0 a situation in which a financial organization is owned by its members rather than shareholders, allowing members to share any profits:
The concept of 'mutuality' is a very helpful one for the reader to use in understanding the author's underpinning philosophy to music with young children.
The pattern that emerges is decline in some traditional modes of collegiate control, such as mutuality, and increasing reliance on mechanisms of oversight and competition.
If mutuality and reciprocity are indeed important to us, those values can be achieved perfectly well without resorting to such policies.
The pose of mutuality is compelling enough to conceal these differences.
Or, do they have a different view of the sense of mutuality, understanding and closeness repeatedly imposed by the factory owners on the shop floor?
The finding demonstrates well the simplicity of equating co-residence with ' closeness ' and ' care ', and that innovations in constructive familial mutuality are ubiquitous but little understood.
This is because agape is too distant from its objects, and involves no necessary mutuality, a feature which makes it destructive of altruism.
Music teachers were disinclined to actualise the musical minds of their pupils or to create a climate of mutuality in which these might grow.