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casuistical การใช้

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  • In one he extracts from a casuistical miser a fee for a poem written in his praise.
  • Your casuistical response about WP : BRD ( and see the related process discussion at WP : CON ) is unconvincing.
  • The magazine was first called " The Athenian Gazette or The Casuistical Mercury " when it was first printed.
  • His university, however, elected him professor of casuistical divinity, and his lectures on moral philosophy brought him a reputation.
  • But what happened, toward winter, in our cruelly casuistical dorm, is that he came to be picked on and I didn't.
  • In contradistinction to the Ashkenazi approach, the Sephardim sought to simplify the Talmud and free it from casuistical detail; see for example Chananel Ben Chushiel.
  • He was professor of mineralogy from 1828 to 1832 and Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy ( then called " moral theology and casuistical divinity " ) from 1838 to 1855.
  • Just a few years later ( 1665 66, and then 1679 ), Alexander condemned " laxity " in the church and ordered a revision of casuistical texts.
  • This is supported by historical considerations, and the device of lax interpretation of the articles is denounced as a casuistical artifice of William Laud's in defence of Arminianism.
  • Jeroham was the author of two casuistical works : " Sefer Mesharim, " on the civil laws ( Constantinople, 1516 ), and " Toledot Adam we-$ awwah " ( ib . ).
  • This casuistical defence of Hitler's foreign policy will not only do harm by supporting neo-Nazi mythology : it will also do harm, perhaps irreparable harm, to Mr . Taylor's reputation as a serious historian.
  • During this period Barlow wrote much, but published little . " Mr . Cottington's Divorce Case ", on which Barlow's reputation as an ecclesiastical lawyer and casuistical divine mainly rests, was written in 1671.
  • Prof . Schulz, however, notes the reluctance of classical Roman jurists to formulate principles . " Even in the more theoretical works, such as Julian's . . . " Digesta ", case law is dominant, and no attempt is made to translate the cases into abstract principles . " This literature, however, does employ " casuistical form " rather than " simply strung together " " responsa ".
  • A . C . Grayling criticized the Royal Society for allowing its premises to be used in connection with the launch of " Questions of Truth ", describing it as a scandal, and suggesting that Polkinghorne had exploited his fellowship there to publicize a " weak, casuistical and tendentious pamphlet . " After implying that the book's publisher, Westminster John Knox, was a self-publisher, Grayling went on to write that Polkinghorne and others were eager to see the credibility accorded to scientific research extended to religious perspectives through association.