scholarly journals Bioethics - A Fundamental Reflection

Author(s):  
Ana Amélia Barbieri
1975 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 457-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kisiel ◽  
M. Podgórny ◽  
A. Rodzik ◽  
W. Giriat

Author(s):  
Fred Coelho

This article presents the contrasting views and theories formulated by European intellectuals such as Claude Lévis-Strauss and Max Bense on the situation of Brazil and Latin America in relation to the main centers of twentieth century criticism. It analyzes improvisation as a fundamental reflection index on the possibilities that third world countries have for negotiating the European Cartesian paradigm. If for some thinkers improvisation and its corollaries are proof that these countries and their people would live forever on the margins or in negative dialectics within the heritage of Enlightenment reason, for others it is precisely there--in the possibility of reinventing reason from hybridisms, strategic appropriations, and re-readings--that the creative and autonomous potentials in the post-colonial world lie. This article is situated precisely in the conflict between reason and the tropics, and looks to bring the debate up to date.


Author(s):  
Ivonne Assunta Cortelletti

Resumo: Com o intuito de contribuir para uma reflexão a respeito do tema Profissionalização em Gerontologia, é lançado um conjunto de idéias abertas que procuram estimular um pensamento divergente sobre os significados, os modos e as estratégias de formação de profissionais na área da Gerontologia. É apresentada uma abordagem sobre a formação profissional, deslocando-a, de uma perspectiva excessivamente centrada nas dimensões acadêmicas, para uma perspectiva centrada na concepção de Gerontologia, ciência interdisciplinar do estudo da velhice, e no terreno da ação prática do profissional dessa área. Argumenta-se a necessidade de pensar a formação profissional a partir de uma reflexão fundamental sobre a profissão de gerontólogo. Palavras-chave: Profissionalização. Formação. Formação Profissional. Profissional em Gerontologia. Abstract: With the purpose of contributing to a reflection on the theme Profissionalization in Gerontology, a set of open ideas that aim at stimulating a divergent thought about the meanings, the modes and the strategies of formation of professionals in the area of Gerontology is introduced. An approach about the professional formation is presented, shifting it from a perspective excessively centered in the academic dimensions to a perspective centered in the conception of gerontology – the interdisciplinary science of the study of old age – and in the field of the practical action of the professional of this area. It is argued that it is necessary to think about professional formation starting from a fundamental reflection about the profession of gerontologist. Keywords: Professionalization. Formation. Professional Formation. Professional in Gerontology.


2021 ◽  
pp. 253-271
Author(s):  
Marius Kleinheyer

Within the context of the economic crisis since 2007 a space for fundamental reflection on the institutional structure of the finan-cial system has been opened, allowing for the introduction of sig-nificant reform proposals in the economic discourse. The IMF economists Jaromir Benes and Michael Kumhof published a work-ing paper in August 2012, reintroducing the Chicago Plan as such a proposal.2 Following up the work of Irving Fisher (1935)3 the au-thors propose the separation of the monetary and the credit func-tions of the banking system, by requiring 100% reserve backing for deposits. This plan is designed to eliminate the possibilities for private banks to create money through fractional reserve banking and is supposed to give governments the complete control over money issuance. The central bank, upgraded as a powerful mone-tary commission, is seen as the best candidate to serve as a state’s monetary authority in the exercise of its monetary prerogative (monopoly of currency, money issuance, and seigniorage). The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the ele-ments of this reform proposal, contrast it with a recapitulatory display of the Austrian analysis and evaluate the plan based on its political desirability. In the first step, the original plan from 1935 by Irving Fisher is presented. Second, the newest version and the key findings of Ben-es and Kumhof are summarized. Third the Austrian critique of fractional reserve banking and central banking is laid out. In the fourth step, a response to a peculiarity of the working paper about the origin of money is offered. In conclusion a brief discussion on the likelihood of political implementation and the evaluation from the Austrian perspective close the argumentation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
E. C. Kloppers ◽  
T. F.J. Dreyer

Liturgical choral song as a form of ecclesiastical proclamation: A fundamental reflection from a hermeneutical-homiletical perspective Certain reformed churches have, traditionally, disapproved of choral singing. This has been due either to one-sided or inconsistent theological arguments, or to overreaction to bad choral singing. This article strives to show that, in principle, there is no difference between the kerugma of preaching and that of a choral work, and that liturgical choral singing can be regarded as a form of church proclamatioru Proclamation is examined from a hermeneutical-homiletical point of view, in order to show that there are no fundamental differences between the ‘hearing’ of a choral work and listening to an ‘ordinary’ spoken sermon.


2004 ◽  
Vol 449-452 ◽  
pp. 969-972
Author(s):  
G. Chen ◽  
Hiromi Nakano ◽  
Hirohisa Sato ◽  
Naoki Kamegashira

The complex oxide Eu2Mn2/3Nb4/3O7 structurally characterized by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results of XRD structure analysis shown that the X-ray diffraction profile calculated with monoclinic C2/c model is in a good agreement with the observed X-ray diffraction patterns. In addition to fundamental reflection peaks, super lattice lines could be also assigned with C2/c symmetry. Therefore, it is derived that Eu2Mn2/3Nb4/3O7 phase has not a pyrochlore structure but has a zirconolite-type structure (pyrochlore-related structure) with a C2/c space group. Eu2Mn2/3Nb4/3O7 has two kinds of distorted MO6 octahedra and HTB layers, which deviates from the regular forms. The microstructure of Eu2Mn2/3Nb4/3O7 investigated by TEM also proved the results of XRD structural analysis. It was viewed that HRTEM image of a characteristic twin structure in Eu2Mn2/3Nb4/3O7 which a zirconolite-type structure has.


Author(s):  
Peter Lor

An effective national library needs adequate resources and appropriate powers and status, which ideally should be enshrined in national legislation. Crucial elements are the national library's relationship with the state, its authority, and its autonomy. If these are well-founded the library's funding and accountability, its ability to carry through national and international cooperative work, and its freedom to determine priorities and allocate resources flexibly are all safeguarded. In developing countries, national libraries often discharge their responsibilities through a national library service (NLS), via a network of branch and affiliated libraries. The main sections of a typical NLS statute are the definition of terms relating to information materials, their format, reproduction and dissemination; the designation of the institution (if new) as the NLS; the aims of the NLS, neither too restrictive nor unrealistically broad, but taking a long-term view; a statement of functions which indicates in outline the tasks and activities of the NLS in pursuing its aims; the status and powers of the NLS; its governance, including the parent ministry and governing board; its personnel structures and policies, especially the vital issue of its director; collections and other assets; services; and finally financing, organization, and regulations. All this presupposes consultation on national policy and strategy within a political process which will require some compromises. Clear and explicit drafting following fundamental reflection on the nature and purpose of an NLS is therefore essential.


Author(s):  
Manuela Hackel

Kierkegaard is the ‘father’ of existentialism. This claim, however, seems to be a contradiction in terms. The first part of the paper offers a fundamental reflection on the question of whether a subjective thinking like Kierkegaard’s can survive his death and in what form. In its second part, the paper inquires into the concrete reception of Kierkegaard’s thinking in the atheistic branch of existentialism (Sartre, Beauvoir, Camus). The paper will examine how Kierkegaard’s fundamental themes and concepts such as understanding, freedom/choice, des-pair, and anxiety are appropriated and transformed on the basis of a changed historical and philosophical situation. It will be argued that it is only in this way that the reception of Kierkegaard will avoid being a hollow repetition and be a lively conversation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-24
Author(s):  
Blaise Bachofen

AESTHETICS OF “PURE SIGN” ADORNO, MERLEAU-PONTY AND ART AS AN ENDLESS REINVENTION OF REALITY Contemporary painting has often dealt with signs, graffiti, calligraphy, and more precisely with aesthetic objects that take the form and appearance of signs, but which do not belong to any existing alphabet. These are forms that imitate signs but are what we might call “pure signs”, i.e. signifiers without a signified. This form of artistic experimentation (of which Paul Klee is the precursor) has elicited parallel and convergent analyses by Merleau-Ponty and Adorno. These authors show the ways in which this kind of artistic experimentation at once renews reflection on language and reflection on art, through a more fundamental reflection on the cognitive actions that they necessarily share, namely deciphering and interpretation. By asking how signs that have no conventional meaning can still be identified as signs–the “decryption” of which is therefore impossible–we re-actualize a question that goes back to Plato and Augustine. How can we begin to investigate and understand what we do not know yet? How does the decryption and interpretation process arise for one who does not yet know if there is something to understand? This type of artwork actually has a meaning, but not in the traditional sense. Although they are unreadable and untranslatable, such works clarifying the meaning of interpretation for us, they free us from a naive and simplistic conception of the process of understanding. They show us that interpretation is always a process of inventing and producing a new meaning, but never of actually finding a pre-existing meaning. In doing so, these kinds of artwork are inseparable from ontological and political issues. Against a conservative view of our relationship to reality, they make us aware that the sense of reality is never simply given nor definitive, and that our relationship to reality contains much more potential than we commonly believe.


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