How To Use Casuistic In A Sentence

  • Deans, even in this extremity of suffering, had he known that his daughter was applying the casuistical arguments which he had been using, not in the sense of a permission to follow her own opinion on a dubious and disputed point of controversy, but rather as an encouragement to transgress one of those divine commandments which The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • A cast of secondary characters make their entrances and exits: an oddball aviator, an intransigent prisoner, a casuistical priest. Intellectual Intrigue in Mexico City
  • But at least they would have been compelled to test their casuistical skills.
  • The appropriate response will not be found in a casuistic literature, or at least in a formalized casuistic approach.
  • You can adduce further cases, I'm sure, of scenes in novels that fit a casuistical model, in which characters convince themselves that their behavior does conform to their obligations or, if not, that it deviates in a principled fashion.
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  • The idea that this is all a response to the post 9/11 policies, with all their corkscrew-like bends, is casuistic, to put it mildly. Who is to run our foreign policy?
  • Quaint, naive, half-grotesque it was in conception, yet the truth of all drama was there actively exhibited, and all casuistic pleading of excuses of some sort, even of justification for the witch (that it was her nature; heredity in her aworking, etc., etc.) would have not only been out of place, but hotly resented by that audience. Robert Louis Stevenson: a record, an estimate, and a memorial
  • The casuistical tradition, described in (Jonsen & Toulmin, 1988), stressed the importance to our reasoning about whether a problematic cases of the skill of ordering similarity relations. Moral Reasoning
  • The students seem drawn to its clarity and concreteness, and there is no shortage of casuistic questions concerning its intricacies.
  • Logical arguments have attacked war since the dawn of time, yet war has always had its casuistic defenders. Making Real Peace with the Spirit of John F. Kennedy
  • As to the last charge advanced by Draper, that Castro betrayed the original ideals of the Cuban revolution, the defense of Professor Williams is either weak or casuistic. The Great San Francisco Poetry Wars, 9
  • Hence the casuistical or other questions which arise out of the relations of friends have not often been considered seriously in modern times. Lysis; or Friendship
  • What arguments they have to beguile poor, simple, unstable souls with, I know not; but surely the practical, casuistical, that is, the principal, vital part of their religion savours very little of spirituality. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. I.
  • There was no escape from the casuistic logic of the witch-hunters. Times, Sunday Times
  • At least Kant had the virtue of rigid consistency and did not make casuistic exceptions. The Volokh Conspiracy » It’s Official: Kinder, Gentler Military Commissions:
  • This is pretty legalistic reasoning, which many people may - rightly or wrongly - consider casuistic to the point of silliness.
  • She thus tries to cover herself with a casuistic distinction that breaks down the moment you try to analyse what she means.
  • But this is all pretty casuistic: We move from case to case without direct consideration of what the objectionable features of adultery are. Porndultery
  • Eastern Orthodox bioethics is distinct from that of traditional Roman Catholicism in that medical morality is not governed by the casuistical application of a natural law known by all through discursive reason.
  • H.W. Fowler wrote about them incisively in his 1926 Dictionary of Modern English Usage, though most of the specific words he considered — such as casuistic and casuistical, diabolic and diabolical — don’t trouble us anymore. Word Court
  • One additional note, though -- please do not write me e-mails asking casuistic questions about whether or not it's okay to read something or other during Lent (I've gotten a few in the past). 2010 Lenten Read-a-Thon
  • A means of reconciling the seemingly irreconcilable in Jewish law and its interpretations, pilpul has come to mean the use of increasingly fine distinctions in argument, often in casuistical fashion. Bernie Farber's chutzpah
  • Donne's casuistical treatise was an early example of the liberalized Enlightenment attitudes of the 1700's. Suicide
  • Chiefly to this, — that philosophers have not always distinguished the theoretical and the casuistical uncertainty of morals from the practical certainty. Philebus
  • overly subtle casuistic reasoning
  • But alas! my dear Mr.B. was never yet thought so entirely fit to fill up the character of a casuistical divine, as that one may absolutely rely upon his decisions in these serious points: and you know we must stand or fall by our own judgments. Pamela
  • The casuistical subtilties may not be greater than the snbtilties of lawyers, hinted at above; but as the former are pernicious, and the latter innocent and even necessary, this is the reason of the very different reception they meet with from the world. An Enquiry into the Principles of Morals

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