平成23年度職業紹介事業報告の集計結果
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2013-5-10 0:00)
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フォトレポート(アンヘル・グリア経済協力開発機構(OECD)事務総長と会談する田村厚生労働大臣)
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2013-5-10 0:00)
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Robert Grosseteste
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2013-5-9 16:20)
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[Revised entry by Neil Lewis on May 8, 2013.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
Robert Grosseteste (ca. 1168 - 1253), Bishop of Lincoln from 1235 to 1253, was one of the most prominent and remarkable figures in thirteenth-century English intellectual life. He was a man of many talents: commentator and translator of Aristotle and Greek patristic thinkers, philosopher, theologian, and student of nature. He was heavily influenced by Augustine, whose thought permeates his writings and from whom he drew a Neoplatonic outlook, but he was also one of the first to make extensive use of the thought of Aristotle, Avicenna...
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Patriotism
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2013-5-9 16:04)
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[Revised entry by Igor Primoratz on May 8, 2013.
Changes to: Bibliography]
Patriotism raises questions of the sort philosophers characteristically discuss: How is patriotism to be defined? How is it related to similar attitudes, such as nationalism? What is its moral standing: is it morally valuable or perhaps even mandatory, or is it rather a stance we should avoid? Yet until a few decades ago, philosophers used to show next to no interest in the subject. The...
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Well-Being
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2013-5-9 10:03)
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[Revised entry by Roger Crisp on May 8, 2013.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
Well-being is most commonly used in philosophy to describe what is non-instrumentally or ultimately good for a person. The question of what well-being consists in is of independent interest, but it is of great importance in moral philosophy, especially in the case of utilitarianism, according to which well-being is to be maximized. Significant challenges to the very notion have been mounted,...
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Feminist Perspectives on Autonomy
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2013-5-3 9:51)
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[New Entry by Natalie Stoljar on May 2, 2013.]
Autonomy is usually understood by feminist writers in the same way that it is understood within moral psychology generally, namely, as self-government or self-direction: being autonomous is acting on motives, reasons, or values that are one's own. Early feminist literature regarded the notion of autonomy with suspicion because it was thought to promote unattractive "masculinist" ideals of personhood; that is, it was...
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Laozi
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2013-5-3 9:49)
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[Revised entry by Alan Chan on May 2, 2013.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
Confucianism, Daoism (Taoism), and Buddhism generally name the three main pillars of Chinese thought, although it should be obvious that like any "ism," they are abstractions - what they name are not monolithic but multifaceted traditions with fuzzy boundaries. In the case of "Daoism," it designates both a philosophical tradition and an organized religion, which in modern...
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食品中の放射性物質の検査結果について(第633報)(東京電力福島原子力発電所事故関連)
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2013-5-2 20:00)
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第7回社会保障の教育推進に関する検討会資料
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2013-5-2 17:00)
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一般用医薬品販売制度
from 厚生労働省新着情報
(2013-5-2 16:00)
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