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- Casuistry abstract "Casuistry /ˈkæʒuːɨstri/, or case-based reasoning, is a method in applied ethics and jurisprudence, often characterised as a critique of principle- or rule-based reasoning. The word "casuistry" is derived from the Latin casus (meaning "case").Casuistry is reasoning used to resolve moral problems by extracting or extending theoretical rules from particular instances and applying these rules to new instances. The term is also commonly used as a pejorative to criticize the use of clever but unsound reasoning (alleging implicitly the inconsistent—or outright specious—misapplication of rule to instance), especially in relation to moral questions (see sophistry).The agreed meaning of "casuistry" is in flux. The term can be used either to describe a presumably acceptable form of reasoning or a form of reasoning that is inherently unsound and deceptive. Most or all philosophical dictionaries list the neutral sense as the first or only definition. On the other hand, the Oxford English Dictionary states that the word "[o]ften (and perhaps originally) applied to a quibbling or evasive way of dealing with difficult cases of duty." Its textual references, except for certain technical usages, are consistently pejorative ("Casuistry‥destroys by Distinctions and Exceptions, all Morality, and effaces the essential Difference between Right and Wrong"). Most online dictionaries list a pejorative meaning as the primary definition before a neutral one, though Merriam-Webster lists the neutral one first.In journalistic usage, the pejorative use is ubiquitous and examples of the neutral usage are not found.".
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink Casuistry.html.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink dhi.cgi?id=dv1-35.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink CASUISTRY.htm.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink casuistry.html.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink accountancy.html.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink 03415d.htm.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink tallmon.html.
- Casuistry wikiPageExternalLink apd-casu.html.
- Casuistry wikiPageID "5946".
- Casuistry wikiPageRevisionID "605671995".
- Casuistry hasPhotoCollection Casuistry.
- Casuistry subject Category:Applied_ethics.
- Casuistry subject Category:Catholic_casuists.
- Casuistry subject Category:Common_law.
- Casuistry subject Category:Legal_reasoning.
- Casuistry subject Category:Scholasticism.
- Casuistry comment "Casuistry /ˈkæʒuːɨstri/, or case-based reasoning, is a method in applied ethics and jurisprudence, often characterised as a critique of principle- or rule-based reasoning. The word "casuistry" is derived from the Latin casus (meaning "case").Casuistry is reasoning used to resolve moral problems by extracting or extending theoretical rules from particular instances and applying these rules to new instances.".
- Casuistry label "Casistica (teologia)".
- Casuistry label "Casuistique".
- Casuistry label "Casuistry".
- Casuistry label "Casuística".
- Casuistry label "Casuística".
- Casuistry label "Casuïstiek".
- Casuistry label "Kasuistik".
- Casuistry label "Kazuistyka".
- Casuistry label "Казуистика".
- Casuistry label "決疑論".
- Casuistry sameAs Kazuistika.
- Casuistry sameAs Kasuistik.
- Casuistry sameAs Casuística.
- Casuistry sameAs Casuistique.
- Casuistry sameAs Casistica_(teologia).
- Casuistry sameAs 決疑論.
- Casuistry sameAs Casuïstiek.
- Casuistry sameAs Kazuistyka.
- Casuistry sameAs Casuística.
- Casuistry sameAs m.01slv.
- Casuistry sameAs Q845694.
- Casuistry sameAs Q845694.
- Casuistry wasDerivedFrom Casuistry?oldid=605671995.
- Casuistry isPrimaryTopicOf Casuistry.