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2288 1491
Published in Volume 7, Issue 5 -

black & white

Britta Ullrich

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.5.712

In a perfect world people, regardless of their skin color, would live next to each other peacefully – in a country, in a city, in a neighborhood, on one street. Sadly this story from Detroit, Michigan shows that racism still is a major structural problem in daily life. https://brittamachtblau.de/?m=201805


2312 1495
Published in Volume 7, Issue 4 -

Sport in der Ganztagsschule - Sports in full day Schools

Christopher Winterhalder

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.4.708

PISA 2001 revealed that German students are missing several competencies in reading, writing and math. The students social background was one main reason for such inadequacies. The following questions arise: “Which actions should be initiated to prevent such outcomes?”, “Do physical activations generally influence pupils learning development?”, “Which benefits has sports in full-day schools?” Those are some of the questions which this paper tries to find answers to.


2454 1733
Published in Volume 7, Issue 4 -

"Sie sitzen daheim und denken sich Geschichten aus". The Representation of Authorship in Daniel Kehlmann's Literary Works

Leah Biebert

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.4.707

Daniel Kehlmann is considered one of the major writers not only of the German-language book market. His best seller Measuring the World has been translated into over forty languages, the novel Tyll is soon to be a Netflix series. Based on the assumption that writer figures can contribute to the reflection about literature and the relation between author, narrator and characters, this thesis examines the representation of authorship in Kehlmann’s literary works. Tracing the most common concepts of authorship, the text explores Kehlmann’s ways of portraying literary production and compares them with his own poetological statements. In this context, it also gives insights into Kehlmann’s handling of metafiction and intertextuality and demonstrates in which ways the dualism of reality and fiction affects the genesis of authorship.


2132 1353
Published in Volume 7, Issue 4 -

Nochmal: Rückforderung von Berufungs-Leistungsbezügen wegen vorzeitigem Wechsel der Hochschule - Once again: Reclaim of appellate benefits

Frank Wertheimer

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.4.704

It is still a relatively new phenomenon that universities are demanding that professors who have left the university after a relatively short period of time due to an external call return their appointment benefits. Previously published in ODW Issue 02/2020 / Volume 2020 https://ordnungderwissenschaft.de/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/06_Wertheimer.pdf


2636 1509
Published in Volume 7, Issue 2 -

Demetrios Award 2020

Gerhard G. Steinmann, Stephan Seiler, María Fernanda Sandoval et al.

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.2.662

The JOSHA Team is very pleased to share information with you about our Demetrios Prize 2020. The International Academy of Sciences, Humanities, and Arts (IASHA e.V.), with the support of the BioThera-Roland Mertelsmann Foundation, will award three prizes of 500 euros for the categories BACHELOR, MASTER and DOCTOR THESIS. Our editors will make the selection and the theses of the winners will be published in JOSHA and can be referenced with their DOI number! The “Journal of Science, Humanities, and Arts – JOSHA” has been initiated to create a novel internet platform to access the broad diversity of important discoveries and creativity in the fields of Science, Humanities, and Arts. At JOSHA we believe, that "Knowledge that is not communicated is wasted knowledge".


2187 1410
Published in Volume 7, Issue 2 -

Die Änderung von Chefarztverträgen - The Change of Chief Physician Contracts

Frank Wertheimer

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.2.655

Due to their integration into a state planning and financing system, which is subject to frequent changes, hospitals require a high degree of flexibility to be able to provide cost-effective health care in the long term. This forces recurrent organizational changes in the organization, which can also have an impact on the activities of the chief physicians working there. Such changes can result, for example, from the progressive shift from inpatient to outpatient services, mergers entail other organizational concepts and can have consequences concerning the place of work. Furthermore, chief physicians may have to give up beds when centers are formed. Government regulations for minimum quantities can force reductions in services, and a new medical concept decided on by the hospital management can also lead to a change in the allocation of service provision. Previously published in: OdW BB 2019, 1076, https://ordnungderwissenschaft.de/


2432 1867
Published in Volume 7, Issue 2 -

Paul Schempps Streit mit dem Oberkirchenrat

Manfred Löwisch

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.2.654

The article describes the canonical fight between pugnacious Protestant pastor Paul Schempp and the bishop of the Protestant regional church in Stuttgart. Paul Schempp, who was born on January 4th, 1900, was dismissed from his position as a teacher of religion at the beginning of the Nazi era after having declared that, one now had to pay attention that the gospel of the Kingdom of God would not suddenly become a gospel of the Third Reich. He then became a priest in Iptingen in Württemberg from 1933 to 1942. His dispute with the bishop concerned, on the one hand, the internal church constitution. He rejected the forced collection of church taxes as unevangelical. On the other hand, he vehemently opposed, in word and writing, the arrangement of his regional church with the Nazi government. In particular, he strictly rejected the planned oath of allegiance to Adolf Hitler. Thereby He also sharply attacked the bishop personally. In 1942, he eventually left the Protestant regional church.


2268 1485
Published in Volume 7, Issue 2 -

Der Mensch ist der Mikrobe egal - Man does not care about the microbe

Eduard Kaeser

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.2.647

"Humans don't care about microbes - we would do well to see illness more as an ecological problem".Eduard Kaeser is a physicist and graduated philosopher born in 1948 in Bern, Switzerland. Thematically, his writing revolves around two centres of gravity: the possibility of anthropology - a humanly possible life - in a world of devices; and the possibility of a liveable universalism in a multiculturally fragmented world (book publication planned: Über interkulturelle Zivilisiertheit). He works as a teacher, freelance publicist, and jazz musician. 2018 has been published by Schwabe-Verlag: "Trojan horses of our time. Critical Essays on Digitalization".


2388 1658
Published in Volume 7, Issue 2 -

Learning by Research – A First Résumé. Forschendes Lernen - eine erste Bilanz

Harald A. Mieg

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.2.640

Today, many decisions in politics and economy rely on statistics, scientific reports and market research. However, how reliable are those results of research? This issue, we are able to assess best if we have performed research ourselves. On this note, learning by research should revolutionize academic teaching: Learning by self-contained and independent research. This principle, not only students and graduates but also universities have to arrange for. This article offers an overview of the concept and implementation of learning by research. Kontakt: harald.mieg@hu-berlin.de; Foto: Henrik Hagedorn


2602 1738
Published in Volume 7, Issue 1 -

Landkarten des Ungewissen als Werkzeug in der angewandten Zukunftsforschung

Hans-Liudger Dienel, Christoph Henseler

Languages: German

DOI: 10.17160/josha.7.1.624

While uncertainty, incertitude, unknown and nescience is not only an accepted but favoured attitude within scientific debates, it is less allowed in science communication to and with society. In science communication, still affirmative messages are expected and thus delivered. The societal expectation against scientific messages obviously was and is transformed into an inner expectation of scientists against themselves. The paper - after giving an overview on the lively discussion about scientific uncertainty and nescience (landscapes of uncertainties) - presents a new tool for the communication of scientific uncertainties in "Maps of Uncertainties". These maps are a new inverse form of infographics, which shall allow a different communication of uncertainties and thus a different science-society-relation. The paper presents and discusses six exemplary maps.