Spotkanie i dialog w procesie resocjalizacji

2018 ◽  
pp. 143-167
Author(s):  
Andrzej Bałandynowicz

Dialogue is therefore one of the authentic ways of being an individual. Only in it is the fulfillment of a personal being fulfilled and a transformation into a community of participants of dialogue takes place. The situation of a personal relationship as a meeting allows us to find the content of human life. Dialogue, inter alia, in resocialization requires the partners to turn to each other, openness, honesty and readiness to interact. Meeting with another person in whose center is a dialogical relation is a situation in which the individual turns to the other as that person and tries to communicate with it through words, rejecting attempts to impress or dominate the partner. The meeting is an opportunity to improve relationships and opportunities to improve your fate due to the commitment of both parties and pursuit of goals

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 33-45
Author(s):  
Paweł Kępka

The article presents issues related to  security design including, among others, the classification of security design, criteria for its division, the essence of design, security interests and objectives, security determinants (environment), concepts for safety-enhancing activities under specified conditions, security potential and the concept of security enhancing activities. The considerations are based on the assumption that security is first and foremost based on the need to protect against the real risks posed by elements that could negatively affect individuals, communities or entire countries. On the other hand, the long history, beyond the defined approach to  providing security, resulting strictly from the willingness to  live in  a  specific environment (space), indicates cases in which the sense of security is related to the authority, capabilities, quality of assets and resources possessed. Both of the approaches presented emphasise that, regardless of their attitude, the issue of protection of human life and health is the most important category of things to be protected. The first approach indicates a reactionary character, closely related to intervention in respect of a given threat (real or imaginary), while the second one draws the perspective of organising the security potential that constitutes the strength of the individual in general, including the case of a real threat. It is a sign of preparing resources (legal, organisational, material, financial, informational) for the potential threat from nature, another person or a country. The concepts defined for preparing for what becomes a threat to the protected values are not only logical, but can also be seen in a hierarchical way. The proof in this case is that, first of all, people repel what threatens them here and now and only then do they think about building their security potential as an answer to what they may face in the future.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 165-180
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Morawiak

Innovation in creating consumer values as an important factor in socio-economic selection making  Consumption concerns many aspects of human life in both material and non-material dimensions. It shapes the attitude towards the family, spare time management, religion or culture. It sets the shape of our dreams, desires and life aspirations. On the one hand, it affects the system of our values, on the other hand, it is inspired by this system. Opponents of consumption, treating it as a secondary value and value in itself, accuse it of leading to the development of such phenomena as: mass entertainment, commercialization of culture or devel­opment of quite unnecessary, apparent needs. Instead, it removes the values generally respected in so­ciety, such as: interest in the fate of others, solidarity, care for the environment or the future of next gen­erations. Today’s consumer is not a mindless human being subject to the rules of the market, they are increasingly educated, aware and responsible. They make choices based not only on their own needs but based on values existing in a given society. They purchase wisely and respectfully, remembering that today’s choices will be the legacy for future generations, thus the consumer’s interest must be synchronized with these generations. Nowadays, it is the consumer who creates the image of the company, forcing it to take ethical and moral actions, and also heading for conscious consumption. Such an attitude creates the opportunity to include the consumer in the processes of companies’ activities and their innovations, as well as treating them personally and more like a partner. In the realities of the new economic, political, and social system, new values of individuals, as well as of entire social groups associated with the behaviour of consumers of the modern world are developing. Consumption, on the one hand, determines the shape of dreams, desires and the way of life. On the other hand, based on an innovative approach to it, it performs a symbolic function that gives a deeper and wider perspective to existing products, emphasizing them as exceeding their useful functions. Consumers becoming more aware of their choices take into account not only the system of their own values but also the values existing in a given society. This innovative approach to consumption creates new quality, a new lifestyle, it shapes new roles, it draws attention to the environment around us, and it cares about the sensible use of its resources and its means. Following values in the selection of products reveals responsibility connected to decision making, its impact on the environment and on entire social groups. They allow the individual to real­ize themselves in the group and the human community, they enable human development, achieving customer satisfaction, and avoiding the plundering economy. 


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Ahmed Hassan Ali Murshed

Certainly, Love is one of the most unmistakable natural sentiments of the individual, so the psychologists have attempted to characterize the word 'love' in various manners, for instance,Freud, in his book, (Civilization and Contents)illuminates the sentiment of love according to mental perspective. As he would like to think, a limit between the 'object' and'ego' is degraded, so he stated that "Against to all proof of his feelings, a person, who is in love utters that 'you' and 'I' are one and begins carrying on as if it was a reality" (Freud, 13). 'Self' of the individual, who falls in love is totally degraded into 'oneself' of the other, so Love assumes an important role in bliss or despondency in human life, in which, the fruitful love makes life upbeat and on the contrary, its disappointment changes life into a hopeless wreck, so unfortunately, Unrequited Love is a one imbalance in which you may love someone with all your heart, but you don’t receive these feelings in return. In other words, it is love that isn’t reciprocated. For example, you may love someone deeply, but this person simply doesn’t love you back. This paper will discuss the characters’ suffering as a result of the one-sided love and explain how they behaved during the events of the love stories, as well as delineate the tragic ending of their unrequited love, furthermore, it will give some examples from some of Pamuk’s novels.


1969 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-86
Author(s):  
Hellmut Toftdahl

The Debate about Grundtvig and Kierkegaard.By Hellmut Toftdahl.In 19. century intellectual life Grundtvig and Kierkegaard tower like two huge antipodes: Kierkegaard’s desperation, sharpness, and merciless honesty - Grundtvig’s gigantic visions and deep understanding of the conditions and weaknesses of human life. They have left traces so profound that instead of establishing contact their imitators have widened the distance between them and made it appear as an unbridgeable gulf. Attempts to compare them have been rare: a couple of books and otherwise only short articles in newspapers and periodicals - and this although we are dealing with two works of unequalled scope in the history of Danish literature.The explanation is probably to be found in the fact that there has been no common system of reference, no third point of comparison, because the two of them seem to be complementary, i. e. they mutually complete but exclude each other. In the bulk of the existing literature about Kierkegaard and Grundtvig the approach has in fact been to condemn one of them by using the other. Only Garl Koch tries to attain objectivity by introducing Tolstoi, the Russian author, as a third point of reference, a kind of common denominator for the two others. More interest attaches to the attempt of Frederik Jungersen to make Kierkegaard an appendix to Grundtvig, an appendix emphasizing only what Grundtvig realized well enough: that the individual should not forget itself in the community. Kierkegaard stresses the self-activity of the individual, which, according to Jungersen, in Grundtvig is the basic condition of congregational life. That Jungersen is wrong here will appear from my book Kierkegaard først – og Grundtvig så, where I demonstrate how escapism, the forgetting of self, is a sine qua non in Grundtvig’s theology and view of human life. As a possible third point of reference I have called attention to the Danish author Martin A. Hansen, who overcame a Kierkegaardian crisis through Grundtvig - a crisis experienced as a conflict between humanism and Christianity, where Christianity was victorious.The article by Hinrich Buss in Kontroverse um Kierkegaard und Grundtvig is admirable. He draws a highly varied picture of the two with a criticism which is based upon objectivity and penetration. The contrast between them is clearly outlined: A Grundtvig who, on account of a not very thoroughly considered programme of secularization, has nothing to offer the present but an advice about not forgetting that the humanity of man is conditioned by his creation by God—on the other hand Kierkegaard’s “modern” analysis of existence as a paradox, carried through with inexorable passion and logical consistency. Buss sees the strength as well as the weakness in both of them: Grundtvig leaves us with the problem of being unable to attach what is human to what is Christian, carefully considered theologically; Kierkegaard performs this work, but he ends up by abandoning the human side, compelled by his dispositions. Kierkegaard is the modern thinker who places us in a situation where we can no longer avoid his reasoning. Grundtvig exhorts us not to forget the Creation; he shows us our loss if we can no longer think such thoughts as these.The article by Hinrich Buss is the first to comply with the demand, as formulated by Jørgen K. Bukdahl, to be made on a comparison between Kierkegaard and Grundtvig: they should be evaluated with regard to their place in the epoch, the period of reflection, with the attendant dissolution of given ties and the resulting “modern” presentation of the problem: How is it possible to establish authority in a reflective, civil age where the old authorities, Church, public authority, king, paterfamilias, teacher, have lost their authoritativeness?In my book Kierkegaard først - og Grundtvig så I have endeavoured to keep this period-dependence in focus, just as I have attempted to use the concepts of existentialism and phenomenology as a common system of reference, regarding, as I do, the works of the two authors as an expression of a way of having the world and an expression of the place of the ego in this subjective picture of the world. The treatises discussed and criticized in this article do not move beyond the psychologizing or the theologically systematizing sphere (vide for instance Henning Høirup, Grundtvig Studier 1956), they are accordingly atomistic, and one looks in vain for the integral person: Kierkegaard or Grundtvig, whom we expect to find behind the political, literary, or theological views expressed in their respective works. In this respect the article by Hinrich Buss is undoubtedly superior to the rest.


Author(s):  
T. Łapian

The emergence and development of socio-cultural animation are closely related to the state of modern society and contemporary culture. Animation has become a response to their deficiencies and deficiencies, for the needs that our post-industrial society cannot satisfy. The development of civilization, which led to industrialization and urbanization, meant that the social structure underwent a radical transformation. Traditional forms of community life and the types of lasting relationships related to them have disappeared, and their place was replaced by individualistic culture focused on the individual and its self-fulfillment. The way we live has become increasingly dependent on the one hand on the state, with its ubiquitous institutions, and on the other hand on market mechanisms, increasingly aggressively entering all possible areas of social life. Many outstanding humanistic psychologists, such as Maslow, Perls, Rogers and Fromm, demanded action to transform the human individual. It was postulated to strive to develop in the individual such qualities as: openness, flexibility, the ability to make conscious choices, intrsteer, creativity, skepticism towards positively understood science and technology, striving for authenticity, treating life as internal changes, autonomy, caring for others, ecological sensitivity, independence, ability to self-organize into self-sufficient institutions, spiritual development. The theme of animation requires an interdisciplinary approach, as it concerns many areas of human life. Seen from a social perspective, it is associated with such phenomena as: enriching social and cultural life forms, inspiring people to creative life and creative activities, reviving local communities and various groups and environments, discovering the unrealized potentials of both individuals and groups. On the other hand, from the pedagogical perspective, you can see a range of methods in animation that can help you deal with contemporary educational and educational challenges. The publications have rich thematic literature that goes beyond Central Europe. The topic raised was not fully exhausted; this text is one of the components of the monograph being created, which will describe the overall profile of the animator and leisure time animation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-46
Author(s):  
Dariusz Jurczak

The author of this article presented a theoretical understanding of the context and methodological paradox of safety.The selected issues of safety paradox of borderlands are highlighted examples of paradoxical approach of local authorities to the issue of safety of the local community. The material also shows the methodological reasons of safety paradox of borderland. Research on issues related to the safety of the unit appears as a trivial problem. A deeper look at the evaluation of the relationship between the sense of security of the individual and national security reveals the other side of the paradox. The problem is compounded by the fact that often decision-makers in the field of security are officials who do not have legal knowledge, in particular the rights and freedoms of the individual. The main part of the article are the selected topics regarding safety paradox of borderland. With regard to the broad perspective on the problem of human safety a departure from the assumption that not every threat to human development is also a security threat. On the other hand a narrow approach to it must be emphasized that this physical hazard exists only in relation to individual security and does not suit the contemporary danger to human life. The paradox of modern safety appears to us in the relationship between the sense of security of the individual, human rights protection, terrorist threats, and international, national, and local standards, also in cases of “ignoring” these standards by both the local authorities and government. Assessing the conditions under which the modern state creates social security institutions, to a number of objective trends must be captured. The overriding is the need to create institutional forms of counteracting the threats of the increasingly diverse nature.


Elements ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott M. O'Leary

Soren Kierkegaard, the mystic existentialist, questions the role of despairing human life in his celebrated text, <em><span style="font-family: mceinline;">The <span style="font-family: mceinline;">Sickness Unto Death</span></span></em>. In a disquitision both persuasive and troubling, he insists that despair, far from being a state of consciousness which should be avoided, is in fact a spiritual mood that brings the individual dialectically closer to the divine. But how can we accept the paradoxes of faith that cause such terrible despair? Our inability to come to terms with the elements of Christianity that Kierkegaard himself calls offensive, such as original sin and God's total authority over man, lead to a pervasive loss of self-consciousness that Kierkegaard sees as the epidemic of modern civilization. Like a physician, Kierkegaard diagnoses our sickness, and his prescription for recovery is paradoxical and provoking.


1912 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 265-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. M. Cornford

That three of them were popularly regarded as correlated with the three ages of human life; (2) that the structure of early Greek societies, as of other primitive societies, was based on the distinction of three main age-grades, of which the three virtues are characteristic; (3) that Plato's own Ideal State has the same age basis underlying the other features peculiar to it, and is indeed transparently modelled on the Spartan constitution; (4) that it is therefore probable that Plato started with the three divisions of his State and their several virtues, and then, proceeding on the assumption that the ‘natural’ State must reflect on a large scale the constitution of the individual ‘nature,’ arranged the structure of the soul to correspond with his polity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sohyun Park

On the one hand, the fast processing speed and the storage and linking possibilities when dealing with electronic data make human life convenient and practical; on the other hand, however, they can also endanger people's lives of freedom. By combining it with other data, we are moving closer to becoming a transparent citizen. In the context of these challenges, the freedom of the individual is at stake. It is essential that personal data be evaluated with appropriate safeguards that adequately protect individuals against the unauthorized or excessive collection, storage, use and disclosure of data concerning them.


1874 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 212-223
Author(s):  
W. Lazarus

We are so accustomed, even when we do not aim at scientific exactness, to regard every phenomenon as produced by causes,—as the resultant of forces,—that we cannot help looking on what we call “life” as the effect of certain definite forces, and on death as the consequence of the extinction of those forces. But when we thus contrast life and death, we must always bear in mind not only that what we call “life” is a condition which presents itself under circumstances of unexhaustable variety, but that in all probability quite as many differences in its manifestation entirely elude our observation. Given the effect, we reason as to the cause; when the effects are different, we infer that either the causes are different, or the conditions on which the effect depends. But if the differences are so numerous that we can scarcely find two cases exactly alike, we can draw no conclusion either as to the causes or as to the conditions. Since in no single case can we recognize the various conditions under which the cause of life works, we cannot hope to decide how the effect is connected with the conditions and how with the causes. Death too is a phenomenon as to which we have not the least idea why it happens; whether because the vital force in the individual has sunk below a certain degree which is necessary for the maintenance of life, or whether as a result of wholly different forces. On this point we scarcely know more than that the possibility of organic life depends upon certain conditions, that it can exist so long as these conditions remain within limits more or less wide, and that a transgression of the limits causes death. We do not, however, know exactly what these conditions are, and still less do we know the limits within which human life can exist; and if we reflect how complicated are the circumstances to be taken into account, we can scarcely hope to see these relations settled for some time to come. It is further to be observed that life, being regarded as the effect of a force, and death as its extinction, there must be a gradual transition from the one to the other.


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