Results for ' HUMAN SCIENCES'

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  1.  10
    Politics and Modernity: History of the Human Sciences Special Issue.Irving History of the Human Sciences, Robin Velody & Williams - 1993 - SAGE Publications.
    Politics and Modernity provides a critical review of the key interface of contemporary political theory and social theory about the questions of modernity and postmodernity. Review essays offer a broad-ranging assessment of the issues at stake in current debates. Among the works reviewed are those of William Connolly, Anthony Giddens, J[um]urgen Habermas, Alasdair MacIntyre, Richard Rorty, Charles Taylor and Roy Bhaskar. As well as reviewing the contemporary literature, the contributors assess the historical roots of current problems in the works of (...)
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  2. Tracing Causal Mechanisms in Social Movement Research in Southeast Europe: The Cases of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Macedonia – Evidence from the “Bosnian Spring” and the “Citizens for Macedonia” Movements.Sciences Ivan StefanovskiInstitute for Social & Humanities Scuola Normale Superiore - 2016 - Seeu Review 12 (1).
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  3.  49
    Ethical Guidelines for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research (A Recommended Manuscript).Chinese National Human Genome Center at Shanghai Ethics Committee - 2004 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 14 (1):47-54.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 14.1 (2004) 47-54 [Access article in PDF] Ethical Guidelines for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research*(A Recommended Manuscript) Adopted on 16 October 2001Revised on 20 August 2002 Ethics Committee of the Chinese National Human Genome Center at Shanghai, Shanghai 201203 Human embryonic stem cell (ES) research is a great project in the frontier of biomedical science for the twenty-first century. Be- cause (...)
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  4. 2004 Subscription Rates for Science and Engineering Ethics.Human Subjects Protections - 2004 - Science and Engineering Ethics 10 (1).
     
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  5. Margaret S. Archer is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick, a past-President of the International Sociological Association and a Council Member of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. Her last book was Structure, Agency and the Internal Conversation (CUP 2003). Under an ESRC award she has completed a book entitled Making Our Way through the World.Human Reflexivity - 2007 - In Clive Lawson, John Latsis & Nuno Martins (eds.), Contributions to Social Ontology. Routledge. pp. 15.
     
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  6.  70
    Conflicts of interest in science and medicine: the physician’s perspective.Delon Human - 2002 - Science and Engineering Ethics 8 (3):273-276.
    The various statements and declarations of the World Medical Association that address conflicts of interest on the part of physicians as (1) researchers, and (2) practitioners, are examined, with particular reference to the October 2000 revision of the Declaration of Helsinki. Recent contributions to the literature, notably on conflicts of interest in medical research, are noted. Finally, key provisions of the American Medical Association’s Code of Medical Ethics (2000–2001 Edition) that address the various forms of conflict of interest that can (...)
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  7. International Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical Research Involving Human Subjects. Geneva: CIOMS, 2002. 16. Resnik DB. The Ethics of HIV Research in Developing Nations. [REVIEW]Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences - 1998 - Bioethics 12:286-206.
     
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  8.  9
    Tempos in Science and Nature: Structures, Relations, and Complexity.C. Rossi & New York Academy of Sciences - 1999
    This text addresses the problems of complex systems in understanding natural phenomena and the behaviour of systems related to human activity, from a science and humanities perspective. It discusses molecular behaviour and structures, and offers examples of ecological and environmental modelling.
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  9.  11
    Beyond Orientalism: Essays on Cross-Cultural Encounter.Fred Reinhard Dallmayr & Packey J. Dee Professor of Philosophy and Political Science Fred Dallmayr - 1996 - SUNY Press.
    Explores some steps toward non-assimilative encounters in the "global village.".
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  10. Phi Cd Rom #5.3.John Milton & Packard Humanities Institute - 1991 - Packard Humanities Institute.
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  11.  2
    Ethical Issues in Human Genetics: Genetic Counseling and the Use of Genetic Knowledge.Henry David Aiken, Bruce Hilton, the Life Sciences John E. Fogarty International Center for Advanced Study in the Health Sciences & Ethics Institute of Society - 1973 - Springer.
    "The Bush administration and Congress are in concert on the goal of developing a fleet of unmanned aircraft that can reduce both defense costs and aircrew losses in combat by taking on at least the most dangerous combat missions. Unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) will be neither inexpensive enough to be readily expendable nor-- at least in early development-- capable of performing every combat mission alongside or in lieu of manned sorties. Yet the tremendous potential of such systems is widely (...)
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  12.  58
    Knowledge, Glory and ‘On Human Dignity'.Henri Atlan, Glory Knowledge & On Human Dignity - 2007 - Diogenes 54 (3):11-17.
    The idea of dignity seems indissociable from that of humanity, whether in its universal dimension of ‘human dignity’, or in the individual ‘dignity of the person’. This paper provides an outlook on the ethics governing the sciences and technology, in particular the biological sciences and biotechnology, and recalls the notion of ‘glory’, both human and divine, as it infuses a great part of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance cultures, just before the scientific revolution in Europe.
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  13.  5
    Genetics, Ethics, and Human Values: Human Genome Mapping, Genetic Screening, and Gene Therapy : Proceedings of the XXIVth CIOMS Conference, Tokyo and Inuyama City, Japan, 22-27 July 1990.Z. Bankowski, Alexander Morgan Capron, Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences, Nihon Gakujutsu Kaigi & Unesco - 1991
  14. Philosophers' Ideas That Changed the World. Christ, Darwin, Marx, Freud.Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, Jesus Christ & Center for Humanities - 1990 - Center for Humanities.
     
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  15.  15
    The Double-Edged Helix: Social Implications of Genetics in a Diverse Society.Joseph S. Alper, Catherine Ard, Adrienne Asch, Peter Conrad, Jon Beckwith, American Cancer Society Research Professor of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics Jon Beckwith, Harry Coplan Professor of Social Sciences Peter Conrad & Lisa N. Geller - 2002
    The rapidly changing field of genetics affects society through advances in health-care and through implications of genetic research. This study addresses the impacts of new genetic discoveries and technologies on different segments of today's society. The book begins with a chapter on genetic complexity, and subsequent chapters discuss moral and ethical questions arising from today's genetics from the perspectives of health care professionals, the media, the general public, special interest groups and commercial interests.
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  16. Philosophy and the human sciences.Charles Taylor - 1985 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Charles Taylor has been one of the most original and influential figures in contemporary philosophy: his 'philosophical anthropology' spans an unusually wide range of theoretical interests and draws creatively on both Anglo-American and Continental traditions in philosophy. A selection of his published papers is presented here in two volumes, structured to indicate the direction and essential unity of the work. He starts from a polemical concern with behaviourism and other reductionist theories (particularly in psychology and the philosophy of language) which (...)
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  17.  33
    Kant and the Human Sciences: Biology, Anthropology and History.Alix Cohen - 2009 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Kant famously identified 'What is man?' as the fundamental question that encompasses the whole of philosophy. Yet surprisingly, there has been no concerted effort amongst Kant scholars to examine Kant's actual philosophy of man. This book, which is inspired by, and part of, the recent movement that focuses on the empirical dimension of Kant's works, is the first sustained attempt to extract from his writings on biology, anthropology and history an account of the human sciences, their underlying unity, (...)
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  18.  6
    Psychoanalysis and the Human Sciences.Louis Althusser - 2016 - Columbia University Press.
    What can psychoanalysis, a psychological approach developed more than a century ago, offer us in an age of rapidly evolving, hard-to-categorize ideas of sexuality and the self? Should we abandon Freud's theories completely or adapt them to new findings and the new relationships taking shape in modern liberal societies? In a remarkably prescient series of lectures delivered in the early 1960s, the French philosopher Louis Althusser anticipated the challenges that psychoanalytic theory would face as politics moved away from structuralist frameworks (...)
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  19.  20
    The Human Sciences in a Biological Age.Nikolas Rose - 2013 - Theory, Culture and Society 30 (1):3-34.
    We live, according to some, in the century of biology, where we now understand ourselves in radically new ways as the insights of genomics and neuroscience have opened up the workings of our bodies and our minds to new kinds of knowledge and intervention. Is a new figure of the human, and of the social, taking shape in the 21st century? With what consequences for the politics of life today? And with what implications, if any, for the social, cultural (...)
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  20.  22
    Defining human sciences: Theodor Waitz’s influence on Dilthey.Riccardo Martinelli - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (3):498-518.
    The work of Theodor Waitz is an important but hitherto unnoticed source of Dilthey’s concept of ‘human sciences’. Waitz was an outstanding philosopher and psychologist who, in the late 1850s, devoted himself wholeheartedly to empirical anthropology. In this field Waitz distinguished himself for his defence of the unity of humankind against mainstream polygenic and racial doctrines. Waitz inspired Dilthey’s articulation of psychology into two branches: the ‘descriptive’ one and the ‘explanative’ one. Even more remarkably, in a work reviewed (...)
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  21. Legitimation Crisis? Philosophy and Human Science.Charles Taylor - 1985 - Philosophical Papers 2.
     
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  22.  3
    An attempt to found human sciences: Simondon’s philosophy of technology. 황수영 - 2019 - Journal of the Society of Philosophical Studies 125:195-226.
    시몽동은 생성과 존재를 결합하는 존재론적 기획 속에서 인간과학의 기초를 세우고자 한다. 선험적 주관을 거부하는 생성적 존재론에서 인간과학의 정당성근거를 도출하는 것은 특이하고도 모험적인 시도이다. 시몽동은 우선 에너지학과 정보이론의 기초 위에서 인간과 사회의 역동적 과정을 설명하는 ‘인간적 에너지학’이라는 개념을 확립한다. 그에게 인식은 존재의 발생과 동시적이고 따라서 인간과학의 정초의 정당성근거는 발생적 근거로 연결된다. 시몽동은 기술철학 저서에서 인간이 마술적 세계로부터 기술성을 통해 점차 스스로를 객관화해 온 과정을 서술한다. 이는 기술공학을 통한 인간과학의 통일성의 재조직화라는 문제로 이어진다. 오늘날 인간의 거부할 수 없는 존재조건이 된 기술적 우주에서 (...)
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  23.  28
    Humanizing Science and Philosophy of Science: George Sarton, Contextualist Philosophies of Science, and the Indigenous/Science Project.Alison Wylie - 2022 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 52 (3):256-278.
    A century ago historian of science George Sarton argued that “science is our greatest treasure, but it needs to be humanized or it will do more harm than good”. The systematic cultivation of an “historical spirit,” a philosophical appreciation of the dynamic nature of scientific inquiry, and a recognition that science is irreducibly a “collective enterprise” was, on Sarton’s account, crucial to the humanizing mission he advocated. These elements of Sarton’s program are more relevant than ever as philosophers of science (...)
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  24.  10
    Shaping Human Science Disciplines: Institutional Developments in Europe and Beyond.Christian Fleck, Matthias Duller & Victor Karády (eds.) - 2018 - Springer Verlag.
    This book presents an analysis of the institutional development of selected social science and humanities disciplines in Argentina, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom. Where most narratives of a scholarly past are presented as a succession of ‘ideas,’ research results and theories, this collection highlights the structural shifts in the systems of higher education, as well as institutions of research and innovation within which these disciplines have developed. This institutional perspective will facilitate systematic comparisons between (...)
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  25. Inventing Human Science: Eighteenth Century Domains.Christopher Fox, Roy Porter, Robert Wokler & G. W. Stocking Jr - 1997 - Annals of Science 54 (3):313-313.
    The human sciences—including psychology, anthropology, and social theory—are widely held to have been born during the eighteenth century. This first full-length, English-language study of the Enlightenment sciences of humans explores the sources, context, and effects of this major intellectual development. The book argues that the most fundamental inspiration for the Enlightenment was the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century. Natural philosophers from Copernicus to Newton had created a magisterial science of nature based on the realization that the (...)
     
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  26.  43
    Inventing Human Science: Eighteenth Century Domains.Christopher Fox, Roy Porter & Robert Wokler (eds.) - 1995 - University of California Press.
    A work of remarkable cross-disciplinary scholarship, this volume illuminates the origins of the human sciences and offers a new view of the Enlightenment that ...
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  27.  6
    The Formation of the Historical World in the Human Sciences.Wilhelm Dilthey - 2002 - Princeton University Press.
    This volume provides Dilthey's most mature and best formulation of his Critique of Historical Reason. It begins with three "Studies Toward the Foundation of the Human Sciences," in which Dilthey refashions Husserlian concepts to describe the basic structures of consciousness relevant to historical understanding. The volume next presents the major 1910 work The Formation of the Historical World in the Human Sciences. Here Dilthey considers the degree to which carriers of history--individuals, cultures, institutions, and communities--can be (...)
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  28.  24
    The Human Science of Communicology: A Phenomenology of Discourse in Foucault and Merleau-Ponty.Richard L. Lanigan - 1992 - Duquesne.
    Communicology is the study of human discourse in all of its forms, ranging from human gesture and speech to art and television. Commuicology also represents the dominant qualitative research paradigm in the discipline of human communication, especially in the applied areas of mass communication, philosophy of communication, and speech communication. Lanigan's work offers the bold and original thesis that Michel Foucault's thematic study of the discourse of desire and power is an elaboration of the problematic discourse explicated (...)
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  29. Interpretation and the Human Sciences' in Philosophy and the Human Sciences.Charles Taylor - 1985 - Philosophical Papers 2.
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  30.  31
    The Human Sciences after the Decade of the Brain.Jon Leefmann & Elisabeth Hildt (eds.) - 2017 - London, Vereinigtes Königreich: Elsevier Academic Press.
    The Human Sciences after the Decade of the Brain brings together exciting new works that address today’s key challenges for a mutual interaction between cognitive neuroscience and the social sciences and humanities. Taking up the methodological and conceptual problems of choosing a neuroscience approach to disciplines such as philosophy, history, ethics and education, the book deepens discussions on a range of epistemological, historical, and sociological questions about the "neuro-turn" in the new millennium. The book’s three sections focus (...)
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  31.  11
    Human Science for Human Freedom? Piaget's Developmental Research and Foucault's Ethical Truth Games.Guoping Zhao - 2012 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 48 (5):450-464.
    The construction of the modern subject and the pursuit of human freedom and autonomy, as well as the practice of human science has been pivotal in the development of modern education. But for Foucault, the subject is only the effect of discourses and power?knowledge arrangements, and modern human science is part of the very arrangement that has given birth to the subject who is thoroughly subjected. In his final years, however, a strong passion for human liberty (...)
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  32. Satellite cuisines: The human sciences and the visual arts.Wilfried van Damme - 2021 - In Helen Westgeest, Kitty Zijlmans & Thomas J. Berghuis (eds.), Mix & stir: new outlooks on contemporary art from global perspectives. Amsterdam: Valiz.
     
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  33.  21
    Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation.Paul Ricoeur - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    Collected and translated by John B. Thompson, this collection of essays by Paul Ricoeur includes many that had never appeared in English before the volume's publication in 1981. As comprehensive as it is illuminating, this lucid introduction to Ricoeur's prolific contributions to sociological theory features his more recent writings on the history of hermeneutics, its central themes and issues, his own constructive position and its implications for sociology, psychoanalysis and history. Presented in a fresh twenty-first-century series livery, and including a (...)
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  34.  26
    Inventing human science.Irving Louis Horowitz - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (5):882-885.
    Inventing Human Science: Eighteenth Century Domains. Edited by Christopher Fox, Roy Porter, and Robert Wokler (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995) $45.00 and £24.00 cloth, xv + 357 pp.
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  35. Humanizing science education.James F. Donnelly - 2004 - Science Education 88 (5):762-784.
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  36. The rise of the human sciences.Christopher J. Berry - 2015 - In Aaron Garrett & James Anthony Harris (eds.), Scottish Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century. Oxford University Press.
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  37.  11
    Human Sciences: Reappraising the Humanities Through History and Philosophy.Jens Hoyrup - 2000 - State University of New York Press.
    Offers historical and philosophical arguments for treating the humanities as sciences.
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  38.  81
    Narrative Knowing and the Human Sciences.Donald Polkinghorne - 1988 - State University of New York Press.
    This book expands the concept of the nature of science and provides a practical research alternative for those who work with people and organizations.
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  39.  39
    Human science research as the embodiment of openness: Swimming upstream in a technological culture.Karin Dahlberg & Steen Halling - 2001 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 32 (1):12-21.
    The principle of openness is central to human science approaches to research where the researcher becomes closely involved with the phenomenon under study. This article addresses both the practical and theoretical challenges that confront the researcher who seeks to be open. It also clarifies the meaning of the concept of openness and considers its relationship to the ideal of objectivity. Openness, it is argued, is neither an enduring state nor a trait but requires an ongoing struggle and has different (...)
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  40.  11
    Human Sciences, History of.Stephen Turner - 2015 - In J. D. Wright (ed.), International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences (Second Edition). Elsevier. pp. 380-385.
    The term Human Sciences is primarily a French usage, but it refers back to a much deeper tradition in the literature claiming that works of the spirit and human experience cannot be reduced to the realm of causal science, and require different methods. Following Kant, much of this discussion has focused on the problem of the conceptual formation of human experience. Methodologically, discussion has shifted back and forth between an emphasis on concepts, on experience, and external (...)
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  41. The Human Sciences and the Crisis of Epistemology: The Road to Heidegger's Critique of Modern Science.Juan Daniel Videla - 2001 - Dissertation, New School for Social Research
    This dissertation studies modern European philosophy's reflection the historical appearance of the human sciences, under the spell of either positivist ideology or historicism, while also making their scientific character a philosophical issue. The work thus hopes to situate the human sciences in an historical context out of which they become unintelligible: the philosophical reflection that, throughout late modernity, has registered their progressive appearance as disciplines of an uncertain and often questioned degree of scientificity. In this way, (...)
     
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  42. The Human Science of Communicology; A Phenomenology of Discourse in Foucault and Merleau-Ponty.Richard L. Lanigan - 1995 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 28 (4):423-425.
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  43.  24
    From human science to biology: The second synthesis of Ronald Fisher.Maurizio Esposito - 2016 - History of the Human Sciences 29 (3):44-62.
    Scholars have paid great attention to the neo-Darwinism of Ronald Fisher. He was one of the founding fathers of the modern synthesis and, not surprisingly, his writings and life have been widely scrutinized. However, less attention has been paid to his interests in the human sciences. In assessing Fisher’s uses of the human sciences in his seminal book the Genetical Theory of Natural Selection and elsewhere, the article shows how Fisher’s evolutionary thought was essentially eclectic when (...)
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  44. The Human Science of Somatics and Transcendental Phenomenology / Žmogaus somatikos mokslas ir transcendentali fenomenologija.Elizabeth Behnke - 2009 - Žmogus ir Žodis 11:10-26.
    Straipsnyje pristatomas žmogaus somatikos mokslas, kuris pirmiausia susiejamas su ankstyvaja Husserlio somatologijos samprata, o vėliau pasiūloma transcendentali šio mokslo pagrindinių prielaidų kritika. Kritiškai nagrinėjama psichofizinė apercepcija ir jos nuoroda į išgyvenamą mirties patirtį. Tada kaip alternatyvi somatikos prielaida pateikiama Husserlio kinestetinės sąmonės samprata. Straipsnnis užbaigiamas fenomenologine kinestetinių sistemų analize susiejant somatikos tyrinėjimus su įsikūnijimo etika bei pagarbos kinestetika. Esminiai žodžiai: fenomenologija, Husserlis, transcendentalumas, somatika, psichofiziologija, gyvenamas kūnas, kinestetinė sąmonė, kinestetinės sistemos, įsikūnijimo etika. After introducing the field of somatics as a (...)
     
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  45. Human sciences and quantum mechanics (гуманитарные науки и квантовая механика).Francois-Igor Pris - 2020 - Philosophy of Science (Философия Науки) Новосибирск 2 (85):113-130.
  46. Human sciences and hermeneutical method.P. Ricoeur - 1973 - In David Carr & Edward S. Casey (eds.), Explorations in Phenomenology. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.
     
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  47.  64
    Does reflexivity separate the human sciences from the natural sciences?Roger Smith - 2005 - History of the Human Sciences 18 (4):1-25.
    A number of writers have picked out the way knowledge in the human sciences reflexively alters the human subject as what separates these sciences from the natural sciences. Furthermore, they take this reflexivity to be a condition of moral existence. The article sympathetically examines this emphasis on reflexive processes, but it rejects the particular conclusion that the reflexive phenomenon enables us to demarcate the human sciences. The first sections analyse the different meanings that (...)
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  48.  82
    Introduction to the human sciences: an attempt to lay a foundation for the study of society and history.Wilhelm Dilthey - 1988 - Detroit: Wayne State University Press. Edited by Ramon J. Betanzos.
    This book is a pioneering effort to elaborate a general theory of the human sciences, especially history, and to distinguish these sciences radically from the ...
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  49.  13
    The human sciences & philosophy.Lucien Goldmann - 1969 - London,: Cape.
  50.  3
    Problems in the biological and human sciences.Michael Bartholomew - 1981 - Milton Keynes: Open University Press. Edited by Bernard Norton & Robert M. Young.
    Mankind's place in nature -- Evolution after Darwin -- The naturalization of value systems in the human sciences.
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