Difference between revisions of "Normative science"

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Saturday April 27, 2024
Jump to navigationJump to search
(<font size="3">☞</font> This page belongs to resource collections on Logic and Inquiry.)
(cleanup)
Line 6: Line 6:
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
{|
+
 
| valign=top |
+
{{col-begin}}
 +
{{col-break}}
 
* [[Axiology]]
 
* [[Axiology]]
 
* [[Descriptive knowledge]]
 
* [[Descriptive knowledge]]
Line 13: Line 14:
 
* [[Norm (philosophy)|Norm in philosophy]]
 
* [[Norm (philosophy)|Norm in philosophy]]
 
* [[Norm (sociology)|Norm in sociology]]
 
* [[Norm (sociology)|Norm in sociology]]
| valign=top |
+
{{col-break}}
 
* [[Normative]]
 
* [[Normative]]
 
* [[Normative ethics]]
 
* [[Normative ethics]]
Line 19: Line 20:
 
* [[Procedural knowledge]]
 
* [[Procedural knowledge]]
 
* [[Scientific method]]
 
* [[Scientific method]]
|}
+
{{col-end}}
  
{{aficionados}}<sharethis />
+
<br><sharethis />
  
 +
[[Category:Inquiry]]
 +
[[Category:Open Educational Resource]]
 +
[[Category:Peer Educational Resource]]
 
[[Category:Normative Sciences]]
 
[[Category:Normative Sciences]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy of Science]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy of Science]]
 
[[Category:Science]]
 
[[Category:Science]]

Revision as of 15:45, 22 May 2010

This page belongs to resource collections on Logic and Inquiry.

A normative science is a form of inquiry, typically involving a community of inquiry and its accumulated body of provisional knowledge, that seeks to discover good ways of achieving recognized aims, ends, goals, objectives, or purposes.

The three normative sciences, according to traditional conceptions in philosophy, are aesthetics, ethics, and logic.

See also

Template:Col-breakTemplate:Col-breakTemplate:Col-end
<sharethis />