3. SOCIAL CONSTRAINTS
• BASED ON SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY OF :
CONFUCIOUS explores
three principal interconnected areas of concern:
A psychology of ritual that describes how ideal social forms regulate individuals,
An ethics rooted in the cultivation of a set of personal virtues
A theory of society and politics based on normative views of the family and the state.
4. SOCIAL CONSTRAINTS
ARISTOTLE
Aristotle and his works became the basis for the both religion and science, especially
through the Middle Ages.
Aristotle's scientific observations were considered the last word in knowledge until
about the 16th century, when Renaissance thought challenged and eventually replaced
much of it.
Even so, Aristotle's empirical approach based on observation, hypothesis and direct
experience (experimentation) is at least part of the basis for scientific activity in nearly
every field of study.)
REF: INTERNET
5. • KANT AND HEDGEL
• Kant’s philosophy of art was a deliberate attempt to remove personal subjectivity.
• Like Hegel, Kant did believe there was a universal beauty, or Absolute of something.
• Hegel’s philosophy rests in his method of dialectical idealism which in fact, his
definition of philosophy springs forth from the very nature of how the method goes. So
to clarify, philosophy is his dialectical idealism and that “philosophy moves
essentially in the element of universality, which includes within itself the
particular”.
• REF: INTERNET
6. • IN PANDEMIC SITUATION WE ARE UNDER
RESTRICTIONS:
• REALITY IS BOTH SUBJECTIVE AND OBJECTIVE
• RESTRICTIONS ARE BOTH SUBJECTIVE AND
OBJECTIVE.
7. SOCIAL CONSTRAINTS
• PROBLEMS OF FREEDOM
• PROBLEMS OF SOCIAL FREEDOM
• MANIFESTATION OF SOCIAL NECESSITY
• IN THE FORM OF SOCIAL AND CULTURAL NORMS
• THINKING PROCESS
• PRODUCTS OF MATERIAL CULTURE
• PEOPLE CANNOT MOVE BEYOND THAT
8. DEFINITION
• SOCIAL CONSTRAINTS REFER TO THE SOCIAL BEHSVIOUR &
ATTRIBUTES THAT INFLUENCE THE SUSTAINABILITY OF SOCIAL
PRACTICES WITHIN A COMMUNITY
• SOCIAL CONSTRAINTS CAN INCLUDE FORMAL PRACTICES SUCH
AS GOVT. REGULATIONS OR INFORMAL NORMS INCLUDING
CULTURAL PREFERENCES.
12. SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT
• LACKING OF FACE TO FACE TEACHING AND LEARNING PROCESS
• SCHOOL IS A MINEATURE FORM OF SOCIETY
• LEARNING IS MORE THAN KNOWLEDGE
• LACKING OF SOCIALISATION
13. SOCIAL MOTIVES
• LACKING OF SOCIAL INTERACTION AND RELATIONSHIP
• COLLABORATION
• COOPERATION
• EQUALITY
14. SOCIAL UNCERTAINTY
1. SOCIAL ISOLATION
2. SOCIAL MIGRATION
3. OCCUPATIONAL MIGRATION
4. UNCERTAINTY BASED ON JOB
5. UNCEDRTAINTY BASED ON EDUCATION
6. UNCERTAINTY BASED ON FUTURE