Jump to content

Talk:Neuro-Linguistic Programming

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Re: "utilitarianism" vs. "pragmatism" (see page history) -- it's true that "utilitarianism" is an ethical theory, but it's also a more common english word; one could speak of "utilitarian design principles," for example, and be referring to architectural and/or interior design, not ethics. And "pragmatism" isn't really a better choice, because "pragmatism" is also an ethical theory, most notably espoused by William James. --Delirium 19:25 14 Jul 2003 (UTC)

If only English were that easy. :) "Utilitarianism" is pretty much only an ethical theory. "utility" and "utilitarian" (as an adjective) are broader, so you'll see that I left those alone on the page. Now that you point it out, of course, I realize that "pragmatism" is also wrong. "Pragmatic" is a better word, so perhaps more changes are necessary to cover that. I certainly grant that many people use the word "utilitarianism" wrongly. --Tb 20:43 14 Jul 2003 (UTC)

There, I've just tweaked a bit that I think avoids the difficulty well. I left "utility", but I changed "pragmatic and utilitarian" into just "pragmatic" (the synonym wasn't doing any work anyhow, given that the page already explains so well just what is meant by this). I changed "pragmatism" to "practicality". --Tb 20:49 14 Jul 2003 (UTC)

Start a discussion about improving the Neuro-Linguistic Programming page

Start a discussion