https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/liebig.zip
e. Liebig liked John Stuart Mill’s book, titled Logic, because it promoted science as a means to social progress and political development, and also because Mill described several examples of Liebig’s [...] highly creative endeavour. 6. Science has a subjective element. 7. There are historical, cultural, and social influences on science. 8. Science and technology impact each other, but they are not the same. 9 [...] so in Bavaria, where the Prince-elector hired him to conduct reforms on both the military and the social system of his country. Thompson took his leave from the British Army, was granted knighthood for
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/lavoisier-respiration.zip
how much food a human needed. Lavoisier was an activist, and was deeply con- vinced of the need for social reform in France. He was a member of the community in favor of tax reforms and new economic strategies [...] highly creative endeavor. 6. Science has a subjective element. 7. There are historical, cultural, and social influences on science. 8. Science and technology impact each other, but they are not the same. 9 [...] so in Bavaria, where the Prince-elector hired him to conduct reforms on both the military and the social system of his country. Thompson took his leave from the British Army, was granted knighthood for
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/eijkman.zip
highly creative endeavor. 6. Science has a subjective element. 7. There are historical, cultural, and social influences on science. 8. Science and technology impact each other, but they are not the same. 9 [...] so in Bavaria, where the Prince-elector hired him to conduct reforms on both the military and the social system of his country. Thompson took his leave from the British Army, was granted knighthood for [...] worked on the reform pro- gram in Bavaria. He made an extensive investigation of the military and social systems of the two dominating countries in central Europe, Austria and Prussia, and compared the
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/lind.zip
so in Bavaria, where the Prince-elector hired him to conduct reforms on both the military and the social system of his country. Thompson took his leave from the British Army, was granted knighthood for [...] worked on the reform pro- gram in Bavaria. He made an extensive investigation of the military and social systems of the two dominating countries in central Europe, Austria and Prussia, and compared the [...] and carbamide. Figure 4: Rubner’s animal calorimeter on display during the exhibition “Energie = Arbeit” in Berlin 2010; photography made by Elke Jung-Wolff; reproduction by courtesy of Stiftung Brandenburger
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/joule-1.zip
Michael Faraday, however, when Joule started publishing on the mechanical equivalent of heat, his social status was certainly an issue. On the other hand, William Thomson was well trained, a young pro- [...] support by Thomson contributed to the acknowl- edgment of Joule’s work. But it is not a question of social status that is interesting in Joule’s work: His experiments are equally remarkable. To give but a [...] doing this work, moreover, he was a gentleman, and doing such a work would not correspond to his social status. 5 Starting research on renewable energy In mid-nineteenth century, industrialization progressed
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/rumford.zip
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/zip/zip-eng/mouchot.zip
constructions. 6. Demonstrate that Mouchot's research provided a solution to a social problem at his time and generally, the social needs indicate and sometimes define the field of the scientific inquiry. 7 [...] Michael Faraday, however, when Joule started publishing on the mechanical equivalent of heat, his social status was certainly an issue. On the other hand, William Thomson was well trained, a young pro- [...] support by Thomson contributed to the acknowl- edgment of Joule’s work. But it is not a question of social status that is interesting in Joule’s work: His experiments are equally remarkable. To give but a
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/fileadmin/content/projekte/storytelling/hintergruende/hintergrund-eng/hintergrund-energie-gb.pdf
fileadmin/content/studiengaenge/europeanstudies/various-pdfs/cv-prof-dr-anna-katharina-mangold.pdf
ist relevance in Social Security and Labour Law], in: Monika Schlachter/Hans Michael Heinig (Hrsg.), Enzyklopädie des Europarechts [Encyclopedia of EU Law] Bd. 7: Europäisches Arbeits- und Sozialrecht [...] Gleichheitsrechte und soziale Grundrechte. Internationale und vergleichende Dimension [Equality and Social Rights in the Weimar Constitution. International and Comparative Dimension], in: Thomas Kleinlei [...] [European Labour and Social Security Law], Baden-Baden: Nomos 2015, pp. 119–170; second edition: 2020.
fileadmin/content/seminare/soziologie/dokumente/culture-practice-and-europeanization/cpe-vol.5-no.1-2020/cpe-5-1-pp123-132-vobruba-2020.pdf
decisions. The social science infrastructure for social policy research is being thinned out, the number of social policy chairs is being reduced, and research institutes are weakening their social pol- icy [...] it by a social transfer up to the income level they would achieve if they only received the social transfer. Depending on the concrete design of the rules for crediting earned income to social transfers [...] true in general, but it is particularly true of social policy. Not only is there no shortage of diagnoses of increasing inequality, disenfranchisement, social relegation and the fear of it. They are even