scholarly journals Strategies on Inheritance and Preservation of Crossing Tongji Bridge Social Custom in Foshan City

Author(s):  
Wanjie Xu ◽  
Zhou Chen
Keyword(s):  
1963 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Selden D. Bacon

This article is concerned with the overlapping of two phe nomena, each of which can occur independently of the other. The first is deviation from the specific social custom of drinking. The second, crime, refers to a class of deviations from many different customs of a society—deviations possessing one unique attribute in common, that of eliciting purposeful, negative sanc tions by the government. General knowledge about deviation from custom and about the impact of alcohol upon human behavior must be combined with an understanding of each of these two categories of deviance in order to assess the overlap.


Mnemosyne ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Sean McConnell

Abstract The manuscripts of De officiis all record something strange at 1.148: Cicero says that the philosophers Socrates and Aristippus had exceptional licence to flout social custom and convention owing to their ‘great and divine good qualities’ (magna et divina bona). There are no worries about Socrates, but the example of Aristippus seems preposterous. This paper makes the following argument: (1) elsewhere Cicero defines divina bona in such a way to exclude hedonists; this should rule out crediting Aristippus with magna et divina bona alongside Socrates; (2) all scholarly efforts to account for the presence of Aristippus at 1.148 fail to convince; (3) the name Aristippus at 1.148 should, therefore, be remedied; (4) there are excellent philosophical reasons to think that Antisthenes, a follower of Socrates who is credited with setting in motion the Cynic philosophical tradition, is the name that Cicero wrote or should have written in the original.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 319-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joaquin Cravioto ◽  
Elsa R. DeLicardie ◽  
Herbert G. Birch

IN THIS MONOGRAPH we report the results of an experimental and ecologic study concerned with estimating some of the effects which malnutrition in early childhood may have upon neurointegrative functioning. In particular, we have been concerned with the association between malnutrition early in childhood and intersensory organization in children during the school years. A study of these relationships has derived from a concern with the possibility that inadequate food intake, particularly as represented by protein-calorie malnutrition, affects not only stature and weight, but also the capacity to learn. If this is indeed the case, then the significance of the observable and dramatic consequences of malnutrition for physical stature may be but one visible sign of functionally, perhaps, far more important non-visible handicapping. Findings on the effects which malnutrition has on the central nervous system suggest strongly that protein deficiency may result in structural lesions of the nervous system. Animals experimentally deprived are persistently delayed in achieving simple developmental landmarks, appear to be less adequate in environmental responsiveness and slower in learning as well as poorer in the retention of that which has been learned than normal controls. Considering the animal experiments and the findings in humans as a unit, one is led to be concerned with what in an ecologic sense could be called a "spiral" effect. A low level of adaptive capacity, ignorance, social custom, infection, or environmental paucity of foodstuffs appear to result in malnutrition which may produce a large pool of individuals who come to function in suboptimal ways.


Author(s):  
Tapio Bergholm ◽  
Markku Sippola

The membership profile of Finnish trade unions has changed from male-dominated industrial workers to female-dominated service and public sector workers who are more highly educated. The Finnish labour market is strongly divided into female and male occupations and sectors, and these intersectional differences play an important part in the differentiation of developmental paths. The erosion of membership is mainly due to the rapid growth of the independent unemployment fund (YTK) competing with unemployment funds associated with trade unions. YTK has been much more successful in recruiting private sector male workers than women. Men’s decisions not to join the union are related to the shift in the motivation to unionise from social custom to instrumental reasons. Along with the gender majority shift, union identification has changed, and unions need to carry out ‘identity work’ to attain members. The shift in gender proportions has also had consequences for the collective bargaining system.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Huanchen Huang

Foshan city of Guangdong province, who enjoys the reputation of Ceramics’ Capital in South China is one of the largest and most important ceramic production bases in China. Foshan ceramic works of art have a long history and have a great influence in the whole country. In this paper, we try to change the design of the simple historical figure, zodiac animal image and vase purely for daily necessities. To enrich the theoretical results of Foshan ceramic doll art research, Foshan ceramic doll insists taste-oriented design so as to further strengthen the research of interesting design, better adapt to the psychological needs of the audience, create the popular literary and artistic works, lead to the improvement of people’s consuming taste, and finally promote the construction of social spiritual civilization and the development of cultural industry in Foshan.


Author(s):  
Zaid Ibrahim Ismael ◽  
Sabah Atallah Khalifa Ali

Nowhere is American author Shirley Jackson’s (1916-1965) social and political criticism is so intense than it is in her seminal fictional masterpiece “The Lottery”. Jackson severely denounces injustice through her emphasis on a bizarre social custom in a small American town, in which the winner of the lottery, untraditionally, receives a fatal prize. The readers are left puzzled at the end of the story as Tessie Hutchinson, the unfortunate female winner, is stoned to death by the members of her community, and even by her family. This study aims at investigating the author’s social and political implications that lie behind the story, taking into account the historical era in which the story was published (the aftermath of the bloody World War II) and the fact that the victim is a woman who is silenced and forced to follow the tradition of the lottery. The paper mainly focuses on the writer’s interest in human rights issues, which can be violated even in civilized communities, like the one depicted in the story. The shocking ending, the researchers conclude, is Jackson’s protest against dehumanization and violence.


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