नीत्वादी Meaning in English
नीत्वादी शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : nitty-dispersion
, moralistic
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
नीतिभ्रष्टतासदाचारिता
सदाचारीपन
नीतिभ्रष्ट
नैतिक रूप से प्रशंसनीय
मोरेल्स
मोरेस
मोरासी
कीचड
वीभत्स
स्र्ग्ण
मोरचाबंदी बांधना
रंगबंधक
कटुतापूर्वक
मोरडेसिटी
नीत्वादी इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
A new body of intensely moralistic politicians would suddenly discover that the opposition was ensconced in power, was thoroughly corrupt, and had plans to utterly destroy republicanism.
The show was highly moralistic with a strong "good over evil" motif in every story.
Some, including Steven Pinker, have criticized the Seville Statement as an example of the moralistic fallacy.
He had a religious experience at age 26 that inspired him to write moralistic poetry.
But as noted in his editorial in Issue #1, his chief inspiration was the bloody and ironically moralistic tales of the EC horror comics.
Syndromes The moralistic fallacy is the informal fallacy of assuming that an aspect of nature which has socially unpleasant consequences cannot exist.
He said he did not want to let himself be controlled by a double-moralistic American family channel, and that such compromises were not acceptable for him to make.
and given to moralistic ruminations.
In fine, tongue-in-cheek moralistic mode, the poem concludes:.
These cheap novels exploited violence, drugs, and sex—especially promiscuity and lesbianism—but rarely delivered the kind of salacious detail their cover art implied and generally tacked on moralistic endings to satisfy critics who accused them of having "no redeeming social value.
In the late 1970s, Bernard Davis, in response to growing political and public calls to restrict basic research (versus applied research), amid criticisms of dangerous knowledge (versus dangerous applications), applied the term moralistic fallacy toward its present use.
In natural science, the moralistic fallacy can result in rejection or suppression of basic science, whose goal is understanding the natural world, on account of its potential misuse in applied science, whose goal is the development of technology or technique.
" Pinker goes on to explain that "[t]he moralistic fallacy is that what is good is found in nature.