Casuists, like Albert Jonsen and Stephen Toulmin ( " The Abuse of Casuistry " 1988 ), challenge the traditional paradigm of applied ethics.
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They argue that the abuse of casuistry is the problem, not casuistry " per se " ( itself an example of casuistic reasoning ).
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They argue that the abuse of casuistry is the problem, not casuistry " per se " ( itself an example of casuistic reasoning ).
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The casus belli is casuistry belli : We can't cuff Saddam to 9 / 11, but we'll clip Saddam because of 9 / 11.
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Beginning in 1656, Pascal published his memorable attack on casuistry, a popular Louis XIV . The king ordered that the book be shredded and burnt in 1660.
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His dissertation was entitled " Cases and Judgments in Ethical Reasoning : An Appraisal of Contemporary Casuistry and Holistic Model for the Mutual Support of Norms and Case Judgments.
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But English writing goes further by employing ideas and images derived from contemporary scientific or geographical discoveries to examine religious and moral questions, often with an element of casuistry.
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Like the Jesuits, the Bene Gesserit have been accused of using casuistry to obtain justifications for the unjustifiable . " Bene " is also Hebrew for " sons of ".
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Furthermore, in the frame of the controversy around Jansenius "'Pascal in his " Provincial Letters " denouncing the " relaxed moral " of Jesuit casuistry.
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And, not infrequently, it justifies grievances in need of a foundation and gives credence to the casuistry, the excessively subtle reasoning, that surrounds a subject like affirmative action.