"Positivism" Essays and Research Papers

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    Doctrine of Fascism

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    25 October 2013 Doctrine of Fascism In Benito Mussolini’s‚ Doctrine of Fascism‚ the identity of the recently popular movement is formed into a coherent set of rules and guidelines. The ideals of Fascism are stated upfront‚ and no matter how difficult to understand‚ the contemporary fascist acted in obedience to them. The government of Fascism‚ already in full force‚ needed this document to ensure people understood the severity of the movement. As an Italian‚ Mussolini appealed to his audience

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    Durkheim-Study Of Sucide

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    that Durkheim’s account of the study of suicide is not an adequate account‚ However‚ Durkheim believed that his study of suicide was valued in understanding the individual act. Durkheim’s suicide was the first major positivist to study suicide. Positivism is an approach that suggests the same quantitative methods derived from observable and measurable data that scientists use to study the natural world to discover the causes of phenomena could also be used to study the social world. Durkheim wanted

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    Criminal organizations develop for a variety of reasons and differ in many ways. Some common ground between the two is the general type of organization. These types of organizations are patron client and bureaucratic organizations. A patron-client organization is a group of criminal patrons who exchanged information‚ established a network of connections with political leaders and government officials‚ and access to a network of operatives for the purpose of benefiting the group’s clients politically

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    Chapter 24 Key Terms 1. Positivism- a philosophy of human intellectual development that culminated in science. In The Positive Philosophy Comte argued that human thought had developed in three stages: Theological‚ metaphysical‚ and positive. 2. Natural selection- The principal of survival of the fittest. It was naturalistic and mechanistic‚ requiring no guiding mind behind the development in organic nature. Contradicted with Biblical story of creation. 3. Social Darwinism- The application

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    MARCUS AND FISCHER Ethnography – concern with descriptions Experimental moment – eccectical‚ free of authoritarian paradigm‚ interpretive‚ anti-establishment; Positivism vs. interpretive SELF-CRITIQUE – discrupts common sens‚ remise en question of assumptions 1. First predicament : sensitivity to cultural difference 2. Second predicament : status of anthropology as a cultural critique (reflection of self through studying alien culture). DUALITY-Palestinian and American‚ Said 50s linguistics

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    consumer buying behavior

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    policy makers that how they can make their brands more popular and get more brand equity. The implication of brand equity depends in many benefits for the companies that have brands. Brand equity has optimistic association with brand loyalty. The positivism approach will be used as the data is quantitative. For this purpose the secondary data will be used. The collection of the data will be through structured interviews from minimum 10 persons and questionnaires from minimum 100 persons. As the collection

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    Introduction to Law

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    Substantive law is the statutory or written law that defines rights and duties‚ such as crimes and punishments (in the criminal law)‚ civil rights and responsibilities in civil law. It is codified in legislated statutes or can be enacted through the initiative process. Substantive law stands in contrast to procedural law‚ which is the "machinery" for enforcing those rights and duties. Procedural law comprises the rules by which a court hears and determines what happens in civil or criminal proceedings

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    Had Socrates the right to flee‚ or‚ hat Socrates the duty to die? Socrates faced a life ending death penalty‚ although having a well prepared opportunity to escape; nevertheless‚ he decided to die. Is this cruel decision to justify? In Socrates’ eyes one has as a mature citizen a contract with the state where one lives. This contract contains duties for both sides. The state has to take care for his citizen whereas the citizen has not only to obey and protect the rules that the state determines

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    Actualism

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    Creation Research Society Quarterly 2012. 49:135–152. Volume 49‚ Fall 2012 135 Battlegrounds of Natural History: Actualism John K. Reed‚ Emmett L. Williams* Abstract A ctualism is a fundamental assumption of secular natural history. It replaced the Christian view of causality through providence‚ and it asserted an absolute physicochemical and geological continuity. Though often confused with uniformity and uniformitarianism due to secular obfuscation‚ actualism‚ at root‚ is

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    criminologies emerged in the 1980s as a reaction to radical criminologies of previous decades. The latter shifted the focus of criminology from classicism‚ with its principles of rational choice and free will (Muncie and McLaughlin‚ 2004‚ p7)‚ and from positivism‚ which propounded that individuals are not responsible for their own actions for biological‚ psychological and sociological reasons (Muncie and McLaughlin‚ 2004‚ p9). In broad terms‚ radical criminologies such as interactionism‚ labelling‚ Marxism

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