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Scholasticism

n. the system of logic, philosophy, and theology taught by university scholars in medieval Europe. It was based on Aristotelian logic, the writings of the early Christian fathers, and the authority of tradition and dogma. Major preoccupations included the attempt to reconcile faith with reason and the dispute between nominalism and realism. Prominent Scholastics included Thomas Aquinas, French philosopher Jean Burridan (c. 1295–1358), Scottish theologian John Duns Scotus (c. 1226–1308), and English Franciscan monk and philosopher William of Occam (c. 1285–1347). —Scholastic n., adj.

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Psychology term of the day

December 19th 2024

unipolar rating scale

unipolar rating scale

a type of instrument that prompts a respondent to evaluate the degree to which a single quality or attribute is present. For example, consider a scale with the following anchors or benchmarks: (1) not at all satisfied, (2) slightly satisfied, (3) moderately satisfied, (4) very satisfied, and (5) completely satisfied. Because there is no anchor that represents the opposing quality of dissatisfaction, the scale has one pole. Also called unipolar scale. Compare bipolar rating scale.