Search results for "value"

showing 10 items of 5321 documents

The origins of the aesthetic enjoyment of music - A review of the literature

2009

Listeners attribute a positive or negative value to music. This aesthetic experience is known to be observable over the individuals’ entire life span, from early childhood to old age, and in every culture. It is then often concluded that such an aesthetic experience constitutes part of the human nature, having an important biological foundation. This assumption leads to the question of how aesthetic experience of music originated in the biological evolution. In this paper, we will explore this question in the light of evolutionary psychology, cognitive science, and systems neuroscience. After reviewing the existing proposals, we conclude that the explanation of the origin of aesthetic expe…

Value (ethics)PITCHmedia_common.quotation_subjectAPPRECIATIONExperimental and Cognitive PsychologypleasureadaptationMusic historyAesthetic experience050105 experimental psychologyPleasure03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemusic emotionsELECTRICAL BRAIN RESPONSES0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEarly childhoodPERSPECTIVEmedia_commonPERCEPTIONCONGENITAL AMUSIAMusic psychologyCONSONANCE05 social sciencesempirical aestheticsEVOLUTIONMusicalityneurosciences of musicEMOTIONSMusic and emotionAestheticsPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicAUDITORY-CORTEX
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Re-build landscape. Design for the reuse of abandoned quarries

2021

Looking at the history of our geological and mining heritage, we can see the evolution of the role played by underground mining sites over the centuries. However, if the activity of quarrying stones is as old as the presence of humans on earth, the issue of the territorial regeneration, based on the recovery and re-functionalization of abandoned quarries, is one of the central arguments of the contemporary debate. The extractive activity that on one hand constitutes an important economic resource for numerous territories, on the other hand requires particular attention to the environmental impact it causes. The theme is that of the so-called drosscapes, soils and residual spaces, once margi…

Value (ethics)Participatory planningResource (biology)Landscape Quarry Reuse Design Participated projectbusiness.industryContext (language use)Environmental ethicsSpace (commercial competition)Landscape designIntervention (law)Political scienceSettore ICAR/13 - Disegno IndustrialebusinessTheme (narrative)
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How BATNAs perception impacts JVs negotiations

2013

PurposeIn light of the inconclusive findings in literature, the aim of this paper is to answer the question: how can negotiation behavior be explained in a situation of power imbalance?Design/methodology/approachBased on Kim et al., the paper proposes a theoretical model that is empirically studied through a case study.FindingsPower relationship is a key contextual factor in determining negotiation behavior in joint ventures (JVs), but it has to be defined more in terms of the perceived value of the alternatives rather than the amount of available better alternatives to a negotiation agreement (BATNAs). Thus, when a partner looks to gain access to knowledge (market, technology, etc.) about …

Value (ethics)Performance managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectPower relationshipContext (language use)Management Science and Operations ResearchGeneral Business Management and AccountingMicroeconomicsNegotiationPerceptionEconomicsPower imbalanceMarketingmedia_commonManagement Decision
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Group epistemic value

2021

AbstractSometimes we are interested in how groups are doing epistemically in aggregate. For instance, we may want to know the epistemic impact of a change in school curriculum or the epistemic impact of abolishing peer review in the sciences. Being able to say something about how groups are doing epistemically is especially important if one is interested in pursuing a consequentialist approach to social epistemology of the sort championed by Goldman (Knowledge in a social world. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999). According to this approach we evaluate social practices and institutions from an epistemic perspective based on how well they promote the aggregate level of epistemic value ac…

Value (ethics)Philosophy of mindVDP::Humaniora: 000::Filosofiske fag: 160Group (mathematics)Social epistemology05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)Metaphysics06 humanities and the arts050905 science studies0603 philosophy ethics and religionEpistemologyPhilosophy of languagePhilosophy060302 philosophySociology0509 other social sciencesCurriculum
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THE RELEVANCE OF MORAL DISAGREEMENT. SOME WORRIES ABOUT NONDESCRIPTIVIST COGNITIVISM

2002

Nondescriptivist Cognitivism vindicates the cognitive value of moral judgements despite their lack of descriptive content. In this paper, I raise a few worries about the proclaimed virtues of this new metaethical framework Firstly, I argue that Nondescriptivist Cognitivism tends to beg the question against descriptivism and, secondly, discuss Horgan and Timmons' case against Michael Smith's metaethical rationalism. Although I sympathise with their main critical claims against the latter, I am less enthusiastic about the arguments that they provide to support them.

Value (ethics)PhilosophyPhilosophyRationalismRelevance (law)Linguistic descriptionCognitivism (ethics)Descriptive contentEpistemologyGrazer Philosophische studien
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The value of statistical laws in physics and social sciences

2007

The deterministic conception of nature implies in itself a real cause of weakness in the irremediable contradiction that it faces with the most certain data of our consciousness. G. SOREL attempted to compose this disagreement with the distinction between artificial nature and natural nature (this last acausal), but in this way he denied the unity of science. On the other hand, the formal analogy between the statistical laws of physics and the ones of social sciences credited the opinion that human facts also undergo a rigid determinism. It is therefore important that quantum mechanics principles have brought to recognize the statistical character of basic laws of elementary processes, in a…

Value (ethics)Physicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectIdentity (social science)AnalogyDeterminismUnity of scienceLawPolitical scienceContradictionSocial scienceConsciousnessmedia_commonPhysical law
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Sport Policy Development in China: Legacies of Beijing’s 2008 Summer Olympic Games and 2022 Winter Olympic Games

2019

The aim of this article is to explore Olympic-led sport policy changes (as part of Olympic legacy) for China triggered by the 2008 Summer Olympics and the 2022 Winter Olympic Games. Although there has been a burgeoning of research interest in analysing Olympic-triggered changes and legacies, with focus on various areas such as economic, sociocultural, and environmental issues, little is known about the changes that the hosting of the Olympics Games stimulates in a host nation’s sport policy. Drawing from policy document analysis, the paper reveals that the two Olympic Games collectively helped to expand the role and value of sport in China and to elevate the status of mass sport. In terms o…

Value (ethics)Policy developmentStrategic policyEconomyBeijingPolicy makingStrategy and ManagementTourism Leisure and Hospitality ManagementPolitical scienceBiddingChinaSociocultural evolutionJournal of Global Sport Management
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Rethinking Deinstitutionalization: Exploring the Boundary Conditions for Abandoning and Decoupling Highly Diffused and Institutionalized Practices

2020

Deinstitutionalization of taken-for-granted practices as a natural consequence of ever increasing entropy seems to directly contradict the major institutional thesis, namely, that over time isomorphic forces increase and, as a result, possibilities for deinstitutionalization decrease culminating in the impossibility of abandoning in highly institutionalized fields. We argue that the possibilities for deinstitutionalization have been overestimated in organizational literature and offer a revisited account of deinstitutionalization vs. institutional isomorphism and institutionalized vs. highly diffusing-but-not-institutionalized practices. A freedom for choice between alternative practices ex…

Value (ethics)PoliticsInstitutionalisationPolitical scienceAbandonment (legal)Subject (philosophy)Convergence (relationship)ImpossibilityPositive economicsInstitutional theorySSRN Electronic Journal
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The Role of Public Entity in Coopetiotion and Convergence

2007

We investigate upon the strategic impact of the public entity to catalyze coalition formation among competitors around an essential facility. The public entity is usually represented as if moved by mere political scopes. However, the presence of a publicly-owned asset or infrastructure, which can be termed an essential facility, gives leeway to shed the opportunity to satisfy potentially new and different type of demand or consumer cluster needs. The increase in value stemming from a renewal in the utilization of the facility might loosen up political restraints against the involvement in the management of the facility of a multiplicity of actors. This allows us to add a new dimension to th…

Value (ethics)PoliticsProperty (philosophy)business.industryCoopetitionBusinessConvergence (relationship)Asset (economics)Competitor analysisPublic relationsDimension (data warehouse)Industrial organizationSSRN Electronic Journal
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Lifelong education

2016

In a society where population aging is a very present reality, it is urgent the adaptation of social policies and strategies for promoting the well-being of this age group [7]. Learning lifelong and adult education are strategies that aim to achieve social, cultural and economic development [4]. They are, undoubtedly, strategies that have a positive impact on society. Intergenerational learning is a practice that allows us to include not only the older, as far as the younger population, benefiting from this strategy two disparate generations. Learning throughout life, through intergenerational sociability, has added value, encourages the closeness between the generations: the younger ones, …

Value (ethics)Population ageingeducation.field_of_studyScholarshipAdult educationWell-beingPopulationLifelong learningClosenessPsychologyeducationSocial psychologyProceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Technological Ecosystems for Enhancing Multiculturality
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