Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
In such cases, the heteronomous variety is said to be oriented towards the autonomous one.
The heteronomous reform ends in February the next year.
The relationship to such scripture, or to such a God, must necessarily be heteronomous.
Heteronomous means 'having different laws' and is used in two contexts:
It is makeshift and contains heteronomous paragraphs, which is no way to set a shining example.
It is often suggested that languages are autonomous, while dialects are heteronomous.
His view of morality was thus heteronomous, as he believed in deference to a higher authority (God), rather than acting autonomously.
Heteronomous annulation is a characteristic of some arthropods.
Now the veil of ignorance deprives the persons in the original position of the knowledge that would enable them to choose heteronomous principles.
An autonomous language or variety is usually a standard language that has its own established norms, as opposed to a heteronomous variety.
Heteronomous language, linguistic dialects.
The modern literary and artistic field is a site of contestation between the heteronomous principle, subordinating art to economy, and the autonomous, resisting such subordination.
Marvel Van Der (2008) states company unions are "heteronomous trade unions that never or rarely organize strikes."
These theories make morality heteronomous, that is, a system of principles whose validation lies outside itself, as opposed to autonomous that is, valid of its own nature.
A heteronomous language variety is a nonstandard language variety whose speakers normally use another, autonomous language variety in writing (especially formal writing) and education.
In contrast, the members of heteronomous societies (hetero- 'other') attribute their imaginaries to some extra-social authority (i.e., God, ancestors, historical necessity).
Immanuel Kant and his followers held that shame is heteronomous; Bernard Williams and others have argued that shame can be autonomous.
(Adapted from Mackey 1965)) autonomous and heteronomous languages The context here is sociolinguistics and more particularly the relationship that exists between the terms language and dialect.
In Greece, Slavic dialects heteronomous with standard Macedonian Slavic or Bulgarian are spoken; however, the speakers do not all identify their language with their national identity.
To follow the practical law is to be autonomous, whereas to follow any of the other types of contingent laws (or hypothetical imperatives) is to be heteronomous and therefore unfree.
Such rules limit the agent's autonomy, resulting in a heteronomous structure of domination such as that found in the core-periphery setting of the world economy as expounded by Dependency Theory.
Piaget named this approach 'moral realism' and noted the shift during these 3 stages from heteronomous morality - dependent on external rules, to autonomous morality - dependent on the individuals own principles of justice.
Kant, whose moral philosophy is centred around the concept of autonomy, here distinguishes between a person who is intellectually autonomous and one who keeps him/herself in an intellectually heteronomous, i.e. dependent and immature status.
Bourdieu postulated a model of 'the field of cultural production' as structured externally in relation to the 'field of power' and internally in relation to two 'principles of hierarchization', the heteronomous and the autonomous.
For example, the various regional varieties (dialects) of German, such as Alemannic, Austro-Bavarian, Central Hessian, East Hessian, North Hessian, Kölsch and Low German, are heteronomous with respect to standard German.