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EN
A closed community of Lutheran Germans in the city of Lőcse (Levoča) and a family lived for centuries in this city showed three generations in the 19th century got far from their home but kept their values. A painter, a manufacturer and a teacher in different eras and environments in Hungary with the same ethic: hard work and thrift. Both originated from Lőcse: János Rombauer, the painter got to Saint Petersburg as a royal painter of Czar Alexander I and returned later to Eperjes (Prešov). Tivadar Rombauer moved close to Munkács (Мукачеве) and later to Ózd as a founder of the most famous iron foundry. Later because of his role in the Revolution he had to flee to America where he established a new life for the emergence of a new family line of his descendants. Emil got to Brassó (Brașov) where he had to cope with Saxons as a Hungarian and later to Budapest where he had to cope with the bureaucracy as a teacher and director. In both three life spans we can easily discover the essence of those values derived from their ancestors and can be characterized with the spirit of capitalism and Protestant ethic.
EN
A family course, describing immigration of Hungarian refugees after the 1848–1849 War of Independence and their integration to American society through generations, is adequate to add details to or even to form our picture of the 19th century immigration and integration. The Rombauer family originated from Protestant, Saxon ancestors in Lőcse (Levoča), where they lived for five hundred years. During the long 19th century, the family members moved to different parts of the world: to Transylvania, to the United States and to Brazil. Their life, values and attitudes to Hungarian and Saxon origins are important parts of understanding integration to different circumstances. Each lifespan adds some new elements to draw a more detailed picture of its time and space: Roderick Rombauer and the life in St. Louis before and after the Civil War, Irma and Marion Rombauer during the prosperous post Second World War era or the life of the descendants of Lajos Tivadar Rombauer in Brazil. But the chain or network of these elements creates a new look to a much larger space and longer period; the connection of these parts helps us to interpret social processes and changes in time in another way.
EN
In this research, we analyze the nexus between knowledge and identity as a problem of the sociology of knowledge. Our aim is to present the genealogical framework with the hypothesis that if we accept that knowledge is a multi-discursive phenomenon, then one way of justifying and stabilizing knowledge in social practices is through the concept of identity. We single out the problem of “locality” of discourses and practices and present the “genealogical paths” through which knowledge and identity are intertwined. Furthermore, our attempt is to identify the specific historical relations of knowledge and identity – through the discursive practices and especially in the context of Enlightenment and the claims for “universal knowledge” as part of the process of the formation of what could be called European identity.
4
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The Pros and Cons of "Intelligent Design"

75%
Forum Philosophicum
|
2008
|
vol. 13
|
issue 2
177-195
EN
The theories of Darwinian evolution and Intelligent Design appear to be locked in an intractable debate, partly because they offer rival scientific explanations for the phenomenon of descent with modification in biology. This paper analyses the dispute in two ways: firstly, it seeks to clarify the exact nature of the logical flaw that has been alleged to lie at the heart of Intelligent Design theory. Secondly, it proposes that, in spite of this error, the Intelligent Design theory advocated by Michael Behe takes at least one significant step in the right direction. Although Behe's suggestion is promising, it is shown to be not nearly radical enough.
PL
Genealogia, chociaż uważana za jedną z nauk pomocniczych historii, coraz częściej wymaga nowoczesnego podejścia i nowych możliwości upowszechnienia przekazywanej informacji. Genealogiczne bazy danych doskonale się do tego nadają i stają się przez to coraz bardziej powszechne. Celem niniejszego artykułu jest charakterystyka sześciu wybranych baz genealogicznych, omówienie okoliczności powstania i rozwoju, zasad gromadzenia materiału oraz ich funkcjonalności, w tym udostępniania danych, możliwości przeszukiwania ich zasobów oraz filtrowania rezultatów wyszukiwania. Autor wyjaśnił, jak należy definiować i postrzegać genealogiczne bazy danych, jak klasyfikować ich zasoby oraz w jaki sposób z nich korzystać.
EN
Genealogy, although considered as one of the auxiliary sciences of history, more and more often requires a modern approach and new possibilities of disseminating information transmitted. Genealogical databases are perfect for this and are becoming more and more common. The following text aims to familiarize a potential user with these databases, show the principles of operation and collection, share data contained therein, the ability to search their resources, correctly read the results. Before that, however, it explains what genealogical databases are, what their typology is and how they fit into the divisions and hierarchies already established. Six bases are described here along with the rules of their operation, showing the search possibilities (or their absence), filtering/sorting results and other options of use.
Vox Patrum
|
1987
|
vol. 12
417-425
FR
C’est qu'on montre chez lui l’analyse de la genealogie de Joseph et la conception de la justice de Joseph.
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