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Chronicles the work of Norberto Tavares, a Cabo Verdean musician
and humanitarian who served as the conscience of his island nation
during the transition from Portuguese colony to democratic
republic. Based on twenty years of collaborative fieldwork, Songs
for Cabo Verde: Norberto Tavares's Musical Visions for a New
Republic focuses on the musician Norberto Tavares but also tells a
larger story about postcolonial nation building, musical activism,
and diaspora life within the Lusophone sphere. It follows the
parallel trajectories of Cabo Verdean independence and Tavares's
musical career over four decades (1975-2010). Tavares lived and
worked in Cabo Verde, Portugal, and the United States, where he
died in New Bedford, Massachusetts at age fifty-four. Tavares's
music serves as a lens through which we can view Cabo Verde's
transition from a Portuguese colony to an independent, democratic
nation, one that was shaped in part through the musician's
persistent humanitarian messages.
To what extent can animal behaviour be described as rational? What
does it even mean to describe behaviour as rational? This book
focuses on one of the major debates in science today - how closely
does mental processing in animals resemble mental processing in
humans. It addresses the question of whether and to what extent
non-human animals are rational, that is, whether any animal
behaviour can be regarded as the result of a rational thought
processes. It does this with attention to three key questions,
which recur throughout the book and which have both empirical and
philosophical aspects: What kinds of behavioural tasks can animals
successfully perform? What if any mental processes must be
postulated to explain their performance at these tasks? What
properties must processes have to count as rational? The book is
distinctive in pursuing these questions not only in relation to our
closest relatives, the primates, whose intelligence usually gets
the most attention, but also in relation to birds and dolphins,
where striking results are also being obtained. Some chapters focus
on a particular species. They describe some of the extraordinary
and complex behaviour of these species - using tools in novel ways
to solve foraging problems, for example, or behaving in novel ways
to solve complex social problems - and ask whether such behaviour
should be explained in rational or merely mechanistic terms. Other
chapters address more theoretical issues and ask, for example, what
it means for behaviour to be rational, and whether rationality can
be understood in the absence of language. The book includes many of
the world's leading figures doing empirical work on rationality in
primates, dolphins, and birds, as well as distinguished
philosophers of mind and science. The book includes an editors'
introduction which summarises the philosophical and empirical work
presented, and draws together the issues discussed by the
contributors.
Imitation is not the low-level, cognitively undemanding behavior it
is often assumed to be, but rather--along with language and the
ability to understand other minds--one of a trio of related
capacities that are fundamental to human mentality. In these
landmark volumes, leading researchers across a range of disciplines
provide a state-of-the-art view of imitation, integrating the
latest findings and theories with reviews of seminal work, and
revealing why imitation is a topic of such intense current
scientific interest. Perspectives are drawn from neuroscience and
brain imaging, animal and developmental psychology, primatology,
ethology, philosophy, anthropology, media studies, economics,
sociology, education, and law. These volumes provide a resource
that makes this research accessible across disciplines and
clarifies its importance for the social sciences and philosophy as
well as for the cognitive sciences. As a further aid to
cross-fertilization, each volume includes extensive
interdisciplinary commentary and discussion. The first volume
considers possible mechanisms of imitation, including discussion of
mirror systems, ideomotor and common coding theories, and the
possibility of "shared circuits" for control, imitation, and
simulation, and then takes up imitation in animals, with
illuminating comparisons to human imitation. The second volume
focuses first on the roles of imitation in human development and in
learning to understand the minds of others, and then on the broader
social and cultural roles and functions of imitation, including
discussions of meme theory and cultural evolution, and of the
pervasive imitative tendencies of normal adults and their relevance
forunderstanding the effects of the media on human behavior.
Are there any human rights that apply to all women and all men in
all cultures at all times? Can we ground human rights in an
abstract rationality possessed by every human being? Or, as some
philosophers have claimed, are attempts to ground human rights
doomed to failure? Do human rights in any case need such grounding?
"On Human Rights," the second book in the Oxford Amnesty Lecture
Series, presents the opinions of seven distinguished contributors
who approach the problem of universal human rights from a variety
of perspectives using a wealth of contemporary and historical
material. The essays make a significant contribution to the theory
and practice of human rights . They grapple with the hard questions
that confront anyone concerned with responding appropriately to the
numerous violations of human rights that surround us.
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