| John Scott - 1994 - 468 sidor
...determining the variability of socio-cultural formations . . . While it is possible to say that man has a nature, it is more significant to say that man...nature, or more simply, that man produces himself, (emphasis added) Man produces himself. But the production of self, as a social being, can only be accomplished... | |
| Sondra Farganis - 1996 - 356 sidor
...substratum determining the variability of socio-cultural formations. While it is possible to say that man has a nature, it is more significant to say that man...nature, or more simply, that man produces himself." The affinity between feminist theory and social constructionism is, as I have suggested, their emphases... | |
| James W. Sire - 2000 - 268 sidor
...Doubleday/ Anchor, 1966), p.49; the sentence actually reads, "While it is possible to say that man has a nature, it is more significant to say that man...nature, or more simply, that man produces himself," but slogans must be ideologically correct. '"Told to me a few years ago by a fellow attendant at a... | |
| Nathan Rousseau - 2002 - 392 sidor
...socio-cultural formations and is relative to their numerous variations. While it is possible to say that man has a nature, it is more significant to say that man...nature, or more simply, that man produces himself. . . . . . . [T]hat man produces himself in no way implies some sort of Promethean vision of the solitary... | |
| James W. Sire - 2004 - 172 sidor
...constructed by that society as it lives within its material context.' "While it is possible to say that man has a nature, it is more significant to say that man...his own nature, or more simply, that man produces himself."4 Berger and Luckmann continue at great length to explain the complex way human self-consciousness... | |
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