Co je moralne?
In: Filozofia: časopis Filozofického Ústavu Slovenskej Akadémie Vied, Band 52, Heft 5, S. 279-287
ISSN: 0046-385X
7 Ergebnisse
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In: Filozofia: časopis Filozofického Ústavu Slovenskej Akadémie Vied, Band 52, Heft 5, S. 279-287
ISSN: 0046-385X
In: Filozofia: časopis Filozofického Ústavu Slovenskej Akadémie Vied, Band 50, Heft 3, S. 172-191
ISSN: 0046-385X
In: Filozofski vestnik: FV, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 9-28
ISSN: 0353-4510
An examination of the concept of community from theoretical & political perspectives emphasizes the centrality of the question in contemporary societies. The impossibility of community, as one of the radical theses of political theory, is defined against the background of the real limitations of a global world that does not allow for the existence of community. The effectiveness of the thesis of the impossibility of community is tested using H. Kelsen's analysis of the parliamentary concept of democracy. In treating community as a political space where political & judicial systems & cultures meet, Kelsen's definition of community avoids the real manifestations of the world. Kelsen defines revolutions as political catastrophes that evoke the framework of the Other where freedom appears as the destruction of social integration. Adapted from the source document.
In: Filozofia: časopis Filozofického Ústavu Slovenskej Akadémie Vied, Band 52, Heft 5, S. 303-309
ISSN: 0046-385X
In: Filozofia: časopis Filozofického Ústavu Slovenskej Akadémie Vied, Band 49, Heft 4, S. 262-272
ISSN: 0046-385X
In: Politická ekonomie: teorie, modelování, aplikace, Band 61, Heft 3
ISSN: 0032-3233
The conventional view of the sustainability of social development is based on the works of the Roman Club, particularly the book "The Limits to Growth" by Donella Meadows and her colleagues (1972). In their opinion, the human population and economy are depleting the wealth of the Earth and pollutants and wastes are burdening the environment. However, the concern that mineral resources will be depleted is unsubstantiated. Environmental economics argues that a higher number of people and a higher income make resources scarcer on a short-term basis. For investors and entrepreneurs, higher prices represent an opportunity and an incentive to search for solutions. Many of them will not succeed in this search and they will bear the costs on their own. However, in a free society, the solutions are eventually found. And in the long run, we are better off thanks to the new discoveries than if the original problems had never occurred. Adapted from the source document.
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 45, Heft 4
The objective of this article is to show how issues concerning women in science and the problem of gendered science, often treated separately, are interconnected. To examine how research on women in science and research on gender and science relate to each other, some feminist epistemological perspectives, mainly feminist contextual empiricism, are used in order to show how the feminist philosophical conceptual framework may be useful for understanding the problems currently faced by women in science. After reflecting and elaborating on the very thesis of gendered science, the author analyses in more detail the concept of epistemic communities and the concept of trust as an epistemic factor. Through these concepts the author argues that philosophical/epistemological considerations are fruitful for studying the experience of individual women in science. Both of these interrelated concepts are considered highly relevant in the search for an epistemological framework facilitating the thematic study of women in science on a theoretical level and research on the current situation of women in the academic world in Slovakia.