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moderationism การใช้

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  • Moderationism holds that temperance ( that is, moderation or self-control ) in all of one's behavior, not abstinence, is the biblical norm.
  • Similarly, in Christianity, " moderationism " is the position that drinking alcoholic beverages temperately is permissible, though drunkenness is forbidden ( see Christianity and alcohol ).
  • Some Christian denominations condone the moderate drinking of alcohol ( moderationism ), such as Anglicans, Catholics, Lutherans, and the Orthodox, although others, such as Adventists, Baptists, Methodists, and Pentecostals either abstain from or prohibit the consumption of alcohol ( sinful.
  • Moderationism argues that, according to the biblical and traditional witness, ( 1 ) alcohol is a good gift of God that is rightly used in the Eucharist and for making the heart merry, and ( 2 ) while its dangers are real, it may be used wisely and moderately rather than being shunned or prohibited because of potential abuse.
  • Pluralistic rationalism is described in cultural media as " commitment to reason [ ing ], regardless of one's worldview, " and by the society itself as " communal commitment to more consistently practice the basic methodological tenets of a reasoning lifestyle ( reality's acceptance, assumption's denial, and emotion's mastery ) irrespective of our theological, ethical, cultural or political worldviews . " According to The Circle of Reason, pluralistic rationalism is practiced through encouraging not a particular worldview, but rather factualism, skepticism, and moderationism; and furthermore through discouraging their opposing practices of denialism, dogmatism, and emotionalism-- or " denials of reality, unquestioned assumptions ( potentially false realities ), and emotive arguments or actions ( dissociation from reality ) . " Plurationalist practices include discouraging the verbal, printed or televised use of insults ( which the group asserts is immoral because, as " ad hominem " argumentation, it seeks to " irrationally persuade by evoking emotionality . " ) Because plurationalists hold that " as a sapient being one's best tool to survive is one's ability to reason, " they claim people's basic universalized moral imperative must then be " to consistently allow, and encourage, others to reason ."