This document summarizes a chapter from a course on values in computational models. It discusses how technology perceptions and public decision making involve complex systems with multiple sources of bias. The chapter analyzes six case studies of new models designed for policy issues involving the natural or built world. Through secondary analysis, the analysis finds that values can originate from the data, model design, and decision-making process. The values in each case study are examined, finding higher trustworthiness of data and clear lines of authority led to more effective outcomes compared to cases with greater uncertainty or conflicts over authority. The chapter concludes that understanding the origins of bias is important for evaluating model results and outcome validity.
Troubling Qualitative Inquiry: Accounts as data and as products
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or
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Cheer Chain Enterprise Co., Ltd.
T +886 4 2386 3559 | F +886-42386 3159
info@cheerchain.com.tw | www.cheerchain.com.tw
Distribution of Software | Training Courses | Consulting Services
This presentation is provide introduction to research design with focus on distinction between different strategies' of Research. Especially qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods. .
Troubling Qualitative Inquiry: Accounts as data and as products
線上購買及更多軟體介紹及下載試用,歡迎至本公司線上商店 ,Buy Online :
http://www.appcenter.com.tw/
or
http://www.cheerchain.com.tw
Cheer Chain Enterprise Co., Ltd.
T +886 4 2386 3559 | F +886-42386 3159
info@cheerchain.com.tw | www.cheerchain.com.tw
Distribution of Software | Training Courses | Consulting Services
This presentation is provide introduction to research design with focus on distinction between different strategies' of Research. Especially qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods. .
POSC 100 Current Event Reflection Paper Rubric Criteri.docxharrisonhoward80223
POSC 100 Current Event Reflection Paper Rubric
Criteria Distinguished Proficient Basic Unacceptable
Completeness Complete in every area;
includes all requirements
Mostly complete;
includes most of the
requirements
Mostly incomplete,
includes few of the
requirements
Incomplete in almost
every area; does not
include requirements
Critical Thinking Displays exceptional
critical thinking; uses
class material and
utilizes sophisticated,
original ideas to develop
arguments
Displays advanced
critical thinking; uses
class material and uses
original ideas to develop
arguments
Displays limited critical
thinking; uses some class
material and some
original ideas to develop
arguments
Displays little critical
thinking; uses limited
class material and does
not use original ideas to
develop arguments
Evaluation & Analysis Presents exceptional
analysis of identified
issues; thoroughly
evaluates the issues
Presents sufficient
analysis of identified
issues; evaluates the
issues
Presents little analysis of
identified issues;
provides a vague
evaluation
Presents almost no
analysis of identified
issues
Understanding Demonstrates an
advanced understanding
of the topic(s) and
issue(s)
Demonstrates an above
average understanding of
the topic(s) and issue(s)
Demonstrates a basic
understanding of the
topic(s) and issue(s)
Demonstrates an
inadequate understanding
of the topic(s) and
issue(s)
Writing Mechanics Writing is clear, concise,
and well-organized
without grammatical
errors or typos
Writing is mostly clear
and generally organized
with few grammatical
errors or typos
Writing is somewhat
clear but is not well
organized and has many
grammatical errors or
typos
Writing is unclear and
very disorganized with
many grammatical errors
or typos
12/22/2017 Communication Today | Critical Thinking and the Challenges of Internet | Communication Today
http://www.communicationtoday.sk/critical-thinking-and-the-challenges-of-internet/ 1/2
C R I T I C A L T H I N K I N G A N D T H E C H A L L E N G E S O F I N T E R N E T
Critical Thinking and
the Challenges of
Internet
A L E X A N D E R P L E C N E R I S S U E : 2 / 2 0 1 4 , S E C T I O N : T H E O R E T I C A L
S T U D I E S
In this article, the author addresses some challenges to information
searches and information evaluation which were brought by the
Internet. Large segments of audience are exaggerating their
awareness and do not realize that their online behavior is driven
more by emotions than by critical assessment of primary sources.
The result is growing popularity of conspiracy theories,
pseudoscience, propaganda, and alternative medicine. These are
all examples of biased reasoning. Due to scientists, scholars,
teachers, and journalists, this trend can be considered as a potential
threat to public health and democracy. Publics incapable of
informed choices can be manipulated to sup.
You will read the text pages that I request. For this assignmenchandaronald
You will read the text pages that I request. For this assignment read pages 27-31 for this discussion which you will have to provide me your email so I can send you the textbook or just the specified pages you will need to complete the assignment. You will then provide a detailed outline of the material and a personal summary or impression of what was covered. The detailed outline will be a minimum of 3 pages. Be sure to include text content that is located in "call out areas" or boxes in the text. Answer must be in Microsoft Word and must be an original answer no plagiarism. There will be
no plagiarism!!!
Indicate the page numbers you've outlined in the subject line of your post.
I’ve posted an example of what the teacher expects.
You have to use this format and Quick Note: You will notice that the textbook assigned to this class uses Wikipedia as a resource. However, I want to point out that you should not use Wikipedia as a source for your coursework. Here’s an article discussing the limitations of Wikipedia.
http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/education/2010/march/The-Top-10-Reasons-Students-Cannot-Cite-or-Rely-on-Wikipedia.html
Example: Science in the Social Sciences
The textbook begins with a quote from Albert Einstein: “Science is the attempt to make the chaotic diversity of our sense-experience correspond to a logically uniform system of thought” (p. 5).
- Truth is not created. It is discovered. Science is an organized attempt to discover truth.
The book clarifies the 3 main categories of science:
1) Natural: study of natural phenomena (cosmological, geological, chemical, biological, etc.)
2) Formal: study of math and logic that use an a priori, rather than factual, methodology (basically, a priori is knowledge that we have and can apply , rather than needing to measure something to gain knowledge about it)
3) Social: study of human behavior and sciences
Einstein was a theoretical physicist; this falls under formal sciences. He did not like things that were unpredictable an he was bothered by chaos. He tried to find ways to predict the unpredictable.
In this class:
We are interested in social sciences, and in particular how that knowledge can be applied to help systems of all sizes. Human services apply methods and findings from social science to improve the lives of people (
individuals
,
groups
– such as families, and larger social context –
communities
).
At the same time, all sciences have a lot in common. The textbook discusses the example of chaos theory. Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics (which is a science itself). Chaos theory deals with conditions where prediction is not possible.
- Chaotic diversity describes things on the quantum level and the human condition
- Chaos theory has implications when working with people; this was recently realized
- Human Services dislike chaos; we want to explain, possibly predict, and prevent human misery
* We can take another look at Einstein’s quote: “Science ...
Here is an in-depth presentation that overviews twenty two (22) qualitative data methods that can be used in marketing research. For more great FREE resources, join us on facebook today at www.facebook.comb2bwhiteboard.
Or visit our website: www.b2bwhiteboard.com
1000 words, 2 referencesBegin conducting research now on your .docxvrickens
1000 words, 2 references
Begin conducting research now on your company/client. After brainstorming on your company’s industry and after your preliminary research information-gathering techniques, create a research profile proposal to deliver to your company’s management that includes the following:
State the specific research goal for the proposal.
What is the company’s current business problem?
Who is the company’s competition?
Establish your population sample for researching customer attitudes and behaviors about the company and product.
Identify the steps in the research process.
.
1000 words only due by 5314 at 1200 estthis is a second part to.docxvrickens
1000 words only due by 5/3/14 at 12:00 est
this is a second part to this assignment due at a different time
Part 1
Your fast-food franchise has been cleared for business in all 4 countries (United Arab Emirates, Israel, Mexico, and China). You now have to start construction on your restaurants. The financing is coming from the United Arab Emirates, the materials are coming from Mexico and China, the engineering and technology are coming from Israel , and the labor will be hired locally within these countries by your management team from the United States. You invite all of the players to the headquarters in the United States for a big meeting to explain the project and get to know one another. The people seem to be staying with their own groups and not mingling.
What is the cultural phenomenon at play here (what is it called/ term)?
How do you explain the lack of intercultural communication and interaction?
What do you know about these cultures—specifically their economic, political, educational, and social systems—that could help you in getting them together?
What are some of the contrasting cultural values of these countries?
You are concerned about some of the language barriers as you start the meeting, particularly the fact that the United States is a low-context country, and some of the countries present are high-context countries. Furthermore, you only speak English, and you do not have an interpreter present.
How will this affect the presentation?
What are some of the issues you should be concerned about regarding verbal and nonverbal language for this group?
What strategy would you use to begin to have everyone develop a relationship with each other that will help ease future negotiations, development, and implementation?
.
More Related Content
Similar to ITS 832 CHAPTER 10VALUES IN COMPUTATIONAL MODELS REVALUED.docx
POSC 100 Current Event Reflection Paper Rubric Criteri.docxharrisonhoward80223
POSC 100 Current Event Reflection Paper Rubric
Criteria Distinguished Proficient Basic Unacceptable
Completeness Complete in every area;
includes all requirements
Mostly complete;
includes most of the
requirements
Mostly incomplete,
includes few of the
requirements
Incomplete in almost
every area; does not
include requirements
Critical Thinking Displays exceptional
critical thinking; uses
class material and
utilizes sophisticated,
original ideas to develop
arguments
Displays advanced
critical thinking; uses
class material and uses
original ideas to develop
arguments
Displays limited critical
thinking; uses some class
material and some
original ideas to develop
arguments
Displays little critical
thinking; uses limited
class material and does
not use original ideas to
develop arguments
Evaluation & Analysis Presents exceptional
analysis of identified
issues; thoroughly
evaluates the issues
Presents sufficient
analysis of identified
issues; evaluates the
issues
Presents little analysis of
identified issues;
provides a vague
evaluation
Presents almost no
analysis of identified
issues
Understanding Demonstrates an
advanced understanding
of the topic(s) and
issue(s)
Demonstrates an above
average understanding of
the topic(s) and issue(s)
Demonstrates a basic
understanding of the
topic(s) and issue(s)
Demonstrates an
inadequate understanding
of the topic(s) and
issue(s)
Writing Mechanics Writing is clear, concise,
and well-organized
without grammatical
errors or typos
Writing is mostly clear
and generally organized
with few grammatical
errors or typos
Writing is somewhat
clear but is not well
organized and has many
grammatical errors or
typos
Writing is unclear and
very disorganized with
many grammatical errors
or typos
12/22/2017 Communication Today | Critical Thinking and the Challenges of Internet | Communication Today
http://www.communicationtoday.sk/critical-thinking-and-the-challenges-of-internet/ 1/2
C R I T I C A L T H I N K I N G A N D T H E C H A L L E N G E S O F I N T E R N E T
Critical Thinking and
the Challenges of
Internet
A L E X A N D E R P L E C N E R I S S U E : 2 / 2 0 1 4 , S E C T I O N : T H E O R E T I C A L
S T U D I E S
In this article, the author addresses some challenges to information
searches and information evaluation which were brought by the
Internet. Large segments of audience are exaggerating their
awareness and do not realize that their online behavior is driven
more by emotions than by critical assessment of primary sources.
The result is growing popularity of conspiracy theories,
pseudoscience, propaganda, and alternative medicine. These are
all examples of biased reasoning. Due to scientists, scholars,
teachers, and journalists, this trend can be considered as a potential
threat to public health and democracy. Publics incapable of
informed choices can be manipulated to sup.
You will read the text pages that I request. For this assignmenchandaronald
You will read the text pages that I request. For this assignment read pages 27-31 for this discussion which you will have to provide me your email so I can send you the textbook or just the specified pages you will need to complete the assignment. You will then provide a detailed outline of the material and a personal summary or impression of what was covered. The detailed outline will be a minimum of 3 pages. Be sure to include text content that is located in "call out areas" or boxes in the text. Answer must be in Microsoft Word and must be an original answer no plagiarism. There will be
no plagiarism!!!
Indicate the page numbers you've outlined in the subject line of your post.
I’ve posted an example of what the teacher expects.
You have to use this format and Quick Note: You will notice that the textbook assigned to this class uses Wikipedia as a resource. However, I want to point out that you should not use Wikipedia as a source for your coursework. Here’s an article discussing the limitations of Wikipedia.
http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/education/2010/march/The-Top-10-Reasons-Students-Cannot-Cite-or-Rely-on-Wikipedia.html
Example: Science in the Social Sciences
The textbook begins with a quote from Albert Einstein: “Science is the attempt to make the chaotic diversity of our sense-experience correspond to a logically uniform system of thought” (p. 5).
- Truth is not created. It is discovered. Science is an organized attempt to discover truth.
The book clarifies the 3 main categories of science:
1) Natural: study of natural phenomena (cosmological, geological, chemical, biological, etc.)
2) Formal: study of math and logic that use an a priori, rather than factual, methodology (basically, a priori is knowledge that we have and can apply , rather than needing to measure something to gain knowledge about it)
3) Social: study of human behavior and sciences
Einstein was a theoretical physicist; this falls under formal sciences. He did not like things that were unpredictable an he was bothered by chaos. He tried to find ways to predict the unpredictable.
In this class:
We are interested in social sciences, and in particular how that knowledge can be applied to help systems of all sizes. Human services apply methods and findings from social science to improve the lives of people (
individuals
,
groups
– such as families, and larger social context –
communities
).
At the same time, all sciences have a lot in common. The textbook discusses the example of chaos theory. Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics (which is a science itself). Chaos theory deals with conditions where prediction is not possible.
- Chaotic diversity describes things on the quantum level and the human condition
- Chaos theory has implications when working with people; this was recently realized
- Human Services dislike chaos; we want to explain, possibly predict, and prevent human misery
* We can take another look at Einstein’s quote: “Science ...
Here is an in-depth presentation that overviews twenty two (22) qualitative data methods that can be used in marketing research. For more great FREE resources, join us on facebook today at www.facebook.comb2bwhiteboard.
Or visit our website: www.b2bwhiteboard.com
1000 words, 2 referencesBegin conducting research now on your .docxvrickens
1000 words, 2 references
Begin conducting research now on your company/client. After brainstorming on your company’s industry and after your preliminary research information-gathering techniques, create a research profile proposal to deliver to your company’s management that includes the following:
State the specific research goal for the proposal.
What is the company’s current business problem?
Who is the company’s competition?
Establish your population sample for researching customer attitudes and behaviors about the company and product.
Identify the steps in the research process.
.
1000 words only due by 5314 at 1200 estthis is a second part to.docxvrickens
1000 words only due by 5/3/14 at 12:00 est
this is a second part to this assignment due at a different time
Part 1
Your fast-food franchise has been cleared for business in all 4 countries (United Arab Emirates, Israel, Mexico, and China). You now have to start construction on your restaurants. The financing is coming from the United Arab Emirates, the materials are coming from Mexico and China, the engineering and technology are coming from Israel , and the labor will be hired locally within these countries by your management team from the United States. You invite all of the players to the headquarters in the United States for a big meeting to explain the project and get to know one another. The people seem to be staying with their own groups and not mingling.
What is the cultural phenomenon at play here (what is it called/ term)?
How do you explain the lack of intercultural communication and interaction?
What do you know about these cultures—specifically their economic, political, educational, and social systems—that could help you in getting them together?
What are some of the contrasting cultural values of these countries?
You are concerned about some of the language barriers as you start the meeting, particularly the fact that the United States is a low-context country, and some of the countries present are high-context countries. Furthermore, you only speak English, and you do not have an interpreter present.
How will this affect the presentation?
What are some of the issues you should be concerned about regarding verbal and nonverbal language for this group?
What strategy would you use to begin to have everyone develop a relationship with each other that will help ease future negotiations, development, and implementation?
.
1000 words with refernceBased on the American constitution,” wh.docxvrickens
1000 words with refernce
Based on the American “constitution,” which internal and external stakeholders, in the policy making process, possess “constitutional legitimacy” for their role in making public policy? Do entities with explicit power have more influence than those entities with implied powers in making public policy? Should they? Why or why not?
1000 words with reference
Accountability and ethical conduct are important concepts in public administration. In Tennessee, recent political stakeholders and some bureaucratic stakeholders have been caught up in various scandals (Operation Tennessee Waltz, Operation Rocky Top etc.). Based on the readings, what could Tennessee do to make political and bureaucratic functionaries more accountable?
.
10.1. In a t test for a single sample, the samples mean.docxvrickens
10.1. In a
t
test for a single sample
,
the sample
'
s mean is
c
o
m
par
ed to the
population
.
10.2. When we use a paired-samples
t
test to compare the pret
es
t and
p
ostt
est
scores for a group of 45 people, the degrees of freedom
(
df
)
ar
e _____.
10.3. If we conduct a
t
test for independent samples
,
and
n1
=
32 and
n2
=
35,
the degrees of freedom
(df)
are
_____.
10.4
.
A researcher wants to study the effect of college education on p
eo
p
le's
earning by comparing the annual salaries of a randomly
-
selecte
d g
ro
up
of 100 college graduates to the annual salaries of 100 randoml
y-selected
group of people whose highest level of education is high
schoo
l.
To
compare the mean annual salaries of the two groups
,
th
e resea
r
cher
should use a
t
test for
______.
10.5. A training coordinator wants to determine the effectiveness
of a program
that makes extensive use of educational technology when t
raining new
employees. She compares the scores of her new emplo
yees who
completed the training on a nationally-normed test to th
e
me
a
n
s
c
ore of
all
those in the country who took the same test.
The a
p
pro
p
riate
statistical test the training coordinator should use for h
er analysis
i
s the
t
test for ______.
10
.
6. As part of the process to develop two parallel forms o
f a q
u
es
t
io
nn
aire
,
the persons creating the questionnaire may admin
i
st
e
r b
o
th
f
or
ms to a
group of students, and then use a
t
test for ______ s
a
mpl
es
t
o com
p
are
the mean scores on the two forms
.
Circle the
correct
answer:
10.7. A difference
o
f 4 points between two
homogeneous group
s
is lik
e
ly to
be
more/less
statistically significant than the
s
ame
d
i
ffe
r
e
n
ce (of 4
points) between two
heterogeneous
groups
,
when all fou
r g
r
o
up
s are
taking completing the same survey and have appro
x
im
a
tel
y t
h
e same
number of subjects.
10.8. A difference of 3 points on a 100-item test taken b
y t
w
o g
rou
ps is likely to be
more/less
statistically significant than a difference of 3 po
i
nt
s on a 30-item test taken by the sa
m
e
t
w
o g
r
oups.
10.9 When
a
t
test for paired samples is u
s
ed to
c
ompare th
e
p
re
t
est an
d
the posttest
means
,
the number of pretest scores i
s
the
same as/different than
the number of
po
s
t-t
e
st scor
e
s.
10.10. W
hen
w
e
w
ant to compar
e w
h
e
th
e
r female
s
' scor
es
on th
e
G
MAT are
di
fferent f
rom males' scores
,
we should use a
t
test for
paired samples/independen
t
samples
.
10
.11 In studi
e
s
w
h
e
re the alte
r
nati
ve (
r
es
ear
c
h
)
h
y
poth
es
i
s
i
s
directiona
l
,
t
h
e critical va
lu
es
for
a
one tailed test/two-tailed test
should b
e us
ed t
o
d
e
t
erm
i
ne the
l
e
vel o
f
signi
fi
cance (i
.
e.
,
the
p
va
lue).
10.12 W
h
e
n
t
h
e
alt
e
rnati
ve
h
y
poth
e
si
s
is: H
A
: u1=u2
,
the c
ri
ti
ca
l
v
alu
es for
one
tailed test/
two-tailed
test
should b
e
u
se.
100 WORDS OR MOREConsider your past experiences either as a studen.docxvrickens
100 WORDS OR MORE
Consider your past experiences either as a student, early child care professional, or teacher. Describe a creative episode similar to the two boys who found a frog in the text (Creativity and the Arts with Young Children, p.309), when the teacher (maybe you) seized the opportunity (the teachable moment) to inspire the children to branch out using their imagination, creativity, and interests. Why do you think this was such a memorable moment?
WHAT WAS OBSERVED?
Two boys were exploring the outdoors and found a small frog. The teacher recognized their high interest and determined that this was an appropriate topic for a study. Their experience in nature provided the interest and stimulus for a long-term project on frogs. The teacher demonstrated her belief that this study could not only include informational learning but also be enriched by the use of the arts. She didn't know a lot about frogs, so she joined the children in looking for information about them. Stories provided the content for the drama about frogs, and the music selection encouraged listening and moving to the “frog music.” A group mural was created through the collaboration of several children, who created visual representations of the frog's environment. Another group of children investigated building a habitat for the frog in their classroom aquarium. All of the children were involved in active learning and used methods that matched their interests. At the conclusion of the study, the children shared their learning by making a giant book about frogs, creating a song about frogs, and demonstrating the development of the frog aquarium that emulated its outdoor environment. Finally, they returned the frog to its home, which led to their understanding that it needed to live in its natural habitat.
.
1000 to 2000 words Research Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of.docxvrickens
1000 to 2000 words
Research Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and discuss why it is so significant.
Your paper should discuss the state of race relations in the United States prior to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It should also discuss the political environment that led to the passing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Additionally, please include a response to the following in your analysis:
What is the purpose of this law?
What groups does it protect? What groups does it not protect?
How were the Jim Crow laws tested during this time period?
What is the U.S. Supreme Court case
Plessy v. Ferguson
about? Is the rule established in the Plessy case still the rule today?
.
1000 word essay MlA Format.. What is our personal responsibility tow.docxvrickens
1000 word essay MlA Format.. What is our personal responsibility toward the natural world, toward what we term our natural resources? Use one of these readings and interpet it to the question reflecting your answer. Add perentheses when using quotes.
“May’s Lion” (Le Guin)
“Deer Among Cattle” (Dickey)
“Meditation at Oyster River” (Roethke)
“The Call of the Wild” (Snyder)
“Eco-Defense” (Abbey)
“The Present” (Dillard)
“Time and the Machine” (Huxley)
Mending wall(Frost)
.
100 wordsGoods and services that are not sold in markets.docxvrickens
100 words
Goods and services that are not sold in markets, such as food produced and consumed at home and some household articles, are generally not included in GDP.
How might the absence of these values mislead one when comparing the economic well-being of the United States and India?
What other items are not included in GDP and how might their exclusion impact policy?
.
100 word responseChicago style citingLink to textbook httpbo.docxvrickens
100 word response
Chicago style citing
Link to textbook: http://books.google.com/books?id=zutRiJJMBQYC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
Article is attached
The overwhelming similarities between the articles are perception of identity through self-focus or self-identity through culture. Mulvaney tells us “truth is socially constructed through language and other symbol systems” (Mulvaney, 222). And as an example, it was just such self-focus that landed Galileo in jail by asserting that the universe was sun-centered as opposed to earth centered. The people of that time had socially constructed their own truths based on their perceptions of that time, although we now know that both were incorrect. It was from this perception of correctness that power was assumed and asserted by the majority, which in this case led to Galileo’s arrest (Mulvaney 2004).
Jandt touches on an interesting fact regarding existentialism, the idea of the “other” and the idea that both the observer and the observed are changed in the process. He states, “that the observer is not independent of the observed; the observed is in some sense “created” or changed or both by the act of observation” (Jandt, 212). It is from this dynamic that Jandt speaks of that we can see the formation of societal roles, i.e. the roles of those in positions of power and those in a subservient roles.
The interesting culmination of the information from all three articles is that the process is not a stagnant one, but rather one that can, and often times does change. Through introspective analysis, asking ourselves the question “Who am I?” we can embrace our cultural differences and through the acceptance of our individual qualities can take back some of the power that was perhaps lost (Jandt, 210). For example, take the labels “Feminist” and “Gay” along with “queer” and “Chicano,” which were certainly negative when created, have been transformed into positive labels embraced by those within each perspective community (Jandt 2004).
Works Cited
Jandt, Fred E., Dolores V. Tanno. "Decoding Domination, Encoding Self-Determination - Intercultural Comminication Research Process." In Intercultural Communication: A Global Reader, by Fred E. Jandt, 205 - 221. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc., 2004.
Mulvaney, Becky Michelle. "Gender Differences in Communication - An Intercultural Experience." In Intercultural Communication - A Global Reader, by Fred E. Jandt, 221 - 229. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc., 2004.
.
100 word response to the followingBoth perspectives that we rea.docxvrickens
100 word response to the following:
Both perspectives that we read referenced Hofstede’s work. Merrit and Helmreich focused closely on Hofstede’s principles of individualism and power distance. They studied how American flight crews differed in these areas from Asian flight crews. The American flight crews proved to have much more individualism than the Asian, although power distance perceptions were mixed between pilots and flight attendants, with the flight attendants perceiving more power distance than the pilots (in Jandt, 2004). Aldridge also focused on individualism and power distance, with regards to the American culture. It is Aldridge’s thesis that it is the idea of the “natural rights of man” that underpins American culture (in Jandt, 2004, p.94). The natural rights of man are a value that is espoused by a culture with high individuality and low power distance. If man has natural rights, then he is an independent being, and in order to value all men, we must have a lower perception of the distance between those of high status and those with lower status.
I enjoyed both perspectives. I felt that the aviation study was very strong, as they were careful to make sure that they accounted for cultural differences in their measurements. I agree with the authors that although they confirmed some sociological theories and demonstrated that flight crews tend to follow their cultural norms, the study is likely skewed. In order to understand how different flight crews behave from standard Asian social norms, the surveys would have to be done from an Asian perspective and even then, there is not just one Asian culture, so that should be taken into account. We likely miss many of the subtle differences between Asian flight crews and their home culture, by not having a sensitive test to that culture.
My main complaint about Aldridge’s perspective is a lack of strong comparison to other cultures. I felt that the argument that American culture is strong based on our belief in natural human rights would have been better served by showing more comparison to other cultures that also espouse this value and/or to cultures that clearly do not. The comparison to Nazi culture was a start, but one that gets kind of old after a while, and is not a culture that is as current as I would prefer in a comparison.
Readings:
Texbook: Jandt, Fred E. (editor) Intercultural Communication: A Global Reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2004
“Human Factors on the Flight Deck: The Influence of National Culture,” Merritt and Helmreich, Jandt pages 13-27
“What is the Basis of American Culture,” Aldridge, Jandt pages 84-98
100 word response to the following
The perspectives learned this week relate to the evolution of human beings and their ability to evolve and survive. As it was state in Aldridge’s readings human beings have the capability to communicate and this ability makes them superior, than animals. All human beings came from the same land and eventually with th.
100 word response to the followingThe point that Penetito is tr.docxvrickens
100 word response to the following:
The point that Penetito is trying to make is that it is important for indigenous cultures to survive. He uses the case of the education of the Maori in New Zealand as an example to exhibit the declining influence of the culture because of the influence of the more dominant British culture. Penetito strengthens his argument by referencing problems that come with colonization and the negative on natives, most notably, the educational system. By attacking this one issue and using facts about the culture to enrich the discussion helps to focus his message that cultures being dominated is a bad thing. The Maori educational system has been moulded to fit the mainstream framework rather than a Maori one (Jandt, 2004, p. 173) and this creates many of the problems and contributes to the extinction of culture. He could use other examples of how colonizing countries leads to the destruction of less important areas of indigiounous cultures such as dress, language, or food in order to strengthen his arguments about the educational systems. The lack of attention in the educational field is having lasting effects on Maoris living in New Zealand and any more information he could use to support this would be important to know. Also examples of educational systems in other colonized countries, to compare and contrast them to New Zealand's would also help to influence readers. He references a report done by the Ministry of Maori Development which states that, "disparities between Maori and non-Maori in a variety of economic sectors such as employment and income" (Jandt, 2004, p. 181). The Maori are just an example of one culture that is fighting for survival out of many. The problem is that through colonization, diversity dwindles. Penetito's writing is valid for all endangered languages because all cultures can use it as a template and useful knowledge for preserving their cultures before they are completely gone.
Textbook: Jandt, F. (2004). Intercultural Communication:A Global Reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications Inc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
100 word response to the following:
I would like to ask a provocative question, or two.
Given that all of the indigenous languages in the USA are on the brink of extinction, should there be federal funding to protect these languages and these cultures?
Along the same lines, what do you think of English-only initiatives? Do these aid or hurt American culture?
http://www.endangeredlanguages.com/
.
100 word response to the folowingMust use Chicago style citing an.docxvrickens
100 word response to the folowing:
Must use Chicago style citing and the textbook: Jandt, Fred E. (editor) Intercultural Communication: A Global Reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2004. Part I Cultural Values
Culture has many different meanings anywhere from historical perspectives to behavioral perspectives to different traditions that have been passed down from generations to generations.
Levi Strauss was interested in structuralism which he defined as “the search for unusual harmonies” (pg 1 Jandt). “There are many more human cultures than human races”, human cultures are counted by the thousands and human races are divided up by units.
The collaboration between cultures is trying to compare the old world with the new world. “No society is intrinsically cumulative. Cumulative history is the way of life of cultures and how they get a long together. All cultural contributions are divided into two groups; isolated acquisitions or features, the features are important but at the same time they are limited. The second group is systemized contributions which is how each society has chosen to express human aspirations. According to Strauss the true contribution of a culture is its difference from others.
Geert Hostede looks at business cultures and states that culture may be divided into four categories symbols, heroes, rituals and values. “Understanding people means understanding their background from which their present and future behavior can be predicted”. There are also four national cultural differences: 1.power distance-the population from equal to extremely unequal 2. Individualism -people have learned to act as individuals rather than in a group 3.masculinity- assertiveness or masculine values prevail over the feminine ones 4.uncertainty avoidance- people in a country prefer structured over unstructured situations.
References:
Jandt, E. Fred. Intercultural Communications. Thousand Oaks; Sage Publications. 2004. Print.
100 word response to the folowing:
Must use Chicago style citing and the textbook: Jandt, Fred E. (editor) Intercultural Communication: A Global Reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2004 Part I Cultural Values
Our culture is something that has been ingrained in us from an early age, and is largely unconscious. Levi-Strauss says that while certain biological traits were selected for us in the beginning of evolution, as soon as culture came into being, those biological traits were influenced by the dynamics of culture (Jandt, p. 6). Essentially, we are not able to separate ourselves from culture, and to do so would be to ruin what is wonderful and unique about each culture. According to Hofstede, all cultures have their processes, and their values. While things like symbols and rituals in a culture vary greatly, he says; “Values represent the deepest level of culture. (Jandt, p. 9)”
Because culture is deeply ingrained in us, all of the variants that Levi-Strauss and Hofstede discussed must be taken in account when dealing wit.
100 word response using textbook Getlein, Mark. Living with Art, 9t.docxvrickens
100 word response using textbook: Getlein, Mark. Living with Art, 9th Ed., New York: McGraw-Hill, 2010. Citing in MLA Format:
Between the Baroque and Rococo era, according to Getlein in Living with Art 2010, Rococo is a development and extension of the baroque style. Rococo is not only a play on the word baroque, but also French for rocks and shells. Rococo is known for its ornate style and several points of contrast. Baroque on the other hand was an art of cathedrals and palaces (Getlein p. 397). The Mirror Room of the Amailienburg in Nymphenburg is a great example of the Rococo style of art with its gentle pastels, overall intimacy, multiple mirrors and its illusion of the sky and with that baroque is large in scale and rococo is lighter. According to Getlein p. 398, Rococo architecture first originated in France but was soon exported, some examples of this type of art are found in Germany. Hall of mirrors on page 392 by Charles Le Brun is an example of baroque art, it is a more intense piece of work that is more vibrant and energetic vice the lighter decoration s used in The Mirror Room.
100 word response using textbook: Getlein, Mark. Living with Art, 9th Ed., New York: McGraw-Hill, 2010. Citing in MLA Format:
The Renaissance covered the period from 1400 to 1600, which brought numerous changes that included new techniques in art, the way art was viewed, and how people viewed themselves. The term renaissance means "rebirth" and it refers to the renewal of interest in Roman and Greek cultures. During the period scholars who called themselves humanists believed in the pursuit of knowledge and striving to reach their full creative and intellectual potential. This new way of thinking had many impacts for art during this period. Artists became interested in observing the natural world and studied new techniques on how to accurately depict it. Various techniques were developed such as the effect of light known as chiaroscuro; noting that distant objects appeared smaller than nearer ones they developed linear perspective; seeing how detail and colored blurred with distance, they developed atmospheric perspective. (Getlein page 361) The nude also reappeared in art, for the body was one of God's most noble creations; an example of this can be seen in figure 16.8 the statue of David, by the artist Michelangelo. (Getlein page 368) The primary difference between the Renaissance and the prior period of time was that artists were no longer viewed craftsmen, they were now recognized as intellectuals. (Getlein page 362)
The Northern Renaissance developed more gradually than in Italy. Northern artists did not live among the ruins of Rome nor did they share the Italians’ sense of a personal link to the creators of the Classical past; thus affecting the focus and characteristics between the two cultures. (Getlein page 374) Renaissance artists in northern Europe focused more on small details of the visible world, such as decoration or the outer appearanc.
100 word response to the following. Must cite properly in MLA.Un.docxvrickens
100 word response to the following. Must cite properly in MLA.
Unlike the Egyptian culture that created statues of themselves as gods and pharaohs. Muslims did not worship false idols or statues so no pictures or statues or gods are present in their mosques. According to Geitlein (2010), “The Qur’an contains a stern warning against the worship of idols, and in time this led to a doctrine forbidding images of animate beings in religious contexts” (p. 410). Instead the Muslims of the Islam culture used geometry and plants to design buildings, like the Egyptian pyramids, Muslims built beautiful mosques with grand designs. Islam became a world religion, like Christians, they needed a place of worship and prayer. They also used fine textiles, sun dried brick, and ceramics to create their designs. An example would be the popular Cordoba mosque of Spain. A lot of mosques use the arch and dome technique like that of the Romans and Byzantine architecture. Arabic script also became popular and appeared inside the mosque temples. Islam used calligraphy as art and to illustrate writing. Egyptians were also big on scripting but theirs was called hieroglyphics, which not only had letters, but pictures were a big part of their writing system as well. The Egyptians didn’t technically worship false idols at all times, at some times they had statues created of themselves but there wasn’t really a religion in Egypt until the one god religion began there. Egypt gave you a visual of the life and world of Egypt, Islam leaves it more up to the imagination with no pictures of what any of the past history looked like.
References
Getlein, Mark. Living With Art. 9th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2010. Print.
100 word response to the following. Must cite properly in MLA:
Realism was a mid to late 19th century movement in which artist should represent the world at it is regardless of artistic and social understandings. Realist were seeking to free art from social regulation and depicting how society shapes the lives of people (Little, page 80).
In his Fur Traders Descending the Missouri, American-born George Caleb Bingham a self taught artist and the first major painter to live and work west of the Mississippi River illustrates the realism of life for a French trapper and his son on the Missouri River hunting from a dugout canoe. The painting is simple to understand, it represents the calmness of a time to me when life was simple.
Abstract Expressionism was a movement that got its start following World War TWO. Developed in New York and often referred to as the New York School or Action Painting it is characterized to depict universal emotions. Additionally this was the first American movement to gain international recognition (Little, page 122).
Jackson Pollock’s perfected Abstract Expressionism through his “drip technique”, a technique in which you apply paint to a canvas on the floor indirectly from a brush. Pollock the youngest of five boys in a family that moved a.
100 original, rubric, word count and required readings must be incl.docxvrickens
100% original, rubric, word count and required readings must be included
This is 3 assignments in one. The final is all the assignments from M1A2- M5A2
The assignments are highlighted in yellow and the rubics are in red and attached for M3A2 and M5A2
Assignment 2: LASA 1—Preliminary Strategy Audit
The end result of this course is developing a strategy audit. In this module, you will outline and draft a preliminary framework for your final product. This provides you with the opportunity to get feedback before a final submission.
In
Module 1
, you reviewed the instructions for the capstone strategy audit assignment and grading rubric due in
Module 5
. By now, you have completed the following steps:
Identified the organization for your report
Interviewed at least one key mid-level or senior-level manager
Created a market position analysis
Conducted an external environmental scan in preparation of your final report and presentation
In this assignment, you will generate a preliminary strategy audit in preparation for your final course project.
Prepare a report that includes the following:
In preparation for your course project, prepare the preliminary strategy audit using the tools and framework you have focused on so far including the following:
Analysis of the company value proposition, market position, and competitive advantage
External environmental scan/five forces analysis
Identify the most important (5–7) strategic issues facing the organization or business unit.
You may modify the strategic issues in your final report based on the additional analysis you will conduct in the next module as well as the feedback you receive on this paper from your instructor.
Keep in mind that it is important to look at the strategic issue(s) from more than just one perspective in the business unit or company—speak to or research the issue from more than one angle to offer a 360-degree approach that does not cause more problems or issues.
Strategic issues arise from a mismatch between internal capabilities and external trends such that important opportunities are not being pursued or significant external threats are not being addressed under the current strategy.
Include a preliminary set of recommended tactics for improving your company’s strategic alignment and operating performance.
You may modify these recommendations in your final report based on the additional analysis you will conduct in the next module as well as the feedback you receive on this paper from your instructor.
Keep in mind that recommendations can include, but are not limited to, tactics in marketing, branding, alliances, mergers and acquisitions, integration, product development, diversification or divestiture, and globalization. If you recommend your company to go global, you must include a supply chain analysis and an analysis of your firm’s global capabilities.
Write your report as though you are a consultant to your company and are addressing the executive officers of this comp.
100 or more wordsFor this Discussion imagine that you are speaki.docxvrickens
100 or more words
For this Discussion imagine that you are speaking to a group of parents or early childcare professionals. Identify the characteristics of the group so that your readers know who is being addressed. Explain to the group why play is so important to children, including:
How and what children learn through play
Give examples of how they can encourage and support play for children
.
10. (TCOs 1 and 10) Apple, Inc. a cash basis S corporation in Or.docxvrickens
10.
(TCOs 1 and 10) Apple, Inc. a cash basis S corporation in Orange, Texas, formerly was a C corporation. Apple has the following assets and liabilities on January 1, 2010, the date the S election is made:
Adjusted Basis
Fair Market Value
Cash
$200,000
$200,000
Accounts receivable
-0-
$105,000
Equipment
$110,000
$100,000
Land
$1,800,000
$2,500,000
Accounts payable
-0-
$110,000
During 2010, Apple collects the accounts receivable and pays the accounts payable. The land is sold for $3 million, and taxable income for the year is $590,000. What is Apple's built-in gains tax?
(Points : 5)
.
10-12 slides with Notes APA Style ReferecesThe prosecutor is getti.docxvrickens
10-12 slides with Notes APA Style Refereces
The prosecutor is getting feedback from local law enforcement officers explaining that they are discouraged from making arrests in cases of domestic violence and child abuse. They claim that they have been either not making arrests in domestic violence situations or arresting both parties when they go out on a call. It seems that abused women often go back to the abusers, and children who get removed from the homes where they have been abused often return after removal. These occurrences have been especially demoralizing to law enforcement.
One of your jobs in working as a victim witness assistant is to help educate law enforcement on the nature and behaviors involved in domestic violence and child abuse. The prosecutor’s office has decided that you should present each of these topics for the next training session:
Topic 1: Domestic violence:
Your goal is to educate law enforcement to use best practices in the investigation of domestic abuse cases. Include the following topics:
How to approach a domestic violence situation when responding to an emergency call
when the parties should be separated
how to interview parties
what information needs to be in the report and why
how best to help a victim
what laws protect victims, including the use of protection orders
why victims return to abusers
length of time it may take to stay away from their abusers
Arrests
the legal standard needed to make an arrest in a domestic violence case
What evidence should be collected at the arrest?
Are dual arrests effective law enforcement?
how to assist domestic violence victims
reluctant victims
help for victims
Topic 2: Child Abuse:
Your goal will be to educate law enforcement about the dynamics of abuse and neglect cases. Include the following topics:
signs of child abuse and categories (physical, sexual, emotional)
difference between abuse and neglect
legal description of neglect
use of guardian
ad litems
the legal standards that must be met in removal from the home
termination of parental rights
requirements of Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA)
role of court-appointed special advocates (CASA) in child abuse and neglect cases
role of social services in abuse and neglect cases
For more information on creating PowerPoint Presentations, please visit the Microsoft Office Applications Lab.
.
10-12 page paer onDiscuss the advantages and problems with trailer.docxvrickens
10-12 page paer on
Discuss the advantages and problems with trailers for temporary housing, the issues for FEMA, and recommendations for improvements to the housing program. Discuss how Public Assistance was used in New York for Hurricane Sandy recovery, and why this was so different than previous housing policies.
.
10. Assume that you are responsible for decontaminating materials in.docxvrickens
10. Assume that you are responsible for decontaminating materials in a large hospital.
How would you sterilize each of the following? Briefly justify your answers.
a. A mattress used by a patient with bubonic plague
b. Intravenous glucose-saline solutions
c. Used disposable syringe
d. Tissues taken from patients
.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdf
ITS 832 CHAPTER 10VALUES IN COMPUTATIONAL MODELS REVALUED.docx
1. ITS 832 CHAPTER 10
VALUES IN COMPUTATIONAL MODELS REVALUED
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN A GLOBAL ECONOMY
DR. JORDON SHAW
INTRODUCTION
• Technology perceptions
• Technology and public decision making
• Methodology
• Case studies
• Analysis
• Summary and conclusions
TECHNOLOGY PERCEPTIONS
• Debate on underlying assumptions of models
• Are models biased?
• Is technology biased?
2. • Are model builders biased?
• Are model users biased?
• Technological determinism
• Technology is not neutral of value-free
• Social construction of technology
• Technology is designed with bias, or values
• Technological instrumentalism
• Technology is neutral and value-free
TECHNOLOGY AND PUBLIC DECISION MAKING
• Policy making involves complex systems
• Model bias must be understood to evaluate results
• Bias, or value can be categorized
• Values of the data
• Values of the model
• Values of the decision-making process
METHODOLOGY
• Select six case studies
• Carry out secondary analysis of results
3. • Identify cases with three basic characteristics
• New model designed for case
• Relate to policy issues with the natural or built world
• Highly complex and controversial issues
CASE STUDIES
• Morphological Predictions in the Westerschele (Belgium and
the Netherlands)
• Morphological Predictions in the Unterlbe (Germany)
• Flood-Risk Prediction (Germany and the Netherlands)
• Determining the Implementation of Congestion Charging in
London (UK)
• Predicting and Containing the Outbreak of Livestock Diseases
(Germany)
• Predicting Particular Matter Concentrations (the Netherlands)
ANALYSIS
• Analyzing empirical data resulted in several findings
• Values in data
• Cases 1-4 exhibited higher trustworthiness of data
• Margin of error high in all cases
4. • Values in the model
• Similar to values in data findings
• Values in the decision-making process
• Clear lines of authority in cases 1, 4, and 5
• Lack of clear authority (cases 2, 3, and 6) leads to conflict
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
• Model effectiveness is impacted by bias
• Values can originate from multiple sources
• Data
• Model design
• Model use
• Outcome validity requires a clear understanding of values put
forth by model
use
ASSIGNMENT:
Reading Reflections
Assigned readings have been posted to the course website.
Complete the readings before the class session for which they
are listed, and come to class prepared to discuss them.
For FIVE days during the quarter, submit a written reflection to
5. the weekly Dropbox before the start of the lecture for that day.
Reflections should be at least 250 words and may respond to
one or several of the assigned readings. Longer is fine. These
reflections should not simply summarize the readings, but
should offer critical comments and points for discussion.
Assignments receiving full points will meet the following
criteria:
· Show that you understand the concepts and arguments
presented in the assigned reading. Leave no doubt that you have
completed a close reading of the text and use quotes, details, or
evidence to support your points.
· Be thoughtful, clear, and well-argued. You will NOT be
graded on your opinion. It is ok to disagree with the article’s
author, your fellow students and with the professor. However,
your posts should not simply state your opinions, but should
provide evidence and logical arguments to support your view.
· Go beyond the obvious; make connections among the class
topic, readings, and your experiences. Your post should not
simply summarize the assigned reading. The best posts include
new, complex ideas and perspectives.
· Use standard academic English (i.e., complete sentences,
capitalization, and conventional spellings). Please remember to
read over your posts before your submit them to correct any
errors.
DEADLINES: Reflections are due before class on the day the
reading was assigned. For example, if a reading is listed for
Monday, September 23, you should submit your reflection on
that reading before class on September 23.
MURPHY HALLIBURTON
Rethinking Anthropological Studies of the Body:
6. Manas and Bodham in Kerala
ABSTRACT Anthropological research that focuses on the body
has been prolific in the last two decades. This trend has
provided an
important reorientation away from a tendency to focus on
mental representations of experience and has allowed for a more
holistic
understanding of the human condition. However, this article
argues that much research on the body has created a false
dichotomy:
Westerners are seen as living in a world of mentalistic bias and
mind-body dualism while all others are understood as more
grounded
in their bodies. Ethnographic research conducted among people
suffering psychopathology and possession in Kerala, India,
challenges
these assumptions about the embodied Other by showing that
these patients experience a continuum of states of being that
includes
the body, mind, consciousness, and self/soul. This approach
demonstrates how an examination of a local culturally and
historically
formed phenomenological orientation can provide a useful
alternative to the tendency to discover embodied peoples.
[Keywords:
body, embodiment, India, Kerala]
7. THE MOVEMENT IN ANTHROPOLOGY of examin-ing bodily
and lived experience, which started in the
1980s and continues today, is an important corrective to
earlier studies that understood life experience primarily in
mentalistic or representational terms and through the as-
sumptions of Western mind-body dualism. This trend has
influenced many areas of inquiry ranging from ethnogra-
phy to studies of language, prehistory, and material cul-
ture. However, this analytic corrective often inappropri-
ately generalizes about non-Western people, suggesting
they ground experience in the body and lack an orienta-
tion that distinguishes mind from body.
This article contests such tendencies by presenting a
phenomenology of people in Kerala, South India, who
make distinctions between body, mind, consciousness,
and other states of being. I focus specifically on "mental"
patients and spirit-possessed people in Kerala who reveal
many mentalistic, and other nontangible, modes of expe-
rience, which actually represent more levels of ratification
away from the body than are contained in Western
mind-body dualism. These popular expressions of illness
in Kerala, as I show, are informed by exegeses found in In-
dian philosophy of fdrlram (body), manas (mind), bodham
(consciousness) and atman (true self/soul), focal points that
lie along a continuum that moves from the body to the
less tangible parts of the person. A combination of selec-
tions from Indian philosophy and excerpts from inform-
ant interviews reveals a phenomenology in Kerala that
does not replicate Western mind-body dualism but in-
cludes the body and several increasingly nonphysical
states culminating in the formless higher self, or atman.
Finally, I will contextualize this local phenomenology and
consider why Kerala may be unique.
9. (e.g., Kleinman 1980; Marsella and White 1982).
Of course, influential anthropological work on the
body can be found prior to this time, most notably Marcel
Mauss's essay "Les techniques du corp" (Techniques of the
body) (1950), which examines how people are encultu-
rated through their bodies, and Mary Douglas's Natural
Symbols (1970), which reveals how the body is used as a
metaphor that helps people make sense of the world and
their society. Anthropological studies of the body were
also informed by Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish
(1977) and his History of Sexuality series (1978-86), which
reveal how people are trained to become modern subjects
through the body.
In 1987, Nancy Scheper-Hughes and Margaret Lock's
"The Mindful Body" successfully appealed to anthropolo-
gists to transcend Western mind-body dualism and exam-
ine alternative cultural conceptions of the body. Around
the same time, linguists, philosophers, and other scholars
also began to seriously scrutinize the body. Expanding on
themes in George Lakoff and Mark Johnson's Metaphors
We Live By (1980), Johnson's The Body in the Mind (1987),
for example, examined how the condition of being in a
body shapes our perception and experience of the world.
Linguistic anthropologists, meanwhile, revealed how non-
linguistic, kinesic communication occurred through the
body and suggested that linguistic context should include
the body and space (Duranti 1992; Farnell 1999:351-352).
Also beginning in the late 1980s, a number of studies ex-
amined women's experiences of objectifications of the fe-
male body, a focus that spanned many disciplines includ-
ing anthropology (Martin 1987), literature (Gilbert 1997),
and philosophy and was taken up by different formula-
tions of poststructural theory (Bordo 1993; Butler 1993).
10. Although these studies tended to focus on the body as
an object of analysis, others began to foreshadow the para-
digm of embodiment that would emerge by the early 1990s.
This paradigm took the experience of being in a body as
its starting point. Some anthropologists turned to an anal-
ysis of the senses (Roseman 1991; Stoller 1989), foi exam-
ple, while others attempted to define an experiential an-
thropology (Jackson 1989; Turner and Bruner 1986; Wikan
1991). Sensory and experiential anthropology—along with
studies of the body and emotion—signaled an awareness
of the aesthetic, tactile, and visceral realms of experience.
The move to a focus on embodiment in anthropology
crystallized with the publication of Thomas Csordas's "Em-
bodiment as a Paradigm for Anthropology" (1990). Influ-
enced by work in phenomenology by Merleau-Ponty and
Bourdieu, Csordas distinguished between the anthropol-
ogy of the body, which considers the body as an external
object of analysis and that tends to focus on concepts of
the body or bodily metaphors, and studies of embodi-
ment, which consider the actual, lived experience of being
in the body or "being in the world" (1999). This article,
and Csordas's other work (1990, 1993, 1994a), launched a
variety of studies centered on embodiment, although this
concept was conceptualized in very different ways within
these studies. For Csordas (as well as Merleau-Poi|ty and
some researchers in linguistics and philosophy, such as
Johnson 1987 and Lakoff and Johnson 1999), embodi-
ment is an existential and universal human condition—all
people experience the world from the perspective of being
in a body. Soon a number of cultural anthropologists ap-
plied various interpretations of embodiment to ethno-
graphic contexts (e.g., Jenkins and Valiente 1994; Levi
1999; Low 1994; Pandolfi 1993; Scheper-Hughes 1992);
this period also saw the focus on the body and the para-
11. digm of embodiment find their way into research in ar-
chaeology Oensen 2000; Rixecker 2000; Shanks 1995) and
linguistic anthropology (Chidester 1996; Farnell 1999), al-
though not all researchers who focus on embodiment up-
hold the distinction Csordas made between "the body"
and "embodiment": Many use the term embodiment
merely to indicate a focus on the body.
CREATING THE EMBODIED OTHER
While turning attention to the body, anthropologists have
often created a picture of the world wherein peoples who
are labeled "non-Western" or "traditional" are understood
as either more grounded in their bodies or as experiencing
the world with a more subtle awareness of mind-body in-
terconnection than the Western subject who is depicted as
naively unaware of the embodied nature of his (the West-
ern woman is supposedly akin to the non-Western subject
in her awareness of her body) own experience. Frustrated
by what they see as biomedicine's need to classify all suf-
fering as "either wholly organic or wholly psychological in
origin," Scheper-Hughes and Lock (1987:9) propose that
medical anthropology try to transcend the paradigm of
mind-body dualism. Although they do not claim that all
non-Western cultures locate experience in the body or are
more holistic, they treat their material as if one can gener-
alize in this way. For example, their article contains fre-
quent contrasts such as: "Non-Western and nonindustrial-
ized people are 'called upon to think the world with their
bodies,' " yet "by contrast, we [Westerners] live in a world
in which the human shape of things . . . is in retreat"
(Scheper-Hughes and Lock 1987:23). In a section called
"Representations of Holism in Non-Western Epistemolo-
gies," they contrast the balance, holism, and monism of
Chinese, Buddhist, and Islamic cosmologies with the
Western emphasis on exclusion, tension, and contradic-
12. tion (Scheper-Hughes and Lock 1987:12-13).
Andrew Strathern's Body Thoughts (1996), which is de-
voted entirely to the topic of orientations to the body in
the West and in other cultures, also contains generalizing
characterizations such as when he speaks of "many peo-
ples around the world . . . in whose own cultural concepts
emotion and reason are closely linked" (1996:8)—where
emotion and reason are considered manifestations of body
and mind. After discussing an article that refers to the
Halliburton • Rethinking Anthropological Studies of the Body
1125
prioritizing of knowledge over emotion in European cul-
tures, Strathern asserts, "Yet in other cultures this kind of
hierarchical ranking of knowledge versus emotion does
not exist" (1996:151). "Many peoples" and "other cul-
tures" are not the same as saying "all non-Western cul-
tures," but in this book, as in many others, the narrative
contains an implicit dichotomy between Western culture
and something else, some generalized Other who is more
aware of his or her embodied nature. Ethnographers, too,
have tended to describe non-Western people as not distin-
guishing mind from body: "Consciousness . . . cannot be
disembodied" and sorcery is always "body seeking" in Sri
Lanka, according to Kapferer (1997:44), and "the Yaka [of
Zaire] perceive of the body as the pivotal point from
which the subject gradually develops a sense of identity,"
according to Rene Devisch (1993:139).
Further evidence of the tendency to see non-Western
cultures as more body oriented is revealed by a closer look
at the numerous anthropological dissertations on the top-
13. ics of body and embodiment referred to earlier. These dis-
sertations are overwhelmingly studies of non-Western
peoples, and when research on the body is carried out in
the United States, it tends to focus on non-Western immi-
grant groups (Online Computer Library Center, Inc. 2001).
When one also considers that much research on the body
in Western culture outside of anthropology focuses on
women (e.g., Bordo 1993; Gilbert 1997) and oppressed
ethnic groups (Fishbum 1997), and that some have associ-
ated expressing suffering through the body with low so-
cioeconomic position (Kleinman 1986; Scheper-Hughes
1992), one gets the impression that—either because of fact
ox through anthropological imagination—it is people who
have less access to power who locate experience in the
body or transcend mind-body dualism. Indeed, Kleinman
explained in the late 1980s: "The research literature indi-
cates that depression and most other mental illnesses, es-
pecially in non-Western societies and among rural, ethnic
and lower-class groups in the West, are associated prepon-
derantly with physical complaints" (1986:52). Contrary to
these studies, the examples of nonbodily modes of experi-
ence from Kerala given below cut across class, gender, and
religious lines (an important dimension of stratification in
India), as do some exceptions in the anthropological lit-
erature such as Mascia-Lees and Sharpe (1992) and Csor-
das (1994b), who examine embodiment among nonmargi-
nal, European American groups.
TOWARD A LOCAL PHENOMENOLOGY
Having leaned on the term phenomenology at several points
already, I should confess that this term is hard to wield.
There is no succinct or agreed-on definition of phenome-
nology. It is associated with the philosophy of Husserl,
Hegel, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty, among other West-
ern thinkers, and with diverse movements within Bud-
14. dhist, Japanese, Indian, and other cultures' philosophies.
In its broadest sense, phenomenology is concerned with
the nature of experience and knowledge, and the relation
between these two, as well as the condition of being in
and experiencing the world. Work in anthropology con-
cerned with ways of feeling and perceiving the world,
however, has tended to focus on the sensate world and the
experience of being in a body (Csordas 1994a; Desjarlais
1992; Weiner 1997). This focus narrows the potential a
phenomenological approach has for anthropological un-
derstanding, one that Mauss recognized years ago when
he proposed a "triple point de vue, celui de Thomme total' "
(triple point of view, that of "the whole person") that
takes into account the psychological, social, and tangible
elements of being in a body (1950:369). Mauss's emphasis
was on understanding the whole person and, thus, his
study of the techniques of the body was also a study of "le
mode de vie" (the mode of living/way of life), or "le modus."
This term, somewhat like his habitus, refers to the intersec-
tion of body techniques, a way of life, psychology, and
other influences constituting a space and a mode in which
one lives (1950:375).
Several important contemporary works follow this
lead. For example, Csordas's original concept of embodi-
ment is also one of phenomenological contingency: It
draws attention to one's way of being-in-the-world and
not just toward the body. Similarly, Robert Desjarlais
(1997) and Lawrence Cohen (1998) offer examples of eth-
nographies that engage the body along with other modes
of experience without overindulging the body. Desjarlais's
ethnography of a homeless community in Boston main-
tains a multiple perspective looking at the selfhood, bod-
ies, and experiences of homeless people and defining ex-
perience as "a historically and culturally constituted
15. process predicated on certain ways of being in the world"
(1997:13). Cohen (1998) examines the (aging) body in In-
dia, without claiming that India is a place that is more
bodily than the West, and considers the body along with
other parts of the person as they are intersected by dis-
courses about aging, power, modernity, and other issues.
Michael Jackson's (1989, 1996) phenomenological anthro-
pology is also interested in a broader topic than the body.
Jackson emphasizes the importance of deprivileging the-
ory and attempts, with deference to his subjects' perspec-
tives, to represent lived experience as it is. Jackson's effort
is similar to the one advocating experience-near anthro-
pology (Bruner 1986; Geertz 1986; Wikan 1991).
Those who focus on social suffering also offer the po-
tential for an anthropology that does not overindulge the
body (Kleinman 1995; Kleinman et al. 1997). This orienta-
tion is, of course, limited to the painful and pathological,
but "suffering" is an analytic and experiential category
that can account for all parts of the person.
Each of these works informs my own understanding
of phenomenology. I use phenomenology to refer to how
one experiences—at the level of consciousness, mind, and
body—being in, and living in, the word. Because every
culture has its own way of assembling and prioritizing the
modes of experience through which people interact with
1126 American Anthropologist • Vol. 104, No. 4 • December
2002
the world (though these phenomenologies may also de-
scribe truths of human experience that transcend locality,
while also being constituted by translocal influences), I
16. suggest that there are multiple phenomenologies and, fol-
lowing Desjarlais, understand that phenomeonologies are
historically and culturally constructed. Thus, my approach
differs from some of the authors who have laid the foun-
dation for phenomenological studies in anthropology in
important ways. For example, in proposing a pheno-
menological, rather than intellectualist, perspective, Jack-
son appears to assume that there is a phenomenology. By
contrast, I argue for the need in anthropology to uncover
local phenomenologies, which I understand as constituted
by both local analytic theories of experience and lived ex-
perience itself and assume these influence one another to
some degree. While anthropologists such as Jackson have
turned to Husserl, Heidegger, and Dewey for theories of
phenomenology, I suggest looking for other cultures'
equivalents of Husserl, Heidegger, and Dewey, such as
Sankara, Prasatapada, and Aurobindo in India. Thus, in
discussing Indian and Kerala phenomenology, I turn to lo-
cal theoretical explanations of experience and to popular
everyday ways of experiencing, which are often informed
by these elite theories. Together these constitute a local
phenomenology.
INDIAN PHILOSOPHY AND PHENOMENOLOGY
Indian philosophy is saturated with discussions of the self
and its many layers—the self and mind, the self and con-
sciousness, the material and the transcendent—and the
nature of experience. This section presents the work of a
few key figures to reveal the genealogies of phenomeno-
logical terms used in contemporary speech in Kerala. In
turning to Indian philosophy, I may appear to be invoking
an elite discourse that is not necessarily incorporated into
popular thought and practice. However, my interviews
with informants reveal that some assumptions in Indian
philosophy also exist in popular discourse, and as I discuss
17. in the final section of this article, this popular consump-
tion of elite philosophy may be what makes Kerala unique.
In addition, using philosophers such as Sankara to dem-
onstrate a cultural phenomenology is an attempt to pre-
sent an account that is comparable to key works in the an-
thropology of the body and embodiment that examine
philosophers, such as Descartes, to characterize the Western
mind-body dichotomy (Csordas 1994a; Scheper-Hughes
and Lock 1987; Strathern 1996:41-62). Such an approach
also reminds us that it is not only Western philosophers
that have grappled with issues of phenomenology and ex-
perience.
Defining and describing atman is the concern of much
Indian philosophical writing. Usually translated into Eng-
lish as self ox soul, atman refers to the higher self that is to-
tally immaterial and eternal and often wrongly, according
to philosophers, identified with the mind or other attrib-
utes. Atman is also a term that some people I interviewed
used to refer to their true or essential self.
Identifying the nature of atman was a major fqcus of a
philosopher known as Sankara. Born in the 8th century in
what is now central Kerala, Sankara is known throughout
India for his Advaita Vedanta philosophy, which aimed to
reveal that the true self, atman, is the same as Brahman or
god/the absolute divinity. Much of Sankara's writing is de-
voted to revealing phenomena that are wrongly attributed
to atman and must be recognized as such to realize this
true self. Thinking that one's self is the body or that one
perceives reality though the senses is misleading according
to Sankara. Even parts of the person that are not quite of
the body, such as the mind, are not part of one's true iden-
tity, one's atman. Sankara presents a scale of decreasing
physicality and decreasing tangibility as one goes from
18. what are false attributes to what is true and valued: from
body to senses to mind to intellect to atman.
In his treatise UpadeSa Sdhasrl, Sankara narrates in the
voice of atman and describes the nature of this self: "Ever
free, ever pure, changeless, immovable, immortal, imper-
ishable and bodiless I have no knowledge or ignorance in
Me who am of the nature of the Light of Pure Conscious-
ness only" (Sankaracharya 1973:121, emphasis added). As
we will see, people suffering illness in Kerala are very con-
cerned about their bodham or "consciousness."
Sankara also distinguishes among intellect, memory,
mind, and knowledge, concepts that might be considered
contained within the mind in Western epistemologies. For
example, he holds that "the peculiar characteristic of the
mind is reflection and that of the intellect is determina-
tion" (Sankaracharya 1973:164). This distinction is seen in
the various terms used by informants (e.g., bodham and
buddhi) below that translate as consciousness or intellect and
are separate from the mind (manas). Sankara is known
throughout Kerala and India. Nowadays, the popular relig-
ious leader Sai Baba, whose photo can be seen in homes
and businesses around Kerala and other parts of India,
promotes Sankara's philosophy that the true self is the
same as the divine.
Vaigesika, which is one of several philosophies that
epistemologically inform ayurvedic medicine, states a clear
phenomenological division of labor similar to what is seen
in Sankara's philosophy. In a discussion of the nature of
atman, a 4th-century VaiSesika text by PraSastapada says:
In the cognitions of sound, etc., also we infer a "cogniser"
{the witness/the self}. This character cannot belong to the
body, or to the sense organs, or to the mind; because all
19. these are unintelligent or unconscious. Consciousness can-
not belong to the body, as it is a material product, like the
jar; and also as no consciousness is found in dead bodies.
Nor can consciousness belong to the sense-organs; {. . . }
Nor can it belong to the mind; because if the mind be re-
garded as functioning independently of the other organs,
then we would have perception and remembrance simul-
taneously presenting themselves (and if the mind be re-
garded as functioning through the other organs, then it
would not be the same as atma [dtman [self]); and also be-
cause the mind itself is a mere instrument.
Halliburton • Rethinking Anthropological Studies of the Body
1127
And thus the only thing to which consciousness could
belong is the self, which thus is cognised by this con-
sciousness. [Radhakrishnan and Moore 1957:40s]1
In this passage, PraSastapada draws distinctions between
atman, consciousness, mind, and body similar to those made
by Sankara. These distinctions can also be seen in Nyaya
philosophy, which is contemporary with VaiSesika, and in
the writings of the 20th-century thinker, Sri Aurobindo
CRadhakrishnan and Moore 1957:356-385, 602-603).
Finally, what is probably the best known of classic
Hindu texts, the Bhagavad Gita, is saturated with teachings
about how one transcends the body and the senses. The
divinity Krishna, in his conversation with the human Ar-
juna, which constitutes the entire text of the Gita, asserts
that atman is eternal and transcends the body:
20. Know this Atman
Unborn, undying, . . .
How can It die
The death of the body? . . .
Worn-out bodies
Are shed by the dweller
Within the body.
[The Song of God: Bhagavad-Gita 1944:37]
Throughout this work, the importance of transcending the
body is repeated by Krishna:
Once more I shall teach you
That uttermost wisdom:
The sages who found it
Were all made perfect,
Escaping the bonds of the body.
[The Song of God: Bhagavad-Gita 1944:106]
The Gita is popularly disseminated in Kerala and
around India more broadly. Many Hindu households dis-
play a picture of Krishna and Arjuna in Arjuna's chariot
and a quote from the Gita. A large mural of Krishna and
Arjuna even dominates the waiting room of a well-known
clinical psychologist in Kerala, and the Gita is dramatized
on television and in other media.
A division of phenomenological experience similar to
that described in these philosophical excerpts exists in the
following testimony from informants. Specifically, we will
see that Sanskritic terminology from the philosophical texts
excerpted above, such as atman, bodham, and manas, and
an emphasis on consciousness, exist in contemporary dis-
course in Kerala showing attention to the rarification of
nontangible parts of the person.
21. KERALA: FIELD RESEARCH AND SETTING
Kerala is home to 30 million people in southern India.
This green and lush coastal state is well-known among re-
searchers who study development for its high—around 90
percent—literacy, high life expectancy, low infant mortal-
ity, and other impressive quality-of-life indicators. Some
attribute these achievements to policies of Kerala's com-
munist government and grassroots social movements
(e.g., Franke and Chasin 1994; Heller 1999; Namboodiri-
pad 1984). Kerala has an excellent health care system and
the highest number of biomedical (known in India as "al-
lopathic") doctors and hospital beds per capita in India
(Franke and Chasin 1994; Panikar and Soman 1984). The
state is also reputed for its practitioners and facilities of
ayurvedic medicine, the most widely used indigenous
medical system of South Asia. Coexisting with its impres-
sive social achievements, Kerala also has serious problems
of unemployment (Mathew 1997) and an extremely high
suicide rate (Halliburton 1998). The Dravidian language
Malayalam is spoken throughout the state, and the term
Malayali is used to refer to the people and culture of Kerala.
The research presented in this article is based on inter-
views with 100 patients and over twenty healers plus ob-
servations of healing sessions at ayurvedic and biomedical
psychiatric hospitals and religious healing centers. The re-
ligious centers included a Muslim mosque, a Hindu tem-
ple, and a Christian church, all of which are renowned for
treating mentally ill or spirit-possessed people.2 Research
was conducted in 1997 with the assistance of three Malayali
graduate students and aspiring therapists, Kavitha N. S., T.
R. Bijumohan ("Biju"), and Benny Varghese. Interviews
with people suffering illnesses focused on their illness nar-
22. ratives, past attempts at therapy seeking, current views of
their problems, and plans for the future.
It should be noted that in the interviews that follow, a
relative of the person who is ill is often the speaker. This is
a fundamental feature of Kerala culture that has also been
observed in other parts of India in research on the socio-
centric or dividual person (e.g., Marriott 1976; Shweder
1991; Vaidyanathan 1989). Patients normally visited a
healing center accompanied by one or several relatives ox
friends who, at most times, spoke on their behalf to heal-
ers. Patients and their families also presented themselves
in this same manner to my assistants and myself in inter-
views. This pattern of interaction exists not only in the
world of health and healing but also in many realms of life
in Kerala, such as negotiating a marriage or employment.
Sociocentric and egocentric are not, however, absolute or
mutually exclusive categories. Katherine P. Ewing (1991)
has shown how intrapsychic individualism coexists with
interpersonal engagement in Pakistan, and Adrie Kusserow
(1999) has revealed realms of sociocentrism in U.S. society.
Likewise, there are contexts in which people in Kerala are
individualistic, such as in Hindu religious practices. Hope-
fully, the mentalistic Westerner/body-conscious non-
Westerner dichotomy will discover the same nuance that
these critiques of the egocentric/sociocentric dichotomy
have revealed.3
PATIENTS AND PROBLEMS OF BODHAM AND MANAS
Inspired and intrigued by the anthropological focus on
the body, I hoped to find in Kerala confirmation of unique
constellations of somatic idioms, forms of expression that
transcended mind-body dualism in the local culture and
in the forms of therapy I was examining, but I was frus-
trated by my informants' tendency to talk about their
23. 1128 American Anthropologist • Vol. 104, No. 4 • December
2002
problems in mentalistic and other nontangible terms. I
tried retooling some of my questions and advising my re-
search assistants, who had some training in psychology, to
veer away from questions that I thought might contain as-
sumptions of mind-body dualism, but I could not get in-
formants to stop talking about their manas and their
bodham. Finally, I decided to let them be right, even if
they did not fit my current theoretical interests. Certainly
some patients demonstrated somatic modes of expressing
distress, and it was sometimes apparent that informants'
ways of speaking about their experience were conditioned
by their being in a body. However, not one of the 38 patients
for whom I have verbatim transcripts of interviews described
their problems predominantly in somatic idioms or without
referring to concerns about "consciousness," atman, the
mind, or other nontangible modes of expressing suffering.
In fact, the elaborateness of the mental and consciousness-
related (perhaps meta-mental) terms in which informants de-
scribed their experience was striking to one accustomed to
the vocabulary of Western mind-body dualism.
Emphasizing the Mental
A number of patients described the explicitly mental na-
ture of their suffering and how this related to the treat-
ment they pursued. Two informants, who were being
treated at biomedical psychiatric hospitals, explained that
they sought help from a psychiatric hospital rather than
from magic or sorcery because their particular problem
came from "thinking." A 30-year-old male Muslim inpa-
24. tient, whom I will call Hamid,4 interviewed by my assis-
tant Kavitha and me at a psychiatric hospital in Trivan-
drum, had been working, like many Malayalis, as a laborer
in the Persian Gulf before he returned home to seek relief
for his problem. His brother, who accompanied him at the
hospital, explained how they decided to seek treatment at
a biomedical psychiatric facility:
Brother of Hamid:... there is a place where we did mantrika
chikitsa [magic treatment].
Kavitha: What all did they do?
BH: They tied a thread and did their ritual. They did the
rite in the Quran. Still he didn't get relief. So we saw an-
other person who told us about the illness. He said the
treatment for this can only be done in a hospital, and he
can't do any mantrika [magic] for this. This occurred
through thoughts [chintdgathi]. This began by thinking
[chintichcha untayatanaj.
The daughter of Jayasree, a retired schoolteacher who was
a psychiatric inpatient at a hospital in Trivandrum, also
explained why she was seeking treatment at a hospital
rather than through magic:
Kavitha: Do you have some belief in that [referring to the
possibility of involving magic or worship] relating to this
problem?
Daughter of Jayasree: Not for this problem. This is be-
cause of the mind, [manas]
Here and in many excerpts that follow, the speaker uses
the term manas, which is a Sanskrit-derived Malayalam
word for mind also used in the Indian philosophies de-
scribed earlier. Mind is the common dictionary translation
from the Malayalam and Sanskrit manas, though manas re-
25. fers to a realm of attributes that is not exactly the same as
those contained in the English mind. For example, in
many philosophical treatises, including texts by Sankara
and PraSastapada presented earlier, manas is distinct from
buddhi, which is translated as intellect. Cognition and
thinking are capacities of manas, but intellect and con-
sciousness are not. Manas is a tool and more tangible,
thereby further from atman than the more intangible
bodham and buddhi.
Occasionally, the distinction between mind and body
is rendered in English terminology. In his first attempt to
describe his troubles, Mohan, a 20-year-old male inpatient
at a biomedical mental hospital, described his problem us-
ing the English word mental and explaining that it relates
to thinking:
I have a "mental" [i.e., a mental problem]. I will think
something. When asking someone something, I will feel
different things in my mind. [. . . ]
When I think like that, sometimes the anger inside me
rises up to my mind. It will come up again. When I be-
come like that I feel that I want to attack someone, like
that the thoughts will not stop.5
Mohan also speaks about emotion, and the metaphor of
anger rising implies awareness of his embodied state. The
connection between thought and emotion is also evident,
but thoughts are Mohan's ultimate concern ("the thoughts
will not stop"). At points throughout this interview, Mo-
han also expressed concern about his atman. He felt that
someone had taken his atman and that it had merged with
the atman of another person. Interestingly, the interview
with Mohan occurred somewhat early in my fieldwork,
and my assistants and I were still trying hard to bring out
26. somatic expressions, which we assumed were just hidden
in the people to whom we were speaking. Such questions
got answers like this:
Biju: Something else, do you have any other "strange
physical feelings"? In your body, some kind of "strange
feelings"?
Mohan: Nothing like that.
Murphy: Okay, okay, [my indication to Biju that we
ought to drop this line of questioning]
Mohan: No, this is only a "mental" illness. Other than
that there is no illness.
Bodham and the Many Modes of Consciousness
Mustapha, a 44-year-old Muslim fisherman who was seek-
ing relief for his problems at Beemapalli mosque, was suf-
fering an illness "in the head" according to his brother
who was attending to him at the mosque. This brother
also related the onset of the problem to being without
bodham or becoming unconscious. The Malayalam term
bodham and other idioms in the following examples are
roughly translated as consciousness with modifications or
translation options occasionally indicated since English
Halliburton • Rethinking Anthropological Studies of the Body
1129
words—being based on a different phenomenology—can-
not reproduce the nuances of these Malayalam terms.
Kavitha: What all was he showing [i.e., what were his
symptoms] when you took him to [name of mental hospi-
tal]?
27. Mustapha's Brother: I can't say exactly what he was show-
ing when he became ill in the head. He will say things in
reverse. He was brought back unconsciously [bodhamillate].
Several other patients' illnesses wexe described as be-
ginning with an episode of problems with bodham. A 32-
year-old Hindu manual laborer was staying with his son,
Satish, who was incarcerated in a cell (for uncontrollable
or violent persons) while he sought relief for his suffering
at Beemapalli mosque. Satish was around eighteen years
old and training to be a welder when his problem started.
His father explained to me that a loss of bsdham was the
beginning and defining characteristic of his son's prob-
lem:
Murphy: What all are the boy's problems?
Satish's Father: The problem is that one day when he was
returning home after going to the road he had a feeling
that about ten to five hundred people were chasing him.
He came and fell unconscious [bodham kettu] at the door-
step. That's all there is to the illness. There is nothing other
than that.
Despite studies referred to earlier (e.g., Kleinman 1986)
that tend to find more expression of suffering through the
body among people at the lower end of social hierarchies,
this working-class father described his son's problems in
terms of bodham.
Lakshmi, a 26-year-old Hindu woman who had been
attending a Hindu temple to seek the goddess' help with
her problems described how consciousness relates to her
experience of possession on several levels of interiority:
Biju: Do you have consciousness [bodham] during posses-
sion [tullaip Consciousness [bodhamp
28. Lakshmi: No.
B: Do you have consciousness inside [ullil bodham kanumo]?
L: Inside the inside, there will be consciousness [ullinre ullil
bodham kanum]. The reason is . . . but there is no outside.
There is a feeling that something is inside.
B: No consciousness [bodham] on the outside, right?
L: No consciousness [bodhamilla].
Lakshmi is referring to a level of interiority where there is
awareness of what is occurring during possession although
her normal, full consciousness does not perceive what is
going on around her and within her. Other possessed peo-
ple similarly report that only a fraction of their regular
consciousness is present during possession experiences.
A woman who was receiving outpatient psychiatric
treatment, in her first attempt to describe her problem, resorts
to the idiom bodham, but also uses a term, drmma, which
sometimes has a meaning like consciousness but also refers
to memory. "I lost memory/consciousness [Ormmayilldteydyi].
Yesterday night, I became unconscious [Bodhamilldteydyi]."
In this passage, it is hard to ascertain whether it is better to
render drmma as memory or consciousness, two of its Eng-
lish glosses. The following description of an incident in-
volving an elderly patient, Kuttappan, at an ayurvedic
mental hospital helps clarify some of the meanings of dr-
mma:
Wife of Kuttappan: We can't sleep here. Yesterday, his
son was here with him. He beat him [the son] with a flash-
light.
Benny: His son?
WK: Yes. There was a cut here, and a tooth was hit and
loosened.
Kuttappan: I don't remember [ormmayilla] that.
29. Bt He did it unconsciously [drmmayilldte].
WK: Unconsciously [drmmayilldte], he did it. So they
chained him. I told him to bring tea in the morning. His
son had not had tea. It was to sooth him. So ask your son.
Father did that unconsciously. So let him call his son and
ask him whether he had tea. Then he started crying. At
that time he was not in his conscious mind [more literally,
he was of little intellect—buddhikkd lesam]
Note also that Kuttappan's wife referred to her husband as
lacking buddhi, which is a term used in the philosophies
described above to refer to the intellect, a capacity that in
Nyaya and VaiSesika philosophies is not the same as
manas or the body. Buddhi is a level higher—that is, more
valued—than mind and body though it is not as high as
stman.
The relative of a young Muslim man who was an inpa-
tient at an ayurvedic mental hospital had another expres-
sion that one of my research assistants felt was also best
rendered as (loss of) consciousness: "He lost consciousness
[talakkd oru marichchal—lit., a turning in his head] is what
he is saying. He lost consciousness [talakkd oru matichchal].
After that, he won't talk. He speaks only with his arms and
legs." Yet another term that my assistants and I thought
best translated as "unconscious" was used by a young
Hindu man, Sivan, who was seeking treatment at an ayur-
vedic mental hospital:
Sivan: They made me sick.
Benny: Who did this, and how did they make you sick?
S: They made me unconscious [mayakki].
B: Made you unconscious [mayakkiyo]?
S: Made me unconscious and scolded me [Mayakkittd pari-
hasichchittd].
30. Mayakkd also has meanings like intoxication, confu-
sion, coma, enchantment, and dimness (Madhavanpillai
1976). Given these additional meanings, mayakkd might
be interpreted as a more embodied form of unconscious-
ness than states like intoxication or coma, requiring a rela-
tionship to the body to be experienced. Or, perhaps, con-
sciousness being absent, one experiences at the level of
the body or the tangible, like the young Muslim man
above who "speaks only with his arms and legs" after los-
ing consciousness.
A 35-year-old Hindu man, Santhosh, who was employed
part-time at a photo studio was an inpatient at a biomedi-
cal psychiatric facility in Trivandrum when we met him.
His first attempt to describe his problem invokes another
idiom that is best rendered in English as "consciousness":
1130 American Anthropologist • Vol. 104, No. 4 • December
2002
Biju: What are the symptoms [lak$ana final—lit., charac-
teristics] of your illness?
Santhosh: Symptoms of illness? When I sleep I will fall
into a deep sleep without any consciousness [apydn vaydte
urahhum].
The variety of terms translated as consciousness refer to what
people in Kerala suffering distress consider to be a predomi-
nant area (or areas) of concern relating to their suffering.
These examples reveal a variety of nontangible, experien-
tial states that do not map clearly into English language/
Western terms and reveal that people in Kerala distinguish
between body, mind, consciousness(es), and atman.
31. Relations between Bodily and Less Tangible Modes
of Experience
In Kerala, people do express suffering through the body in
addition to the mental and consciousness-based modes
described in the previous section. However, the excerpts
from interviews that follow reveal how people suffering
distress in Kerala attend to their body yet appear more
concerned about their states of mind and consciousness.
A 38-year-old Hindu woman, Santhi, who was receiv-
ing inpatient treatment at the Trivandrum Medical Col-
lege expressed her difficulties in terms of a combination of
bodily and nonbodily idioms. Having financial difficulties
at home, Santhi was worried about her husband's drink-
ing, and she complained that her mother-in-law mis-
treated her. "Thinking [vichdrichd] about all this, I have
mental troubles [manassina visamam]," Santhi explained.
Later in her description of her illness, she also focused on
bodily and aesthetic states:
When I try to sleep in the daytime, sometimes I feel like
my legs are shaking, like my legs are moving and my head
is heavy. And when my head is heavy, I think I will loose
my normal state/mind [samanila tettipokum].
Note, however, that Santhi's description culminates in her
concern about losing her state of mind. Shortly afterward,
she returns to the somatic aspects of her suffering:
Santhi: Now when my body becomes numb/limp/stiff
[chenattd kayaru] and when I am tired.
Kavitha: What is chenattd kayaru ?
S: All this hair will stand up straight. It will go away after a
while.
K: Is this the only thing you feel, or is there anything else?
32. S: Sometimes I will have stomach pain, burning in the
chest. Sometimes burning in the stomach, then headache.
Everything is there.
S a n t h i t h e n responds t o t h e interviewer's p r o m p t t o
talk
a b o u t m e n t a l a n d bodily states, b u t she emphasizes t h
a t
h e r m o s t crucial c o n c e r n relates t o her m e n t a l state:
Kavitha: You said that this will happen [that you will be
possessed}. When that happens, how do you feel in your
body? And in your mind, how do you feel?
Santhi; In my mind, I will be afraid.
K: Will be afraid. Other than that?
S: Nothing other than that.
K: Nothing more than that.
S: I am afraid. I feel that I will lose my normal mind
fsamanila tettipokum].
The mother of Sreedevi, a woman who was seeking
ayurvedic psychiatric treatment, described Sreedevi's diffi-
culties in terms of bodily, behavioral, and emotional ̂ dioms:
Biju: What is the problem for which you are seeking treat-
ment?
Sreedevi's Mother She is not eating, and she has started
crying. And when sleeping, she'll suddenly wake up com-
plaining of stomach pain. She shows bahalam [agitation/
boisterousness].
But t h e n Sreedevi's m o t h e r explains:
Because this is a mental problem [manassikamdyittulla
visamam], we have been coming here.
33. What these excerpts reveal are several modes of cul-
turally defined phenomenological experience. I would
propose that rather than a mind-body dualism, there is in
Kerala a phenomenology of multiple modes of experience
that range from material to intangible and rarefied: that is,
from the body to manas to bodham to atman. The other
idioms that translate as consciousness, such as ormma,
would belong on this continuum of modes of experience
between manas and atman. The informants cited above do
not explicitly say that these modes of experience lie on a
continuum of increasing intangibility, although they use
these terms in a way that is consistent with the philoso-
phies described earlier that outline a continuum of body-
mind-consciousness-atman. What is clear is that, unlike
many other ethnographic examples in anthropological
studies of the body, people suffering affliction and illness
in Kerala do distinguish mind from body and locate expe-
rience in nonbodily realms that are extremely important
to them. Yet mind and body are not diametrically opposed
in Kerala. They are simply different, and, in fact, mind—
manas—is more embodied, more gross and material, than
bodham and atman.
It is also possible that there are multiple phenome-
nologies, or variations on this phenomenology, within
Kerala society. The examples above present people from
various class, gender, and religious backgrounds, but fur-
ther study may reveal variations along these lines. In fact,
the Indian philosophies described earlier are to some de-
gree elite discourses, but what may make Kerala unique is
that these elite philosophies and phenomenologies seem
to be popularly consumed.
THE CONTEXT AND THE UNIQUENESS OF KERALA
In our contemporary globalized world, we should not be
34. surprised to find local phenomenologies interacting with,
being influenced by, or resisting translocal discourses of
mind and body. We should also expect that elements of
these broader discursive universes will combine with local
understandings into distinct, and perhaps even unique,
phenomenological orientations. Historically, local dis-
courses and practices in Kerala have been influenced by
transregional ideologies such as North Indian Sanskritic
Hinduism, Islam, and Communism. This trend continues
in postcolonial Kerala in which Western idioms of distress
Halliburton • Rethinking Anthropological Studies of the Body
1131
have been imported with the proliferation of biomedical
psychiatric services, and, thus, Western mind-body dual-
ism has encountered Kerala's phenomenology.
It could be suggested that people in Kerala deempha-
size the body and prioritize the more intangible parts of
the person because of the influence of Western biomedi-
cine,6 which is more widely available in Kerala than in
other states. This explanation is tempting, but not suffi-
cient to explain Kerala's uniqueness. Although, with only
four percent of India's population, Kerala had 30 percent
of the biomedical mental hospitals in India in 1991,7 there
is not a simple hegemony of biomedicine in Kerala. The
state has as many ayurvedic facilities as it has biomedical
facilities, but more biomedical beds and doctors (State
Planning Board, cited in Mani 1998) and more ayurvedic
doctors who specialize in manasika rogam (mental illness)
compared to other regions of India (Bhattacharyya 1986;
Kakar 1982). Indeed, the phenomenological perspectives
presented above come not only from informants undergo-
35. ing biomedical psychiatric therapy but also from patients
using ayurvedic therapy and religious healing centers.
Moreover, local phenomenology predates the arrival of
Western biomedicine in South Asia and expresses an un-
derstanding of relationship among consciousness, mind,
and body that is distinct from that found in Western
mind-body phenomenology. This does not mean that
Kerala's phenomenology is static; the privileging of mind
over body has most likely been reinforced by that same
tendency in Western biomedical discourses, which are
well-known and, in some contexts, prestigious in Kerala.
Although the two phenomenologies are different, the
valuing of mind over body in the Western discourse can
be considered akin to prioritizing the intangible over the
tangible in Kerala's phenomenology.
It is likely that Kerala's phenomenology is related to
Kerala's tradition of high literacy. What Kerala has that
other states do not—and what might make its phenome-
nology unique—is the popular consumption of what
would be considered only elite phenomenological dis-
courses in other parts of the country. The philosophical
views I have presented are high, literate culture in various
parts of India, but in Kerala they are popularly consumed.
Furthermore, literacy is not only a modern development
but has historically been a distinguishing feature of Kerala
society (Gough [1968] cites examples of the local con-
sumption of elite Sanskritic sources and literacy in Malay-
alam from the 9th, 16th, and other centuries). Today in
Kerala, literacy enables the consumption of biomedical,
psychiatric, and medical discourse through popular me-
dia, such as psychological advice columns in magazines
such as Mangalam and Manorama and television shows
that feature biomedical experts. Again the picture is com-
plex: While biomedical views receive more coverage, there
are ayurvedic healers and others who write in the popular
36. press and appear on television.
Regardless of how local phenomenology has received,
reinterpreted, or resisted Western mind-body dualism via
biomedicine, it is important to emphasize and further de-
lineate the difference between Kerala's phenomenology
and Western mind-body dualism. I suggest that English
metaphors of "psychological" distress belie a greater atten-
tion to embodied experience than metaphors that are used
in Malayalam. English words such as 5^55, tension, and de-
pression, which are sometimes used in Kerala, are meta-
phors that are kinetic or imply a physical torsion—they
convey a feeling of pressure or weight on the body in or-
der to represent conditions of mind and emotion. Malay-
alam and Sanskritic terms for distress do not evoke these
images of weight and pressure. As examples, people I spoke
to in Kerala who suffered distress used the following terms:
visamam, which best translates as "sadness"; kastahhal,
which means "troubles"; and duhkham, which is best ren-
dered as "grief." A greater knowledge of Malayalam ety-
mology and a thorough analysis of these words in their
use in everyday discourse would be necessary, however, to
more accurately complete this comparison. In addition,
while this privileging of mind over body is similar to valu-
ing the intangible over the tangible, Kerala phenomenol-
ogy, and the Indian philosophies mentioned earlier,
would locate both mind and body on the lower, more
gross and tangible end of the body-mind-bodham-atman
continuum. Yet both phenomenologies do have in com-
mon a denigration of the body.
CONCLUSION
I wish to reassert that I am not advocating an abandon-
ment of anthropological studies of the body or the various
37. approaches that are labeled "embodiment." This move
away from representational biases continues to be an im-
portant step toward more thoroughly understanding the
human experience. We should, however, be suspicious of
our current tendencies to discover "exotic" peoples who
live in the body. Perhaps analogous to the tendency for
anthropologists to assume the distant Other to be living in
a remote time (Auge 1999; Fabian 1983), the excitement
about finding alternatives to the allegedly mentalistic
West has led us to locate the Other more firmly in the
body. This leads not only to possibly mischaracterizing
the already-reified, "non-Western" subject. It also, wrong-
ly, implies that the Western person is not living in an em-
bodied state and is unable to transcend mind-body dual-
ism. I am suggesting instead that we be alert to particular
local ways of dividing up how one feels, experiences, and
perceives—remembering that such ways of experiencing
are shaped by elite and popular, local and larger, forces
and discourses.
Although studies of embodiment have moved us in
this direction, the very term seems to direct attention to
the body, a tendency reflected in those many studies that
use embodiment as a synonym for somatization. Although
we might still wish to discover what is unique about the
body in a particular setting, getting a sense of the local
phenomenology first will contextualize the body and
1132 American Anthropologist • Vol. 104, No. 4 • December
2002
thereby reduce the risk of missing crucial aspects of lived
experience.
38. The issues treated in this article also signal the exist-
ence of larger problems in studying experience in anthro-
pology; I have asserted that how one experiences is locally
constituted, yet there remains the possibility that within a
local phenomenology there is some level of translocal hu-
man experience. As anthropologists, we have a particular
talent for revealing the limitations of universals as well as
a responsibility to present such challenges. So while Hegel,
Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Sankara, and others speak about
universal human experience, we need to ask to what de-
gree such thinkers shape, and are shaped by, unbeknownst
to them, their local context.
MURPHY HALLIBURTON Department of Anthropology,
Queens
College, CUNY, Flushing, NY 11367
NOTES
Acknowledgments. For their comments on earlier versions of
this
article, I am indebted to Vincent Crapanzano, Setha Low,
Shirley
Lindenbaum, Joan Mencher, and Thomas Csordas. I also wish to
thank the anonymous reviewers of the original manuscript of
this
article who provided valuable guidance for rethinking and
refining
the arguments 1 present. Research for this study was made
possible
by grants from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for
Anthropological
Research and the National Science Foundation.
1. From Paddrthadharmasamgraha of Pragastapada, translated
by
Ganganathajha (Allahabad: E. J. Lazarus and Co., 1916).
39. Reprinted
in Radhakrishnan and Moore 1957. Comments in " [ ] " brackets
are
Radhakrishnan and Moore's. Comments in ")}" brackets are
mine.
2. There has been some debate over whether mental illness and
spirit possession are similar or distinct conditions (e.g., Bour-
guignon 1991; Lewis 1989). Although these conditions may
differ
existentially, they are pragmatically similar in Kerala in the
sense
that people pursue both psychiatric and religious healing for the
same problem, and they sometimes describe the same condition
as
possession and a problem of mind or consciousness.
Also, it could be pointed out that I am finding an orientation to
consciousness and the mind because my research focuses on
peo-
ple with "mental" difficulties, but it is precisely in the world of
pu-
tatively mental problems that anthropologists have found a need
to focus on the body. For example, Kleinman (1986) found pa-
tients in a psychiatric center in China expressing social distress
through the body rather than psychologically. See also Jenkins
and
Valiente 1994.
3. I am grateful to one of the reviewers of this article for
suggesting
this analogy.
4. All names of patient-informants are pseudonyms. However,
real
names of research assistants are used.
40. 5. All interviews with patient-informants are translated from
Ma-
layalam, and words that occurred in English in the original
inter-
views are indicated by quotation marks.
6. My observations in Kerala contrast with a study by Jean
Lang-
ford (1998) of an ayurvedic psychotherapy practice in North
India.
According to Langford (1998:89-90), many patients of the ayur-
vedic therapist, Dr. Singh, have somatic symptoms (e.g.,
weakness,
stomach pain, constipation), which the doctor diagnoses as a
prob-
lem with vata (one of the dosas, which are underlying essences
or
forces in the body). One patient Langford observed was
described
as unusual in that he complained of "extreme depression" (1998:
90). Langford paraphrased the view of an ayurvedic
psychologist
regarding this case: "In India . . . there is not much awareness
about psychological problems. Usually people with
psychological
disorders come to the out-patient department complaining of
physical ailments and are diagnosed by Dr. Singh with
depression
and/or anxiety" (1998:91). By contrast, many of the people I
inter-
viewed characterized their problems in terms of what a
Westerner
would consider psychological states (i.e., states of manas and
bodham).
41. 7. Franke and Chasin 1994:v (citing India Abroad, December
13,
1991, p. 32). Also, Bhattacharyya's research in Bengal (1986)
and
Nunley's work in Uttar Pradesh (1996) indicate that Western
biomedical psychiatric services in those regions are rare relative
to
Kerala.
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