Diversity and Exclusivity

2009 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 70-85
Author(s):  
M. Ashraf Adeel

It is argued that religions seem to insist, paradoxically, on both exclusivity and diversity to inspire passionate commitment on the one hand and to allow for genuine choice of religion on the other. The argument is developed with special reference to Islam, with hints of similar strands of thought in Judaism and Christianity. The paradoxicality of this position of religions is similar to Kierkegaard’s interpretation of faith, as exhibited byAbraham in his sacrifice. Interpreting religions in this way provides us with a better context for understanding the exclusivism/pluralism debate.

2009 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 70-85
Author(s):  
M. Ashraf Adeel

It is argued that religions seem to insist, paradoxically, on both exclusivity and diversity to inspire passionate commitment on the one hand and to allow for genuine choice of religion on the other. The argument is developed with special reference to Islam, with hints of similar strands of thought in Judaism and Christianity. The paradoxicality of this position of religions is similar to Kierkegaard’s interpretation of faith, as exhibited byAbraham in his sacrifice. Interpreting religions in this way provides us with a better context for understanding the exclusivism/pluralism debate.


1988 ◽  
Vol 152 (S1) ◽  
pp. 21-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Cooper

The discussion here is largely concerned with the purposes and structure of classifications of clinical concepts, variously called diseases, illnesses, disorders and syndromes, which are the main reasons why patients go to see doctors. Multiaspect (or multiaxial) classification has deservedly come to the fore in recent years, and seems likely to increase in importance for purposes of education, communication and research in the near future, but it is mentioned only briefly in the following discussion. The main focus of attention for the moment is the clinical descriptions of disorders; this is, of course, usually the first aspect in a multiaspect system, and the one around which the other aspects tend to be organised.


Parasitology ◽  
1940 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecil A. Hoare

In view of the morphological similarity of T. evansi and T. brucei, including the sporadic occurrence of marked polymorphism in the first-named species, the hypothesis is advanced that T. evansi may have originated from T. brucei, by the introduction of the last-named species into localities free of Glossina and its subsequent propagation by direct passages.The possibility of contact between the mammalian host of T. evansi, on the one hand, and Glossina and tsetse-borne trypanosomiases, on the other, is shown to exist in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, thus pointing to the source from which T. evansi in that country may have originated and providing circumstantial evidence in support of the hypothesis.Attempts were made to discover whether T. evansi is capable of developing in Glossina. A total of 568 flies were fed on infected mice and examined at periods from 6 hr. to a fortnight following the infective feed. The results were entirely negative: not only is the trypanosome incapable of establishing an infection in the fly, but the majority of flagellates perish and are digested during the first hours after ingestion by the insect.The behaviour of T. evansi in tsetse is shown to be similar to that of non-transmissible strains of trypanosomes of the Brucei group after prolonged maintenance by direct passages in the mammalian hosts, and is therefore also in keeping with the hypothesis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-44
Author(s):  
Nandini Chakraborty

Media plays a vital role in our society today. With the advent of mass media, including television and more recently, video and computer games, children and teenagers are exposed to increasingly higher doses of aggressive images. Media is a double-edged tool. On the one hand, it plays an important role in framing public opinion, and on the other, its character is to sensationalize issues to attract readers. But its objective should be clear; that is, to reform a juvenile and not to penalize him or her.  The article depicts the media's influence on juvenile delinquency and the tendency for delinquency. Several media reports show the cases of juvenile delinquency, with special reference to India.


2021 ◽  
pp. 287-289

This chapter discusses What We Talk About When We Talk about Hebrew (And What It Means to Americans) (2018). The essays in this collection address the diminishing role of Hebrew in American Jewish communal identity and practice. On the one hand, each writer demonstrates passionate commitment to the Hebrew-language, in many cases offering moving testimony of Hebrew's role in their personal and communal lives. Consequently, they propose diverse strategies for boosting the presence of Hebrew among Jewish Americans. On the other hand, they all resist romantic concepts of Hebrew drawn from Johann Gottfried Herder's conflation of language, nation, and folk, which inevitably leads to a valorization of authenticity. To put it another way, modern Israeli Hebrew poses particular challenges to Hebraists elsewhere, despite the longstanding role of Hebrew in Jewish civilization. The great strength of this volume lies in its successful severing of devotion to Hebrew (whether intellectual, emotional, or cultural) from allegiance to “authenticity” in its diverse meanings.


Finisterra ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (65) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Hooson

These pos-Soviet years have brougt a return of geography, along with history, after the long period of ideologically controlled uniformity. There is, in particular, a felt need for resurrection of the kind of regional and historical geography which was practiced in the tradition of the French schools of Vidal de La Blache and the "annales" on the one hand, and the Berkeley school of historical-cultural geography, personified by Sauer, on the other. The paper examines the contribution of Stanislawski, an essential regional, cultural-historical Berkeley geographer who had written three books and several articles on Portugal.


Temida ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 55-66
Author(s):  
Milica Kovacevic

This paper is primarily devoted to issues related to the normative regulation of hate crimes, with special reference to the regulations of the Republic of Serbia, which are indirectly related to this matter. This kind of crimes are characterized by prejudices that perpetrators have towards injured parties, as members of certain, mostly, minority groups, due to which many hate crimes could be also called crimes of prejudice. In comparative law there are two different basic directions when it comes to regulating hate crimes: separation of hate crimes in a separate category on the one hand, and punishment of perpetrators of criminal acts with the detriment of minority groups through the usual charges of a given criminal justice system, on the other. The author finds that, regardless of the formal response forms, real life suggests that hate crimes can be essentially suppressed only by promoting values such as equality, respect for diversity and tolerance, and by continuous education of public about the danger of hate crimes.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 302
Author(s):  
Wei Wang ◽  
Weihong Zhou

The issue of translatability has always been in dispute in translatology. On the one hand, languages are translatable, which can be demonstrated from different perspectives such as the general characteristics of language, the parallel linguistic structures, the cultural similarities, and the sameness of the intelligence quotient of all human races. On the other hand, there exist a series of limits in translation which obstruct the translatability of languages. Thus language can be described as relatively translatable. Translators are supposed to provide hybrid versions so as to facilitate communication and decrease tension between source language text and target language text.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 153-170
Author(s):  
Syamsul Anwar

This article deals with an uṣūlī concept known among the Hanafi legal theoretician under the name of dalālāt al-khāf (the denotation of an obscure text) and its relation to the mechanism of ijtihād with special reference to the case of euthanasia. The author examines the meaning of the obscure text (al-khāfiy) and discusses the mechanism followed by the uṣūlī in clarifying the ambiguity in it, taking euthanasia as an example. From this, the author concludes that the process of legal reasoning in founding out a legal rule for a case involves three poles which have dialectical relations to one another: the text, the reality, and the objective of law. The text with its symbolic characteristic and its relying upon generalization and abstraction in expressing an object enables the mujtahid to add a new meaning to it and this meaning is produced through an adequate understanding of the case and the spatio-temporal space in which it happens in the one hand and through considering the objective of law as meaning space on the other hand. The reality of the case shades  light in our understanding of the text, while the text in the same time gives us a clear orientation in coping with the reality.


1916 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 446-463
Author(s):  
Fred. Griffith

Simple agglutination tests divided into two main groups a series of 34 meningococci obtained from the cerebro-spinal fluid of cases of meningitis during the recent epidemic.Certain of these strains of meningococci, which were either not agglutinated or only slightly by any of the sera employed, could be placed in one or other of the groups by the demonstration of their agglutinogenic capacity.Certain individual strains in each of the groups were agglutinated to a less degree than the homologous strain, and certain strains were agglutinated by sera of both groups.For further evidence as to specific relationship resort was made to agglutinin absorption experiments.While the question, as to whether meningococci can be divided into independent groups by means of agglutinin absorption tests, must, at this stage of the investigation, remain open, the experiments detailed above indicate that variations in absorptive capacity between individual strains of meningococci are analogous to, though not in actual correspondence with, variations in agglutinability.The non-contact naso-pharyngeal strains, culturally identical with meningococci, exhibited in relation to monovalent agglutinating sera prepared with cerebro-spinal meningococci, the same tendency to grouping as the cerebro-spinal strains and similar variations in agglutinability. The 28 non-contact strains, which have been investigated serologically, reacted to the following extent with one or other of the above-mentioned meningococcus immune sera:—5 showed complete agglutination in 1:400 or over, 10 in 1:200 or over, 6 in 1:100; 7 were not completely agglutinated in dilutions higher than 1:50. The first-mentioned 5 absorbed, from the respective agglutinating sera, the agglutinins for the homologous strains. From one of these 5, N.P. 10, a serum was prepared which was found to agglutinate strains in Group II. Of the 16 strains which agglutinated with meningococeus sera between 1:100 and 1:400, a few were tested as to their absorptive capacity in relation to two sera and, as will be seen from the absorption tables, showed evidence of agglutinin absorption. The absorption, though slight in amount, was equal to that occurring with the same sera treated with certain cerebro-spinal strains. The remaining 7 strains, which were agglutinated feebly by the meningococeus sera employed, are being subjected to further investigation (1) as to their agglutinability in relation to other cerebro-spinal meningococeus sera, (2) as to their capacity for producing agglutinating sera for cerebro-spinal meningococci. Taken as a whole, the serological results afford indication of a division of meningococci into two groups with some overlapping of each.The theoretical explanation may be that the antigenic substance of the meningococeus contains one or other of two specific components, A and B, and sometimes contains both components, one of the two then being present in greater amount than the other. Consequently some strains produce sera with agglutinins of the A class alone; others create agglutinins of the B class alone; others produce both A and B agglutinins, with preponderance in some cases of A and in other cases of B. As regards agglutinability, again, some strains are capable of combining with A alone, others with B alone, and others with both A and B, but to a greater degree with the one than with the other.Comparing the capacity of an individual strain for producing agglutinin with its capacity for combining with agglutinin, I find that in some cases these two capacities appear to coincide. But this is not a general rule. For example, a strain may have limited capacity for combining with agglutinin, but much greater capacity for producing agglutinin; again, it may combine with A alone, or mainly with A, but produce agglutinins in which B preponderates over A.Absorption experiments, again, show that whilst there is sometimes a correspondence between capacity to absorb and capacity to create, or combine with, specific agglutinin, this correspondence is not a general rule.These last two considerations show that the characteristics of different strains of meningococci, while affording a basis for division into groups, are closely inter-related, and, in fact, are connected by inseparable links, which appear to make it impossible to effect a definite cleavage between the one group and the other.The above observations have been suggested by the results so far obtained, but further work on this subject is in progress, with special reference to the identification of the meningococcus in the naso-pharynx.


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