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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
Constructive empiricism is not just a view regarding the aim of science; it is also a view regarding the epistemological framework in which one should debate the aim of science. This is the focus of this book -- not with scientific truth, but with how one should argue about scientific truth.
This book is the product of four years of collaborative work within the framework of the European Science Foundation's Regional and Urban Restructuring in Europe (RURE) programme. With one exception, all of the chapters have been prepared by participants in RURE - the exception being that commissioned from Conti and Enrietti on Fiat and Italy to provide a fuller coverage of changes in the main automobile producing companies and countries of Europe. A - perhaps the - central theme around which the RURE programme was conceived is that the restructuring of the production system lies at the heart of the changing map of Europe. Equally, it continues to be the case that the automobile industry lies at the cutting edge of the search for viable new models of production. Some eighty years ago the automobile industry occupied a pivotal position in the transition from craft to mass production - indeed "Fordism" came to denote not just a particular micro-economic model of production organisation in the factory but a macro-scale model of economic development, characterized by a particular pattern of relations between mass production, mass consumption and national state regulation. From the late 1960s, however, it became increasingly clear that Fordism as a macro-scale model of advanced capitalist development was reaching its limits.
"Society and Nature" is a lively and highly accessible introduction
to the sociology of the environment. The book provides a
comprehensive guide to contemporary issues and current debates -
including society, nature and the enlightenment, industry and
environmental transformation, commodification, consumption, the
network society and human identity, human biology, citizenship and
new social movements. Combining insights from contemporary sociology, politics,
developmental biology and psychology, Peter Dickens suggests that
environmental degradation is largely due to humanity's narcissistic
demand that the environment be made into a commodity to be
consumed. Meanwhile, human biology is also being modified: people's
bodies are being rebuilt in ways that reflect their class
positions. People and their surroundings have always adapted
according to the demands of society. But modern capitalist society
is changing the environment and its people in profound, potentially
catastrophic, ways, shaping both human and non-human nature in its
own image. The book contains a number of student features to interest and
guide the reader as well as an attractive and clear layout. It will
be particularly useful for students and teachers of sociology,
human ecology, environmental studies and social theory. Dickens' insight won his work the American Sociological Association's Outstanding Publication Award 2006, in the Environment and Technology section.
Constructive empiricism is not just a view regarding the aim of science; it is also a view regarding the epistemological framework in which one should debate the aim of science. This is the focus of this book - not with scientific truth, but with how one should argue about scientific truth.
"Society and Nature" is a lively and highly accessible introduction
to the sociology of the environment. The book provides a
comprehensive guide to contemporary issues and current debates -
including society, nature and the enlightenment, industry and
environmental transformation, commodification, consumption, the
network society and human identity, human biology, citizenship and
new social movements. Combining insights from contemporary sociology, politics,
developmental biology and psychology, Peter Dickens suggests that
environmental degradation is largely due to humanity's narcissistic
demand that the environment be made into a commodity to be
consumed. Meanwhile, human biology is also being modified: people's
bodies are being rebuilt in ways that reflect their class
positions. People and their surroundings have always adapted
according to the demands of society. But modern capitalist society
is changing the environment and its people in profound, potentially
catastrophic, ways, shaping both human and non-human nature in its
own image. The book contains a number of student features to interest and
guide the reader as well as an attractive and clear layout. It will
be particularly useful for students and teachers of sociology,
human ecology, environmental studies and social theory. Dickens' insight won his work the American Sociological Association's Outstanding Publication Award 2006, in the Environment and Technology section.
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