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* Casuistry – Oxford Encyclopedia of Rhetoric catalogued at she-philosopher. com
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Casuistry and –
* History versus Casuistry: Evidence of the Ramajanmabhoomi Mandir presented by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad to the Government of India in December – January 1990-91.
Casuistry and Encyclopedia
Casuistry and Rhetoric
Casuistry and .
Casuistry does not begin with theory, rather it starts with the immediate facts of a real and concrete case.
Casuists, like Albert Jonsen and Stephen Toulmin ( The Abuse of Casuistry 1988 ), challenge the traditional paradigm of applied ethics.
Casuistry (), or case-based reasoning, is a method in applied ethics and jurisprudence, often characterised as a critique of principle-or rule-based reasoning.
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 is a method of case reasoning especially useful in treating cases that involve moral dilemmas.
Casuistry is the basis of case law in common law, and the standard form of reasoning applied in common law.
Casuistry does not require practitioners to agree about ethical theories or evaluations before making policy.
It was not until publication of The Abuse of Casuistry: A History of Moral Reasoning ( 1988 ), by Albert Jonsen and Stephen Toulmin, that a revival of casuistry occurred.
Casuistry was much mistrusted by early Protestant theologians, because it justified many of the abuses that they sought to reform.
– and Oxford
* Guide to the Elements – Revised Edition, Albert Stwertka, ( Oxford University Press ; 1998 ) ISBN 0-19-508083-1
Wiles is the son of Maurice Frank Wiles ( 1923 – 2005 ), the Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford and Patricia Wiles ( née Mowll ).
* Page, Norman, ‘ Housman, Alfred Edward ( 1859 – 1936 )’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ( Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004 )
The estate was conveniently located within easy walking distance of Bletchley railway station, where the " Varsity Line " between the cities of Oxford and Cambridge – whose universities supplied many of the code-breakers – met the ( then-LMS ) main West Coast railway line between London and Birmingham, Manchester, Glasgow.
Early collections of English ballads were made by Samuel Pepys ( 1633 – 1703 ) and in the Roxburghe Ballads collected by Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer ( 1661 – 1724 ).
" Elizabeth I ( 1533 – 1603 )" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ( 2008 ) accessed 23 Aug 2011
Oxford also patronised a company of musicians, as evidenced by payments in 1584 – 85 by the cities of Oxford and Barnstaple to " the Earl of Oxford's musicians ".
* Anthony Aveni, " February's Holidays: Prediction, Purification, and Passionate Pursuit ," The Book of the Year: A Brief History of Our Seasonal Holidays ( Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003 ), 29 – 46.
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