These cases of incommensurability are one reason for the incomparability of the decision options. |
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Such incommensurability should not be understood as a reflection of our inability to make fine discriminations between divergent ways of life. |
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God is the only hypothesis that does justice to the immensity and incommensurability of the cosmos. |
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It is important, nevertheless, not to overemphasize the semantic incommensurability of languages. |
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One common portrait of the difference between the Chinese and Western traditions posits a radical incommensurability on the very nature of philosophical inquiry. |
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At times, there is also incommensurability where the values cannot be measured in a way that allows comparison or tradeoffs to be made between them. |
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Often the incommensurability is expressed by the mean of two perceptions that we cannot keep inside us at the same time, preventing us to measure or to assess the relation between them easily. |
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Non-indigenous terms are used in both domestic and international contexts, but by reference to indigenous understandings and categories in order to allude to difference or incommensurability in epistemologies. |
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Legal scholars have also discussed problems of legal policy in light of the incommensurability critique. |
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An anatomy and physiology of incommensurability replaced a metaphysics of hierarchy in the representation of women to man. |
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Value incommensurability is worrying: if values are incommensurable, then either we are forced into an ad hoc ranking, or we cannot rank the values at all. |
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However, it does retain incommensurability about values. |
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Then Thomas Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend challenged received views of science and made talk of revolutionary breaks and incommensurability central to the emerging new field of history and philosophy of science. |
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Regulating traditional Chinese medicines without understanding and recognizing its uniqueness and the incommensurability of the system is like throwing the baby out with the bath water. |
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In fact, we step on the issue of incommensurability of values. |
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Two additional dimensions of Lindbeck's Wittgensteinian notion of incommensurability can help those looking to discover meaning in interreligious conversations. |
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He proposes that consequentialism, liberalism, and absolute rights and duties may be consistent with incommensurability, although not required by it. |
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Vassilis Karasmanis argues that Plato's account of apeiron in the Philebus is an attempt to understand continuity and magnitude through a third concept, incommensurability. |
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We will conclude that this incommensurability is often present in the domain of basic human goods and in the domain of instantiations of basic human goods. |
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Incommensurability does, after all, suggest the existence of isolated rationalities that are incapable of meaningful dialog with and critique of other rationalities. |
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