5402

Homo Faber: Continuity and Ruptures. -- Abstract: The author undertakes a reflection on the evolution of human work and its relationship with the man who works. This approach rules out ab initio the hypothesis of the end of work, which is considered absurd, since it would imply the end of humanity c...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Supiot, Alain
Otros Autores: Goldin, Adrián O., trad.
Formato: Artículo publishedVersion
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Departamento de Publicaciones 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://repositoriouba.sisbi.uba.ar/gsdl/cgi-bin/library.cgi?a=d&c=juridica&cl=CL1&d=HWA_5402
https://repositoriouba.sisbi.uba.ar/gsdl/collect/juridica/index/assoc/HWA_5402.dir/5402.PDF
Aporte de:
id I28-R145-HWA_5402
record_format dspace
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-145
collection Repositorio Digital de la Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA)
language Español
orig_language_str_mv spa
topic Derecho laboral
Homo faber
Trabajo realmente humano
Deshumanizacion del trabajo
Capital humano
Trabajo-mercancia
Cambio tecnologico
Significado del trabajo
Revolucion digital
Trabajo del futuro
Dimension subjetiva del trabajo
Dimension objetiva del trabajo
Globalizacion
Desafio ecologico
Desafio institucional
Desafio tecnologico
Historia de la organizacion del trabajo
Labour law
Homo faber
Truly human work
Dehumanization of work
Human capital
Commoditized work
Technological change
Meaning of working
Digital revolution
Work of the future
Subjective dimension of work
Objective dimension of work
Globalization
Ecological challenge
Institutional Challenge
Technological challenge
History of the organization of work
spellingShingle Derecho laboral
Homo faber
Trabajo realmente humano
Deshumanizacion del trabajo
Capital humano
Trabajo-mercancia
Cambio tecnologico
Significado del trabajo
Revolucion digital
Trabajo del futuro
Dimension subjetiva del trabajo
Dimension objetiva del trabajo
Globalizacion
Desafio ecologico
Desafio institucional
Desafio tecnologico
Historia de la organizacion del trabajo
Labour law
Homo faber
Truly human work
Dehumanization of work
Human capital
Commoditized work
Technological change
Meaning of working
Digital revolution
Work of the future
Subjective dimension of work
Objective dimension of work
Globalization
Ecological challenge
Institutional Challenge
Technological challenge
History of the organization of work
Supiot, Alain
5402
topic_facet Derecho laboral
Homo faber
Trabajo realmente humano
Deshumanizacion del trabajo
Capital humano
Trabajo-mercancia
Cambio tecnologico
Significado del trabajo
Revolucion digital
Trabajo del futuro
Dimension subjetiva del trabajo
Dimension objetiva del trabajo
Globalizacion
Desafio ecologico
Desafio institucional
Desafio tecnologico
Historia de la organizacion del trabajo
Labour law
Homo faber
Truly human work
Dehumanization of work
Human capital
Commoditized work
Technological change
Meaning of working
Digital revolution
Work of the future
Subjective dimension of work
Objective dimension of work
Globalization
Ecological challenge
Institutional Challenge
Technological challenge
History of the organization of work
description Homo Faber: Continuity and Ruptures. -- Abstract: The author undertakes a reflection on the evolution of human work and its relationship with the man who works. This approach rules out ab initio the hypothesis of the end of work, which is considered absurd, since it would imply the end of humanity creating new objects and symbols. From an objective perspective, the homo faber adapts his living environment to his needs, develops his ecumenus and makes the earth not an object of appropriation but the vital environment on which man depends. Work is truly human insofar as it gives man the possibility of putting a part of what he is into what he does; from this perspective, one must avoid dehumanizing work by denying the thinking character of the worker (which implies assimilating the worker to animals or machines). Fictions such as abstract or commoditized work and the notion of human capital that was formulated by Stalin in 1935, long before Gary Becker popularized the idea in 1964, are considered. The latter is held to constitute a dehumanized notion of human labor, only tempered by trade union rights and social democracy in the professional sphere, as well as by democracy in the public sphere. The challenges that this valuable conception of work must face are made explicit. Ecological, due to the need to avoid overexploitation of natural resources; technological, since this impact is due to the technical mutations produced since the first industrial revolution and institutional one, due to the conflict of legal logics between the rules of international trade and finance and the principles and rules of social justice.
author2 Goldin, Adrián O., trad.
author_facet Goldin, Adrián O., trad.
Supiot, Alain
format Artículo
Artículo
publishedVersion
author Supiot, Alain
author_sort Supiot, Alain
title 5402
title_short 5402
title_full 5402
title_fullStr 5402
title_full_unstemmed 5402
title_sort 5402
publisher Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Departamento de Publicaciones
publishDate 2021
url http://repositoriouba.sisbi.uba.ar/gsdl/cgi-bin/library.cgi?a=d&c=juridica&cl=CL1&d=HWA_5402
https://repositoriouba.sisbi.uba.ar/gsdl/collect/juridica/index/assoc/HWA_5402.dir/5402.PDF
work_keys_str_mv AT supiotalain 5402
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spelling I28-R145-HWA_54022024-08-16 5402 Homo Faber: Continuity and Ruptures. -- Abstract: The author undertakes a reflection on the evolution of human work and its relationship with the man who works. This approach rules out ab initio the hypothesis of the end of work, which is considered absurd, since it would imply the end of humanity creating new objects and symbols. From an objective perspective, the homo faber adapts his living environment to his needs, develops his ecumenus and makes the earth not an object of appropriation but the vital environment on which man depends. Work is truly human insofar as it gives man the possibility of putting a part of what he is into what he does; from this perspective, one must avoid dehumanizing work by denying the thinking character of the worker (which implies assimilating the worker to animals or machines). Fictions such as abstract or commoditized work and the notion of human capital that was formulated by Stalin in 1935, long before Gary Becker popularized the idea in 1964, are considered. The latter is held to constitute a dehumanized notion of human labor, only tempered by trade union rights and social democracy in the professional sphere, as well as by democracy in the public sphere. The challenges that this valuable conception of work must face are made explicit. Ecological, due to the need to avoid overexploitation of natural resources; technological, since this impact is due to the technical mutations produced since the first industrial revolution and institutional one, due to the conflict of legal logics between the rules of international trade and finance and the principles and rules of social justice. Fil: Supiot, Alain. Université de Nantes. Faculté de Droit et Sciences Politiques. Institut d'Etudes Avancées. Paris, France Goldin, Adrián O., trad. Jurisdiccion Internacional Supiot, Alain 2021 Tema: El Derecho del Trabajo en la Actualidad / Adrián O Goldin, coord. -- Sección Doctrina. -- "Publicado originalmente en francés en la obra SUPIOT, Alain (dir.), "Le Travail au XXIe siècle. Livre du centenaire de l'Organisation Internationale du Travail Ivry-sur-Seine", Éditions de l'Atelier, 2019. Se publica aquí con la amable autorización de Éditions de l'Atelier. La traducción fue realizada por Adrián Goldin.". -- Resumen: El autor emprende una reflexión sobre la evolución del trabajo humano y su relación con el hombre que trabaja. Este enfoque descarta ab initio la hipótesis del fin del trabajo, que se juzga absurda pues implicaría el fin de la humanidad creadora de nuevos objetos y símbolos. Desde una perspectiva objetiva, el homo faber adapta su entorno vital a sus necesidades, desarrolla su ecúmeno, y hace de la tierra no un objeto de apropiación sino el medio vital del que el hombre depende. El trabajo es realmente humano en tanto le da al hombre la posibilidad de poner una parte de lo que él es en lo que hace; desde esa perspectiva, ha de evitarse deshumanizar el trabajo negando el carácter pensante de quien trabaja (lo que implica asimilar al trabajador a los animales o a las máquinas). Se consideran ficciones como el trabajo abstracto o el trabajo- mercancía y la noción de capital humano que fuera formulado por Stalin en 1935, mucho antes de que Gary Becker popularizara la idea en 1964. Se sostiene que esta última constituye una noción deshumanizada del trabajo humano, solo atemperada por los derechos sindicales y la democracia social en el ámbito profesional, así como por la democracia en la esfera pública. Se explicitan los desafíos que debe afrontar aquella concepción valiosa del trabajo: el ecológico, en razón de la necesidad de evitar una sobreexplotación de los recursos naturales; el tecnológico puesto que ese impacto se debe a las mutaciones técnicas producidas desde la primera Revolución Industrial, y el institucional, en razón del conflicto de lógicas jurídicas entre las reglas del comercio y las finanzas internacionales y los principios y reglas de la justicia social. application/pdf 2451-5795 (impreso) 0326-7431 (en linea) Derecho laboral Homo faber Trabajo realmente humano Deshumanizacion del trabajo Capital humano Trabajo-mercancia Cambio tecnologico Significado del trabajo Revolucion digital Trabajo del futuro Dimension subjetiva del trabajo Dimension objetiva del trabajo Globalizacion Desafio ecologico Desafio institucional Desafio tecnologico Historia de la organizacion del trabajo Labour law Homo faber Truly human work Dehumanization of work Human capital Commoditized work Technological change Meaning of working Digital revolution Work of the future Subjective dimension of work Objective dimension of work Globalization Ecological challenge Institutional Challenge Technological challenge History of the organization of work spa Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Departamento de Publicaciones info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ar/(openAccess)(openAccess)(openAccess)(openAccess) Revista Jurídica de Buenos Aires, a. 46, no. 102, t.1 Homo faber : continuidad y rupturas info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://repositoriouba.sisbi.uba.ar/gsdl/cgi-bin/library.cgi?a=d&c=juridica&cl=CL1&d=HWA_5402 https://repositoriouba.sisbi.uba.ar/gsdl/collect/juridica/index/assoc/HWA_5402.dir/5402.PDF