THE AIM OF THIS BRIEFING IS TO PRESENT A SHORT LEGAL ANALYSIS OF A SAMPLE OF THE CASES BROUGHT BY THE REPUBLIKANER PARTY AT LANDER LEVEL, CONCENTRATING IN PARTICULAR ON THE ARGUMENTS CONCERNING THE PROTECTION OF THE CONSTITUTION IN LOWER SAXONY, THE ONE LAND WHERE THE REPUBLIKANER PARTY WAS SUCCESSFUL IN PREVENTING ITS ACTIVITIES FROM BEING OBSERVED. THE CASES RAISE ONCE MORE THE CONTROVERSIAL DEBATES ON THE CONSTITUTIONAL PRINCIPLE OF "MILITANT DEMOCRACY": TO WHAT EXTENT IS IT PERMISSIBLE TO INFRINGE CERTAIN BASIC RIGHTS IN ORDER TO PROTECT THE FREE, DEMOCRATIC, BASIC ORDER OF THE BASIC LAW? THE EXTENT TO WHICH THE ROLE OF THE REPUBLIKANER PARTY AS A PARTICIPANT IN THE DEMOCRATIC PROCESS SHOULD BE RESPECTED IS EVALUATED.
Examines the network structures and positions of managers and assesses two models of workplace rewards. Results partially support a rational-technical model since network positions do not differ greatly between men and women with similar credentials. Yet, discrimination theory receives some support in men's slightly higher formal positions and predominance in the networks. (Abstract amended)
1. The refutation of idealism -- 2. The nature and reality of objects of perception -- 3. William James' "Pragmatism" -- 4. Hume's philosophy -- 5. The status of sense-data -- 6. The conception of reality -- 7. Some judgments of perception -- 8. The conception of intrinsic value -- 9. External and internal relations -- 10. The nature of moral philosophy.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
I. What is philosophy? -- II. Sense-data -- III. Propositions -- IV. Ways of knowing -- V. Hume's theory -- VI. Hume's theory examined -- VII. Material things -- VIII. Existence in space -- IX. Existence in time -- X. The notion of infinity -- XI. Is time real? -- XII. The meaning of "Real" -- XIII. Imagination and memory -- XIV. Beliefs and propositions -- XV. True and false beliefs -- XVI. Being, fact and existence -- XVII. Truths and unversals -- XVIII. Relations, properties and resemblance -- XIX. Disjunctive and other properties -- XX. Abstractions and being.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
1. Are the characteristics of particular things universal or particular? -- 2. A defence of common sense -- 3. Facts and propositions -- 4. Is goodness a quality? -- 5. Imaginary objects -- 6. Is existence a predicate? -- 7. Proof of an external world -- 8. Russell's 'Theory of descriptions' -- 9. Four forms of scepticism -- 10. Certainty -- 11. Wittgenstein's lectures in 1930-33.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
In 2005 Brown University anthropologist Lina Fruzzetti unexpectedly hears from two unknown Italian women, her cousins. Shortly thereafter she interviews her visiting mother. Lina's father, an Italian official in colonial Eritrea, died when Lina was three. Previously he had a wife and daughter in Carrara, Italy, since deceased. Although Lina goes to Italy to meet her relatives, the film is not an exercise in "finding your roots" but rather is a "life history document"---Lina seeks to understand Italian-Eritrean colonialism. Footage goes back and forth. In Providence, Lina's mother explains that, widowed, she went to Sudan to work and prosper, placing Lina to board in a Catholic school. Lina finds more relatives, including a nephew and his wife in faraway Barcelona. Experts explain how her father's Carrara, once an epicenter of Anarchism, supported fascist military adventures. "Repatriated" mixed-race Eritreans discuss Italy and racism. In Eritrea she interviews her mother at home, then maternal kin. She tours Asmara, the Italian colonial capital, hearing reminiscences of Italian rule. The film's denouement is Lina's mother's spectacular funeral. All of Lina's interviewees are ambivalent. They neither condemn nor exonerate Italy's Eritrean imperialist adventures. Although Lina's Catholic schooling enabled her spectacular path to respected US academic, she interviews no nuns or priests. This reviewer posits that since 476 AD Rome has had no empire, but the papacy revived an ecclesiastical empire. The Ethiopian College inside the Vatican figures in a recent study of homosexuality in the Vatican. Its author concludes that while hardliners fulminate against homosexuality, the rank and file tolerate it, as long as no masks are publicly removed. These conclusions mirror Lina's about the Eritrean colonial adventure. Finally, contemplating kinship rituals of pilgrimage and reunions, we conclude that Lina's mother's grave constitutes a shrine that may spiritually enrich future pilgrims from her bloodline, while their reunions with Italian kin may resemble a Protestant model: the pilgrim's journey to meet Italian kin validates solid status already achieved as a member of the educated international elite.