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... theories, such as Maslow's hierarchy of needs, have demonstrated that humans' most basic needs m...
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...Rather, if the law needs to move away from Dunmore's distinction between po... support, and be supported by, their fellow humans in the varied activities in which they choose to e... came to court seeking protection of their basic right to associate. They sought the right to organ...
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Our choices are based on a belief system that originates from various sources, such as our own childhood experiences, our religious views or simply a lack of knowledge. Historically, the view of the nature of the child has changed over the centuries. For example, at one time the child was seen as inherently bad -- a creature actively seeking to "get away with" or "oppose the norms." This "badness" had to be "corrected" by the use of physical punishment in order to "knock it out to ensure the future of cooperative citizens.
... of safety and security are one of the basic human needs second only to air, food and shelter. Humans need to feel free from any real or perceived dange...
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... reasoners are merely communally situated humans trying to solve conventional conflicts, then it is... more fully throughout the paper, the basic theory is that we are able to draw on our deeply h...See e.g. David Wiggins, Needs, Values, Truth: Essays in the Philosophy of Value,...
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This paper identifies two new tools, the Keirsey Temperament Sorter (KTS) and Derrida's deconstruction method, to identify cognitive differences between Australian, Thai, and Japanese managers. The KTS identifies one's temperament pattern, which describes ways in which human personalities interact with the environment to satisfy needs. Temperament theory has been extended to leadership/management theory to show that inborn temperament tendencies are differently distributed by cultural groups and these tendencies affect approaches to negotiations. Derrida's deconstruction method offers a new approach to identifying a culture's true diversity by recommending an analysis of the 'difference-to-oneself' within a culture before comparing 'difference-between' cultures. Results identified signi...
...To them, all human beings were basically alike and individual differences were due to chanc... not known what abilities and capabilities humans will develop through education and maturation. It ...
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It is common for parents/families in traditional settings, whether in Africa or China, to pair their children/members in marriage often without their consent. This specific mate selection practice, arrangement, is used to designate marriages in these settings: the so-called arranged marriages. Observations about this mate selection practice are then posited as conclusive evidence of change in these marriages. This paper attempts an exploratory clarification of marriages in traditional Africa in two ways. First, it uses the marriage system of the Okrikans to reveal that arranged and non-arranged marriages coexist, each administered by and organized around distinct institutions, with differing consequences for family membership, inheritance and other important issues. Second, it breaks do...
...-Canoe Houses caUed wari or omu-aru,6 the basic unit of social administration in Okrika. OriginaUy... and replenishing the manpower and suppUes needs of a warcanoe. A middleman role Okrika played betw... on it capacity for action independent of humans. In other words, mate selection decisions are made...
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...Privacy Needs - It has been found that all animals seek differen... and participation is also evident among humans. Although some anthropologists suggest that privac... (1967) argues that privacy consists of four basic states: solitude, intimacy, anonymity, and reserve...
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... they would be toxic or unsafe for use in humans. Ultimately, they turned out to be harmless. Howev... as the carrier medium and using a basic salt to stabilize the composition ( Schering-Ploug... to support the proposition that an expert needs to know how to perform the experiments described i...
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... they would be toxic or unsafe for use in humans. Ultimately, they turned out to be harmless. Howev... as the carrier medium and using a basic salt to stabilize the composition ( Schering-Ploug... to support the proposition that an expert needs to know how to perform the experiments described i...
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.... Three quite basic, but very significant, factors explain our situati... planet's sustainable carrying capacity for humans (given our current technological and managerial ab... energy quality and scale to end use needs, etc.) and proceed as necessary to supply sources ...