enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Energy hierarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_hierarchy

    The Energy Hierarchy is a classification of energy options, prioritised to assist progress towards a more sustainable energy system. It is a similar approach to the waste hierarchy for minimising resource depletion , and adopts a parallel sequence.

  3. Environmental sociology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_sociology

    Environmental sociology is the study of interactions between societies and their natural environment.The field emphasizes the social factors that influence environmental resource management and cause environmental issues, the processes by which these environmental problems are socially constructed and define as social issues, and societal responses to these problems.

  4. Industrial society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_society

    In sociology, an industrial society is a society driven by the use of technology and machinery to enable mass production, supporting a large population with a high capacity for division of labour. Such a structure developed in the Western world in the period of time following the Industrial Revolution , and replaced the agrarian societies of ...

  5. Energy economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_economics

    Energy economics is a broad scientific subject area which includes topics related to supply and use of energy in societies. [1] Considering the cost of energy services and associated value gives economic meaning to the efficiency at which energy can be produced. [2]

  6. Critical mass (sociodynamics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_mass_(sociodynamics)

    By their definition, then, "critical mass" is the small segment of a societal system that does the work or action required to achieve the common good. The "Production Function" is the correlation between resources, or what individuals give in an effort to achieve public good, and the achievement of that good.

  7. Maximum power principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_power_principle

    H.T.Odum and M.T.Brown (2007) Environment, Power and Society for the Twenty-First Century: The Hierarchy of Energy, Columbia University Press. M.Tribus (1961) § 16.11 'Generalized Treatment of Linear Systems Used for Power Production', Thermostatics and Thermodynamics, Van Nostrand, University Series in Basic Engineering, p. 619.

  8. Energy development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_development

    Energy development is the field of activities focused on obtaining sources of energy from natural resources. [citation needed] These activities include the production of renewable, nuclear, and fossil fuel derived sources of energy, and for the recovery and reuse of energy that would otherwise be wasted.

  9. Differentiation (sociology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differentiation_(sociology)

    Exemplifying Differentiation and System Theory, this photographic mosaic may be perceived as a whole/system (a gull) or as a less complex group of parts.. Talcott Parsons was the first major theorist to develop a theory of society consisting of functionally defined sub-systems, which emerges from an evolutionary point of view through a cybernetic process of differentiation.