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Court rules --- International Court of Justice. --- Court rules.
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Civil Procedure provides an indispensable guide both to students of civil procedure at all levels as well as practitioners who regularly have to grapple with the CPR.
Civil procedure --- Court rules --- Rules of court --- Courts --- Procedure (Law)
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The present book is a natural outgrowth of Rescher's longstanding preoccupation with the rational systematization of our knowledge as manifested in such earlier works as Cognitive Systematization (Oxford: Blackwell, 1979), and Complexity (New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1998). Accordingly, the role of principles in human affairs is crucial and ubiquitous. Principology, the theory of principles-underdeveloped through it may be-is accordingly bound to find a significant place in the sphere of philosophical inquiry regarding matters of thought and action.
Principle (Philosophy) --- Rules (Philosophy) --- Philosophy
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Cataloging. --- Descriptive cataloging --- -Cataloging --- Rules --- -Handbooks, manuals, etc --- Anglo-American cataloguing rules. --- Alphabetical cataloguing --- Cataloging --- Rules&delete& --- Handbooks, manuals, etc --- AACR 2 --- Anglo-American cataloging rules --- AACR2 --- Anglo-American cataloguing rules --- Handbooks, manuals, etc. --- Descriptive cataloging - Rules - Handbooks, manuals, etc
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Administrative agencies --- Administrative procedure --- Court rules
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The Rei(g)n of Rule is a study of rules and their role in language. Rules have dominated the philosophical arena as a fundamental philosophical concept. Little progress, however, has been made in reaching an accepted definition of rules. This fact is not coincidental. The concept of rule is expected to perform various, at times conflicting, tasks. Analyzing key debates and rule related discussions in the philosophy of language I show that typically rules are perceived and defined either as norms or as conventions. As norms, rules perform the evaluative task of distinguishing between correct and incorrect actions. As conventions, rules describe how certain actions are actually undertaken. As normative and conventional requirements do not necessarily coincide, the concept of rule cannot simultaneously accommodate both. The impossibility to consistently define 'rule' has gone unnoticed by philosophers, and it is in this sense that 'rule' has also blocked philosophical attempts to explain language in terms of rules.
Language and languages --- Rules (Philosophy) --- Philosophy --- Philosophy.
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Parliamentary practice --- United States. --- Rules and practice.
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Descriptive cataloging --- Cataloging --- Alphabetical cataloguing --- Anglo-American cataloguing rules. --- AACR 2 --- Anglo-American cataloging rules --- AACR2
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