Permission
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One is said to have a '''permission''' when he or she ''may'' (or is allowed to) perform some [[philosophy of action|action]]. There are [[law|legal]] and [[ethics|ethical]] permissions, but these can also belong to some other [[normative]] realms, like [[etiquette]] and [[game]]s. | One is said to have a '''permission''' when he or she ''may'' (or is allowed to) perform some [[philosophy of action|action]]. There are [[law|legal]] and [[ethics|ethical]] permissions, but these can also belong to some other [[normative]] realms, like [[etiquette]] and [[game]]s. |
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One is said to have a permission when he or she may (or is allowed to) perform some action. There are legal and ethical permissions, but these can also belong to some other normative realms, like etiquette and games.
Permissions, like obligations, depend on norms or institutions.
See also
- Consent
- Permission (philosophy)
- Permissive society
- Nothing is True, Everything is Permitted
- If there is no god, then, everything is permitted
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Permission" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.