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term and laissez-faire
Historically, the term often referred to the combination of economic liberalism, which champions laissez-faire markets, with the classical conservatism concern for established tradition, respect for authority and religious values.
The term " fundamentalism " is sometimes applied to signify a counter-cultural fidelity to some simplistic principle, as in the pejorative term " market fundamentalism " applied to an exaggerated religious-like faith in the ability of unfettered laissez-faire or free market economic views or policies to solve economic and social problems.
However others have argued that the economic strategy was inadequately characterised by the term laissez-faire.
This term is also used by some advocates of laissez-faire capitalism in reference to a private capitalist economy controlled by a state, often meaning a privately owned economy that is subject to statist economic planning.
Jeremy Bentham used the term, but it was probably James Mill's reference to the " laissez-faire " maxim ( together with " pas trop gouverner ") in an 1824 entry for the Encyclopædia Britannica that really brought the term into wider English usage.
Some have characterized this metaphor as one for laissez-faire, but Smith never actually used the term himself.
This republicanism, as well as his advocacy of reason in philosophy and laissez-faire for economic policy, lost him favor with Napoleon, who turned Tracy's coinage of " ideology " into a term of abuse ; Karl Marx followed this vein of invective to refer to Tracy as a " fischblütige Bourgeoisdoktrinär "— a " fish-blooded bourgeois doctrinaire.
Some advocates of laissez-faire capitalism ( such as Monetarists, some Neoclassical economists, and the heterodox economists of the Austrian school ) reject the term, seeing all " anti-competitive behavior " as forms of competition that benefit consumers.
Therefore, his use of the term " liberty " was more in reference to a laissez-faire approach to the economy, and religious liberty.
Big government ( sometimes capitalized as Big Government ) is a term generally used by political conservatives, laissez-faire advocates, or libertarians to describe a government or public sector that they consider to be excessively large, corrupt and inefficient, or inappropriately involved in certain areas of public policy or the private sector.
Market fundamentalism ( also known as free market fundamentalism ) is a pejorative term applied to a strong belief in the ability of laissez-faire or free market economy views or policies to solve economic and social problems.
In political science, the term is used to refer to ideologies that combine the advocacy of laissez-faire economic principles, such as respect for contracts, defense of private property and free markets with the belief in notions such as natural inequality, the importance of religion and the value of traditional morality through a framework of limited, constitutional, representative government.
However, in recent years in France, the word is being increasingly used by proponents of laissez-faire capitalism and minarchists to describe themselves ; in reaction, ultra-libéral is a pejorative term aimed by a large section of the French left-wing against those whom they regard as having extreme capitalist views.
" He believes the term " laissez-faire capitalism " is an oxymoron because capitalism, he argues, is " organization of society, incorporating elements of tax, usury, landlordism, and tariff, which thus denies the Free Market while pretending to exemplify it ".
However, he says he has no quarrel with anarcho-capitalists who use the term " laissez-faire capitalism " and distinguish it from " actually existing capitalism.
" He believes that " laissez-faire capitalism, historically speaking, is an oxymoron " but has no quarrel with anarcho-capitalists who use the term and distinguish it from " actually existing capitalism.

term and ("
The term " the United States " has historically been used, sometimes in the plural (" these United States "), and other times in the singular, without any particular grammatical consistency.
A term similar to this is the Canadian motto A Mari Usque Ad Mare (" From sea to sea.
The term " android " can mean either one of these, while a cyborg (" cybernetic organism " or " bionic man ") would be a creature that is a combination of organic and mechanical parts.
While the term's etymology might suggest that antisemitism is directed against all Semitic peoples, the term was coined in the late 19th century in Germany as a more scientific-sounding term for Judenhass (" Jew-hatred "),
In 1973, Arau acted in and directed Calzónzin Inspector (" Cazonci " or " Caltzontzin " was the term used in the Purépecha culture, to name their emperors.
The term " adiabatic " literally means impassable, coming from the Greek roots ἀ-(" not "), διὰ-(" through "), and βαῖνειν (" to pass "); this etymology corresponds here to an absence of heat transfer.
Heidegger coined the term " dasein " for this property of being in his influential work Being and Time (" this entity which each of us is himself … we shall denote by the term ' dasein.
" The Pali term has sometimes been translated as " wisdom-being ," although in modern publications, and especially in tantric works, this is more commonly reserved for the term jñānasattva (" awareness-being "; Tib.
According to Jan Nattier, the term Mahāyāna (" Great Vehicle ") was originally even an honorary synonym for Bodhisattvayāna, or the " Bodhisattva Vehicle.
The term epískopos was not from the earliest times clearly distinguished from the term presbýteros (" elder ", " senior ", nowadays used to signify a priest ), but the term was already clearly used in the sense of the order or office of bishop, distinct from that of priest in the writings of Ignatius of Antioch ( died c. 108 ), and sources from the middle of the 2nd century undoubtedly set forth that all the chief centres of Christianity recognized and had the office of bishop, using a form of organization that remained universal until the Protestant Reformation.
The second period was characterized by the Spanish attempts to reimpose arbitrary rule during the period known as the Reconquista of 1814 – 1817 (" Reconquest ": the term echoes the Reconquista in which the Christian kingdoms retook Iberia from the Muslims ).
This last term (" von Neumann machine ") is less specific and also refers to a completely unrelated computer architecture proposed by von Neumann, so its use is discouraged where accuracy is important.
In the 2001 feature film Ocean's Eleven Don Cheadle uses the term " barney " and the claim is made that this rhyme is derived from Barney Rubble, (" trouble ") with references to a character from the Flintstones cartoon show.
This is simply one term in the multipole expansion when the total charge (" monopole moment ") is 0 — as it always is for the magnetic case, since there are no magnetic monopoles.
The term " diatessaron " is from Middle English (" interval of a fourth ") by way of Latin, diatessarōn (" made of four "), and ultimately Greek, διὰ τεσσάρων ( dia tessarōn ) (" out of four "; i. e., διά, dia, " at intervals of " and tessarōn of wikt: τέσσαρες | τέσσαρες, tessares, " four ").
The archaic term Velja noć ( velmi: Old Slavic for " great "; noć: " night ") was used in Croatian while the term Velikden (" Great Day ") was used in Serbian.
* Shortening or " clipping " the term (" Jeez " for Jesus, " What the -" for " What the hell ")

term and let
In a historical or geopolitical sense the term usually refers collectively to Christian majority countries or countries in which Christianity dominates or was a territorial phenomenon .“ Christendom is originally a medieval concept steadily to have evolved since the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the gradual rise of the Papacy more in religio-temporal implication practically during and after the reign of Charlemagne ; and the concept let itself to be lulled in the minds of the staunch believers to the archetype of a holy religious space inhabited by Christians, blessed by God, the Heavenly Father, ruled by Christ through the Church and protected by the Spirit-body of Christ ; no wonder, this concept, as included the whole of Europe and then the expanding Christian territories on earth, strengthened the roots of Romance of the greatness of Christianity in the world .”
The Christian censorship of the Jewish Talmud in the aftermath of the Disputation of Barcelona and during the Spanish Inquisition and Roman Inquisition, let the term spread within the Jewish classical texts, since the church censors replaced terms like Minim (" sectarians ", coined on the Christians ) with the term Epikorsim or Epicursim, meaning heretics, since the church had heavily persecuted heretics at that time.
Among the first venues for what would soon be called " Off-Off-Broadway " ( a term supposedly coined by critic Jerry Tallmer of the Village Voice ) were coffeehouses in Greenwich Village, in particular, the Caffe Cino at 31 Cornelia Street, operated by the eccentric Joe Cino, who early on took a liking to actors and playwrights and agreed to let them stage plays there without bothering to read the plays first, or to even find out much about the content.
At the outset, let me state that Buddhism is not atheistic as the term is ordinarily understood.
The Latin term fiat, translated as " let it be ," suggests the autocratic attitude ascribed to such a process.
Every president to date has let his or her party membership rest dormant during his term of office.
The " let off " is a term that describes what happens as the cam rolls all the way over.
Talbot Mundy a contemporary of Kipling makes use of the term in " King of the Khyber Rifles " ( p. 265 ) to describe a cuckold, " And what kind of man must Rewa Gunga be who could lightly let go all the prejudices of the East and submit to what only the West has endured hitherto with any complacency -- a " tertium quid "?
In 1853, " Bob " Ingersoll taught a term of school in Metropolis, Illinois, where he let one of his students, the future Judge Angus M. L. McBane, do the " greater part of the teaching, while Latin and history occupied his own attention ".
Encourages women to carry anencephalic babies to term and let them die naturally.
He was involved in the negotiation that let to the 2004 Warwick Agreement, in which the Labour Party agreed to implement some of the trade unions ' policies during their third term.
The term paresis comes from the " letting go " or " paralysis " from παρίημι " to let go, to let fall.
The most common term is " On-On ," shouted by runners to let others know they are on the right trail.
During his first term in the Senate, Taft criticized what he believed was the inefficiency and waste of many New Deal programs and of the need to let private enterprise and businesses restore the nation's economy instead of relying upon government programs to end the Great Depression.
In that case L is the radial limit ( thought of within the complex unit disk ), where we let r tend to the limit 1 from below along the real axis in the power series with term
The Brampton Angling Association has a long term let from the Earl of Carlisle for fishing rights on a portion of the River Irthing and part of the King Water.
By extension, this term can be used in British English for almost any activity which takes a period of time ( The Liberal government had a good innings, but finally lost office in 1972, or You've had a fair innings, now it's my turn, meaning " you have spoken for long enough, now let me speak ").
The Lancet was founded in 1823 by Thomas Wakley, an English surgeon who named it after the surgical instrument called a lancet, as well as after the term " lancet arch ", a window with a sharp pointed arch, to indicate the " light of wisdom " or " to let in light ".
) The term " Yeshu " is not undisputedly attested prior to the Talmud and Tosefta, let alone as a Hebrew original for " Jesus ".
* Let us use the term “ deductive system ” as a set of sentences closed under consequence ( for defining notion of consequence, let us use e. g. Tarski's algebraic approach ).
An additional explanation for the term cited by members is " when dogs are not let into the house, they stay outside in the cold and turn blue ," a reference to the Blue Dogs ' belief they had been left out of a Party that they believed had shifted to the political left.
When the author is introduced as the man who invented the term Cyberspace, he remarks, " and they won't let me forget it ".

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