LAWS 2301 Chapter : Reading 2.doc
Document Summary
It assumes a high degree of social consensus and argues that these rules and processes reflect shared values and concerns. This means they assume individuals rationally assess the potential costs and benefits of behavioural options before proceeding to act. The critical perspective seeks to overcome the limitations of the. It rejects the limited and exclusionist orientation of the traditional. In its complexity, it harkens back to a complex web of ontological, The notion of a dialectical approach is, at one and the same time, In its simplicity, the notion of dialectic warns us against the. Who decides when a value is important enough to require codification and as emerging and existing in a pure state, as some kind of neutral reflection of natural order and social consensus. This process does not occur automatically or spontaneously. The pluralists recognize that is occurs within the social institutions of the state, and reflects the outcomes of the processes that characterize the modern state.