| teleology |
From telos which means an ultimate end or conclusion. Teleology refers to any grand narrative , such as the idea of history as progress (an idea shared by both European imperialism and marxism) towards an end when one idea will dominate, or be totalised (western civilization, for example, or Marxist communism). Teleological theories tend to privilege one narrative (that of western values, for example, or that of class), to the exclusion of all others.
Ãâó: www.adamranson.freeserve.co.uk/critical%20concepts...
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| teleology |
Conversion of Special-Case Experience into Generalized Principles
Ãâó: www.buckminster.info/Glossary/Glossary-T.htm
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| teleology |
a doctrine of final purpose, ie, that creative developments are due to the purposes, designs or "plans" that are served and/or carried out by them. See also Aetiology.
Ãâó: staff.jccc.net/thoare/gl%20q%20to%20z.htm
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| teleology |
the study of final causes, results. Having a definite purpose, goal, or design.
Ãâó: www.carm.net/atheism/terms.htm
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| teleology |
The theory that the cause and direction of changes in phenomena are determined by a previously existing plan or purpose, as opposed to mechanism wherein they are determined according to the laws of the natural sciences (qv). All human actions (purposive human behavior) are teleological, ie, they are activated by the purpose of the actor. HA. 23-26; UF. 6-8.
Ãâó: www.mises.org/easier/T.asp
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