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Some Related Sentences

normative and term
* Progressive Judaism, a term for strands of Judaism which do not view halakha as normative
However, the term " political science " was not always distinguished from political philosophy, and the modern discipline has a clear set of antecedents including also moral philosophy, political economy, political theology, history, and other fields concerned with normative determinations of what ought to be and with deducing the characteristics and functions of the ideal state.
A similar term, normative media, emphasizes technical and social characteristics of the media itself in shaping decisions.
* Structural supersessionism is Soulen's term for the de facto marginalization of the Old Testament as normative for Christian thought.
In Fish ’ s source the term is explained as the idea that it is possible to characterize a linguistic system that every speaker shares .” In the context of literary criticism, Fish uses this concept to argue that a reader ’ s approach to a text is not completely subjective, and that an internalized understanding of language shared by the native speakers of that given language makes possible the creation of normative boundaries for one ’ s experience with language.
It is a normative and evaluative term.
A similar adjective is gender-normative ; Eli R. Green wrote, " The term ' cisgendered ' is used of the more popular ' gender normative ' to refer to people who do not identify with a gender diverse experience, without enforcing existence of a ' normative ' gender expression.
" Still, she finished her term with a certain respect for the normative power of the United Nations as the " institution whose majorities claim the right to decide-for the world-what is legitimate and what is illegitimate.
The most pejorative terms for white people in Brazil, both for locals and foreigners, even used by brancos morenos against fair-skinned White Brazilians, are branquelo (, literally ) and the even more disparaging leite azedo (,, in reference to the combination of an unusual light complexion, almost white as the milk, and the negative stereotype of the bad smell in Westerners — in most of Brazil, including White-majority states of Centro-Sul such as Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, the normative social habit is to take at least one bath per day year-round, and Westerners are said to generally be not used to this — still the term is so common that in some regions it does not carry more the same negative connotation it carried in the past, although without losing its disparaging meaning ).
* transgender, a term given to individuals that diverge from the normative gender role
In the social sciences, the term " normative " has broadly the same meaning as its usage in philosophy, but may also relate, in a sociological context, to the role of cultural ' norms '; the shared values or institutions that structural functionalists regard as constitutive of the social structure and social cohesion.
In law, as an academic discipline, the term " normative " is used to describe the way something ought to be done according to a value position.
In moral philosophy, the term legitimacy ” often is positively interpreted as the normative status conferred by a governed people upon their governors ’ institutions, offices, and actions, based upon the belief that their government's actions are appropriate uses of power by a legally constituted government.
As a linguistic concern, the term is often meant to discourage a dichotomous view of the racial landscape between the normative white category and everyone else.
Likewise, sometimes the term " ethical intuitionism " is associated with a pluralistic, deontological position in normative ethics, a position defended by W. D.
The term " vanilla " refers to normative (" non-kinky ") sex and relationships, the vanilla world being mainstream society outside of the BDSM subculture.

normative and refers
* In its normative sense, " morality " refers to whatever ( if anything ) is actually right or wrong, which may be independent of the values or mores held by any particular peoples or cultures.
What virtue ethics refers to, rather, is a collection of normative ethical philosophies that place an emphasis on being rather than doing.
A counterhegemony refers to an alternate normative interpretation of the functioning of social, economic, and political institutions.
For normative purposes, however, Greater Mexico City most commonly refers to the Metropolitan Area of the Valley of Mexico ( Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México ) an agglomeration that incorporates 18 additional municipalities.
Anthropologist James E. Landing, author of Black Judaism, distinguishes the Black Hebrew movement, which he refers to as Black Judaism, from normative Judaism practiced by people who are Black ( black Judaism ):
Discourse ethics, sometimes called argumentation ethics, refers to a type of argument that attempts to establish normative or ethical truths by examining the presuppositions of discourse.

normative and policies
Whereas de Soto's work is popular with policymakers and champions of free market policies like The Economist, many scholars of the informal economy have criticized it both for methodological flaws and normative bias.
Inclusion of such topics has helped create policies that have reduced gender, racial, and ethnic discrimination and inequity, satisfying normative goals central to all economics.
Still, positive economics is commonly deemed necessary for the ranking of economic policies or outcomes as to acceptability, which is normative economics.
), the resulting dynamic is an interplay between an enabling technology, normative guiding policies and strategies, and the resulting social transformation.
The hope is that such conversations can help to clarify the moral and normative consequences of public policies in ways that can help us to maintain the common good, while respecting our growing religious diversity.
However, to the extent it promotes ethical values and policies based on the theory of evolution, it can also be classified as a normative evolutionary ethics.

normative and promote
Often, post-positivist theories explicitly promote a normative approach to IR, by considering ethics.
Failure to acknowledge and accept that conscientious judgements can be seriously mistaken, may only promote situations where one's conscience is manipulated by others to provide unwarranted justifications for non-virtuous and selfish acts ; indeed, insofar as it is appealed to as glorifying ideological content, and an associated extreme level of devotion, without adequate constraint of external, altruistic, normative justification, conscience may be considered morally blind and dangerous both to the individual concerned and humanity as a whole.
Within the broad Christian church, certain denominational and inter-denominational movements exist which promote Expository preaching as being essential in the life of the church, and should be the normative way in which sermons should be preached.

normative and its
Although controversial at its time, the 13 principles laid out by the 12th century Spanish Jewish philosopher Maimonides are now considered mostly normative.
Critical theory in literature and the humanities in general does not necessarily involve a normative dimension, whereas critical social theory does, either through criticizing society from some general theory of values, norms, or " oughts ," or through criticizing it in terms of its own espoused values.
Reform and Reconstructionist Jews deny that these texts may be used for determining normative law ( laws accepted as binding ) but accept them as the authentic and only Jewish version for understanding the Torah and its development throughout history.
It does not ask that its adherents hold to any particular beliefs, nor does it ask that halakha be accepted as normative.
Each of the 44 member churches in the Anglican Communion is, however, free to adopt and authorise its own official documents, and the Articles are not officially normative in all Anglican Churches ( neither is the Athanasian Creed ).
Conservative Judaism holds that Orthodox Judaism is a valid and legitimate form of normative rabbinic Judaism ; it respects the validity of its rabbis.
Various systems of moral universalism may differ in various ways on the meta-ethical question of the nature of the morality, as well as in their substantial normative content, but all agree on its universality.
Whereas gay / lesbian studies focused its inquiries into " natural " and " unnatural " behaviour with respect to homosexual behaviour, queer theory expands its focus to encompass any kind of sexual activity or identity that falls into normative and deviant categories.
Geostrategy as a political science is both descriptive and analytical like Political Geography, but adds a normative element in its strategic prescriptions for national policy.
It seeks to avoid the overt normative politics of most so-called " green economics " by justifying its theses strictly in ecology, economics and sound social science, and by working within a context of globalization.
Defining wealth can be a normative process with various ethical implications, since often wealth maximization is seen as a goal or is thought to be a normative principle of its own .< ref name =" Heilbroner "> Robert L. Heilbroner, 1987 < nowiki >
In this context it has normative connotations absent from its use to denote a theoretical standpoint.
His work was characterized by its careful investigation of first principles, as in his distinction of positive and normative reasoning, and by critical analysis, not always constructive.
Nussbaum condemns the practice of female genital mutilation, citing deprivation of normative human functioning in its risks to health, impact on sexual functioning, violations of dignity, and conditions of non-autonomy.
Firby is from the Old English name Fredebi ( its Middle English spelling was normative Fritheby, and Frethby, since Normanised into Early Modern English as Firby, although numerous spellings ( Furby, Furbee, Ferby, Furbay, Farby, and Freeby ) have existed since Modern English, and especially through Americanisation.
Unlike ordinary customary law, which has traditionally required consent and allows the alteration of its obligations between states through treaties, peremptory norms cannot be violated by any state " through international treaties or local or special customs or even general customary rules not endowed with the same normative force ".
However, if the entity looks almost human, it will elicit our model of a human other and its detailed normative expectations.
Alkali basalt may contain minor nepheline and does contain nepheline in its CIPW normative mineralogy.
The methodological basis for a positive / normative distinction has its roots in the fact-value distinction in philosophy, the principal proponents of such distinctions being David Hume and G. E. Moore.

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