Results 361 to 370 of about 19,240,983 (413)
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The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion.
, 1994Originally published in Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books, 1994, Vol 39(2), 225. Reviews the book, The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion by John Zaller (1992).
D. Rucinski
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The nature of human intelligence.
, 1968There is a lot of books, user manual, or guidebook that related to The Nature Of Human Intelligence PDF, such as : classical mechanics upadhyaya bond more third papers in non verbal reasoning 9 10 years fiesta mk4 manual a visit of charity origami ...
John Millar Carroll, J. Guilford
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An Examination of the Nature of Trust in Buyer–Seller Relationships:
, 1997The authors integrate theory developed in several disciplines to determine five cognitive processes through which industrial buyers can develop trust of a supplier firm and its salesperson.
Patricia M. Doney, Joseph P. Cannon
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Nature and operation of attitudes.
Annual Review of Psychology, 2001This survey of attitude theory and research published between 1996 and 1999 covers the conceptualization of attitude, attitude formation and activation, attitude structure and function, and the attitude-behavior relation.
I. Ajzen
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2016
The common perception of nature is that it is an objectified thing “out there” somewhere. This mental view of nature arises from the standard subject–objective dichotomy that tends to define contemporary life. There are human beings, and then there are natural objects (wetlands) and phenomena (sunsets).
Juha Hiedanpää, Daniel W. Bromley
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The common perception of nature is that it is an objectified thing “out there” somewhere. This mental view of nature arises from the standard subject–objective dichotomy that tends to define contemporary life. There are human beings, and then there are natural objects (wetlands) and phenomena (sunsets).
Juha Hiedanpää, Daniel W. Bromley
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Teaching in nature? Naturally!
Journal of Biological Education, 2018Elementary school children spend less and less time outdoors in nature. In this way they will neither become familiar with plants and animals in their environment, nor will their environmental awareness develop. The solution for them would be to spend more quality time outdoors. In this work 170 teachers from Hungary and 170 teachers from Serbia shared
Edita Borić+2 more
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The Nature of Theory in Information Systems
MIS Q., 2006The aim of this research essay is to examine the structural nature of theory in Information Systems. Despite the importance of theory, questions relating to its form and structure are neglected in comparison with questions relating to epistemology.
S. Gregor
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Physics World, 1992
What lies behind the world we observe? Why are there laws of physics? Is there a need for a designer? Why does mathematics work? Why does physics work so well? How far can science go in deciphering the Universe? Will we, one day, know everything?
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What lies behind the world we observe? Why are there laws of physics? Is there a need for a designer? Why does mathematics work? Why does physics work so well? How far can science go in deciphering the Universe? Will we, one day, know everything?
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On the Nature of the Nature of Law [PDF]
What is it for something to have a nature? And what is it for law to have a nature? Analysis of the concept of law has often been taken to be a search for the essential features of law, but it is not clear that the nature of a phenomenon or artifact is better explained by its essential features than by its common ones.
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American Literary History, 2008
The spring 2005 issue of American Literary History helps explain the woeful neglect of Howard Horwitz’s book, By the Law of Nature: Form and Value in Nineteenth Century America, published in 1991. Its dust jacket blurb does not in the least exaggerate in describing Horwitz’s examination of the nineteenth century’s heterogeneous discourse of nature as ...
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The spring 2005 issue of American Literary History helps explain the woeful neglect of Howard Horwitz’s book, By the Law of Nature: Form and Value in Nineteenth Century America, published in 1991. Its dust jacket blurb does not in the least exaggerate in describing Horwitz’s examination of the nineteenth century’s heterogeneous discourse of nature as ...
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