- as
employing casuistic reasoning.[by whom?] The
casuistic method was po****r
among Catholic thinkers in the
early modern period.
Casuistic authors include...
- The
Society of
Jesus (Latin:
Societas Iesu; abbreviation: S.J. or SJ), also
known as the
Jesuit Order or the
Jesuits (/ˈdʒɛʒuɪts, ˈdʒɛzju-/ JEZH-oo-its...
- of
casuistic cuneiform law have been
found at Hazor.
There are also
similarities between the Code of
Hamurabi and the
Covenant Code: in the
casuistic format...
-
hinges on the
distinction between casuistic and
apodictic law. The
Covenant Code
consists largely of case or
casuistic law (often in the form of an "if-then"...
-
distinction between three questions in ethics: psychological, metaphysical,
casuistic. "The
psychological question asks
after the
historical origin of our moral...
-
ruler Ur-Nammu had
formulated the
first law code,
which consisted of
casuistic statements ("if … then ...").
Around 1760 BC, King
Hammurabi further developed...
- term "pilpul" was
increasingly applied derogatorily to
novellae deemed casuistic and hairsplitting.
Authors referred to
their own
commentaries as "al derekh...
-
English as a
colloquialism used by some to
indicate extreme dis****tion or
casuistic hairsplitting. The
requirement for
close derivation of the conceptual...
- of the
human person,
concomitant human rights, due
proportionality in
casuistic remedies, the
unavoidability of death, and the
importance of charity....
- the
intellectual gymnastics one
needs to
perform to make them work seem
casuistic and, for many, unpersuasive. They are
metaphysical beliefs, in that (like...