Examples of communicative rationality in the following topics:
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- A rational appeal uses logical arguments and factual evidence to persuade individuals.
- When you focus on rational appeals you are dealing with the mind and cognition of the audience .
- Invention is how you formulate arguments based on logos--rational appeal or logic.
- You might use many different forms of evidence to support your rational appeal.
- When you focus on rational appeals you are dealing with the mind and cognition of the audience.
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- Development of communication and transportation technologies made more efficient administration possible (and popularly requested) and democratization and rationalization of culture resulted in demands that the new system treat everybody equally.
- As Weber understood, particularly during the industrial revolution of the late 19th century, society was being driven by the passage of rational ideas into culture that in turn transformed society into an increasingly bureaucratic entity.
- Bureaucracy is a type of organizational or institutional management that is, as Weber understood it, rooted in legal-rational authority.
- Weber did believe bureaucracy was the most rational form of institutional governance, but because Weber viewed rationalization as the driving force of society, he believed bureaucracy would increase until it ruled society.
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- Rational-legal authority is a form of leadership in which authority is largely tied to legal rationality, legal legitimacy, and bureaucracy.
- In rational-legal authority, power is passed on according to a set of rules.
- Rational-legal authority is a form of leadership in which the authority of an organization or a ruling regime is largely tied to legal rationality, legal legitimacy, and bureaucracy.
- According to Max Weber, a modern state exists where a political community has three elements.
- According to Weber, rational-legal authority is a form of leadership in which the authority of an organization or a ruling regime is largely tied to legal rationality, legal legitimacy, and bureaucracy.
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- Many scholars have described rationalization and the question of individual freedom as the main theme of Weber's work.
- Weber understood this process as the institutionalization of purposive-rational economic and administrative action.
- Weberian civil service is hierarchically organized and viewed as the most efficient and rational way of organizing.
- Bureaucratization for Weber was the key part of the rational-legal authority.
- He saw it as the key process in the ongoing rationalization of Western society.
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- Weber identified in bureaucracies a rational-legal authority in which legitimacy is seen as coming from a legal order.
- As a result of the development of communication and transportation technologies, like telegraphs and automobiles, a more efficient administration became not only possible but demanded by the public.
- Accompanying this shift was an increasing democratization and rationalization of culture.
- Weber identified in bureaucracies a rational-legal authority in which legitimacy is seen as coming from a legal order.
- Regarding Western societies, Weber called this increasing rationalization an "iron cage" that trapped individuals in systems based solely on efficiency, rational calculation, and control.
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- Bureaucracy is a type of organizational or institutional management that is, as Weber understood it, rooted in legal-rational authority.
- Weber did believe bureaucracy was the most rational form of institutional governance, but because Weber viewed rationalization as the driving force of society, he believed bureaucracy would increase until it ruled society.
- Since a completely rational society was inevitable and bureaucracy was the most rational form of societal management, the iron cage, according to Weber, does not have a solution.
- This form of government would be based on communally owned and highly developed means of production and self-governance.
- Rather, they had achieved a form of socialism, what Marx called the stage between capitalism and communism.
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- A real number that is not rational is called irrational.
- The term rational in reference to the set Q refers to the fact that a rational number represents a ratio of two integers.
- In mathematics, the adjective rational often means that the underlying field considered is the field Q of rational numbers.
- Rational polynomial usually, and most correctly, means a polynomial with rational coefficients, also called a "polynomial over the rationals".
- However, rational function does not mean the underlying field is the rational numbers, and a rational algebraic curve is not an algebraic curve with rational coefficients.
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- A rational function is one such that $f(x) = \frac{P(x)}{Q(x)}$, where $Q(x) \neq 0$; the domain of a rational function can be calculated.
- Note that every polynomial function is a rational function with $Q(x) = 1$.
- For a simple example, consider the rational function $y = \frac {1}{x}$.
- Factorizing the numerator and denominator of rational
function helps to identify singularities of algebraic rational functions.
- Graph of a rational function with equation $\frac{(x^2 - 3x -2)}{(x^2 - 4)}$.
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- Max Weber was particularly concerned about the rationalization of society due to the Industrial Revolution and how this change would affect humanity's agency and happiness.
- Since Weber viewed rationalization as the driving force of society and given that bureaucracy was the most rational form of institutional governance, Weber believed bureaucracy would spread until it ruled society.
- Related to rationalization is the process of disenchantment , in which the world is becoming more explained and less mystical, moving from polytheistic religions to monotheistic ones and finally to the Godless science of modernity.
- According to Durkheim, an important component of social life was social solidarity, which can be understood as a sense of community.
- Compare the similarities and differences between Weber's Rationalization, Marx's Alienation and Durkheim's Solidarity In relation to the Industrial Revolution
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- Rational decision making is a multi-step process, from problem identification through solution, for making logically sound decisions.
- Rational decision making is a multi-step process for making choices between alternatives.
- The process of rational decision making favors logic, objectivity, and analysis over subjectivity and insight.
- The word "rational" in this context does not mean sane or clear-headed as it does in the colloquial sense.
- The idea of rational choice is easy to see in economic theory.