Michael Thompson and Matthew Taylor discuss
how cultural theory can offer a new economic paradigm.
Not exact matches
I think Carl Jung came up with some good ways of thinking about our
cultural images and
how they come about — that scientists many hundreds or thousands of years later might have the same sorts of
cultural images informing their intuitions, and thus using those images as the basis for a
theory of evolution is not so much extraordinary than it is to be expected.
This article examines Whitehead's
theory of perception to indicate
how this
theory provides a philosophical reinterpretation for two issues of concern to feminists: criticism of
cultural symbols, including language, and the importance of intuition and emotion, usually associated with women, in experience.
She said her
theory was that it's our
cultural mindset that determines
how we tolerate pain.
Song compared two competing
theories for
how the status of the people we know affect our mental health, as well as two
cultural explanations for why that mental health effect can vary across society.
Other
theories in the book make the connection between
how individuals (including scientists) perceive risk and their socio -
cultural groups.
Solis» research focuses on children's cognitive development, specifically
how young children play with each other and with objects to understand and build
theories about the world around them, and
how this is shaped by their
cultural context.
Theories like Bloom's Taxonomy, the SAM and ADDIE models, situated cognition, and socio - cultural learning theories will help you have a firm grasp on how the human mind absorbs, assimilates, and retains info
Theories like Bloom's Taxonomy, the SAM and ADDIE models, situated cognition, and socio -
cultural learning
theories will help you have a firm grasp on how the human mind absorbs, assimilates, and retains info
theories will help you have a firm grasp on
how the human mind absorbs, assimilates, and retains information.
As such, instructors who apply the Sociocultural Learning
Theory in their instructional design can also become aware of
how learners may directly impact one another, as well as
how cultural «norms» can influence a learner's learning behavior.
Every semester there is seminar that introduces students to the contemporary
theory and methodologies emerging in the nascent field, as well as to develop their understanding of critical
theory and
how it relates to their future role as
cultural producers.
The resulting volume (to be released in fall 2017) offers a resource for students, scholars, or any engaged reader, to consider dominant threads in aesthetic
theory along side related works of art, including selections from structuralist and post-structuralist explorations of representation, to German media
theory, the study of
cultural techniques, and the still - burgeoning realm of new media
theory, together offering a wide array of theoretical and methodological approaches to the world of images, and a sense of
how those approaches have evolved over time.
The title, «Waves,» alludes to these
cultural relations, as well as to the organization, study and production of feminist
theory and activism — and
how it has been grouped in recent history as first, second and third feminist waves.
In the group exhibition «The Projective Drawing» at Austrian
Cultural Forum New York (ACFNY), curator Brett Littman applies Evans's
theory, which is skeptical of drawing at its core, to challenge our understanding of
how the medium of drawing operates in contemporary culture by highlighting both Austrian and international artists whose drawings require viewers to activate a matrix of complex and nontraditional ideas in order to interpret the works on view.
Traversing theoretical and practice - based inquiry in my artistic research, I use
theories from the transdisciplinary WGS field to examine hidden dynamics informing relationships between individuals, as well as between the individual and society, exploring
how cultural pillars of identity are activated.
But he said that tackling racism would require some alternative targets to be developed, such as: the numbers of Aboriginal people sitting on hospital boards;
how many senior managers had done critical race
theory training; and
how many health systems had a
cultural design strategy.
More recently, culture — gene coevolution has emerged as an influential
theory to explain
how human behaviour is a product of two complementary and interacting evolutionary processes: genetic and
cultural evolution (Cavalli - Sforza & Feldman 1981; Lumsden & Wilson 1981; Boyd & Richerson 1985).
The four - day JBMTI Summer Intensive Institute focuses on relational -
cultural theory and teaches participants the paths of connection and
how to build systems that support human's relational nature and culminates in social change.