Examples of pragmatic maxim in the following topics:
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- Pragmatism is a philosophical tradition centered on the linking of practice and theory.
- Pragmatism as a philosophical movement began in the United States in the 1870s.
- Then, your conception of those effects is the whole of your conception of the object. " He later termed this claim the pragmatic maxim.
- The maxim equates any conception of an object to a conception of that object's effects, to a general extent of the effects' conceivable implications for informed practice.
- Peirce called his pragmatism "the logic of abduction," the logic of inference to explanatory hypotheses.
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- Second, property rights can be justified by "natural rights" or by logic and pragmatism.
- A pragmatic justification of property rights is based on defining property rights to achieve an objective.
- That objective could be an optimal allocation or to maximize the monetary value of assets.
- Property rights justified on natural rights tends to be static while pragmatism tends to justify property rights that evolve to meet the needs of changing circumstances (population, technology, environment, etc.).
- Hayek, a market oriented economist, seems to focus on a pragmatic approach to property rights:
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- However, it is when he abandoned Hegelian constructs and joined the movement in America called Pragmatism that he began to formulate his basic doctrine on the three phases of the process of inquiry:
- With the rise of the idea of quantitative measurement in the physical sciences (see, for example Lord Rutherford's famous maxim that any knowledge that one cannot measure numerically "is a poor sort of knowledge"), the stage was set for the division of the study of humanity into the humanities and the social sciences.
- Alongside these developments, Pragmatism facilitated the emergence of qualitative social science via the ethnographic and community-based endeavors of the Chicago School in the 1920's and 1930's.
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- The Pragmatic Sanction was an edict issued by Charles VI on April 19, 1713, to ensure that the Habsburg hereditary possessions could be inherited by a daughter.
- The Pragmatic Sanction was the first such document to be publicly announced and as such required formal acceptance by the estates of the realms it concerned.
- Maria Theresa, Charles' daughter who in 1740 succeeded her father following his death, still gained the throne of Hungary (the Hungarian Parliament voted its own Pragmatic Sanction in 1723).
- Despite the promulgation of the Pragmatic Sanction, however, her accession in 1740 resulted in the outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession.
- Explain the contents of the Pragmatic Sanction and its intended purpose
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- In Pragmatism, nothing practical or useful is held to be necessarily true, nor is anything which helps to survive merely in the short term.
- The two most important roots of Mead's work, and of symbolic interactionism in general, are the philosophy of pragmatism and social behaviorism.
- Pragmatism is a wide ranging philosophical position from which several aspects of Mead's influences can be identified.
- In Pragmatism nothing practical or useful is held to be necessarily true, nor is anything which helps to survive merely in the short term.
- Discuss Mead's theory of social psychology in terms of two concepts - pragmatism and social behaviorism
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- A goal of financial management can be to maximize shareholder wealth by paying dividends and/or causing the market value to increase.
- There are several goals of financial management, one of which is maximizing shareholder and market value .
- The idea of maximizing shareholder value comes from interpretations of the role of corporate governance.
- The idea of maximizing market value is related to the idea of maximizing shareholder value, as market value is the price at which an asset would trade in a competitive auction setting; for example, returning value to the shareholders if they decide to sell shares or if the firm decides to sell.
- Maximizing shareholder and market value is, for some, one of the goals of financial management.
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- The total revenue-total cost perspective and the marginal revenue-marginal cost perspective are used to find profit maximizing quantities.
- Profit maximization is the short run or long run process that a firm uses to determine the price and output level that returns the greatest profit when producing a good or service.
- There are two ways in which cost curves can be used to find profit maximizing quantities: the total revenue-total cost perspective and the marginal revenue-marginal cost perspective.
- The profit maximizing output is the one at which the profit reaches its maximum .
- Profit maximization is directly impacts the supply and demand of a product.
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- Though uncommon, a member of Congress switch parties for either ideological or pragmatic reasons.
- Others switch for more pragmatic reasons, such as to gain more power in Congress or to gain reelection.
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- Pacifism may be based on moral principles or pragmatism.
- Pragmatic pacifism holds that the costs of war and inter-personal violence are so substantial that better ways of resolving disputes must be found.
- Explain the difference between principled pacifism and pragmatic pacifism, and what they share in common
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- If the sole objective of a firm is to maximize profit, there are various profit maximizing pricing methods that can be used.
- Some firms decide to set prices to maximize profits for either the short run or the long run.
- There are several methods to maximizing profits:
- The profit maximizing output is the one at which this difference reaches its maximum.
- The profit maximizing output level is represented as the one at which total revenue is the height of C and total cost is the height of B; the maximal profit is measured as CB.