casuistically
English
    
    
Adverb
    
casuistically (comparative more casuistically, superlative most casuistically)
- (manner) Using casuistry or casuistics.
- He approached the moral dilemma casuistically, not abstractly from first principles.
 
- (domain) From the perspective of casuistics or casuistry.
- 1967, Satyananda, World ethics:- Those ideals are casuistically the best whose realisations lead to least number of other ideals sacrificed.
 
- 1978, Philip E. Devine, The ethics of homicide:- Rule-utilitarian arguments — arguments that proceed from the consequences of our moral rules rather than of our individual acts — are casuistically very powerful.
 
- 1987, Harold Bloom, William Shakespeare's measure for measure:- She would then be — casuistically, I suppose, and legally, without doubt — worse off than the seduced Isabella: for Isabella would have submitted to Angelo without consent of the will
 
- 2006, Inazo Nitob, Bushido, the Soul of Japan, page 22:- Critics may point out flaws in this story, which is casuistically vulnerable
 
 
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