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strictly follow social and ecological planning? III. What would prosperity and development mean in life after capitalism? Scholars from the humanities and social sciences or practitioners in politics, business
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indicators of general beliefs, we use expected life satisfaction in five years time, long-term party preferences, and regional and national origins. The expected life satisfaction is clearly oriented towards [...] assume that individuals who believe that they will be happy with their life in five years time have a more optimistic attitude towards life and therefore evaluate the euro in a more positive manner.5 Political [...] (2001, p. 38f.) found that countries where life satisfaction is higher on average in EU comparison tend to reject the euro more than in countries with low life satisfaction, which tend to endorse the euro
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determinants of socio-economic development and their underlying notions of 'progress' and 'the good life'. A particular focus is on the discussion of common patterns of argumentation on the relationship
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disciplines (humanities, social and cultural sciences, natural and engineering sciences, medicine and life sciences) and is not restricted in terms of content. Applicants must be conducting a research project
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. He also ex- perimented with electrical discharges, and com- pared various barometers. The daily life of Lavoisier was focused entirely on science. In 1771, he married a 13-year-old young lady named
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as a teacher in a local school. He earned his living and provided himself with a quiet, untroubled life. Me- teorology was his passion. He constructed barom- eters and other scientific instruments used [...] used in this field. He began to keep a diary where he entered his weather observations. During his life he made more than 200,000 observations and published them as a book in 1793. Young Dalton was busy teaching [...] pension which enabled him to retire from delivering lectures at the Academy. One event in Dalton’s life is especially worth mentioning: One day Dalton decided to visit his mother and gave her a colorful
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individuals, and less than 20 km² of occupied habitat. References • BirdLife International (2006b): Mauritius Kestrel - BirdLife Species Factsheet [2]. Retrieved 2007-MAR-1. • Diamond, Anthony W.& Roger [...] it is estimated that the remaining habitat allows for a carrying capacity of maybe 50-150 more (BirdLife International 2006a,b). They occur in the remaining forests of the island, especially in the Black [...] control of introduced predators is basically all that is being done to assist the species' survival (BirdLife International 2006a,b). While some apparent inbreeding depression was noted in the captive birds[citation
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of March and September (Monday to Friday). Topics and Contents Academic culture in Germany Everyday life in Flensburg Administrative processes (registering your local address at the city citizens' office
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mornings and early afternoons, in order to help our participants maintain a balance between family life and their academic preparation. As part of academic preparation we use Moodle, an online learning
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social networks and nar- ratives, that is between the structural and the symbolic dimensions of social life (which reminds me to some extent of Bourdieu’s efforts to overcome the division between “ob- jectivism” [...] argued that such narra- tive bonding is dissolving increasingly in the course of the rationalization of life worlds. Yet, it is not dissolving. On the contrary, it continues to shape human social relations as [...] threat- ens to undermine the theoretical intention of taking seriously the narrative dimension in social life. It insinuates that there is a storyteller who provides stories that people like. But narrative resonance