An action that springs from desire, emotion, or interest is therefore heteronomous. |
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Conversely the more heteronomous they are in their literary practices, the more inclined they are to collaborate. |
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To say that we are heteronomous because of this is therefore deeply problematic. |
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Being free but not autonomous is a condition Kant called heteronomous. |
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It is makeshift and contains heteronomous paragraphs, which is no way to set a shining example. |
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This is an agent who is able to overcome the promptings of all heteronomous counsels, such as those of self-interest and desire, should they be in conflict with reason. |
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Developmental theorists have described this type of motivation in similar ways using the terms heteronomous morality, impulsive, and to a lesser extent, pre-operational. |
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It is often suggested that languages are autonomous, while dialects are heteronomous. |
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The late French historian Andre Gorz described this part of the economy as the autonomous sector in contrast to the dominant heteronomous sector. |
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For Bauer, socialism was irredeemably heteronomous. |
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In such cases the local variety is said to be dependent on, or heteronomous with respect to, the standard variety. |
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Thus these varieties are said to be dependent on, or heteronomous with respect to, Standard German, which is said to be autonomous. |
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Similarly, a heteronomous variety may be considered a dialect of a language defined in this way. |
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Building upon Hume's work, the German philosopher Immanuel Kant advocated freedom from any heteronomous authority, such as the church and dogmas, that could not be established by reason alone. |
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Such discipleship can only appear heteronomous from the moral point of view, since the paradigm cannot be reduced to, or determined by, principles known prior to imitation. |
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They make truth claims for these values and do not seek to disguise their incompatibility with ways of life based on heteronomous deference to established authority. |
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