European wars.
Washington does not want wars with other countries
European wars.
Washington does not want wars with other countries
And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion
everyone should be free to have whatever religious belief they want for themseleves.
https://via.hypothes.is/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kij6yNenOF4
Richard Feynman OBSERVED VON NEUMANN's BRAIN And Saw Something NOT HUMAN
Richard Feynman OBSERVED VON NEUMANN's BRAIN And Saw Something NOT HUMAN
they have meetings from several places, where they exercise themselves in gaming and playing of juggling tricks and all manner of revels…
The possibility of Mortonsuse of Brute is very apparent to the nature of interpretation displayed by a social ceiling for the indigenous people being observed. Even as he speaks of food, it's as the Amerindians are weasel like in aprhending a would be rabbitt within the snares of their home. (Cattup keene Meckin)**
Annotating this presentation with comments connecting it to current thinking

Clayton Anti-Trust Act
A U.S. law passed to strengthen earlier antitrust laws and promote fair competition in business
Like Charles Sheldon’s fictional Rev. Maxwell, Rauschenbusch believed that every Christian, whether they were a businessperson, a politician, or a stay-at-home parent, should ask themselves what they could do to enact the kingdom of God on Earth
In what ways does this quote show that Rauschenbusch believed Christianity should guide social responsibility and action in everyday life, regardless of a person’s role in society?
muckrakers
journalist who exposed corruption, injustice, and social problems in American society
The many problems associated with the Gilded Age—the rise of unprecedented fortunes and unprecedented poverty, controversies over imperialism, urban squalor, a near-war between capital and labor, loosening social mores, unsanitary food production, the onrush of foreign immigration, environmental destruction, and the outbreak of political radicalism
While the era is remembered for wealth and industrial growth, it also exposed deep inequalities and serious social problems, like unsafe working conditions, poverty, and corruption.
Many white American women argued that enfranchising white upper- and middle-class women would counteract Black voters. These arguments even stretched into international politics. But whether the message advocated gender equality, class politics, or white supremacy, the suffrage campaign was winning.
Conflicts all around
Substack Rant<br /> by [[Dan Allosso]] on MakingHistory<br /> accessed on 2026-02-12T22:47:59
A Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments
He is opposing the inclusion of religion in the state
There we observed that changing the claim from "this country's teachers" to "many of this country’s teachers" would account for the exceptions, teachers who did not fit the generalization.
I think that this is very important. You need to be intentional with the vocabulary you are using; we have to do this to make sure that we are not generalizing and roping people into a statistic or something that they do not fit in.
Often, a particular claim or reason may sound plausible, but we need to slow down and ask if it is true in all cases.
You need to look from ALL cases to see if it still fits together. Even if it sounds believable right off the bat, it needs to be backed up.
If we see a general statement, we should ask ourselves whether it is always true or whether we can identify any case that doesn’t fit the pattern.
When making a comment, we have to make sure that it is true and is backed by some sources. You need to look for patterns to be able to generalize.
Sometimes an argument asserts that there are only two or three options, when in fact there may be others. This is often called a false dilemma or false choice fallacy.
This is a bit confusing to me.
The entire argument is not invalidated just because there are counterexamples
I like this statement because I tend to always put what ifs but this shows that you can do that without damaging your essay.
or example, the argument given above about teachers' right to free speech starts with a general statement about a right of all Americans to free speech and applies it to a specific group (teachers) in a specific setting (the classroom). Once we identified exceptions to the general right to free speech, we could no longer be sure that teachers in classrooms have that right, at least not based on the generalization ab
This just sounds like a lot that would just be easier if we didn't make generalizations.
Why couldn't she have workmenfor her friends
class anxiety; a desire to transcend boundaries
To write ethically, you must also identify another group of people: the individuals who will gain or lose because of your message.
Overall, this chapter shows that ethical writing is about accountability, fairness, and respect for the audience. Technical writers have power because their words influence decisions. Whether in business, science, or healthcare, ethical communication builds trust. This reading reminded me that strong writing skills also require strong moral judgment.
These are important aspects of technical writing,
One of my main takeaways from Chapter 4 is that ethics in technical and professional writing is not just about avoiding plagiarism. It is about responsibility to your audience. Writers must present information honestly, clearly, and without misleading readers. This made me realize how much trust people place in professionals, especially in science and healthcare fields.
There is a good chance that at some point in your career you will find yourself in a situation that involves unethical behavior at your workplace.
I found the section about honesty and transparency especially important. As a biology major and future medical professional, ethical communication is critical. If doctors or researchers misrepresent data, it can harm patients and communities. This chapter connects directly to our class because writing clearly and truthfully affects real-world decisions and public trust.
Take Linear Algebra, for example. We’re taught to see matrices as "grids of numbers." But to a machine learning engineer, a matrix is often secretly a graph. When you see a matrix as an adjacency list: • Matrix multiplication becomes a way of counting paths between nodes. • Eigenvectors reveal the hidden clusters within a network. • Information flow in a Neural Network becomes a topological problem, not just an algebraic one. I’ve always found that once you see the connection between these two worlds, the "scary" math disappears and is replaced by intuition. In the most popular edition of The Palindrome, I break down this exact connection. Join 38k+ others building their intuition here: https://thepalindrome.org/p/matrices-and-graphs…
math made easy
Although the activities of pure liquids or solids are not written explicitly in the equilibrium constant expression, these substances must be present in the reaction mixture for chemical equilibrium to occur. Whatever the concentrations of CO and COA2, the system described in Equation 2.3.1 will reach chemical equilibrium only if a stoichiometric amount of solid carbon or excess solid carbon has been added so that some is still present once the system has reached equilibrium. As shown in Figure 2.3.1, it does not matter whether 1 g or 100 g of solid carbon is present; in either case, the composition of the gaseous components of the system will be the same at equilibrium.
I am confused about why pure solids and liquids are completely left out of equilibrium constant expressions, even though they are required for the reaction to occur.
เมื่อช่วงชีวิตที่งดงาม ถูกสะท้อนผ่านสถาปัตยกรรมจากยุคสมัยอันรุ่งโรจน์ของฝรั่งเศสนาราสิริ วิคตัวร์ กรุงเทพกรีฑา แรงบันดาลใจจาก Le Château de Versailles ที่สุดแห่งความสง่างามจากยุคพระเจ้าหลุยส์ที่ 14 โดดเด่นด้วยรายละเอียดอันประณีตในทุกๆ ด้าน โดยหยิบยกน้ำพุแห่งอพอลโล่ (Apollo Fountain) เทพผู้ถือครองดวงอาทิตย์อันทรงพลังมาสร้างเป็นปฏิมากรรมแห่งสัญญะ สะท้อนถึงบ้านที่เป็นชัยชนะที่สง่างามในแบบคุณ บนทำเล “กรุงเทพกรีฑา” ทำเลทองที่ตอบโจทย์ทั้งความสะดวกสบายและการใช้ชีวิต Ultra Luxury ในอนาคต เริ่ม 65-120 ล้าน*
ทดสอบ
You will also notice in Table 2.2.2 that equilibrium constants have no units, even though Equation 2.2.5 suggests that the units of concentration might not always cancel because the exponents may vary. In fact, equilibrium constants are calculated using “effective concentrations,” or activities, of reactants and products, which are the ratios of the measured concentrations to a standard state of 1 M. As shown in Equation 2.2.6, the units of concentration cancel, which makes K unitless as well: (2.2.6)[A]measured[A]standardstate=MM=molLmolL Because equilibrium constants are calculated using “effective concentrations” relative to a standard state of 1 M, values of K are unitless.
I don't understand why equilibrium constants are unitless even though they are written using concentrations. I am also a little confused about how different starting concentrations still lead to the same equilibrium constant at a given temperature.
Boosters sometimes still call the region “America’s breadbasket,” and for much of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries it was also, to a large degree, America’s foundry, and, during World War II, its armory
This is the reputation that the Mid-West has and it will probably still be known for the next few generations.
What is the Midwest like?” she asked. “Midwestern history, Midwestern customs, Midwestern cuisine?” I struggled to answer with anything more than clichés: bad weather, hard work, humble people. I knew these were inadequate.
I feel this is the only real answer a person can give about the Mid-west.
s Jefferson composed his inspiring words, however, ateenage boy who would enjoy none of those rights and liberties waited nearby to serve at hismaster’s beck and call.
The hypocrisy of the American Revolution is fairly well known and documented. The fact that he owns slaves is often used to compare Jefferson the man to Jefferson the heroic writer in the American story.
Reading stands at the heart of the process of writing academic essays. No matter what kinds of sources and methods you use, you are always reading and interpreting text.
This is the main idea and it sets the tone for the rest of the text.
What three areas does Mintzberg use to organize the 10 roles?
Interpersonal Informal Decisional
What are Mintzberg’s 10 managerial roles?
Figurehead Leader Liasion Monitor Disseminator Spokesperson Entrepreneur Disturbance Handler Resource Allocator Negotiator
This was a common story he heard growing up in Palestine. She learned about Muslim women who saw no contradictions between feminism and Islam, such as the Muslim Sisters (Ikhwat al-musilmat) in the West Bank who believe that Islam gave women their full rights, but that the religion was corrupted by men to suit their patriarchal agenda
I think that most of the stories are corrupted by high class or power people.
Where there are several hundred [students] together and a large percentage of them are afflicted with trachoma and tuberculosis the means for their segregation is not sufficient, the well children are open to these dangers. Think of the danger of trachoma. No immigrant can land in New York who has trachoma, but here we are exposing the youth of the race to an incurable disease. If this were done by one individual to another, it would be a penitentiary offense. I hear someone defending the Bureau.
I feel like this is almost a perfet example of how the government really valued the Native people and how much it really cared about assimilation. The government didn't care about deadly diseases killing the future of the Native Americans, it just cared about them not being Native Americans anymore. It wanted them to act and behave like a white man, and didn't care what it took, nor if they lived or died. It generally shows the heartbreaking double standard, where something considered unspeakable and a heinous crime for White People was just ignored when it happened to Natives, that being cramming a bunch of sick and terminally ill individuals with healthy ones, without the facilities to house them separately and within quarantines.
There are old Indians who have never seen the inside of a class room whom I consider far more educated than the young Indian with his knowledge of Latin and Algebra. There is something behind the superb dignity and composure of the old bringing up; there is something in the discipline of the Red Man which has given him a place in the literature and art of this country, there to remain separate and distinct in his proud active bearing against all time, all change.
I feel like this does emphasize a sort of knowledge that not everyone poses, that being practical knowledge. A person who grew up in the woods is likely to know a lot about herbal medicine, how to hunt animals and survive. They also would have the wisdom of experience. This seems to definitely push the narrative that you don't need to know how to do math to be intelligent and worthy of respect, but rather knowledgeable and purposeful.
Wealth, offices, and the benefits of government would collect in the centre: and the extreme states and their principal towns, become much less important.
I feel this is an issue we do see today
he jury trial of the vicinage in the administration of justice a full and equal representation, is that which possesses the same interests, feelings, opinions, and views the people themselves
jury of your peers, use of the word vicinage calls to mind the sixth amendment, the vicinage clause
but beware how you determine–do not, because you admit that something must be done, adopt any thing–teach the members of that convention, that you are capable of a supervision of their conduct.
Be careful, prudent, thoughtful in your deliberation, do not be swayed by the ambitious trappings or in thinking this is an inconsequential decision, do no choose just anything because something must be chosen, hold the confederation/convention accountable and choose thoughfully.
system of general government, which they have declared best calculated to promote your safety and happiness as citizens of the United States.
systems of general government, something designed to unify the laws and order of each state individually and collectively
Diet and caloric intake, along with epidemic disease, famine, war, and other disasters, kept human life expectancy much shorter than it is today. In many of the richest and most advanced parts of the premodern world, from China and Japan in East Asia to England and Germany in Europe, life expectancies at birth were thirty to forty years,23 or half of what they are today for most of the developed world
In the premodern world, people didn’t live as long because of poor diets, disease, famine, and war. Even in rich countries, most people only lived about thirty to forty years, which is much shorter than today.
It now appears that climate change was a general cause of the premodern population increases around the world. Given the interest in our current problem of global warming, historians and climatologists have reconstructed past climates and have indeed found significant variations in temperatures and rainfall.
This passage says that climate change helped populations grow in the premodern world. Better temperatures and rainfall made farming easier, which supported more people. Because of today’s global warming concerns, historians and scientists have studied past climates and found that temperature and rainfall have changed a lot over time.
海の生き物が出てくる絵本特集(財団のおすすめ本)
キーワードで自動表示する?
ご利用団体一覧
利用規約に一覧に表示される旨を追加する。
会員登録しないで、みんなが読める本
BlueOpenのみ
人気の本 もっとみる
Blueもミックス
運営会社
伊藤忠記念財団 の方がいい もしくは、運営団体 とし 団体の方へ を 学校・図書館の方へ とするか
The focus in appraisal shifted to documenting citizens as muchas the state, margins as much as the centre, dissenting voices as much as mainstreamones, cultural expression as much as state policy, the inner life of humanmotivations as much as their external manifestation in actions and deeds.
With regards to Meghan's comment above and my understanding of archival silences, I cannot help but to think this shift and the eventual shift towards community is some form of reparations. How is the field paying for the crimes of its past? Can it? Should it? Is the shift towards community enough?
Black or Hispanic students were far less likely than White students to display advanced science achievement in kindergarten
We've got a lot of kinders displaying advanced science achievement?
The reading achievement measure was designed to assess basic reading skills (e.g., print familiarity), vocabulary, and reading comprehensio
Also interesting that kinders would be included in this as they are just beginning to develop basic reading skills and vocabulary!
Parental warmth (α= .65) was a measure of four items asking the parent to self-assess their relationship with their child through showing love, expressing affection, spending close time together, and child-parent closeness.
This seems vague - self-assess your relationship with you child through showing love?
人気の本
固定される可能性がある
詩
新しい本のタグ/ 人気の本のタグ
新しい本
固定化される可能性がある
算数を楽しく読もう!(団体のおすすめ本(全員への設定))
閉じたり開いたりを入れる? →一旦入れないで進める。
ボタンをクリックすると本が変わるよ
3冊にする?
ログイン中 ふうちゃ
ログイン中とうのがもっとわかるようにしたい。(色が変わるなど)
読書記録帳
読んだ本=読書記録 → 読書日記(感想/メモ)/感情スタンプ/ 書影の印刷はNGとしたい
読んだ本
読み終わった本か否かは取得できない。図書管理の<ページ数>は必須ではないため。 統計では、「読む」ボタン押下時で集計する ・準備した本:ダウンロードした本?子供自身が「読んだ」ボタンを押下するか?削除が欲しい ・あとで読む:削除が欲しい ・並び替え機能を追加(ダウンロード順、最近読んだ本、(可能なら、ドラックで移動可能)
Confirmation Bias: The tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms one's preexisting beliefs or hypotheses while giving disproportionately less consideration to alternative possibilities.
qoute
nfrastructure including roads andagricultural research was weak, education was neglected and thepoverty level was increasing. To address the issue of their infra-structure, the Chinese government built over 400 000 km ofroad, provided phone access to 16 million rural inhabitants andsaw the amount of electricity consumed in rural areas rise from18 billion to 180 billion kilowatts between 1975 and 1997.They also invested in agricultural research and mandated 9 yearsof education.37 These efforts were shown to reduce incomeinequality and decrease rural poverty. 38 39 China has also seenimprovement in health outcomes.
Response to Question 2:
The case study highlights how China's investment in infrastructure led to the reduction of income inequality and rural poverty. Research indicates that poverty can influence health outcomes by affecting factors such as access to healthcare and health literacy. The country' investment ultimately improved health outcomes, particularly as it relates to the health status of rural populations.
SUMMARY
Question 1:
How did poverty shape the patient's experience with her cancer diagnosis and treatment? Annotate the section/piece of text that corresponds to this question.
Question 2: What lessons can be learned from Uganda and China's investment in infrastructure and healthcare delivery?
The girl’s poverty pre-vented her presentation to medical care as shecould not afford bus fare and feared she would notbe able to pay for the care when she arrived.
Response to Question 1:
The girl could not afford transportation fees nor her potential treatment fees due to her impoverished condition.
ご利用団体一覧
全団体を表記するか否か→表示する お問い合わせください その為に37条に準じている団体のみ利用可能な旨を記載する。 このページにも団体登録へのリンクがあるといいと思う。
f the communication of serious news does not go well, misunderstandings can ensue, causing increased conflict between providers and patients and families, which has been shown to lead to poor quality decision making.
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Table 3-2.Ways to explore cultural beliefs in discussing bad news
What do you think might be going on? What do you call the problem?
What do you think has caused the problem?
What do you think will happen with this illness?
What do you fear most with this illness?
Would you want to handle the information and decision making, or should that be done by someone else in the family?
In some cultures, disclosure of truth is believed to cause bad outcomes, and nondisclosure can be protective and benevolent.
.
Hope often initially focuses on outcomes that are strongly desired and reflect individuals’ varying beliefs, values, and sense of possibility.
.
Physicians who focus the relationship on hope alone may feel as if they are being dishonest with the patient and may withdraw from the relationship as the patient becomes sicker.
.
These two strategies, hoping for the best and preparing for the worst, need not be mutually exclusive. Hoping, while simultaneously preparing, minimizes the weakness of each strategy on its own.
.
Specific hope is the state of desiring a specific possible event or future state of affairs, called the hope object.
.
How much stress a physician experiences prior to sharing the news is exacerbated when the physician is inexperienced, when the patient is young, and when there are limited prospects for successful treatment. Physicians may feel uncertain about how the patient will
.
There may be a reluctance to deliver serious news, known as the “mum effect,” that may result in the physician holding onto the serious news for a prolonged time prior to contacting the patient.
.
Providers must be aware of their personal beliefs about illness, death, and dying prior to sitting down with the patient, to ensure that they are not inadvertently pressuring patients to respond in a certain way.
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This model of decision making is the norm in Western culture, but not in all cultures.
.
Research and anecdotal information remind us that many patients do not often remember most of the initial serious news discussion once the diagnosis is spoken.
.
Present the possible treatment options in small bits and elicit patients’ values and preferences as it relates to the possible treatment options.
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Doctors consistently overestimate survival in terminally ill patients, especially those who have a short life expectancy.
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Step 6, the final step of the SPIKES protocol (Set goals)
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A good surrogate expression for “I’m sorry” is an “I wish” statement. “I wish I had better news for you” allows the physician to walk in the patient’s shoes while acknowledging that the news is unlikely to change.
.
When giving serious news to a patient or family, generally avoid apologizing unless you have clearly made a mistake that you are ready to acknowledge.
.
If a physician is feeling anxious while anticipating a response from a patient after having given serious news, this may represent the physician’s own response and not necessarily a guide to how the patient is feeling (countertransference).
.
However, if an empathic response is done without sincerity or when a patient is not receptive, it can end up being harmful to a therapeutic relationship.
.
An approach to responding to patient emotion.
.
Sometimes patients may have to deal with strong negative emotions (see next section) after hearing serious news before they are able to see hope. But even in circumstances where there is no further effective treatment, one can potentially be hopeful for a good quality of life moving forward or for other important personal or family outcomes.
.
Step 1 of the six-step SPIKES protocol (Set up the interview)
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Step 5 in the SPIKES protocol (Emotions)
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A good rule of thumb along the lines of “ask, tell, ask” is to give at most three pieces of information at a time before checking for understanding.
.
Excessive bluntness must be avoided (“There is nothing we can do to treat this cancer”) to keep patients feeling engaged in the conversation and to avoid inciting a feeling of isolation and anger—but one should try to gauge what and how much additional information is given by soliciting what additional questions the patient and family may have.
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Step 2 of the SPIKES protocol (Perception)
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Step 4 (Knowledge)
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Step 3 of the protocol (Invitation)
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Most patients indicate during research studies that they want as much information as possible about their illness, though they may not express their full desire to providers (and they may not retain the details of what has been shared if they have a strong emotional response to the news).
.
Ask what the patient and family know and what they want to know. Some patients may choose less-than-full disclosure in regard to their medical conditions, and you cannot know without asking.
.
In addition to the optimal physical setting, physicians should prepare for the conversation by finding out the medical information necessary to answer any anticipated questions. Talking to consultants about specific diagnoses, test results and treatment options in advance will help when formulating a plan with the patient.
.
The space chosen for this purpose should be private, quiet, comfortable, and convenient for everyone involved. Identify the key participants that should be present, including family or friends who the patient identifies as being close supports, as well as practical additions to the team, such as nurses, interpreters, social workers, and consultants who know the patient well.
.
Table 3-1.The SPIKES protocol for delivering bad news.
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Patient-centered communication is an approach in which attention is placed on using verbal and nonverbal behaviors to establish partnerships with patients.
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Patients will often feel encouraged to participate in difficult decision making when they are connecting with their physician, which can result in higher quality medical decision making.
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In one survey, only 5% of oncologists said that they learned to give serious news through a formal teaching program; most had either learned by sitting in on other clinicians giving such information or had no formal teaching at all.
.
Prior literature in this area describes these conversations as “breaking bad news.” However, in a qualitative study from 2011 on this topic, patients did not like clinicians judging what was considered “bad” news, and valued framing the news as something to work through with the provider, rather than just labeling it as “bad.”
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Bad news is defined in the literature as any information likely to alter drastically a patient’s view of his or her future.
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In 1990, the data showed a dramatic upward trend in disclosure with 97% of surveyed physicians disclosing an unfavorable diagnosis to their patients.
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In 1961, 90% of physicians preferred not to share a cancer diagnosis with their patients.
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In 1847, when the American Medical Association (AMA) published their First Code of Medical Ethics, they agreed, stating that “The life of a sick person can be shortened not only by the acts, but also by the words or manner of a physician. It is, therefore, a sacred duty to guard himself carefully in this respect, and to avoid all things which have a tendency to discourage the patient and depress his spirits.”
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In Decorum, Hippocrates wrote, “… conceal most things from the patient while you are attending him. Give orders with cheerfulness and serenity, turning attention away from what is being done to him [because] a forecast of what is to come can cause a turn for the worse.”
.
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For those of us who believe in the life of the mind, enhancing our brains’ abilities is ultimately worth the occasional
Value
Jak pokonać BEZSENNOŚĆ po 40-tce? 3 prawdziwe historie z gabinetu terapeuty - dr Klaudia Tabała
Why Vampires Live Forever
新学期が始まる4月に読んでもらいたい本を紹介します。読みながら、楽しく手を動かせる本をピックアップしています。
団体サイト側で、先生からのコメントも登録できましたでしょうか?
the reason that group is looking at child pornography is they already have an interest in being sexual with a child.
I feel like it's reasonable to assume this direct correlation.
Still, satisfying pedophilic urges without involving a real child is obviously an improvement over satisfying them based on a real child’s image.
Eh.
From that perspective, any inappropriate viewing of children is an inherent evil, regardless of whether a specific child is harmed.
Yes, because at the end of the day, it would still be satisfying the abusers urges and I don't think that is right.
As AI-generated images enter the sphere, it becomes harder to discern which images include real victims in need of help.
Exactly. This would be adding fuel to fire regardless.
But short of that, replacing the market for child pornography with simulated imagery may be a useful stopgap.
Band aid on a bullet wound for sure
We’re talking about not giving into a craving, a craving that is rooted in biology, not unlike somebody who’s having a craving for heroin.”
Hmm... I don't think this is an appropriate analogy but I do understand what he's getting at.
But lost in this fear is an uncomfortable possibility—that AI-generated child sexual material could actually benefit society in the long run by providing a less harmful alternative to the already-massive market for images of child sexual abuse.
The word "benefit" is being used too loosely. There is no benefit. This also does not address the underlying issue - individuals are still preying on children.
Common xenophobic scapegoats in American history include the fear of Chinese, Russians, Japanese, Jews, and Muslims.
The US government has played a role in creating such conjecture many times over.
they withheld the results of other investigations that were skeptical of the condition.
This is concerning.
Another curious action was the decision to remove the panel’s only MPI specialist, Simon Wessely, after he publicly expressed the view that psychogenic factors may have played a role
Is the blatant dismissal of MPI solely from a misunderstanding of the condition, or are there subconscious biases to accuse foreign adversaries?
MPI is a collective stress reaction that is based on a belief and is commonly found in normal populations.
Preconceptions led to the strong refusal to consider MPI
was forced to resign after refusing to rule out MPI as a possible cause
Shows how highly political and emotional this case is
played an influential role in how their symptoms were perceived
confirmation bias? Symptoms of paranoia or anxiety?
Such changes are common in conditions ranging from migraine to depression to normal aging
Again, shouldn't those conducting these studies be familiar with these realities of such tests?
Several
Mentions the four major studies and the wrongdoings that contributed to misinterpreted data
Furthermore, 12 of those affected had histories of concussion compared to none in the healthy controls, which could account for the differences between the groups.
Shows a preexisting brain trauma
“appeared to have sustained injury to widespread brain networks without an associated history of head trauma”
Wouldn't it be standard to first conduct a standard MRI?
the mixing of politics with science
My second article was guilty of this, and when it happens, it decreases the credibility of the case
nuance
nuance n. tyiny differences
Puedes publicar lo que quieras, en el formato que quieras, sin que nadie te monitoree. Adicionalmente, compartes enlaces permanentes, que siempre funcionarán, bien sean simples y legibles en tu propio dominio (como ejemplo.com/ideas) o cipherlinks, que funcionan incluso si no tienes un dominio, este cambia o está caído/inaccesible.
Este sitio web es muy similar Hypothesis, es una herramienta de anotación colaborativa que permite que la lectura sea activa, visible y social; sin que tenga ninguna restricción, que permite tener el control y responsabilidad de lo que publica.
Note that uploading data to IPFS is not a direct upload to a centralized server but rather storing the data on your node or a pinning service, which then makes it available to the network

To upload a string to IPFS
import { createHelia } from 'helia'; import { unixfs } from '@helia/unixfs';
const projectId = 'your-project-id';
const projectSecret = 'your-project-secret';
const auth = 'Basic ' + Buffer.from(${projectId}:${projectSecret}).toString('base64');
Saved PeerSuite Document 12_16_2025
scenario
use peersute space document for inotes
and
1993. It includes Canada, the United States, and Mexico, with a combined population of 450 million and an economy of over $20.8 trillion.
I believe that this is a fantastic example of keeping tensions low between 3 neighboring nations who share different cultural values. In this example, NAFTA allowed for the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, to both work together in terms of trade, rather than compete with one another in the North American theatre. If we hadn't had North American trade between the 3 countries, than the U.S. would never have the chance to produce cars in Mexico, giving Mexico more jobs and wealth within their economy, which in turn helps the U.S.
International trade improves relationships with friends and allies; helps ease tensions among nations; and—economically speaking—bolsters economies, raises people’s standard of living, provides jobs, and improves the quality of life.
I think this is a great point that shows that international trade has prevented many potential conflicts between nations who would rather seek trade benefits than the detriment from war. Having two countries that would otherwise be enemies trade with one another allows for mutual benefit by keeping tensions low. However, issues can arise in the event that one country begins using their trading relationship to take advantage of the other through corporate espionage.
Intense nationalism, for example, can lead to difficulties. Nationalism is the sense of national consciousness that boosts the culture and interests of one country over those of all other countries. Strongly nationalistic countries, such as Iran and New Guinea, often discourage investment by foreign companies. In other, less radical forms of nationalism, the government may take actions to hinder foreign operations. France, for example, requires pop music stations to play at least 40 percent of their songs in French. This law was enacted because the French love American rock and roll. Without airtime, American music sales suffer. In another example of nationalism, U.S.-based PPG made an unsolicited bid to acquire Netherlands-based AzkoNobel NV. There was a chorus of opposition from Dutch politicians to the idea of a foreign takeover of AzkoNobel, the Dutch paint manufacturer. The government warned that it would move to defend AzkoNobel from a hostile takeover attempt. AzkoNobel played up the sentiment, tweeting about its rejection of the hostile takeover with the hashtag #DutchPride.37
This section explains how strong nationalism can make it harder for foreign businesses to operate in other countries. Governments may create laws or block foreign companies to protect their own culture and industries. It shows that pride in a country can sometimes limit global business and trade.
Protective tariffs make imported products less attractive to buyers than domestic products. The United States, for instance, has protective tariffs on imported poultry, textiles, sugar, and some types of steel and clothing, and in March of 2018 the Trump administration added tariffs on steel and aluminum from most countries. On the other side of the world, Japan imposes a tariff on U.S. cigarettes that makes them cost 60 percent more than Japanese brands. U.S. tobacco firms believe they could get as much as a third of the Japanese market if there were no tariffs on cigarettes. With tariffs, they have under 2 percent of the market.
This part explains how tariffs make foreign products more expensive so people will buy more local goods. While this can help businesses in that country, it also makes it harder for companies from other countries to compete. It shows that trade rules can protect some industries but hurt others at the same time.
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So Shahrazad rejoiced; and thus, on the first night of the Thousand Nights and a Night, she began with the TALE OF THE TRADER AND THE JINNI.
Here is the beginning of the Thousand and One Nights, after the framing device has been fully established.
Chapsal Escudero, Mauricio. "Kant y el rol de la sensibilidad humana en el bienestar animal." Areté, vol. 36, no. 2, July 2024, pp. 231+. Gale In Context: Global Issues, dx.doi.org/10.18800/arete.202402.002. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.
Introduction Organizational members at workplaces become victims of meaninglessness when they gradually lose their ability to believe in the importance and usefulness of any action, and eventually consider work as a burden or a meaningless chore (Lips-Wiersma and Morris, 2013). Causes of meaninglessness can be multifarious. A concerted effort by the research community can help identify antecedents, outcomes, scope conditions, semantic relationships and mechanisms surrounding this construct. In this paper, we focus on one precursor of meaninglessness – institutional inconsistency. Institutional inconsistencies arise when competing institutional prescriptions clash, for example, during occasions of institutional change. Such occasions require organizational members to think of alternative ideas and values. Frequently, it becomes necessary to identify new means for resolving conflicts (Creed et al., 2010; Goodrick and Reay, 2011; Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006; Greenwood et al., 2011). Not all organizational members cope with the institutional demands in the same manner. Members of an organization differ in their mindsets (Kegan, 1982, 1994). Hence, there arises diversity in experiences of and reactions to institutional inconsistencies. The same situation may lead to certain organizational members developing a sense of meaninglessness, while others experience no such feeling. Extant research has thoroughly investigated the role of conflicting logics behind different institutions (Goodrick and Reay, 2011), the levels of conflict between them (Pache and Santos, 2010), the relative exposure of organizations and organizational members to the institutional inconsistencies (Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006; Reay et al., 2006) and the ways the institutional inconsistencies can be managed at the organizational and field levels (Besharov and Smith, 2014; Reay and Hinings, 2009). But institutional inconsistencies are more cognitive in nature and are better understood at the organizational member level (Creed et al., 2010; Suddaby, 2010; Voronov and Yorks, 2015). The origin and diffusion of meaning-making can be better explained at the organizational member level (Suddaby, 2010). Yet, research on how organizational members experience such conflicting institutional prescriptions differently to develop varied levels of meaninglessness is scarce (except Creed et al., 2010; Hensmans, 2003; Suddaby, 2010). In this paper, we wish to develop this theme. Bartunek et al. (1983) advice that developmental stage theories are well placed to deal with the complex nature of many organizational problems. In the context of our inquiry, Kegan’s (1982, 1994) constructive development theory (hereafter, CDT) fits the bill. The CDT highlights the ways organizational members develop and make sense of their personality and the surroundings in the light of their experiences. In this research, we use the CDT to inquire how institutional inconsistencies experienced by organizational members translate into a feeling of meaninglessness. The CDT helps clarify the mechanism through which institutional inconsistencies translate into different degrees of meaninglessness in various mindsets. We expect that our work shall serve as a guidepost for scholars who attempt to develop strategies that can help managers counter the meaninglessness in their organizations. In the next section, we briefly review the literature on institutional inconsistencies. Then, we examine the conditioning role of institutional conformity pressure and disposition pressure that differently affect the conversion of institutional inconsistencies into meaninglessness in different organizational members. Next, taking the difference in organizational members’ mindsets – as categorized in the CDT – we explain the difference in their understandings and reactions to institutional inconsistencies. We drive some empirically testable propositions. We conclude highlighting some limitations of this work and identifying some avenues for future research. Review of previous research: institutional inconsistencies Institutions are underlying beliefs and dogmas that grow to become rules which monitor organizational members’ actions and activities (Jepperson, 1991; Lammers and Barbour, 2006; Scott, 2001). Institutions are dynamic in nature and evolve gradually (Ansari et al., 2010; Fiss et al., 2012; Gondo and Amis, 2013). The ample extant literature shows how institutions change and diffuse and what mechanisms guide such change and diffusion (Ansari et al., 2010; Fiss et al., 2012; Gondo and Amis, 2013). This change in institutions can be an outcome of certain institutional inconsistencies (Creed et al., 2010; Friedland and Alford, 1991; Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006; Rao et al., 2003; Seo and Creed, 2002). Institutional inconsistencies are “ruptures both among and within the established social arrangements” (Seo and Creed, 2002, p. 225). We accept and base our conceptual framework on this definition. Previous literature suggests following important sources of institutional inconsistencies: presence of potentially incompatible institutional norms (Seo and Creed, 2002); a person’s exposure to conflicting and overlapping institutional logics, which are defined as “overarching sets of principles that […] provide guidelines on how to interpret and function in social situations” (Fan and Zietsma, 2017; Greenwood et al., 2011, p. 318); legitimacy that undermines functional inefficiency; adaptation that undermines adaptability; intra-institutional conformity that creates inter-institutional incompatibilities; isomorphism that conflicts with divergent interests (Seo and Creed, 2002, p. 226); and an outcome of organizational responses (Vermeulen et al., 2016) to some institutional complexity (Fincham and Forbes, 2016), etc. Organizational members, in their routine life, find various examples of institutional inconsistencies originating from conflicting institutional logics. For example, Zilber’s study shows that how a conflict originates when the dominant feminist logic is challenged by the therapeutic logic (Zilber, 2002). Two more examples are depicted in the conflict between development and commercial microfinance logics (Battilana and Dorado, 2010) and between commercial and community logics (Besharov and Smith, 2014). The conflict can be across institutional spheres, where a strong sphere competes to be dominant (Dick, 2006; Ladge et al., 2012). Institutional inconsistencies are the breeding places for change. They can bring about institutional and social change at field and organizational levels (Creed et al., 2010; Friedland and Alford, 1991; Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006; Rao et al., 2003; Whittington, 1992). For example, previous research states that, field-level institutional inconsistencies lead to corporate governance change that: revolutionizes the managerial corporate control; changes the relative political position of various constituents; regulates climate of the market; threatens managerial hegemonic positions in a field; creates dissensus; and results in heterogeneous power and resources distribution for action in the field (Davis and Thompson, 1994). At the organizational level, these consequences of institutional inconsistencies have brought drastic changes in various policies (Scully and Creed, 1998). At an individual level, institutional inconsistencies shape a member’s orientation “from unreflective participation in institutional reproduction to an imaginative critique of existing arrangements” (Seo and Creed, 2002, p. 231). They “may facilitate a change in actors’ consciousness such that the relative dominance of some institutional arrangements is no longer seen as inevitable” (Seo and Creed, 2002, p. 233). They do so by providing a change-conducive environment, which identifies the existing gaps between the ways the things are and the things should be (Sewell, 1997; Swidler, 1986; Weber and Glynn, 2006). Moreover, they motivate the members to carve new means to resolve the conflicts (Creed et al., 2010; Goodrick and Reay, 2011; Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006; Greenwood et al., 2011). Researchers have explored the outcomes of institutional inconsistencies that result, for example, from identity-role incompatibility, e.g. being a “gay” and a “church minister” (Creed et al., 2010), a “devoted Catholic” and a “reformer” (Gutierrez et al., 2010) or a “professional” and a “mother” (Ladge et al., 2012). However, very little is known about organizational members’ experience of and reaction to institutional inconsistencies (except for Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006; Hensmans, 2003). Apparently, members may vary in their experience of and reaction to the tensions and conflicts created by institutional inconsistencies (Seo and Creed, 2002). It is suggested that, in the face of institutional change, organizational members either accept new logic or reinforce the existing ones (Tracy, 2004). More work is required to uncover the mechanism that operates beneath acceptance or rejection of institutional prescription and its outcomes, e.g. in the form of meaninglessness. We contend that institutional members’ experiences of institutional inconsistencies and eventual display of behavioral scripts are not free from the effects of internal and external forces. Therefore, in the lines ahead, we unpack the literature on the institutional pressure of conformity (external) and pressure of disposition (internal) that significantly influence the choices that organizational members make. Institutional pressure of conformity Institutional field is the set of actors (organizational members or organizations) (Hoffman, 1999), governed by approved institutional prescriptions. Institutional field derives its strength from the dominant views of the referent others – “whose perspective constitutes the frame of reference of the actor” (Oshagan, 1996, p. 337). Their views in the form of discourses are the “outward expression of a mental attitude” (Grunig, 1979, p. 741). These views can create, maintain and abandon any institution (Green et al., 2008; Greenwood et al., 2002). It is essential to conform to the dominant socially approved views of referent others, while any violation can lead to social penalties like losing face (Glynn and Huge, 2007; Glynn and Park, 1997; Ho et al., 2013; Kim, 2012; Neuwirth and Frederick, 2004; Oshagan, 1996; Rimal and Real, 2003). This conformity, primarily, relies on the fact that “how widespread a behavior is among referent others” and what are the threats and benefits of compliance or noncompliance (Rimal and Real, 2005, p. 185). The institutional field not only exerts the pressure of conformity, but it also facilitates the deinstitutionalization of the prescriptions with the approval of referent others. In fact, the deinstitutionalization is a two-stage process, whereby a dominant opinion turns hostile to an arrangement, and subsequently exerts pressure on the members to abandon it. Here, it is important to question that, when the organizational members abandon an institutional prescription under social pressure, what extent do they detach themselves mentally and emotionally from the previous institutional prescription. If they find it difficult to detach, how do they experience and behave in this new institutional settlement? Pressure of human disposition In the course of life, organizational members come across various inconsistencies in institutional fields. They respond differently to these conflicts and inconsistencies as per their personal experiences (Creed et al., 2014). These experiences are the product of the institutional practices that are carved in their minds and are internalized in the form of their disposition (Bourdieu, 2000). They result in emotional investment into certain internalized institutional practices (Bourdieu, 2000). Emotional investment can be defined as the emotional attachment of an organizational member to the basic ideals of certain institutional arrangements (Stavrakakis, 2008; Voronov and Vince, 2012; Zizek, 1999) that disciplines the organizational members’ subjectivity and disposition (Creed et al., 2014). Organizational members are considered as more than refined “actors” who initiate and respond to any change in the institutional stimuli (Bechky, 2011; Hallett and Ventresca, 2006). The emotional investment of organizational members’ disposition makes them respond differently to different situations. It may cause them to transcend certain institutional arrangement (Creed et al., 2014; Patriotta and Lanzara, 2006), and alternative institutional arrangements may or may not let them alter their behavioral scripts (Thornton et al., 2012). Even the organizational members may not identify the need to alter their behavior in response to a novel situation (Molinsky, 2013; Swidler, 1986). In a nutshell, the life-long learning process and personal experiences of organizational members impact their perspective to face and understand the institutional inconsistencies (Kegan, 1982, 1994; Mezirow, 2000). On the whole, the field pressure of conformity and pressure of human disposition exert either reinforcing or opposing pressures on organizational members. The disposition sometimes has a counteraction against the pressure of conformity. Thus, apparently, the organizational members exhibit the changed behavioral scripts, but in the very core of mind, the institutional arrangements are still present. This underscores the meaninglessness of newly imposed institutional arrangement. Therefore, to understand the complicity of printed-on-minds institutional arrangements in generating meaninglessness, it is necessary to complement the prior focus on field’s conformity pressure with differences in how organizational members experience the institutional inconsistencies. To explain that how organizational members differ in their experiences of and capacity to understand institutional inconsistencies, we include the CDT in our framework. Constructive developmental theory (CDT) The CDT (Kegan, 1982, 1994) is an extension of Piaget’s pivotal work on life-long progressive psychosocial development, explaining unfolding of mental capacity for complex thoughts throughout childhood and into adolescence (Fisher et al., 2000; Loevinger and Blasi, 1976; McCauley et al., 2006; Rooke and Torbert, 2005). The CDT posits that human cognitive development does not cease once organizational members reach adulthood (Kegan and Lahey, 2009). Rather, their life-long experiences make them differently capable of responding to their surroundings through self-reflection. Mindset development is not necessarily related to age; it means that older people do not have necessarily progressed to the higher mindset stage (Kegan and Lahey, 2009). The CDT (Drago-Severson, 2004; Kegan, 1982, 1994) is an effective tool to understand how organizational members with different mindsets experience institutional inconsistencies differently. Three reasons make the CDT a valuable option to explain the mechanism of translating institutional inconsistencies into different degrees of meaninglessness in various mindsets. First, it supports that people evolve their meaning-making process, which enhances their capacity to reflect on their experiences in a contextual setting they abode (Kegan, 1994; Kegan and Lahey, 2001; McCauley et al. 2006). So, this theory considers the contextual factors affecting organizational members meaning-making of the situations; this brings it close to the institutional theory. Second, the CDT explains that how the process of meaning-making in different mindsets is filtered through organizational members’ emotional experiences like desires, fears and anxieties (Kegan, 1994). Third, the CDT also indicates the differences between the mindset stages and personality variables (Strang and Kuhnert, 2009) in the light of the human actors’ various life-long experiences. Overall, it highlights the difference in organizational members’ capacity of meaning-making of the surroundings. In general, six mindset stages are categorized in Kegan’s CDT (1982, 1994). In this paper, we focus on the three stages, particularly relevant to adults – i.e. socialized mindset, self-authoring mindset and self-transforming mindset. Extant literature also confirms that the vast majority of organizational members’ mindsets fall within these three stages (Kegan, 1994; Kegan and Lahey, 2009; Rooke and Torbert, 2005; Torbert, 1987). Therefore, these three stages better fit the bill (Drago-Severson, 2009; McCauley et al. 2006; Strang and Kuhnert, 2009). Socialized knowers are organizational members who are identified as reliant on valued others for the authentication of their feelings, opinions and actions. They identify with the values and desires of valued others. They cannot externalize view point of valued others as discrete from their own. They avoid concrete conscious deliberation against valued others and feel threatened in case of a conflict that strains valued relations (Drago-Severson, 2004, 2009; Kegan, 1982, 1994; Kegan and Lahey, 2009). Self-authoring knowers can distinguish their feelings from those of others and take responsibility for their judgments. They derive approval of their actions from the trust what they believe is right (Kegan, 1982, 1994). For them, conflict is a constructive opportunity to improve performance (Popp and Portnow, 2001). In the face of conflicts, they deliberate conscious reflection based on their desired identity to take decisions (Kegan, 1994). While, self-transforming knowers can get engaged simultaneously with multiple and often competing value systems. They can maintain a dialectical relationship with differences, seeking more inclusive perspectives to address or transcend differences in a principled way (Kegan, 1982, 1994). Conflict is an opportunity for self-learning. In the face of conflicts, they reflect on the tensions and challenges using their intuition and emotions to act (Voronov and Yorks, 2015). At each mindset stage, people react differently to process events and to make meaning of them. The differences in mindset stages indicate the differences in the capacities to appreciate institutional inconsistencies, while the possibility of mindset stage development proposes that the capacity for appreciating institutional contradictions may change over time. Previous research verifies that, among professionals, more organizational members are either at the socialized mindset stage or at the transitioning stage from socialized to self-authoring or functioning at the self-authoring mindset stage (Kegan and Lahey, 2009). Hardly 1 per cent of them reach the self-transforming mindset stage (Kegan, 1994). However, we will not exclude self-transforming mindset from our analysis, because employees with such mindsets may considerably affect the meaning-making process in other mindsets. As mindset stages represent more or less durable capacities to reflect on the knowledge that is transferable across institutional spheres, the CDT complements the focus of institutional analyses of the field-specific influences on social behavior (Child and Smith, 1987; Hinings and Greenwood, 1988; Kikulis et al., 1995). Our conceptualization acknowledges more fully the sedimented (Creed et al., 2014) or “sticky” (Patriotta and Lanzara, 2006) effects of the various institutional arrangements that not only govern individuals’ lives in specific institutional spheres (Gladwell, 2005) but are internalized and retain their potency even when they are not directly exposed to them (Bourdieu, 2000; Kegan, 2000). Summing up, we expect that organizational members belonging to different mindsets as prescribed by the CDT experience disposition and field conformity pressures differently. The disposition and field conformity pressures condition the translation of institutional inconsistencies into meaningfulness or meaninglessness differently in three different mindsets. In the lines ahead, we explain the construct of meaninglessness and discuss the level at which it is operationalized in our work. Meaninglessness For decades, organizational efforts are being focused to generate meaningful work for their employees (Lips-Wiersma and Morris, 2013). Meaningfulness is defined as “the value of a work goal or purpose, judged to the organizational member’s own ideals or standards” (May et al., 2004, p. 11). In organizations, it is “the sense made of, and significance felt regarding the nature of one’s being and existence” (Steger et al., 2006, p. 81). Meaning-making is intrinsic to people as: […] by nature, a person is involved in his or her being and in his or her becoming (to which alienation is an obstacle): a subject whose whole being is meaning and which has a need of meaning (Aktouf, 1992, p. 415). Previous research suggests that organizational members with the meaningful approach are more creative, productive, committed and collegial in organizations (Amabile and Kramer, 2012). Traditionally, the focus of all management theories is to motivate their employees to get their work done; for this reason, the managers were supposed to adopt the carrot-and-stick approaches. Sometimes they achieve their objective by enhancing their compensations, and sometimes by making a job more enriched. Despite all efforts, the employees are reported to be engaged in counterproductive work behaviors more than any other time before in the history (Aquino et al., 1999; Ball et al., 1994; Bennett and Robinson, 2000; Robinson and O’Leary-Kelly, 1998). The meaning of life at work often has been treated as more philosophical rather than psychological, and scholars attribute it as one of the reasons behind few empirical studies conducted in this domain (Chamberlain and Zika, 1988; Keeva, 1999; Steenkamp, 2012). In the extant literature, there are three different levels to interpret meaning related to work. The first level is “meaning in work” that is about the organizational member’s reason behind working and his/her objective to pursue work-related activities (Isaksen, 2000). The second level is “meaning of work” that indicates the role of work in a society, depicting norms, values and traditions of work in the daily life of people. The meaning of work can be linked to values emanating from the organizational member, religion and society at large (Team, 1987). Nelson and Quick (2000) stated that the meaning of work differs from person to person and from culture to culture. In an increasingly global workplace, it is important to understand and appreciate differences among organizational members and among cultures with regard to the meaning of work. The third level is “meaning at work” which relates to the meaning within the specific context (Chalofsky, 2010). It implies meaning extracted through the relationship between the organizational member and institutional context. This last level of meaning at work is the aggregate of total work experience. Meaning at work is derived from or through the attachment of the employees to the organization, its procedures, their engagement in social relations and the evaluation of the worthiness of their work. In our theory, we are concerned with last two levels of meaning at work. This is because of our special interest in the importance of institutional context that cannot be neglected in the experience of meaningfulness or meaninglessness. Literature views meaninglessness (and its antonym meaningfulness) as an experience (Battista and Almond, 1973; Baumeister, 1991; O’Connor and Chamberlain, 1996; Yalom, 1980), as a perception (Fabry et al. 1979; Hackman and Oldham, 1975; Thompson and Janigian, 1988) and as a feeling (Kahn, 1990). As per Oxford dictionary, a feeling is an emotional state or reaction, an experience is a practical contact with and observation of facts or events and a perception is defined as an awareness of something through senses. In our conceptualization, we treat meaning or its absence as a feeling and experience. Therefore, we adopt the definition of meaninglessness as stated by Shephard (1971) – i.e. “the inability to understand the events in which one is engaged” (Shepherd, 1971, p. 14). The phenomenon of meaninglessness as a form of alienation appears when work roles are perceived lacking integration with organizational goals. In organization and management research, several important antecedents of meaninglessness have been identified. It has been found that meaninglessness can be an outcome of: burnout, apathy and detachment from one’s work (May et al., 2004); physical, psychological and emotional sufferings that leads to stressful life events (Newcomb and Harlow, 1986; Tim Oakley, 2010); a situation when work roles are perceived lacking integration with organizational goals (Casey, 2002); and inefficiency, non-adaptability, institutional inconsistencies and misaligned interests that negate the existing institutions making them meaningless (Seo and Creed, 2002). Keeping in view the aforementioned causes of meaninglessness, knowledge of meaninglessness in employees is essentially necessary for managers. This is because of the fact that meaninglessness is a symptom of several wrongs that might be at work in an organization. Sensing meaninglessness can help managers directly go to the cause and fix it. For example, in a recent intra-organizational level of treatment, Bailey and Madden (2016) have interviewed 135 professionals in 10 different professions and asked them to tell stories about incidents or times when they found their work to be meaningful. The results of the study reveal that meaninglessness is not same as other work attitudes, e.g. commitment or engagement, rather it is intensely personal and individual. Unjust and unfair treatment, pointless and unfitting job descriptions, improper judgment and non-supportive behavior of managers have been identified as causes of meaninglessness (Bailey and Madden, 2016). Therefore, managers play an important role in making work meaningless for their employees; thus, poor management is found to be the top destroyer of meaningfulness. Building on the previous work, we adopt the institutional perspective to propose that institutional inconsistencies breed meaninglessness. In doing so, we also trace a cause–effect path to show that originating from conflicting logics, institutional inconsistencies (cause) can result in the development of a feeling of disconnect (effect) in the organizational members who cannot navigate across different logics equally (Voronov and Yorks, 2015). In fact, their actions are affected by a dominant logic, negating the other logics by making them meaningless. This is apparent in the literature of organizational routines that, even in the presence of other competing logics, how one specific institutional logic embedded, for example, in religion, can control organizational members behavioral script (Creed et al., 2010; Gutierrez et al., 2010). Similarly, Kellogg (2011) and Michel (2011) demonstrate that the institutional logic of professionalism may alone shape organizational members’ behavior. But which logic organizational members shall adhere to and is depicted in their behavioral script depends on their mindsets and the emotional investment there against. For example, socialized knowers emotionally invest in the valued-others; self-authoring knowers invest in the desired identity; and self-transforming knowers invest in the moral identity (Kegan, 1982, 1994). This signifies the importance of analysis of variations in organizational members’ cognitive meaning-making, and therefore makes differences in their mindsets more appealing to us. It is important to clarify that institutional inconsistencies themselves do not trigger a change process. Rather, these are organizational members whose understanding of institutional arrangements can facilitate or impede the change (Emirbayer and Goldberg, 2005; Voronov and Vince, 2012). The reason is that the organizational members’ understanding of the institutional arrangements is a very significant factor in deciding that whether these institutions are meaningful or not (Bourdieu, 2000; Glynos et al., 2012; Mutch, 2007; Voronov and Vince, 2012). Thus, organizational members’ mindsets and understanding of institutional prescriptions are significantly important in meaning-making (Voronov and Yorks, 2015). As organizational members emotionally invest in institutional arrangements (Kegan, 1982, 1994), they are reactive to those factors that tend to attack their emotional investments. Here, we suggest that only those institutional inconsistencies that challenge organizational members’ investment (either in valued others, desired identity or in moral identity) can trigger cognitive micro-processes by which meaninglessness develops. Therefore, when organizational members perceive institutional inconsistencies, this brings a reflective shift in their consciousness, making them evaluate the existing institutions (Benson, 1977). This mobilizes organizational members to search for alternative meanings (Seo and Creed, 2002). Mindset stages and feeling of meaninglessness In this section, we shall discuss the ways the organizational members belonging to different mindsets experience institutional inconsistencies and field conformity pressure. Afterward, we shall put forth the propositions, showing the feelings of meaninglessness are conditioned by the factors of field conformity and disposition in the face of institutional inconsistencies. Socialized knowers Socialized knowers depend on the will of the “valued others” for the construction of reality and meaning-making of their environment. They even make sense of institutional milieu via the cues of valued other (Weber and Glynn, 2006). They do not rely on their own direct experience with the institutional arrangements. Their association with valued others is the source of authentication for them and make socialized knowers feel worthy. They subordinate their own needs to the happiness of others (Drago-Severson, 2009), as the level of sensitivity toward the wills of their valued others is high. Their self-subordination to valued-others is a psychological phenomenon, which postulates that they are strongly prone to be identified with others and be liked (Kegan and Lahey, 2009). This is because they depend on respected authorities as sources of authentication of their own opinions, feelings and actions. They perceive the peril of being shunned by the valued others as a threat to their very sense of self-authentication (Creed et al., 2014; Scheff, 1988; Thoits, 2004). Thus, the values, norms, reasoning and emotional experiences of socialized knowers are embedded in their social context (Kegan, 2000, p. 59). They also conform to the beliefs of the valued others about the institutional arrangements. In the face of any institutional inconsistencies, if the valued others preserve the status quo, then possibly such exposure to the institutional inconsistency may less likely develop the feeling of meaninglessness in socialized knowers. As the thought pattern of socialized knowers is actually conditioned by the cognitive and behavioral script of valued others, so they unconsciously subordinate their own opinions to the wishes of valued others (Drago-Severson, 2004). Thus, they are the one highly affected by the field pressure of conformity, exerted by the beliefs of valued others about institutional prescriptions. When it comes to the phenomenological experience of inconsistencies, socialized knowers have just a raw sensation of these inconsistencies. In terms of apprehension of institutional inconsistencies, if valued others defend the institutional status quo, socialized knowers’ cognitive apprehension is blocked. To fulfill the desire to conform to the desires of the valued others, socialized knowers would not deliberate to reflect on the institutional goals. Though cognitive apprehension of socialized knowers is limited, this apprehension can be facilitated, if the valued others highlight these inconsistencies (Voronov and Yorks, 2015), to develop meaninglessness in them (Figure 1). We, therefore, propose that: P1a. The degree of meaninglessness felt by socialized knowers is decreased to the extent the valued others defend the extant institutional prescription. P1b. The degree of meaninglessness felt by socialized knowers is decreased to the extent the field exerts the conformity pressure to extant institutional prescription. Otherwise, P1c. The degree of meaninglessness felt by socialized knowers is increased to the extent the valued others highlight the institutional inconsistencies. P1d. The degree of meaninglessness felt by socialized knowers is increased to the extent the field withdraws the conformity pressure to the extant institutional prescription. Self-authoring knowers Self-authoring knowers have a high sense of authority and possess the capacity for making deliberate choices between their own beliefs and expectations of others (Drago-Severson, 2009; Kuhnert and Lewis, 1987). They consider other people around as autonomous beings, being different from them having their own distinct values and agendas. Self-authoring knowers internalize certain institutional goals and treat them as their own desires and wishes. Therefore, they heavily invest in institutional goals. The understanding of the context of an institution is prerequisite for attaining this mindset stage. This context helps them to develop internalized capacity to desire certain things and exercise discretionary judgment based on their values. They draw clear symbolic boundaries between institutions; those which belong and those which do not, because institutions: […] exercise pressures on component organizational members to weaken their ties, or not to form any ties with other institutions or persons that might make claims that conflict with their own demands (Coser, 1974, p. 6). They tend to block any competing source of identification and allegiance. Thus, they develop an idealized desired identity which they seek to gain and to maintain (Anteby, 2008; Carr, 1998; Ibarra and Barbulescu, 2010). They evaluate their thoughts, feelings and actions (Ibarra, 1999), using the desired identity as a frame of reference through conscious reflection. Self-authoring knowers invest in institutional arrangements in which their desired identity is rooted. Generally, individuals governed by different logics can navigate multiple institutional spheres such as work and family. For instance, there can be self-authoring knowers who might prioritize different institutional spheres differently – e.g. they might prioritize their religion more than their profession, and this might be reversed for another person. Likewise, for them, some institutional orders are more demanding and dominate their life more strongly (Coser, 1974). The desired identities of self-authoring knowers are more likely to be aligned with one institutional sphere than another. Thus, they prefer to invest in those institutional spheres in which their desired identity is rooted. According to the scholars of the CDT, self-authoring knowers have a greater capacity for leadership and change management (Kuhnert and Lewis, 1987; Strang and Kuhnert, 2009; Valcea et al., 2011). Whenever there is an institutional inconsistency, they tend to act as change agents. However, their reaction to institutional inconsistencies greatly depends on the degree of their emotional investment in those institutions. Exposure to institutional inconsistencies which triggers dissonance against their desired identity tends to develop defense mechanisms in them. They generate a narrative to rationalize their continued emotional investment in particular institutional prescription to reduce dissonance. Conscious reflection and reasoning are their preferred modes of operation for dissonance reduction (Festinger, 1957). They view conflict as potentially constructive (Popp and Portnow, 2001). They have the cognitive awareness of the presence of alternative institutional arrangements, in case of institutional inconsistencies. In terms of apprehension of institutional inconsistencies, those experiences that improve their ability to rationalize inconsistencies facilitate their apprehension, rendering them meaningless. While, institutional inconsistencies which challenge their desired identity block their apprehension (Voronov and Yorks, 2015). Based on the above-mentioned arguments, we propose the following: P2. The degree of meaninglessness felt by the self-authoring knower is increased to the extent the alternative institutional prescriptions successfully challenges the ones attached to his/her desired identity. Self-transforming knowers This mindset stage is the most difficult to attain, thus is rare among the adults (Kegan, 1994; Kegan and Lahey, 2009; Rooke and Torbert, 2005; Strang and Kuhnert, 2009; Torbert, 1987). Self-transforming knowers take their “unique identity itself as an object of reflection”, experiencing “multiple possibilities of the self as a product of interaction with others” (McCauley et al. 2006, p. 638). They are indulged in what Lawrence and Maitlis (2012) call the “ethic of care”. Ethic of care involves seeing others as relational than as bounded actors and independent. Ethic of care allows them to value the growth of an uncertain future, conceive truth as provisional and local and recognize the ubiquity of vulnerability (McCauley et al., 2006). They consider conflict as inevitable and an opportunity for self-development and development of others as well. Self-transforming knowers are akin to Mannheim’s (1985) free-floating intellectuals, whose subjectivities are less constituted by the extant institutional arrangements and their positions in the arrangements. They can adopt a more skeptical orientation toward the institutional arrangements they encounter. This stage is most conducive to perceive institutional inconsistencies because of self-transforming knowers’ sense of self is least conditioned by particular institutional arrangements. They perceive institutional arrangements as potentially arbitrary social constructions (Gergen, 1997). When exposed to institutional inconsistencies, they use intuition and emotions to explore the tensions and challenges through self-reflection (Kegan, 1994). Their capacity to apprehend institutional inconsistencies makes them better evaluate their meaninglessness. Self-transforming knowers prefer to maintain personal integrity and moral identity (Blasi, 1984) to the extent that they evaluate institutional inconsistencies on the basis of what is morally right. It can be inferred that those institutional inconsistencies that trigger their moral identity strongly can make institutional arrangements highly meaningless. They take conflict as an instrument for learning. They do not adopt defense mechanism. Research shows that self-transforming knowers can help employees to resolve the conflict between community and market logics, by highlighting mutual identifications and by mitigating boundaries (Besharov, 2014). Self-transforming knowers identify themselves emotionally with those who are unprivileged and are more directly affected by the institutional inconsistencies. Their apprehension of institutional inconsistencies depends on the degree to which their moral identity is triggered (Khan et al., 2007). It is facilitated when they have increased emotional connection with people impacted by institutional inconsistencies. On the contrary, having little emotional connection with people impacted by institutional inconsistencies, proper apprehension of inconsistencies in self-transforming knowers is blocked (Kegan and Lahey, 2009; Voronov and Yorks, 2015). The case study on child labor in Pakistan soccer industry by Khan et al. (2007) shows that, in an utmost effort to maintain their moral identity, self-transforming knowers, sometimes, feel more meaninglessness in the face of institutional inconsistencies impacting others (Khan et al., 2007). Based on the preceding, we propose the following: P3. The degree of meaninglessness felt by self-transforming knowers is increased to the extent that they relate institutional inconsistency to the experiences of others impacted by it. Discussion In this paper, we suggest that the pressure of conformity (exogenous) and pressure of disposition (endogenous) condition the course of human agents’ actions in the face of institutional inconsistencies, differently in different mindsets. Grounded on the three types of mindsets as proposed in the CDT, we identify the nature and extent of reactions of different mindsets to institutional inconsistencies under the molding impact of the disposition and pressure of conformity. Thus, we argue that, for socialized knowers, the degree of meaninglessness is directly related to how valued others perceive an inconsistent institutional prescription. If the valued others defend that institutional prescription, socialized knowers will feel less degree of meaninglessness, provided the field also exerts high conformity pressure to that institutional prescription. On the contrary, the degree of meaninglessness felt by socialized knowers is enhanced if the valued others highlight the institutional inconsistencies in an institutional prescription, under decreased conformity pressure. Self-authoring knowers react differently in the face of institutional inconsistencies. They feel a heightened extent of meaninglessness if the alternative institutional prescriptions challenge those attached to their desired identity. Self-transforming knowers feel a higher level of meaninglessness when they realize that an institutional inconsistency is strongly related to the experiences of others impacted by it. Keeping in view the fact that meaninglessness is one of the most significant problems facing humanity (Lips-Wiersma and Morris, 2013; Maddi, 1967), we identify some managerial implications. Our work notes the importance of identification and categorization of employees based on their mindsets and behavioral scripts. The subject–object interview developed by Lahey et al. (1988) can be used to assess and categorize the types of mindsets of the employees. This will also inform the managers that, when exposed to institutional inconsistencies, how much and to what extent the employees will develop meaninglessness. However, what strategies managers would use to contain meaninglessness are yet to be explored, and we invite future researchers to advance this area of research. A better understanding of the organizational members’ perception of institutional inconsistencies and the reaction of the meaninglessness can obviously facilitate development and application of such strategies that can help managers to better organize in the face of institutional change – a perpetual phenomenon. In this connection, the managers should first assess whether the change is desirable. Thereafter, they ought to evaluate their own and others’ reaction to it. In particular, managers are required to better understand their own assumptions, beliefs and convictions, along with those of others, to develop a comprehensive perspective to facilitate or resist change. The feelings of meaninglessness by members with different mindsets can be channelized by the managers either to promote or resist a change. At this juncture, it is important to state the scope conditions relating to our work. Scope conditions can be dealt under three major headings: space, time and value (Bacharach, 1989). First, space or level issues are important to be dealt, because incongruence among levels of theory, measurement and analysis may create problems (Suddaby, 2010). We suggest that, depending on the mindset type, an organizational member’s feeling of meaninglessness might be higher to hihe/sher own previous feelings and lower than the group-level feeling and equal to the overall organizational level of feeling. Second, institutional inconsistencies, mindset and meaninglessness like many other organizational phenomena, are temporal in nature and are subject to constraints of time. Therefore, ignoring the temporal limits and assuming invariance in these constructs can be misleading. We recognize that, just as the type of mindset, the experience of meaninglessness is to be viewed as a state of mind that varies over time. We also suggest that meaninglessness is considered to have both the temporal scope condition – it increases as the employee encounters more events that cause it – and also discontinuous temporal scope condition – one particular event increases meaninglessness but over time it subsides. Third, a limit of the value gets relevant as researchers have their own view of the world and the assumptions (Pierce et al., 1989). Therefore, it is necessary to explicate the background assumptions that we have brought to this conceptual work. In this connection, we admit that our work focuses on theorizing feeling of meaninglessness and not on how employees with different mindsets move from such feeling to take action. We believe that this distinction has better served our analytical purpose and helped us better theorize the differential abilities of various mindsets in apprehending institutional inconsistencies with considerable depth. Moreover, we disregard the fact that institutional logics have their own internal contradictions (Greenwood et al., 2011) and focus on the contest between different logics. Future researchers may investigate the extent to which employees with different mindsets apprehend such internal contradictions and develop meaninglessness. In terms of avenues for future research, our work also paves the way for future research endeavors that may involve an interaction of three mindsets in actor’s meaning-making process (Kegan, 1982, 1994). It is suggested that interaction among three mindsets is largely governed by four major factors: degree of investment in institutional arrangements; phenomenological experience of inconsistencies; blockages of apprehension; and facility of apprehension (Drago-Severson, 2004, 2009; Kegan, 1982, 1994; Kegan and Lahey, 2009). We suggest that mutual interaction within and among different mindset groups should be thoroughly analyzed, as it carries a lot of unrealized potentials to advance this field of study. Lastly, Reay and Hinnings (2009) have suggested taking recourse to a multi-level analysis to explain the institutional change process. This should be complemented by a detailed investigation of meaning-making by different mindsets in the face of institutional inconsistencies at multiple levels. Moreover, for a broader understanding of the phenomenon, future researchers may also consider other “control” variables affecting the organizational member meaning-making along with their mindset types. We propose that, along with different mindsets, religiosity, loyalty, identity, demography and career-specific variables should be examined at the organizational member level. Likewise, commitment, structure, climate at the organizational level and the legal system, technology at the macro level can be examined. Figure 1. Institutional inconsistencies and meaninglessness in various mindsets
I’ve watched this up close — and I’ve had to sit through it. Organizations hired Chief Diversity Officers but didn’t shift budget authority. They added “equity” to mission statements but didn’t change who controlled strategy. They created advisory councils of frontline leaders, extracted their knowledge through unpaid “consultation,” then made the same decisions they would have made anyway. They launched listening tours that went nowhere. They renamed programs. They revised style guides. They had people sign oaths — actual oaths — as if the problem were insufficient personal commitment rather than institutional structure.
Very good description of how these things often work out.
Gyuri Lajos Oct 8, 2021The best moat comes from persistence and long term dedication. Engage with something wich is important for the world for which the world i snot ready yet, but you love to do and engages with your whole being. Subsidize "your habit", your "side hustle" with something adjacent, as Frank Herbert would advise you. When the time comes, you will be ready, and it cannot easily be re-engineered. There is no short term fix for levelling up what Long Term Attention can create.It is like the joke, do all that with your lawn, but keep doing it for hundreds of years.
The best moat

Los fármacos constituyen la piedra angular de la terapéutica moderna; aunque, médicos y legos reconocen que los resultados de la farmacoterapia varían sobremanera con cada persona. Esta variabilidad se ha percibido como un aspecto impredecible y, por lo tanto, inevitable de la farmacoterapia, pero en realidad no es así.
Importante Para el examen
up and runn
up and runn
"I’m going to slip into econ speak. So, apologies here. But, like, they’ve already kind of, like, maximized their utility subject to constraints. And I think that’s broadly true across people. Like, obviously, when you move away from the population studied in criminal justice and look at wealthier people or more advantaged people, you know, their constraints are different. Maybe they’re less, but they’ve already kind of maximized what they can given what they’re facing. And the remaining constraints in the world tend to be, they’re sticky, you know, they’re systemic. They’re things that change slowly over time, or maybe rapidly over time, given, you know, in the rare case of a real kind of moment of social revolution or technological revolution, I guess. But they’re not something that you can just do, like an NGO, can just implement a policy and, like, fix it or something."
When: Friday, March 20, 2026. 8am-7pm
Who keeps a conference for this long!? how the hell do people focus all through?
https://thenewstack.io/google-docs-switches-to-canvas-rendering-sidelining-the-dom/
Google Docs Switches to Canvas Rendering, Sidelining the DOM
tan de los múscu
esta bien
How to force Google Docs to render HTML instead of Canvas from Chrome Extension?
google docs render HTML
conciseness is key.
Sentences need to have a lot of details.
A bad introduction is misleading, rambling, incoherent, boring, or so hopelessly vague
Introductions need to have a hook which would appeal the audience.
eturn to the beginning to see how the conclusion relates to the introduction and thesis.
This is right because we need to make sure our writing connects to the thesis statement. If our evidence is actually supporting it.
Languages come in four rough performance buckets, from slowest to fastest
No. Languages are neither fast nor slow. Only language implementations.
Although the phrase “State Shintō” swily came to enjoy widespread currency, conceptually it remained vague.
Seeing a lot of non-definitions throughout this episode. No one wants to define anything, but still take action
Shintoism insofar as it is a religion of individual Japanese is not to be interfered with,” he proclaimed. “Shintoism, however, insofar as it is directed by the Japanese Government and is a measure en-forced from above by the Government, is to be done away with. . . . Shinto-ism as a state religion, National Shintō, that is, will go.”
How can these two things be reasonably discerned from one another by an outsider?
Propa-ganda posters likened Japanese people to vermin and called for their exter-mination
This sentiment being about other Americans is so jarring. Not to say its any less upsetting otherwise, just bizarre in context
Not everybody agreed on what reli-gious freedom was or how it should be protected, but despite signicant dif-ferences of opinion the occupiers were unanimous in claiming that Japan had lacked “real” religious freedom prior to their arrival
How can they say something is lacking if they cannot even agree on a definition?
Religious freedom did not travel from America to Japan during the Allied Occupation. It did not touch down when American boots hit the ground. Religious freedom was already there.
Religious freedom hardly existed in America to begin with, so the notion that it would bring itself anyplace from there is ironic
journeys.
I would add one final emotive paragraph underneath your bio as a final push. Something along the lines of 'Imagine having...' or 'What if...'. You want to catch anyone who's taken the time to scroll down the page without signing up. Paint a vivid picture of what unschooling can look like, and that this summit is their window into this alternative way of schooling.
ence
I would stick to the lighter button colour you've used towards the top of the page so they pop more. It's easy to miss them because they blend in.
DAY 1
Could you have one line for each day that sets the scene around the day's topic (if you have one)?
Topic interviews
Your expert sessions
ns and live workshops.
If your speakers have been feautured in recognisable publications or media outlets, you could include a small trust section here... As featured by:
The Lineup
Your expert lineup
Welcome to The Unschooling Summit, a space to explore how you and your child can live, learn and thrive!
The Unschooling Summit is your space to explore how you and your child can live, learn and thrive!
s
In terms of the video... is there a way to remove the black frame at the top of and the bottom to make it look more visually appealing and also reduce the size of the video section?
International Speakers - Live Roundtables - Workshops - Community Sessions
I wonder whether turning this into a 'trust bar' with matching icons for each idea makes these ideas pop even more
No one can change their genes or demographics, but an environment can always be modified – and for the better. For a relatively cheap investment, more green space at a school offers long-term benefits to generations of students. After all, a campus is more than just buildings. No doubt, the learning that takes place inside them educates the mind. But what’s on the outside, research shows, nurtures the soul.
this last paragraph really closed this article by specifically describing how am little change can affect someone long term in a positive way.
Specifically, we found that students at schools with smaller populations, schools in smaller communities, schools in the southern U.S.
this also makes sense because this areas have more green spaces and not overwhelming.
After analyzing data from 13 U.S. universities, our research shows that school size, locale, region and religious affiliation all make a difference and are significant predictors of mental health.
this is important because this can change designs and the ability all together.
More than 80% of the students we surveyed said they already have their favorite outdoor places on campus. One of them is Aggie Park, 20 acres of green space
previous
with exercise trails, walking and bike paths and rocking chairs by a lake
this makes sense because they do say that working out or going outside helps improve someone's day and give them energy, which every college kid needs
A works cited page acknowledges the person who made a statement or realized a true theory.
Parenthetical citations helps the reader stay organized with the works cited page. They can reference as they read.
A synthesis is all of your gathered information on the topic in which the thesis statement follows.
Such affixes are less productive than other affixes, which combine freely with most bases.
I'm curious what is meant by the term productive here. Is it simply referring to application of the word?
For speakers of English today, changes like “mouse becomes mice when it’s plural” have to be memorized, and are therefore irregular.
This does make me wonder why some rules carry over and why some rules become abandoned. Why continue using irregular forms of words as a language evolves when that rule does not apply to others?
For example, the root -whelmed, which occurs in overwhelmed and underwhelmed, can’t occur on its own as *whelmed.
This also reminds me of the word Automobile. Without the affix "Auto", "Mobile" can't work as its own word.
2025).
la cita al Balance Nacional de energía debe ser del 2023, es una mezcla, una cosa es la consulta, otra cosa el año del reporte y otra el año en que se publica la noticia. Debe haber una manera adecuada de poner la cita
L’œuvre architecturale devient alors un message polyphonique, qui se prête à une lecture dans le temps.
... tout comme la ville alors ?
De la même manière, la ville peut devenir récit de soi, se mettre en scène comme un jeu, s’éloigner de la simple représentation des choses, des idéologies ou des psychologies sociales.
Peut-être est ce du à une mauvaise compréhension de ma part, mais je ne parviens pas à saisir à "qui" renvoie ce "soi"
Une personne ? La ville elle-même devenue quasi personnage ?
plot
Is "plot" generally a protected expression? Or would it be more a non-protected idea? Or neither...
His book is presented as a factual account, written in an objective, reportorial style.
Maybe better to write Historical Fiction than a "factual account" if you are concerned about the copyright-ability of your production!
copyright provides a financial incentive to those who would add to the corpus of existing knowledge by creating original works
Comes out of Fairness Theory, rewarding labor/cultural contribution?
EXISTENTIALISM AND DEATH*Existentialism is not a doctrine but a label widely used to lump together several philosophers and writers who are more or less opposedto doctrines while considering a few extreme experiences the beststarting point for philosophic thinking. Spearheading the movement,Kierkegaard derided Hegel's system and wrote books on Fear andTrembling (1843), The Concept of Anxiety (1844), and The Sickness unto Death, which is despair, ( 1849). Three-quarters of a centurylater, Jaspers devoted a central section of his Psychology of Weltanschauungen (1919) to extreme situations (Grenzsituationen),among which he included guilt and death. But if existentialism iswidely associated not merely with extreme experiences in generalbut above all with death, this is due primarily to Heidegger whodiscussed death in a crucial 32-page chapter of his influential Beingand Time (1927). Later, Sartre included a section on death in hisBeing and Nothingness (1943) and criticized Heidegger; and Camusdevoted his two would-be philosophic books to suicide (The Mythof Sisyphus, 1942) and murder (The Rebel, 1951).It was Heidegger who moved death into the center of discussion.But owing in part to the eccentricity of his approach, the discussion influenced by him has revolved rather more around histerminology than around the phenomena which are frequently referred to but rarely illuminated. A discussion of existentialism anddeath should therefore begin with Heidegger, and by first givingsome attention to his approach it may throw critical light on muchof existentialism.2Heidegger's major work, Being and Time, begins with a 40-pageIntroduction that ends with "The Outline of the Treatise." Weare told that the projected work has two parts, each of whichconsists of three long sections. The published work, subtitled "FirstHalf," contains only the first two sections of Part One. The"Second Half" has never appeared.* This essay was written for The Meaning of Death, edited by Herman Feifel,to be published by McGraw-Hill in 1960.75Of the two sections published, the first bears the title, "Thepreparatory fundamental analysis of Being-there." "Being-there"(Dasein) is Heidegger's term for human existence, as opposed tothe being of things and animals. Heidegger's central concern iswith "the meaning of Being"; but he finds that this concern itselfis "a mode of the Being of some beings" (p. 7), namely humanbeings, and he tries to show in his Introduction that "the meaningof Being" must be explored by way of an analysis of "Being-there."This, he argues is the only way to break the deadlock in the discussion of Being begun by the Greek philosophers?a deadlock dueto the fact that philosophers, at least since Aristotle, always discussed beings rather than Being.1 To gain an approach to Being, wemust study not things but a mode of Being; and the mode of Beingmost open to us is our own Being: Being-there. Of this Heideggerproposes to offer a phenomenological analysis, and he expresslystates his indebtedness to Husserl, the founder of the phenomenological school (especially on p. 38). Indeed, Being and Timefirst appeared in Husserl's Jahrbuch f?r Philosophie und ph?nomenologische Forschung.It is entirely typical of Heidegger's essentially unphenomenological procedure that he explains "The phenomenological method ofthe inquiry" (?7) by devoting one subsection to "The concept ofthe phenomenon" and another to "The concept of the Logos," eachtime offering dubious discussions of the etymologies of the Greekwords, before he finally comes to the conclusion that the meaningof phenomenology can be formulated: "to allow to see from itselfthat which shows itself, as it shows itself from itself" (Das was sichzeigt, so wie es sich von ihm selbst her zeigt, von ihm selbst hersehen lassen). And he himself adds: "But this is not saying anythingdifferent at all from the maxim cited above; 'To the things themselves!'" This had been Husserl's maxim. Heidegger takes sevenpages of dubious arguments, questionable etymologies, and extremely arbitrary and obscure coinages and formulations to say in abizarre way what not only could be said, but what others beforehim actually had said, in four words.1 My suggestion that the distinction between das Sein and das Seiende be rendered in English by using Being for the former and beings for the latter hasHeidegger's enthusiastic approval. His distinction was suggested to him by theGreek philosophers, and he actually found the English "beings" superior to theGerman Seiendes because the English recaptures the Greek plural, ta onta. (Cf.my Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre, p .206.) All translations from theGerman in the present essay are my own.76In Being and Time coinages are the crux of his technique. Hecalls "the characteristics of Being-there existentials [Existenzialien].They must be distinguished sharply from the determinations of theBeing of those beings whose Being is not Being-there, the latterbeing categories" (p. 44). "Existentials and categories are the twobasic possibilities of characteristics of Being. The beings that correspond to them demand different modes of asking primary questions: beings are either Who (existence) or Which (Being-at-handin the widest sense)" (p. 45).It has not been generally noted, if it has been noted at all, thatwithout these quaint locutions the book would not only be muchless obscure, and therefore much less fitted for endless discussionsin European and South-American graduate seminars, but also afraction of its length?considerably under 100 pages instead of438. For Heidegger does not introduce coinages to say briefly whatwould otherwise require lengthy repititions. On the contrary.While Kierkegaard had derided professorial manners and concentrated on the most extreme experiences, and Nietzsche wroteof guilt, conscience, and death as if he did not even know ofacademic airs, Heidegger housebreaks Kierkegaard's and Nietzsche'sproblems by discussing them in such a style that Hegel and Aquinasseem unacademic by comparison. The following footnote is entirelycharacteristic: "The auth. may remark that he has repeatedly communicated the analysis of the about-world [Umwelt] and, altogether, the 'hermeneutics of the facticity' of Being-there, in hislectures since the wint. semest. 1919/20" (p. 72). Husserl is alwayscited as "E. Husserl" and Kant as "I. Kant"?and his minions dutifully cite the master as "M. Heidegger."How Kierkegaard would have loved to comment on Heidegger'soccasional "The detailed reasons for the following considerationswill be given only in . . . Part II, Section 2"?which never saw thelight of day (p. 89). Eleven pages later we read: "only now thehere accomplished critique of the Cartesian, and fundamentally stillpresently accepted, world-ontology can be assured of its philosophicrights. To that end the following must be shown (cf. Part I, Sect.3)." Alas, this, too, was never published; but after reading the fourquestions that follow one does not feel any keen regret. Witnessthe second: "Why is it that in-worldly beings take the place ofthe leaped-over phenomenon by leaping into the picture as theontological topic?" (I.e., why have beings been discussed insteadof Being?) Though Heidegger is hardly a poet, his terminology77recalls one of Nietzsche's aphorisms: "The poet presents his thoughtsfestively, on the carriage of rhythm: usually because they could notwalk" (The Portable Nietzsche, p. 54).If all the sentences quoted so far are readily translatable intoless baroque language, the following italicized explanation of understanding (p. 144) may serve as an example of the many more opaquepronouncements. (No other well-known philosophic work containsnearly so many italics?or rather their German equivalent whichtakes up twice as much space as ordinary type.) "Understandingis the existential Being of the own Being-able-to-be of Being-thereitself, but such that this Being in itself opens up the Where-at ofBeing with itself" (Verstehen ist das existenziale Sein des eigenenSeink?nnens des Daseins selbst, so zwar, dass dieses Sein an ihmselbst das Woran des mit ihm selbst Seins erschliesst). The following sentence reads in full: "The structure of this existential mustnow be grasped and expressed still more sharply." Still more?Heidegger's discussion of death comes near the beginning of thesecond of the two sections he published. To understand it, two keyconcepts of the first section should be mentioned briefly. The firstis Das Man, one of Heidegger's happier coinages. The German wordman is the equivalent of the English one in such locutions as "onedoes not do that" or "of course, one must die." But the Germanman does not have any of the other meanings of the English wordone. It is therefore understandable why Das Man has been translatedsometimes as "the public" or "the anonymous They," but sinceHeidegger also makes much of the phrase Man selbst, which means"oneself," it is preferable to translate Das Man as "the One." TheOne is the despot that rules over the inauthentic Being-there of oureveryday live
check
add one sub point to this.
Overall then, life purpose consists of crafting a balance thatapplies at every level – the way in which people craft their own lives,their relationship to social relations, their relationship to altruism, theirrelationship to the state and their relationship to ideas of spirituality
life purpose, and requires balance which relates to golden mean and finding the middle.
Utilitarianism is a philosophy that values the greatest amount of happiness for the greatest numberof people (Driver 2014). Utilitarianism was created by European philosophers Jeremy Bentham andJohn Stuart Mill throughout the late eighteenth and nineteenth century. Bentham believed that whena government is based on utilitarianism, a system of law and reason is created that values happinessas its foremost principle (Bentham 1789). To provide a mechanism for utilitarianism to be applied togovernmental policy, Benthem created the utility calculus. The utility calculus is a set of specificquestions designed to evaluate a situation and propose the response or action a government shouldtake to maximize happiness and minimize unnecessary pain.
Most recently, in summer 2023, only one in 10 headliners at music festivals in the UK were women.12
Festivals are sparking again and this gives some spotlight to women... could be good to mention this at some point in the paper. Many women actually headline these festivals now and are the main event that people come and see. There are still a lot of men though, but I am thinking of newer stars like Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo... Taylor Swift does not do festivals but I would also like to include how her world tour influenced the industry and the economy around her.
Summary: In chapter three, Victor's mother dies from scarlet fever when nursing Elizabeth back to health, and Victor starts his studies at Ingolstadt. M. Krempe shunned his past research. Victor did not listen and went to M. Waldman, who eagerly became his mentor. The chapter ends with him saying that his future destiny has been decided.