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Koch (2011) highlights similarities to past eugenic policies and accuses the central theorists of hubris even a "huckster's promise" (p. 199)—in presuming not only that we will be able to engineer complex traits like intelligence, but that they can know the appropriate regulatory limits and speak for all parents.
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This concept has been central to theorists of citizenship for at least the last half-century.
Third, he suggests a false dichotomy between utopian anarchy and central planning.Libertarian theorists of spontaneous order, such as Hayek, certainly do argue that central planners cannot hope to impose an economic order more attractive and beneficial than the order known to arise spontaneously from a well-functioning market system.
Each of these answers is problematic: a central task for theorists of criminal law is to work towards a clearer understanding of the questions to which such answers are offered (see generally Altman & Wellman, 2004; Luban, 2004, 2010 May 20055; Renzo 2012, 2013).
A central claim made by theorists following this approach was that policy outcomes are most often contrary to societal or public interest because industry representatives lobby the government for benefits they might gain through protectionism or other forms of economic controls.
The central question for most theorists is: what more is required for evil than mere wrongdoing?
For ethical theorists the central task is an explanation of promissory obligations: How is it that we come to have a moral obligation to do what we promise we will?
This central move by queer theorists, the claim that the categories through which identity is understood are all social constructs rather than given to us by nature, opens up a number of analytical possibilities.
A central task for union theorists, therefore, is to spell out just what such a "we" comes to whether it is literally a new entity in the world somehow comprised of the lover and the beloved, or whether it is merely metaphorical.
According to Ettner and many other gender therapists and theorists, the central problem pretty much any trans person faces is having a gender identity that doesn't match body type (Ettner, 1996, 1999).
The great 19th- century theorist of central banking, Walter Bagehot, would have applauded: Squeeze the speculation out of the market and then ease aggressively.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com