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EN
The paper focuses on corporate social capital and analyzes the mechanisms in which it influences employee efficiency. The author proposes a model to examine the relationship between social capital and employee efficiency. Łopaciuk-Gonczaryk offers a synthesis of available literature on the subject, with a special emphasis on some of the most controversial problems in this area. The paper describes two types of corporate social capital: bonding capital and bridging capital. They are usually analyzed separately by economists, but Łopaciuk-Gonczaryk looks at them together while examining the influence of social capital on efficiency. She also zeroes in on the interaction between bonding and bridging capital. The theoretical analysis made in the paper should be followed up by empirical research, the author concludes.
EN
The present research is aimed at examining the relative importance of the competing motivators of the sequencing of reason clauses in a corpus of research articles of applied linguistics. All the finite reason clauses accompanied by their main clauses in this corpus were collected. Random forest of conditional inference trees is the statistical modelling in this study. The findings showed that sentence-final reason clauses outnumber sentenceinitial ones. Moreover, subordinator choice and bridging, which are discourse-pragmatic constraints on clause positioning, emerged as the two more powerful predictors of the ordering of reason clauses in this corpus. Furthermore, the complexity of the clause turned out to be a stronger processing-related predictor than the length of the clause.
3
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KAPITAŁ SPOŁECZNY FIRMY

88%
EN
This paper is to present results from the empirical research conducted in a financial institution in Poland. The study was to confront the proposed theoretical model with real employees’ behaviours and to explore complex issues connected with corporate social capital. The aim of the research was to investigate the influence of bonding and bridging social capital on employees’ and teams’ performance, moderated by type of the tasks. Additionally, possible interaction between two types of social capital was taken under the study. Main findings of the research were to support some of the thesis, but there are further researches required in order to verify the theoretical model proposed.
EN
The following contribution starts out going through the pages where Hans Georg Gadamer recalls his early youth and his first university studies in Breslavia. In those pages Gadamer emphasizes more than once a particular “foundational” exigence, the need “to throw a bridge”, to articulate in new terms the dialogue between humanistic tradition and positive sciences. That fundamental exigence “to throw a bridge” of a new relationship with scientific knowledge is one of the essential features of contemporary hermeneutics. Italy was the first country to publish the first translation of Gadamer’s main work, Wahrheit und Methode. And in Italy alone, in last year’s philosophical debate around the hermeneutic koiné finds in the relationship with science (natural sciences, scientific knowledge) as it has been interpreted by hermeneutics so far, and in the exigency to finally reformulate that relationship in less “aesthetical-metaphysical” terms, the place where hermeneutics may recognize its own nihilistic sense: to correspond to the becoming (flowing) of nihilism, that is of modernity, means first of all to mark the distance from the attitudes that hermeneutic philosophers have so far had with regard to the positive sciences.
EN
The present research is aimed at examining the relative importance of the competing motivators of the sequencing of reason clauses in a corpus of research articles of applied linguistics. All the finite reason clauses accompanied by their main clauses in this corpus were collected. Random forest of conditional inference trees is the statistical modelling in this study. The findings showed that sentence-final reason clauses outnumber sentenceinitial ones. Moreover, subordinator choice and bridging, which are discourse-pragmatic constraints on clause positioning, emerged as the two more powerful predictors of the ordering of reason clauses in this corpus. Furthermore, the complexity of the clause turned out to be a stronger processing related predictor than the length of the clause.
6
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Hans Albert a Antigona

51%
EN
The article is not written from a polemical angle, but rather is motivated by an endeavour to extend critical rationalism beyond the bounds of Albert’s version of the doctrine. In this I am guided by these main theses: I. Albert does not distinguish the rejection of the argument of final justification from the argument of sufficient, not only final, justification, valid in the case of trivial knowledge in our “middle world”. II. If critical rationalism is going to cover not just a segment, but the whole of reality, as Albert would like, then necessarily it must give attention to existential elements when we are confronted with extreme situations in which argument takes the form of our very existential decision. III. I do not think that Albert should abandon his atheism and I, too, am a convinced atheist. However, if his critical attitude to the phenomenon of Christian faith is to be suffiently rational, he cannot overlook the anthropological dimensions of Christian faith and their heights. IV. Critical rationalism has not, in my opinion, addressed two basic questions: 1) Is capitalism a humanism? 2) Should the question of private property be the object of critical re-examination – especially with regard to the conditional problems of the globalising world. V. Even allowing for the fact that Albert, in his last writings, toned down his former disdain for psychology, we should recognise that addressing problems and contexts in which discoveries are made always has a psychological accompaniment.
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