03141 am 2200733 n 450 9910214940503321201608012-37546-047-210.4000/books.pressesenssib.1060(CKB)3710000001633285(FrMaCLE)OB-pressesenssib-1060(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/49560(PPN)267930089(EXLCZ)99371000000163328520170720j|||||||| ||| 0freuu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHorizon 2019 : bibliothèques en prospective /Anne-Marie Bertrand, Dominique Arot, Robert Damien, François Gèze, Bertrand Legendre, Pascal Ory, Georges Perrin, François Rouet, Valérie TesnièreVilleurbanne Presses de l’enssib20161 online resource (112 p.) 2-910227-87-1 Que seront les bibliothèques en 2019 ? Dans quel contexte évolueront-elles ? Quelles missions leur seront confiées ? Quelle légitimité sera la leur ? Voilà quelques-unes des questions évoquées dans le colloque « Horizon 2019 : bibliothèques en prospective », tenu à l'enssib en 2009. Voici, dans cet ouvrage, quelques-unes des réponses, hypothèses, conjectures, interrogations et suppositions apportées par les intervenants de ce colloque. Interrogations, analyses qui cherchent à éclairer l'horizon, à défaut de le rejoindre. Hypothèses, scénarios qui cherchent à déchiffrer l'avenir mais aussi à le construire.Horizon 2019Horizon 2019 Library, Information & Communication sciencesbibliothèquescollectivitésbibliothéconomieinnovations technologiquescollectivitésbibliothèquesbibliothéconomieinnovations technologiquesLibrary, Information & Communication sciencesbibliothèquescollectivitésbibliothéconomieinnovations technologiquesBertrand Anne-Marie908432Arot Dominique995587Damien Robert222999Gèze François249159Legendre Bertrand1302892Ory Pascal570436Perrin Georges1285449Rouet François746151Tesnière Valérie1281660Arot Dominique995587Bertrand Anne-Marie908432Damien Robert222999Gèze François249159Legendre Bertrand1302892Ory Pascal570436Perrin Georges1285449Rouet François746151Tesnière Valérie1281660FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910214940503321Horizon 2019 : bibliothèques en prospective3026700UNINA04690nam 2200625 450 991082786050332120230803201747.01-4384-5096-6(CKB)3710000000087111(EBL)3408842(SSID)ssj0001114536(PQKBManifestationID)12520726(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001114536(PQKBWorkID)11055569(PQKB)11635331(MiAaPQ)EBC3408842(Au-PeEL)EBL3408842(CaPaEBR)ebr10835335(OCoLC)870652654(EXLCZ)99371000000008711120131107d2014 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrMoral relativism and Chinese philosophy David Wong and his critics /edited by Yang Xiao and Yong HuangAlbany :State University of New York Press,2014.1 online resource (293 p.)SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and cultureDescription based upon print version of record.1-4384-5096-6 1-4384-5095-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.""Contents""; ""Preface""; ""1. Introduction""; ""I. David Wongâ€?s Pluralistic Moral Relativism""; ""1. The Strategy and Style of Wongâ€?s Approach: Working Out a Defensible Relativism""; ""2. The Three Main Theses of Wongâ€?s Pluralistic Relativism""; ""3. Wongâ€?s Defense of Pluralistic Relativism""; ""4. Wongâ€?s Moral Relativism and Chinese Philosophy""; ""II. Central Issues between Wong and His Critics""; ""1. A Morality of Humanity Over and Above Moralities of Social Groups?""""2. Can a Metaethics that Is Naturalistic, Pluralistic, and Relativistic Accommodate a Normative Morality that Is Non-Naturalistic, Monistic, or Universalistic Morality?""""3. The Principle of Humanity vs. the Principle of Charity: Interpretation of Confucianism""; ""4. Naturalism and the Naturalistic Fallacy""; ""5. Naturalism, Relativism, and Realism""; ""6. Speaker Relativism or Patient Relativism?""; ""Notes""; ""References""; ""Part I: Critical Essays""; ""2. Human Morality, Naturalism, and Accommodation""; ""I. Wongâ€?s Pluralistic Relativism""""II. The Universal Element in Morality""""III. Relativism""; ""IV. Accommodation""; ""V. Conclusion""; ""Notes""; ""References""; ""3. Naturalism and Pluralistic Relativism""; ""I. Introduction""; ""II. Individuating Moralities""; ""III. From Moral Ambivalence to Pluralistic Relativism?""; ""IV. Value Monism and Universalism Revisited""; ""V. Should Wong Allow Non-Naturalistic Moralities to be Adequate?""; ""VI. Moralities as Practiced Versus Ideal Moralities""; ""VII. A Problem for Wongâ€?s Reciprocity Constraint""; ""VIII. Wongâ€?s Use of Xunzi: A Separate Naturalistic Project?""""Acknowledgment""""Notes""; ""References""; ""4. Principle of Humanity vs. Principle of Charity""; ""I. The Argument""; ""II. The Rival Principles of Humanity and Charity in Radical Translation""; ""III. The Role of Comparative Philosophy in the Argument""; ""IV. Xunzi and Sage Authority""; ""V. Mencius and Ambivalence about Principles""; ""VI. Zhuangzi: Detachment and Moral Engagement""; ""VII. Conclusion: Tolerance, Accommodation, and Openness""; ""Acknowledgments""; ""References""; ""5. Naturalism, Relativism, and the Authority of Morality""; ""I. Wongâ€?s Pluralistic Relativism""""II. Questions about the Universally Valid Criteria of Morality""""III. Questions about the Locally Contingent Criteria of Morality""; ""Notes""; ""References""; ""6. The Metaphysics and Semantics of Moral Relativism""; ""I. Moral Relativism and Moral Realism""; ""II. Moral Disagreements and Moral Relativism""; ""Notes""; ""References""; ""7. Toward a Benign Moral Relativism: From the Agent/Appraiser-Centered to the Patient-Centered""; ""I. Problems with Relativism without Constraints""; ""II. How Wongâ€?s Pluralist Relativism Avoids these Problems""""III. Toward a Patient-Centered Moral Relativism""SUNY Series in Chinese Philosophy and CultureEthical relativismPhilosophy, ChineseEthical relativism.Philosophy, Chinese.171/.7Xiao Yang908674Huang Yong894790MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910827860503321Moral relativism and Chinese philosophy4105179UNINA