original Millennium Development Goals. I argue that this post-2015 agenda still neglects fundamental qualities of cultural sovereignty that are key to maintaining sustainable practices, values and lifestyle habits. No single goal emphasises the need to protect local ecological knowledge, cultural heritage and alternative economic practices - nor their interrelation with biodiversity - as a pathway (...)
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  23.  15
    What's cultural about biocultural research?William W. Dressler - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 33 (1):20-45.
  24.  14
    Biocultural versus biological systems: Implications for genetic similarity theory.C. Scott Findlay - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (3):524-525.
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  25.  4
    The ‘biocultural approach’ in Latin American ethnobiology.Tania I. González-Rivadeneira - 2023 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 101 (C):24-29.
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  26.  10
    White Ants: Biotic Borders to Biocultural Frontiers.Jeannie N. Shinozuka & Rohan Deb Roy - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):131-135.
    Establishing biotic borders was part and parcel of empire building. The question of which kinds of biological species were permitted to make their way into North American and West European territories shaped transregional border control in the imperial age. Biotic borders were intensely biocultural in that stereotypes around race and ethnic differences shaped them. Drawing on examples from the history of white ants (also known as termites) in the American and British empires, this essay argues that insects had a (...)
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  27.  14
    Biocultural Aspects of Disease. Edited by Rothschild Henry. Coordinating Editor Charles F. Chapman. Pp. xix + 653. (Academic Press, New York and London, 1982.) £43.00/$65.00. [REVIEW]E. J. Clegg - 1983 - Journal of Biosocial Science 15 (2):252-252.
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  28.  22
    Film Studies and The Biocultural Turn.David Andrews & Christine Andrews - 2012 - Philosophy and Literature 36 (1):58-78.
    Film studies has largely avoided the biocultural turn that has swept through other areas of the humanities. This resistance may be understood in terms of the field’s recent distaste for grand theory—and in terms of the loose, social-constructionist thinking that is one residue of that distaste. Fortunately, a biocultural approach to cinema can offer film studies a necessary and defensible set of assumptions. It can also offer interpretive tools and potential ways of conceptualizing perennial concerns like authorship and (...)
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  29.  12
    Anxiety, Remembering, and Agency: Biocultural Insights for Understanding Sasaks' Responses to Illness.M. Cameron Hay - 2009 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 37 (1):1-31.
  30. Vampire apocalypse: A biocultural critique of Richard Matheson's I am legend.Mathias Clasen - 2010 - Philosophy and Literature 34 (2):313-328.
    Richard Matheson seeded several weird fish in the deep and dark waters of the American myth pool, not least as a prominent screenwriter for the legendary 1960s TV series The Twilight Zone. I Am Legend, a post-apocalyptic science fiction/horror novel, published in 1954 and set in 1976, remains one of his best known works.1 It shows up persistently on "Best of Horror" lists and is generally regarded as a milestone in modern Gothic fiction. What is it about this novel that (...)
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  31.  31
    Stress, coping e adaptação na transição para o segundo ciclo de escolaridade: efeitos de um programa de intervenção.Karla Sandy de Leça Correia & Maria Alexandra Marques Pinto - 2008 - Revista Aletheia 27:07-22.
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  32.  28
    A qualidade da amizade: adaptação e validação dos questionários McGill.Luciana Karine de Souza & Claudio Simon Hutz - 2007 - Aletheia: An International Journal of Philosophy 25:82-96.
    O objetivo deste estudo é adaptar e validar (validade de construto) os Questionários McGill de Amizade para uso com população adulta no Brasil. Estes instrumentos avaliam a qualidade da amizade através da percepção do indivíduo sobre funções do amigo, satisfação com a amizade, e sentimentos positivo..
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  33.  49
    Music and biocultural evolution.I. Cross - 2003 - In Martin Clayton, Trevor Herbert & Richard Middleton (eds.), The Cultural Study of Music: A Critical Introduction. Routledge. pp. 19.
  34.  16
    Enhancing farmers’ agency in the global crop commons through use of biocultural community protocols.Michael Halewood, Ana Bedmar Villanueva, Jazzy Rasolojaona, Michelle Andriamahazo, Naritiana Rakotoniaina, Bienvenu Bossou, Toussaint Mikpon, Raymond Vodouhe, Lena Fey, Andreas Drews, P. Lava Kumar, Bernadette Rasoanirina, Thérèse Rasoazafindrabe, Marcellin Aigbe, Blaise Agbahounzo, Gloria Otieno, Kathryn Garforth, Tobias Kiene & Kent Nnadozie - 2021 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (2):579-594.
    Crop genetic resources constitute a ‘new’ global commons, characterized by multiple layers of activities of farmers, genebanks, public and private research and development organizations, and regulatory agencies operating from local to global levels. This paper presents sui generis biocultural community protocols that were developed by four communities in Benin and Madagascar to improve their ability to contribute to, and benefit from, the crop commons. The communities were motivated in part by the fact that their national governments’ had recently ratified (...)
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  35. Ética biocultural : una ampliación del ámbito socioecológico para transitar desde la homogeneización biocultural hacia la conservación biocultural.Ricardo Rozzi - 2015 - In Beatriz Bustos (ed.), Ecología política en Chile: naturaleza, propiedad, conocimiento y poder. Santiago de Chile: Editorial Universitaria.
     
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  36. Theological ethics and technological culture: A biocultural approach.Michael S. Hogue - 2007 - Zygon 42 (1):77-96.
    Abstract.This article examines an orientation for thinking theologically and ethically about the cultural pattern of technology and a vision for living responsibly within it. Building upon and joining select insights of philosophers Hans Jonas and Albert Borgmann, I recommend the analytic and evaluative leverage to be gained through development of an integrative biocultural theological anthropology.
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  37. Culturally sensitive agricultures and biocultural diversity.Cláudia Brites & Pedro Mendes Moreira - 2018 - In Inger J. Birkeland (ed.), Cultural sustainability and the nature-culture interface: livelihoods, policies, and methodologies. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, earthscan from Routledge.
     
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  38. The Parallel Lives of Biocultural Synthesis and Clinically Applied Medical Anthropology.Leigh Hayden - 2006 - Nexus 19 (1):4.
     
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  39.  27
    The Evolution of Moral Progress. A Biocultural Theory.Allan Buchanan & Russel Powell - 2019 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 73 (1):161-164.
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  40. Cognitive poetics and biocultural figurations of life, cognition and language: towards a theory of socially integrated science.Juani Guerra - 2011 - Pensamiento 67 (254):843-850.
    On the basis of a revision of the real dynamics of Greek poiesis and autopoiesis as evolutionary processes of meaning and knowledge-of-the-World evaluative-construction, Cognitive Poetics proposes key philological, ontological and cultural adjustments to improve our understanding of thought, conceptual activity, and the origins and social nature of language. It searches for an integrated theory of social problems in general Cognitive Science: from Linguistics or Psychology, through Anthropology, Neurophilosophy or Literary Studies, to Neurobiology or Artificial Life Sciences. From an essential turn (...)
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  41.  10
    Deny None of It: A Biocultural Reading of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale.Gry Faurholt - 2021 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 5 (1):13-22.
    Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale has predominantly been read as a critique of patriarchy, a feminist dystopia. This article amends the feminist analysis by applying a biocultural approach to the novel, taking as its point of departure three problems that have troubled the feminist reading: Offred’s perceived passivity, the novel’s subtly critical stance towards its feminist characters, and the open ending. By taking into account the environmental context-a fertility crisis-the biocultural reading is able to analyze char­acter in terms (...)
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  42.  12
    (Re)Considering Geoengineering in an Ethical Biocultural Framework.Radu Simion - 2023 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia 68 (2):15-32.
    "In the perspective of biocultural homogenization and the increasingly prominent use of technology, environmental ethics faces new challenges. Development policies, governance, and economic factors impose new ways of understanding and managing coexistence. Phenomena such as pandemics, global warming, migratory phenomena, the expansion of urban and rural areas, and the development of large-scale monocultures show us that human agency, resources, the environment, and surroundings are increasingly intertwined, both physically and metaphysically, in an increasingly encompassing organism where the dissociation between the (...)
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  43.  30
    Points of Contact: Integrating Traditional and Scientific Knowledge for Biocultural Conservation.Brendan Mackey & David Claudie - 2015 - Environmental Ethics 37 (3):341-357.
    Every region of the world is confronted with ongoing ecosystem degradation, species extinctions, and the loss of cultural diversity and knowledge associated with indigenous peoples. We face a global biocultural extinction crisis. The proposition that traditional knowledge along with scientific understanding can inform approaches to solving practical conservation problems has been widely accepted in principle. Attempts to promote a more bilateral approach, however, are hampered by the lack of a common framework for integrating the two knowledge systems in a (...)
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  44.  31
    Précis of The Evolution of Moral Progress: A Biocultural Theory.Russell Powell & Allen Buchanan - 2019 - Analyse & Kritik 41 (2):183-194.
    The idea of moral progress played a central role in liberal political thought from the Enlightenment through the nineteenth century but is rarely encountered in moral and political philosophical discourse today. One reason for this is that traditional liberal theorists of moral progress, like their conservative detractors, tended to rely on under-evidenced assumptions about human psychology and society. For the first time, we are developing robust scientific knowledge about human nature, especially through empirical psychological theories of morality and culture that (...)
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  45.  23
    Racial Experience as Bioculturally Embodied Difference and Political Possibilities for Resisting Racism.Gabriel A. Torres Colón - 2018 - The Pluralist 13 (1):131-142.
    In 1903, W. E. B. Du Bois addressed the question "How does it feel to be a social problem?". In 2008, Moustafa Bayoumi answered the same question for Muslims in the United States. Both Du Bois and Bayoumi provide powerful critiques against any notion that racialized minorities are inherently problematic. Both men generally argue that one cannot blame racialized minorities for the ill treatment they endure under systematic oppression. Du Bois and Bayoumi are two of many voices fighting against the (...)
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  46. Towards a Critical Biocultural Approach: Understanding HIV/AIDS Transmission Among Women in the United States and Implications for Prevention Programmes.Jillie Retson - 2001 - Nexus 15 (1):4.
     
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  47.  20
    Filosofía Ambiental de Campo y Conservación Biocultural.Kelli Moses - 2008 - Environmental Ethics 30 (9999):115-128.
    Los hábitats (dónde vivimos), los hábitos (cómo vivimos) y los habitantes (quiénes somos) constituyen una unidad ética a la vez que ecosistémica. Sin embargo, los hábitats son usualmente estudiados por ecólogos, en cambio, los hábitos por filósofos y otras disciplinas sociales. Con el fin de superar esta disociación, iniciamos un programa transdisciplinario de campo coordinado por ecólogos y filósofos ambientales, que ensaya una visión más integral de los habitantes embebidos en sus hábitats y hábitos en la ecorregión subantártica de Sudamérica. (...)
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  48.  16
    Discussing the Biocultural Approach to Race.Jon Kyllingstad & Ageliki Lefkaditou - 2015 - Science & Education 24 (9-10):1263-1269.
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  49.  40
    Wanting and drug use: A biocultural approach to the analysis of addiction.Daniel H. Lende - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 33 (1):100-124.
  50.  37
    The Evolution of Moral Progress: A Biocultural Theory.Allen Buchanan & Russell Powell - 2018 - New York: Oup Usa.
    Steven Pinker has said that one of the most important questions humans can ask of themselves is whether moral progress has occurred or is likely to occur. Buchanan and Powell here address that question, in order to provide the first naturalistic, empirically-informed and analytically sophisticated theory of moral progress--explaining the capacities in the human brain that allow for it, the role of the environment, and how contingent and fragile moral progress can be.
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