enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. David Cooperrider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Cooperrider

    Cooperrider's impact on the fields of leadership, human development and management theory is significant. [7] His work at Case Western Reserve University in the early 1980s on Appreciative Inquiry anticipated and helped bring about today's positive psychology movement, strengths-based leadership models, and positive organizational scholarship (POS).

  3. Power: A New Social Analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power:_A_New_Social_Analysis

    Among the psychological types of influence, we have a distinction between "traditional, naked, and revolutionary power". (Naked power, as noted earlier, is the use of coercion without any pretense to legitimacy.) By "traditional power", Russell has in mind the ways in which people will appeal to the force of habit to justify a political regime ...

  4. Pietism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pietism

    Then came a time when another intellectual power took possession of the minds of men." Dietrich Bonhoeffer of the German Confessing Church framed the same characterization in less positive terms when he called Pietism the last attempt to save Christianity as a religion: Given that for him religion was a negative term, more or less an opposite ...

  5. Connecticut Western Reserve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut_Western_Reserve

    It sold much of this "Western Reserve" to a group of speculators who operated as the Connecticut Land Company; they sold it in portions for development by new settlers. [2] The phrase Western Reserve is preserved in numerous institutional names in Ohio, such as Western Reserve Academy, Case Western Reserve University, and Western Reserve Hospital.

  6. John Maynard Keynes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Maynard_Keynes

    Nevertheless, many models were developed by Keynesian economists, with a famous example being the Phillips curve which predicted an inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation. It implied that unemployment could be reduced by government stimulus with a calculable cost to inflation.

  7. The Federal Reserve’s latest dot plot, explained — and what ...

    www.aol.com/finance/federal-latest-dot-plot...

    The Fed’s dot plot is a chart updated quarterly that records each Fed official’s projection for the central bank’s key short-term interest rate, the federal funds rate. The dots reflect what ...

  8. Elite theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elite_theory

    In philosophy, political science and sociology, elite theory is a theory of the state that seeks to describe and explain power relations in society.In its contemporary form in the 21st century, elite theory posits that (1) power in larger societies, especially nation-states, is concentrated at the top in relatively small elites; (2) power "flows predominantly in a top-down direction from ...

  9. Works of piety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Works_of_piety

    Works of piety", in Methodism, are certain spiritual disciplines that along with the "works of mercy", serve as a means of grace, [1] in addition to being manifestations of growing in grace and of having received Christian perfection (entire sanctification). [2] [3] All Methodist Christians, laity and ordained, are expected to employ them. [4]