Fulltext results:
- 13
- for sameness? ===== A single humanity ===== The concept of culture in anthropology originates in the development of a single, universal concept of human. * Bartolome de las Casas, a Spanish ... o creates inequality of another kind: Alternative conceptions of oneself as a person don’t have the same credibility and authority as the dominant conception of the human subject as an individual. As Ngũg
- 8
- stem of states ===== There are two senses of the concept of //the state//, one general and one more specif... er their territories and their people. ===== The concept of the state derives from a belief in a great divide in history ===== The concept of the state itself is associated with a traditio... ts of a theory of the modern state ===== Weber’s concept of the so-called “modern” state is based on certa
- 5
- ues. * The incompleteness of their initial self-concepts can be changed into an new, unequal, asymmetric ... * If the servant kills the lord, then their self-concept as a free person now depends on killing other peo... or overcome, and both parties move to a new self-concept of themselves as equals. * A new kind of self-c... lism as dialectic ===== * The initial European conception of their colonial expansion is that it is simp
- 3
- ecursors in European thought. Consider Rousseau’s concept of “the natural state of man” (Rousseau [1755] 19... igenous societies of the New World to support his conception of the original state of nature. * New Wor
- 11
- If an imagined community of a nation inherits a conceptual framework from colonial knowledge, then so too... * The main claim * The factual evidence * The conceptual lenses, or what Stephen Toulmin ([1958] 2003)
- 2022
- ^**Length**^**Worth**^ |Mar 27 |Concept quiz ... la. 2010. “Indigenous Cosmopolitics in the Andes: Conceptual Reflections Beyond ‘Politics’.” //Cultural Ant
- 1
- ogists want to contribute to a general, universal concept of society, but others question whether there is
- 2
- ltural categories seems to imply that a culture’s conceptual structure exists in isolation from everything
- 4
- e/2741037. Radcliffe-Brown, A. R. 1952. “On the Concept of Function in Social Science.” In //Structure an
- 6
- view of human nature ===== Marx has a different conception of the human subject from //homo duplex//. For
- 10
- rd University Press. Dahl, Robert A. 1957. “The Concept of Power.” //Behavioral Science// 2 (3): 201–15.