When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Linguistic prescription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_prescription

    Linguistic prescription [a] is the establishment of rules defining publicly preferred usage of language, [1] [2] including rules of spelling, pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, etc. Linguistic prescriptivism may aim to establish a standard language, teach what a particular society or sector of a society perceives as a correct or proper form, or advise on effective and stylistically apt ...

  3. Prescriptivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prescriptivity

    Prescriptivity is a term used in meta-ethics to state that when an evaluative judgment or decision is made it must either prescribe or condemn. The word implies that these judgments (and the prescription and condemnation) logically commit us to certain ways of living.

  4. Prescription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prescription

    In general, the word prescriptive refers to refer to normative judgments, i.e. judgments about what is good or bad, such as: Prescriptive analytics, third and final phase of business analytics; Linguistic prescriptivism, the laying down of normative language rules; Prescriptive (normative) economics, branch of economics that incorporates value ...

  5. Prescriptive analytics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prescriptive_analytics

    Prescriptive analytics is the third and final phase of business analytics, which also includes descriptive and predictive analytics. [2] [3] Referred to as the "final frontier of analytic capabilities", [4] prescriptive analytics entails the application of mathematical and computational sciences and suggests decision options for how to take advantage of the results of descriptive and ...

  6. Social norm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_norm

    Proscriptive norms, in contrast, comprise the other end of the same spectrum; they are similarly society's unwritten rules about what one should not do. [66] These norms can vary between cultures; while kissing someone you just met on the cheek is an acceptable greeting in some European countries, this is not acceptable, and thus represents a ...

  7. Universal prescriptivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_prescriptivism

    Universal prescriptivism (often simply called prescriptivism) is the meta-ethical view that claims that, rather than expressing propositions, ethical sentences function similarly to imperatives which are universalizable—whoever makes a moral judgment is committed to the same judgment in any situation where the same relevant facts pertain.

  8. Group dynamics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_dynamics

    Prescriptive Norms: the socially appropriate way to respond in a social situation, or what group members are supposed to do (e.g. saying thank you after someone does a favour for you) Proscriptive Norms : actions that group members should not do; prohibitive (e.g. not belching in public)

  9. Norm (philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norm_(philosophy)

    Orders and permissions express norms. Such norm sentences do not describe how the world is, they rather prescribe how the world should be. Imperative sentences are the most obvious way to express norms, but declarative sentences also may be norms, as is the case with laws or 'principles'.