An Evaluation Upon The Emotion Values of Animal Names Used in Turkish Proverbs in The Balkans (original) (raw)

2022, Interpretive Research Humanities and Social Sciences, Livre de Lyon

Humanity entered the 21 st century with great hopes. In this century, diseases would be cured, wars would end, and the dominant role of hunger and climate on people would change. However, it soon became clear that all this was just a utopia. This century was no different from the bloody 20 th century. Moreover, global terror and even more jealous attitudes of the great states in the distribution created a complete disappointment. In the 20 th century, the capitalist discourse that was imposed on the world to destroy the Soviet Union (USSR), such as peace, love and brotherhood, turned out to be a huge bubble. Moreover, this new world order was more complex. Although it was enough to read a few lines in the past, developments such as the internet, digital world and social media not only allowed information to circulate in seconds, but also started a terrible disinformation era. Confusion exceedingly increased. The global pandemic originating from China was added to this picture, which started at the end of 2019 and affected the whole world, causing people to question themselves. Political administrations began to be questioned, production styles began to change, and the interaction of human with human, and human with nature began to gain different meanings. The old nightmare resurrected with the Russo-Ukrainian War; therefore, the world steadily overstretched. While all this was going on, it was seen that scientism was not the solution. A new awakening has begun in the world. Just like in the Renaissance, social sciences became the source of the new awakening, thinking and questioning. The world saw that with the collapse of the USSR, the humanities, which were despised, postponed, and whose chairs in universities were closed, began to say that "I am here again". In the new predictions, futurists began to voice out loud that the future problem of the world will be immigration, thirst, crises in food and energy supply or distribution, equality, freedom, free circulation, justice in income distribution, law and free communication than before. All these problems cannot be solved only on the 2   INTERPRETIVE RESEARCH HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES basis of developments in science. It has been seen that there is a greater need for sciences such as history, sociology, geography, economics, economics and philology than in the past. The present book is a modest answer to this need, for which experts in the field have prepared chapters. When the content of the book is carefully examined, it will be seen that important articles related to the basic areas of human behaviour have been written. The book contains a series of articles from migration studies to philology, from psychology to management science. We sincerely thank the authors individually. Undoubtedly, each study has made a significant contribution to related fields.