Results 241 to 250 of about 28,668 (294)

A Conceptual Model for Strengthening Family Capabilities Through a Process of Care. [PDF]

open access: yesInt J Environ Res Public Health
Reid J   +5 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Exploring bad faith in tourism [PDF]

open access: yesAnnals of Tourism Research, 2021
Previous applications of existential philosophy to tourism have focused on the work of Martin Heidegger but have neglected the contribution of Jean-Paul Sartre. This paper examines the relevance of Sartre’s concept of ‘bad faith’ to tourism. Bad faith is
Duncan Light, Lorraine Brown
exaly   +2 more sources
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Related searches:

Bad-Faith Dissent

2018
This chapter explores whether the presence of bad-faith motive is a reliable criterion to identify normatively inappropriate dissent (NID). Rather than appropriate epistemic motives to help advance scientific knowledge, bad-faith motives involve some other objectionable goal: to confuse the public, stall policies that the dissenters dislike, promote ...
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín   +1 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Bad Faith

2019
This chapter recounts the full takeover of the AFT leadership by Counts and his liberal supporters, who by 1940, as Coudert’s inquisition unfolded, were able to push an anti-communist agenda on the entire union on the claim that communist teachers act in bad faith and must be expelled not only from the union, but from the schools as well.
  +5 more sources

The ‘Faith’ of Bad Faith

Philosophy, 1988
Sartre's account of bad faith has been widely discussed, not least in the pages of Philosophy. 1 If good faith is to be taken as the antithesis of bad faith, by the inclusion of the evaluative term 'good', it would appear to be the more desirable of the two states, and thus radically different from bad faith.
openaire   +1 more source

Patriotism as Bad Faith*

Ethics, 2005
Most people think that patriotism is a virtue. That, at least, is what is suggested by a quick glance at the political world and the popular media in this and similar countries. Politicians constitute an extreme case— I think that many of them would rather be called cowardly or selfish or corrupt than unpatriotic—but their case is odd only for its ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Bad Faith of Violence—and Is Sartre in Bad Faith Regarding It?

Sartre Studies International, 2005
In my recent book, Sartre on Violence—Curiously Ambivalent,1 I mentioned more than once that although Sartre, on a number of occasions, referred to the bad faith of violence, 1 had no intention of making that topic a focus of my book. But I went on to say that "this is an issue for another study," which I proposed to pursue "on another occasion."2 ...
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy