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Emic-etic

A number of bibliographic data bases exist which can provide references to data on both levels and effects. These include BIOSIS, TOXLINE, MEDLINE, CANCERLINE, NIOSHTIC, EMIC, ETIC, and ENERGYLINE. These systems are all publicly available and provide a means of surveying the available literature for existing data sources. [Pg.351]

To apply an emic/etic hermeneutic to those texts from Nag Hammadi that explicitly mention fate is a step beyond the generalizing principles of Hans Jonas. It is to ask what sort of work, rhetorically, the trope of enslavement to fate does, both within the logic of the text itself, as well as within the broader self-understanding or self-identity of the presumed community behind the text. My conclusions fall more in line with the century-old work of Richard... [Pg.85]

An important step in moving towards a professional appraisal of tourist behaviour lies in recognising that there are multiple perspectives on behaviour. In particular one important approach arising out of research in linguistics and anthropology is the etic-emic distinction (Pike, 1966 Triandis, 1972). An emic approach is one that takes the perspective of the participant - the person engaging in the behaviour. The topic of interest... [Pg.5]

The interpretive-functional dimension classifies the space according to studies which, at the interpretive pole, are qualitative, emic and directed at a subjective understanding of tourism. Analyses at the functional end are quantitative, etic in character, and seek generalisations from empirical relationships. [Pg.195]

Arnold, D.E. 1967. Maya blue A new perspective. Master s thesis. University of Illinois, Urbana. Arnold, D.E. 1971. Ethnomineralogy of Ticul, Yucatan potters Etics and emics. American... [Pg.276]

DART/ETIC (Development and Reproductive Toxicology/ Environmental Teratology Information Center) EMIC... [Pg.271]

Etic. proach Method in which a culture is studied from outside in order to create objectivity the opposite of an emic approach. [Pg.66]

Kin etics and Thermody namic s of Simple Ch emical Processes... [Pg.51]

Evidence for cross-cultural equivalence should not, however, be taken to imply that cultural factors can be ignored. Cultural studies distinguish between etic (culturally universal) and emic (culture-specific) processes. While the cross-cultural analyses discussed above identified how the same process (Fig. 2) could operate across different countries (i.e., it describes an etic process), this does not mean... [Pg.3711]


See other pages where Emic-etic is mentioned: [Pg.13]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.250]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.3711]    [Pg.3713]    [Pg.62]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.3 , Pg.188 ]




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