Produktinformationen Download Flyer Die Geschichte der Wissenschaften ist in erster Linie eine Geschichte der Ideen und Entdeckungen. oft genug aber auch der Moden. Irrtümer und Missverständnisse. Sie hängt eng mit der Entwicklung kultureller und zivilisatorischer Leistungen zusammen und bleibt von der politischen Geschichte keineswegs unberührt. Diese Wechselwirkungen verständlich aufzuzeigen und damit auch für die Gegenwart nutzbar zu machen. hat sich die ZeitschriftBerichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichtezur Aufgabe gemacht. Disziplinübergreifende historische Themenstellungen lassen Gemeinsames und Spezifisches innerhalb der Natur-. Geistes-. Sozial-. Medizin- und Ingenieurwissenschaften erkennen. ISSN: 0170-6233 (print). 1522-2365 (online). Band 34. 4 Ausgaben 2011. Impressum Impressum(PDF) –[Archiv anzeigen][Archiv verstecken] Zitate:Um sicher zu gehen. dass die Artikel in dieser Zeitschrift korrekt elektronisch erfasst werden (z.B. in CrossRef oder ISI Web of Science). benutzen Sie beim Zitieren bitte folgende Abkürzung: 'Ber. Wissenschaftsgesch.' (die Zeichensetzung hängt vom Stil der zitierenden Zeitschrift ab).
Biblical Theology Bulletin is a distinctive, peer-reviewed, quarterly journal containing articles and reviews written by experts in biblical and theological studies. The editors seek to acquaint theologians, religious scholars, religious educators, pastors, pastoral personnel and the religiously educated public with critically grounded biblical research along with its implications for the humanities and religious communities today.
The Bilingual Research Journal is the National Association for Bilingual Education's premier scholarly, peer-reviewed research publication. Bilingual Research Journal delivers in-depth coverage of education theory and practice, dealing with bilingual education, bilingualism, and language policies in education.Topics include:AssessmentBiliteracyIndigenous languagesLanguage planningLanguage politicsMultilingualismPedagogical approachesPolicy analysisInstructional researchLanguage planningSecond language acquisitionThe journal has a strong interest in matters related to the education of language minority children and youth in the United States, grades PreK-12, but articles focusing on other countries are often included if they have implications for bilingual education in the U.S.Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
As medical technology continues to develop, the subject of bioethics has an ever increasing practical relevance for all those working in philosophy, medicine, law, sociology, public policy, education and related fields.
For thirty years, Biography has been an important forum for well-considered biographical scholarship. It features stimulating articles that explore the theoretical, generic, historical, and cultural dimensions of life-writing; and the integration of literature, history, the arts, and the social sciences as they relate to biography. Each issue also offers insightful reviews, concise excerpts of reviews published elsewhere, an annual bibliography of works about biography, and listings of upcoming events, calls for papers, and news from the field.
Recent decades have witnessed fascinating and controversial advances in the biological sciences. This journal answers the need for meta-theoretical analysis, both about the very nature of biology, as well as about its social implications. Biology and Philosophy is aimed at a broad readership, drawn from both the sciences and the humanities. The journal subscribes to no specific school of biology, nor of philosophy, and publishes work from authors of all persuasions and all disciplines. The editorial board reflects this attitude in its composition and its world-wide membership. Each issue of Biology and Philosophy carries one or more discussions or comparative reviews, permitting the in-depth study of important works and topics.
The journal Biosemiotics provides a platform for exceptional peer-reviewed papers that is as broad as the rapidly growing discipline for which it is named. Its coverage spans a range of disciplines, bridging biology, philosophy, linguistics and the communication sciences. Conceived in the insight that the genetic code is a language as old as life itself, and grounded in the study of signs, of communication and of information in organisms, biosemiotics is evolving today toward the challenge of naturalizing not only biological information but also biological meaning, in the belief that signs and codes are fundamental components of the living world. Biosemiotics offers an advanced forum for the exchange of ideas on this exciting new area of biological theory. It serves a readership comprising biosemioticians themselves, along with interested researchers in disciplines from social semiotics to community ecology, from communication science to artificial intelligence.