References
A corruption of Arabic terminology, used in former times by the British military to denote a soldier’s wearing of civilian clothing when off duty. For the quote, see Wittgenstein Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics Wiley-Blackwell 3rd edn 1981 Part V
Which Pavie quotes from Williams, himself quoting from Socrates. See Williams, B.: 1990, L’Éthique et les Limites de la philosophie, trad. A.-M. Lescourret, (Gallimard) — (French translation used by the author)
Stephen Lloyd Smith ‘Naïve Expertise: Spacious Alternative to the Standard Account of Method’ Philosophy of Management Volume 9 Number 3 2010 pp 95–133. See Thomas’ paper for further developments of the argument.
See Norma Romm ‘Reconsidering Methodological Arguments: A Commentary on Stephen L. Smith’s Paper ‘Naïve Expertise: Spacious Alternative to the Standard Account of Method (SAM)’ Philosophy of Management Volume 10 Number 2 2011 pp 75–90 and Smith’s response to this in the following issue (10.3)
Though Thomas does not argue so strongly, this reader would also hold that some degree of generalizing from a limited amount of evidence to a universal assertion is also essential in all cases of acquisition of knowledge from the external world.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Griseri, P. Care, Mufti, and the Instrumental Turn. Philos. of Manag. 13, 1–4 (2014). https://doi.org/10.5840/pom20141311
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5840/pom20141311