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DELIBERATIVE AGENT

  • Deliberative agent
  • Type of computer program

    Deliberative agent (also known as intentional agent) is a sort of software agent used mainly in multi-agent system simulations. According to Wooldridge's

    Deliberative agent

    Deliberative_agent

  • Deliberative
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Look up deliberative in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Deliberative may refer to: Deliberative agent Deliberative assembly Deliberative Council of Princes

    Deliberative

    Deliberative

  • Distributed artificial intelligence
  • Subfield of artificial intelligence

    receives input, processes it and produces an output. deliberative agent – A deliberative agent in contrast should have an internal view of its environment

    Distributed artificial intelligence

    Distributed_artificial_intelligence

  • Intelligent agent
  • Software agent which acts autonomously

    required for low-level tasks with the more deliberative reasoning needed for high-level objectives. "Intelligent agent" is also often used as a vague term,

    Intelligent agent

    Intelligent agent

    Intelligent_agent

  • Go! (programming language)
  • Multi-paradigm programming language

    "Go! For multi-threaded deliberative agents". Proceedings of the second international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems. pp

    Go! (programming language)

    Go!_(programming_language)

  • 4D-RCS Reference Model Architecture
  • Reference model for military vehicles

    vehicles. According to Balakirsky (2003) 4D/RCS is an example of deliberative agent architecture. These architectures "include all systems that plan to

    4D-RCS Reference Model Architecture

    4D-RCS Reference Model Architecture

    4D-RCS_Reference_Model_Architecture

  • Belief–desire–intention software model
  • Model for designing artificial intelligence

    Intentions represent the deliberative state of the agent – what the agent has chosen to do. Intentions are desires to which the agent has to some extent committed

    Belief–desire–intention software model

    Belief–desire–intention_software_model

  • Lex animata
  • attributes action in the service of this power to a fictional person and deliberative agent – the state – in ways that recall Thomas Hobbes, Samuel Pufendorf

    Lex animata

    Lex_animata

  • Grand jury
  • Jury that screens potential prosecutions

    Quasi-Jury and Grand Jury Systems as Deliberative Agents of Social Change: De-Colonial Strategies and Deliberative Participatory Democracy". Chicago-Kent

    Grand jury

    Grand_jury

  • Kialo
  • Online debate platform

    and against claims underneath user-submitted theses or questions. The deliberative discourse platform is designed to present hundreds of supporting or opposing

    Kialo

    Kialo

    Kialo

  • 007 First Light
  • 2026 action-adventure video game

    whether that be in stealth or open combat compared to the slower, more deliberative, puzzle-like approach of Hitman where assassinations required setup.

    007 First Light

    007_First_Light

  • Argumentation theory
  • Academic field of logic and rhetoric

    that the agent has expressed or formulated, and has pledged to carry out, or has publicly asserted. According to the commitment model, agents interact

    Argumentation theory

    Argumentation theory

    Argumentation_theory

  • Ratification
  • Process of putting into effect a documentation in international law

    parliamentary procedure in deliberative assemblies. In contract law, the need for ratification often arises in two ways: if the agent attempts to bind the principal

    Ratification

    Ratification

  • Citizens' assembly
  • Randomly selected people to deliberate on public issues

    questions so as to exert an influence. Other names and variations of deliberative mini-publics include citizens' jury, citizens' panel, people's panel

    Citizens' assembly

    Citizens' assembly

    Citizens'_assembly

  • Science and technology studies
  • Academic field

    of popular topics which affect society. Deliberative democracy is a tool for making decisions. Deliberative democracy can be traced back all the way

    Science and technology studies

    Science and technology studies

    Science_and_technology_studies

  • Libertarianism (metaphysics)
  • Term in metaphysics

    said to be caused by the agent. A number of event-causal accounts of free will have been created, referenced here as deliberative indeterminism, centred

    Libertarianism (metaphysics)

    Libertarianism (metaphysics)

    Libertarianism_(metaphysics)

  • Unit 731
  • Japanese biological and chemical warfare unit (1936–1945)

    hypobaric chambers, amputating limbs, and exposing victims to chemical agents and explosives. Prisoners—often referred to as "logs" by the staff—were

    Unit 731

    Unit 731

    Unit_731

  • Town meeting
  • Form of direct democracy for cities or towns

    town meetings as forms of direct democracy based upon unitary values. Deliberative democrats, such as James Fishkin, have presented the town meeting as

    Town meeting

    Town meeting

    Town_meeting

  • Agent architecture
  • Agent architecture in computer science is a blueprint for software agents and intelligent control systems, depicting the arrangement of components. The

    Agent architecture

    Agent_architecture

  • Reason (argument)
  • Consideration which justifies, guides, or explains

    actions. In their deliberative role, they are the appropriate inputs to sound deliberation and can become motivating reasons when an agent responds to them

    Reason (argument)

    Reason_(argument)

  • STIT logic
  • Family of modal logics for agency and choice

    the deliberative STIT operator distinguished between a "Chellas" STIT that merely records the result of an agent's present choice and a "deliberative" STIT

    STIT logic

    STIT_logic

  • Public speaking
  • Performing a speech to a live audience

    the ancient Greek philosopher, identified three types of speeches: deliberative (political), forensic (judicial), and epideictic (ceremonial or demonstrative)

    Public speaking

    Public speaking

    Public_speaking

  • Soar (cognitive architecture)
  • Symbolic cognitive architecture

    bottom-up, parallel, and automatic processing. The next level is the deliberative level, where knowledge from the first level is used to propose, select

    Soar (cognitive architecture)

    Soar_(cognitive_architecture)

  • World model (artificial intelligence)
  • Internal representation of world by AI

    components. A fast reactive path handles immediate responses. A slower deliberative path performs longer-horizon planning. Video prediction accuracy or robot

    World model (artificial intelligence)

    World_model_(artificial_intelligence)

  • Symbolic artificial intelligence
  • Methods in artificial intelligence research

    reasoning, respectively." In this view, symbolic reasoning is more apt for deliberative reasoning, planning, and explanation while deep learning is more apt

    Symbolic artificial intelligence

    Symbolic_artificial_intelligence

  • Agentive logic
  • Field of philosophical and mathematical logic studying agency and action

    {cstit}}:\varphi ]} , which requires only that the agent's choice guarantees φ {\displaystyle \varphi } ; and the deliberative STIT operator, [ i   d s t i t : φ ]

    Agentive logic

    Agentive_logic

  • Vietnam War
  • 1955–1975 war in Southeast Asia

    and South Vietnamese forces were shocked by the scale, intensity and deliberative planning, as the infiltration of Communist personnel and weapons into

    Vietnam War

    Vietnam War

    Vietnam_War

  • Argument technology
  • Sub-field of artificial intelligence

    defeasible reasoning and designing robust coordination protocols for multi-agent systems. At the same time, mechanisms for computing semantics of Argumentation

    Argument technology

    Argument_technology

  • United Nations
  • Global intergovernmental organization

    organs of the United Nations v t e The General Assembly is the primary deliberative assembly of the UN. Composed of all UN member states, the assembly gathers

    United Nations

    United Nations

    United_Nations

  • Direct democracy
  • Form of democracy

    Two leading forms of direct democracy are participatory democracy and deliberative democracy. Semi-direct democracies, in which representatives administer

    Direct democracy

    Direct democracy

    Direct_democracy

  • Applied philosophy
  • Branch of philosophy

    ignorance’ objection to the deliberative conception of democracy: holding that most people are too ignorant for deliberative democracy to be an effective

    Applied philosophy

    Applied philosophy

    Applied_philosophy

  • Politics
  • Activities associated with group decisions

    ideal". Deliberative democracy is based on the notion that democracy is government by deliberation. Unlike aggregative democracy, deliberative democracy

    Politics

    Politics

    Politics

  • Commission
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    crime, in law Committee, a body of one or more persons subordinate to a deliberative assembly or other form of organization All pages with titles containing

    Commission

    Commission

  • GA
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    assembly (disambiguation) United Nations General Assembly, the main deliberative organ of the United Nations Geographical Association, a UK organisation

    GA

    GA

  • Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • President of the United States from 1933 to 1945

    1956, p. 284. Smith 2007, pp. 373–75. Mary E. Stuckey (2015). Voting Deliberatively: FDR and the 1936 Presidential Campaign. Penn State UP. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-271-07192-3

    Franklin D. Roosevelt

    Franklin D. Roosevelt

    Franklin_D._Roosevelt

  • Andrew Jackson
  • President of the United States from 1829 to 1837

    Buren, he remained calm in times of difficulty and made his decisions deliberatively. He had the tendency to take things personally. If someone crossed him

    Andrew Jackson

    Andrew Jackson

    Andrew_Jackson

  • Neuro-symbolic AI
  • Subfield of artificial intelligence

    used for pattern recognition. System 2 handles planning, deduction, and deliberative thinking. In this view, deep learning best handles the first kind of

    Neuro-symbolic AI

    Neuro-symbolic_AI

  • Aristotle's views on women
  • Nicomachean Ethics and Generation of Animals, he posits women as possessing deliberative reason but lacking authority, legitimizing their subordination to male

    Aristotle's views on women

    Aristotle's views on women

    Aristotle's_views_on_women

  • Free will
  • Ability to make choices voluntarily

    said to be caused by the agent. A number of event-causal accounts of free will have been created, referenced here as deliberative indeterminism, centred

    Free will

    Free will

    Free_will

  • Collective intelligence
  • Group intelligence that emerges from collective efforts

    keeping per-participant time costs low, and that it can outperform purely deliberative or simple crowdsourcing procedures under the paper's modelling assumptions

    Collective intelligence

    Collective intelligence

    Collective_intelligence

  • Agile software development
  • Umbrella term for certain approaches to software development

    leadership, where it suggested to administrators that slower traditional and deliberative processes should be replaced with more "nimble" ones. The concept rarely

    Agile software development

    Agile_software_development

  • Sharon Tate
  • American actress and model (1943–1969)

    Vreeland Hill (2018). Sharon Tate Campaign Plan MMXX: The Result of a Deliberative Process that Contemplates a New Dawn in Hollywood. Publisher: Michael

    Sharon Tate

    Sharon Tate

    Sharon_Tate

  • Democratic backsliding in Georgia
  • "Western-imported" focus on winning elections as opposed to the processes of deliberative democracy, and structural factors, such as political parties' inability

    Democratic backsliding in Georgia

    Democratic_backsliding_in_Georgia

  • Dramatistic pentad
  • Aspect of dramatism

    the five categories of: act, scene, agent, agency, and purpose. Burke states, "The 'who' is obviously covered by agent. Scene covers the 'where' and the

    Dramatistic pentad

    Dramatistic pentad

    Dramatistic_pentad

  • Daniel Dennett
  • American philosopher (1942–2024)

    decisions, then agents cannot be liable for resultant actions. Kane says: [As Dennett admits,] a causal indeterminist view of this deliberative kind does not

    Daniel Dennett

    Daniel Dennett

    Daniel_Dennett

  • Oath Keepers
  • American far-right anti-government militia

    Kirakosyan, Lyusyena (eds.). RE: Reflections and Explorations a Forum for Deliberative Dialogue. pp. 103–110. doi:10.21061/vtipg.re.v2. hdl:10919/81094.

    Oath Keepers

    Oath Keepers

    Oath_Keepers

  • Provisional Irish Republican Army
  • Paramilitary force active from 1969 to 2005

    Dublin, when a third of the delegates walked out of the party's highest deliberative body, the ard fheis, in protest at the party leadership's attempt to

    Provisional Irish Republican Army

    Provisional Irish Republican Army

    Provisional_Irish_Republican_Army

  • Agonism
  • Political theory emphasizing the positive aspects of conflict

    challenges to John Rawls's theory of justice and Jürgen Habermas's theory on deliberative democracy have spawned a host of new literature in this area. His work

    Agonism

    Agonism

  • Removal of Sam Altman from OpenAI
  • 2023 business action

    board of directors ousted Altman effective immediately following a "deliberative review process". The board concluded that Altman was not "consistently

    Removal of Sam Altman from OpenAI

    Removal of Sam Altman from OpenAI

    Removal_of_Sam_Altman_from_OpenAI

  • Commitment device
  • Device to implement precommitment by restricting one's future options

    approach provides a complementary psychological account: people in calm, deliberative states (“cold” states) systematically underestimate how powerfully visceral

    Commitment device

    Commitment device

    Commitment_device

  • Motivation
  • Inner state causing goal-directed behavior

    extended period before the intended goal is reached. It is often a more deliberative process that requires goal-setting and planning. Both short-term and

    Motivation

    Motivation

    Motivation

  • Japanese war crimes
  • War crimes committed by the Empire of Japan

    develop biological weapons that could be used for aggression. Biological agents and gases developed from these experiments were used against the Chinese

    Japanese war crimes

    Japanese war crimes

    Japanese_war_crimes

  • Korea under Japanese rule
  • 1910–1945 colony of the Empire of Japan

    Myeongseong"), and on 8 October 1895, she was assassinated by Japanese agents. The Korean military unit, Hullyŏndae, participated in the assassination

    Korea under Japanese rule

    Korea under Japanese rule

    Korea_under_Japanese_rule

  • Second Sino-Japanese War
  • 1937–1945 conflict in East Asia

    least 200,000 deaths, and used chemical weapons including lethal blister agents. China was recognized as one of the Big Four Allied powers in World War II

    Second Sino-Japanese War

    Second Sino-Japanese War

    Second_Sino-Japanese_War

  • Method of loci
  • Memory techniques adopted in ancient Roman and Greek rhetorical treatises

    relive memories and investigate. In the 2023 video game Alan Wake II, FBI Agent Saga Anderson uses an adapted version, which she calls the "Mind Place,"

    Method of loci

    Method of loci

    Method_of_loci

  • Tom Hayden
  • American activist (1939–2016)

    "new left" committed, in the spirit of participatory democracy, to "deliberativeness, honesty [and] reflection." The sponsoring League for Industrial Democracy

    Tom Hayden

    Tom Hayden

    Tom_Hayden

  • Frank Dignum
  • Dutch computer scientist

    agents with norms." Artificial Intelligence and Law 7.1 (1999): 69–79. Castelfranchi, C., Dignum, F., Jonker, C. M., & Treur, J. (2000). Deliberative

    Frank Dignum

    Frank_Dignum

  • United States Electoral College
  • Electors of the U.S. president and vice president

    of electors chosen by the state were no longer free agents, independent thinkers, or deliberative representatives. They became, as Justice Robert H. Jackson

    United States Electoral College

    United States Electoral College

    United_States_Electoral_College

  • Social contract
  • Concept in political philosophy

    represents some rules, principles, or institutions M represents the deliberative setting within which I endorses R It follows that a general model can

    Social contract

    Social contract

    Social_contract

  • Teller (elections)
  • Person who counts the votes in an election, vote, referendum or poll

    available to parties unless voters give it voluntarily to tellers. In other deliberative assemblies, such as voluntary associations, elections and other matters

    Teller (elections)

    Teller (elections)

    Teller_(elections)

  • Trilemma
  • Difficult choice from three options

    cover for When the People Speak: Deliberative Democracy and Public Consultation When the People Speak: Deliberative Democracy and Public Consultation

    Trilemma

    Trilemma

  • Liberalism and the Limits of Justice
  • 1982 book by Michael Sandel

    particularly the continued influence of Rawls' ideas and the rise of deliberative democracy. Sandel clarifies his critique of Rawls and engages with responses

    Liberalism and the Limits of Justice

    Liberalism_and_the_Limits_of_Justice

  • Kinshasa
  • Capital and most populous city of DR Congo

    (Communal Executive College). The Conseil Communal serves as the commune's deliberative body. Its members, known as Conseillers Communaux, are elected by direct

    Kinshasa

    Kinshasa

    Kinshasa

  • Bob Dole
  • American politician and attorney (1923–2021)

    of South Dakota took the Senate floor and condemned the role of the deliberative assembly in maintaining the U.S. presence in Vietnam, saying the Senate

    Bob Dole

    Bob Dole

    Bob_Dole

  • Surrender of Japan
  • End of World War II

    The Japanese hoped that the Soviet Union could be persuaded to act as an agent for Japan in negotiations with the United States and Britain. After several

    Surrender of Japan

    Surrender of Japan

    Surrender_of_Japan

  • Demoicracy
  • Political theory

    is why the term was later embraced by some of the major proponents of deliberative democracy like James Bohman and Samantha Besson (even if not by Habermas

    Demoicracy

    Demoicracy

  • Use of X by Donald Trump
  • [Trump] abruptly announced, via Twitter – without any of the formality or deliberative processes that generally accompany the development and announcement of

    Use of X by Donald Trump

    Use of X by Donald Trump

    Use_of_X_by_Donald_Trump

  • Eleanor of Aquitaine
  • Queen of France (1137–52) and England (1154–89); Duchess of Aquitaine (1137–1204)

    (Master thesis). Université Toulouse. Ramsey, Shawn D. (August 2012). Deliberative Rhetoric in the Twelfth Century: The Case for Eleanor of Aquitaine, Noblewomen

    Eleanor of Aquitaine

    Eleanor of Aquitaine

    Eleanor_of_Aquitaine

  • Constitution of the United Kingdom
  • Uncodified national constitution

    principle of a "democratic society", with a functioning representative and deliberative democracy, that upholds human rights, legitimises the fact of Parliamentary

    Constitution of the United Kingdom

    Constitution of the United Kingdom

    Constitution_of_the_United_Kingdom

  • Russo-Japanese War
  • 1904–1905 conflict in East Asia

    anti-Japanese and pro-Chinese faction at the Korean court was murdered by Japanese agents within the halls of the Gyeongbokgung palace, an act that backfired badly

    Russo-Japanese War

    Russo-Japanese War

    Russo-Japanese_War

  • William Barr
  • American attorney (born 1950)

    scrapped) citizenship question in the 2020 census, were withheld due to a "deliberative process" and "attorney-client communications", according to the Justice

    William Barr

    William Barr

    William_Barr

  • Meiji Restoration
  • 1868 return to imperial rule in Japan

    stipend into the new monetary system. For instance, merchants who acted as agents to sell their stipends often pocketed the profit made on these sales. Meanwhile

    Meiji Restoration

    Meiji Restoration

    Meiji_Restoration

  • Mind
  • Totality of psychological phenomena

    ISBN 978-1-4757-3779-0. Vogler, Candace A. (2016). John Stuart Mill's Deliberative Landscape: An Essay in Moral Psychology. Routledge Revivals. Routledge

    Mind

    Mind

    Mind

  • Edmund Burke
  • Anglo-Irish politician, writer and philosopher (1729–1797)

    interests each must maintain, as an agent and advocate, against other agents and advocates; but Parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one

    Edmund Burke

    Edmund Burke

    Edmund_Burke

  • Proxy voting
  • Form of voting that allows delegation

    proxy voting is incompatible with the essential characteristics of a deliberative assembly in which membership is individual, personal, and nontransferable

    Proxy voting

    Proxy_voting

  • Kempeitai
  • Military police of the Imperial Japanese Army

    Sorge, who was posing as a journalist sympathetic to Nazism, was a Soviet agent, and in mid-1940 informed the Kempeitai that Sorge was under surveillance

    Kempeitai

    Kempeitai

    Kempeitai

  • John Stuart Mill
  • English philosopher and author (1806–1873)

    greatest ability for the greatest number to develop and exercise their deliberative and rational capacities. Mill redefines the definition of happiness as

    John Stuart Mill

    John Stuart Mill

    John_Stuart_Mill

  • Joseon
  • 1392–1897 Korean dynasty

    were called "danghagwan". State Council (Uijeongbu) was the highest deliberative body, whose power declined over the course of the period. The Chief State

    Joseon

    Joseon

    Joseon

  • Irony
  • Literary and rhetorical device or general attitude towards life

    irony. Cosmic irony, sometimes also called the irony of fate, presents agents as always ultimately thwarted by forces beyond human control. It is strongly

    Irony

    Irony

    Irony

  • International Agency for Research on Cancer
  • Intergovernmental agency

    participating Working Group scientists, and to protect the integrity of the deliberative process. On 20 March 2015, IARC classified glyphosate, the most widely

    International Agency for Research on Cancer

    International_Agency_for_Research_on_Cancer

  • Boxer Rebellion
  • 1899–1901 anti-foreign uprising in China

    hinterland, built great warehouses and factories, brought in a body of dissolute agents, and calmly notified our people that henceforward they would manage the

    Boxer Rebellion

    Boxer Rebellion

    Boxer_Rebellion

  • Recommender system
  • System to predict users' preferences

    implementing bridging-based algorithms in major platforms by empowering deliberative groups that are representative of the platform's users to control the

    Recommender system

    Recommender_system

  • Heuristic
  • Problem-solving method

    alternative anchors, and providing cognitive prompts to encourage more deliberative decision-making. Other heuristics studied in behavioral economics include

    Heuristic

    Heuristic

  • Hawaiian Kingdom
  • Country in the Pacific Ocean (1795–1893)

    overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi occurred with the active participation of agents and citizens of the United States" and "the Native Hawaiian people never

    Hawaiian Kingdom

    Hawaiian Kingdom

    Hawaiian_Kingdom

  • Martinique
  • Overseas department and region of France

    composed of nine members (a president and eight executive councilors). The deliberative assembly of the territorial collectivity is the Assembly of Martinique

    Martinique

    Martinique

    Martinique

  • Special Higher Police
  • Imperial Japanese secret police force

    often undercover officers infiltrating suspect organizations and acting as agents provocateur, or voluntary informants from Tonarigumi neighborhood associations

    Special Higher Police

    Special Higher Police

    Special_Higher_Police

  • Gain-of-function research
  • Field of medical research

    effective federal oversight of GoFR as part of a broader U.S. government deliberative process. The Cambridge Working Group was formed by Harvard epidemiologist

    Gain-of-function research

    Gain-of-function_research

  • Aristotle
  • Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath (384–322 BC)

    or blame), forensic (judicial speeches over guilt or innocence), and deliberative (speeches calling on an audience to decide on an issue). Aristotle also

    Aristotle

    Aristotle

    Aristotle

  • Importance
  • Property of things that make a difference

    so-called deliberative priority but not identical to it. Deliberative priority is a form of practical preference: it determines the weight the agent ascribes

    Importance

    Importance

  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
  • Yugoslavia from 1945 to 1992

    (First Session of the AVNOJ) and claimed the status of Yugoslavia's deliberative assembly (parliament). In 1943, the Yugoslav Partisans began attracting

    Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

    Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

    Socialist_Federal_Republic_of_Yugoslavia

  • Athenian democracy
  • Government regime in ancient Athens

    Hellenistic control of Athens, with the Macedonian king appointing a local agent as political governor in Athens. However, the governors, like Demetrius

    Athenian democracy

    Athenian democracy

    Athenian_democracy

  • Scarsdale, New York
  • Village and town in Westchester County, New York, U.S.

    village justice. Our local non-partisan system encourages cooperative, deliberative and open civic government to attract highly qualified individuals to

    Scarsdale, New York

    Scarsdale, New York

    Scarsdale,_New_York

  • New Left
  • 1960s–70s Western political movement

    "closed theories". Instead they called for a "new left ... committed to deliberativeness, honesty [and] reflection". The New Left that developed in the following

    New Left

    New_Left

  • Sook Ching
  • 1942 massacre in Singapore by Japan

    had also actively participated in the killings and acted as undercover agents. According to Lieutenant Colonel Hishakari Takafumi, a newspaper correspondent

    Sook Ching

    Sook Ching

    Sook_Ching

  • Government of Rosario
  • represented by a Mayor (Intendente), and the Legislative, consisting of a Deliberative Council (Concejo Municipal). The status of the city and its form of government

    Government of Rosario

    Government of Rosario

    Government_of_Rosario

  • Democracy and economic growth
  • Anticipatory Athenian Cellular Consensus Conservative Cosmopolitan Defensive Deliberative Direct Economic Electronic Empowered Ethnic Grassroots Guided Hybrid

    Democracy and economic growth

    Democracy_and_economic_growth

  • Headquarters of the United Nations
  • Group of buildings in New York City

    solutions to specific local problems through a grid-like, mirror-like deliberative process". Due to the headquarters' symbolism, several works of fiction

    Headquarters of the United Nations

    Headquarters of the United Nations

    Headquarters_of_the_United_Nations

  • Common good
  • What is shared and beneficial for all or most members of a given community

    preferences. In contrast to aggregative conceptions, deliberative democracy emphasizes the processes by which agents justify political claims on the basis of judgments

    Common good

    Common_good

  • Dual process theory (moral psychology)
  • Theory of human moral judgment

    consciously inaccessible. The conscious-controlled process involves slow and deliberative reasoning. Moral judgments of this type are less influenced by the immediate

    Dual process theory (moral psychology)

    Dual process theory (moral psychology)

    Dual_process_theory_(moral_psychology)

  • The Cobra Event
  • 1998 thriller novel by Richard Preston

    noting with some concern that it had not gone through the customary deliberative planning process.' [11] Critics noted that not all scientific experts

    The Cobra Event

    The_Cobra_Event

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing DELIBERATIVE AGENT

DELIBERATIVE AGENT

AI search references containing DELIBERATIVE AGENT

DELIBERATIVE AGENT

  • Minter
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Minter

    English : occupational name for a moneyer, Old English myntere, an agent derivative of mynet ‘coin’, from Late Latin moneta ‘money’, originally an epithet of the goddess Juno (meaning ‘counselor’, from monere ‘advise’), at whose temple in Rome the coins were struck. The English term was used at an early date to denote a workman who stamped the coins; later it came to denote the supervisors of the mint, who were wealthy and socially elevated members of the merchant class, and who were made responsible for the quality of the coinage by having their names placed on the coins.

    Minter

  • Tatbir
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Tatbir

    Deliberate Truth

    Tatbir

  • Miner
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Miner

    English : occupational name for someone who built mines, either for the excavation of coal and other minerals, or as a technique in the medieval art of siege warfare. The word represents an agent derivative of Middle English, Old French mine ‘mine’ (a word of Celtic origin, cognate with Gaelic mein ‘ore’, ‘mine’).

    Miner

  • Manger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, Dutch, and German

    Manger

    English, Dutch, and German : occupational name for a retail trader, Middle English manger, monger, Middle Dutch manger, menger, Middle High German mangære, mengære (from Late Latin mango ‘salesman’, with the addition of the Germanic agent suffix).Norwegian : habitational name from a farmstead in southwestern Norway named as Mángr in Old Norse, perhaps from már ‘sea gull’ + angr ‘fjord’.

    Manger

  • Mercer
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Catalan

    Mercer

    English and Catalan : occupational name for a trader, from Old French mercier, Late Latin mercarius (an agent derivative of merx, genitive mercis, ‘merchandise’). In Middle English the term was applied particularly to someone who dealt in textiles, especially the more costly and luxurious fabrics such as silks, satin, and velvet.

    Mercer

  • Messenger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Messenger

    English : occupational name, from Middle English, Old French messag(i)er ‘carrier of messages’ (an agent derivative of message, Late Latin missaticum, from missus ‘sent’).

    Messenger

  • Leatherwood
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Leatherwood

    English : perhaps a deliberate alteration of Leatherhead, a habitational name from Leatherhead in Surrey, which is named from Celtic lēd ‘gray’ + rïd ‘ford’, or alternatively a habitational name from Lythwood in Shropshire, which is named from Old English hlið ‘slope’ + wudu ‘wood’.Zachariah Leatherwood, son of John Leatherwood, was born in Prince William Co., VA, about 1735. After the revolutionary war, he settled in Spartanburg Co., SC, with his second wife, Jane Calvert, and many of his fourteen children.

    Leatherwood

  • Dearth
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Dearth

    English : nickname from Middle English derth ‘famine’ (of uncertain application) or de(e)th ‘death’, Old English dēa{dh}. The latter name would have been acquired by someone who had played the part of the personified figure of Death in a pageant or play, or else one who was habitually gloomy or sickly, and the insertion of the letter -r- may have been a deliberate attempt to dissociate the name from death.

    Dearth

  • Manser
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manser

    English : from the male personal name Manasseh, Hebrew Menashe ‘one who causes to forget’ (see Manasse), borne in the Middle Ages by Christians as well as by Jews. Hebrew Menashe and its reflexes in other Jewish languages have always been popular among Jews.English : occupational name for someone who made handles for agricultural and domestic implements, from an agent derivative of Anglo-Norman French mance ‘handle’ (Old French manche, Late Latin manicus, a derivative of manus ‘hand’).

    Manser

  • Meller
  • Surname or Lastname

    Americanized form of German Möller (see Moeller).German

    Meller

    Americanized form of German Möller (see Moeller).German : habitational name for someone from Melle.German, Jewish (Ashkenazic), and Polish : occupational name for a miller or flour merchant, from an agent derivative of German Mehl ‘flour’.English : variant of Miller.

    Meller

  • Cowherd
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Cowherd

    English : variant of Coward, perhaps a deliberate respelling by a bearer anxious to avoid association with the unrelated modern English word coward.

    Cowherd

  • Mill
  • Surname or Lastname

    Scottish and English

    Mill

    Scottish and English : topographic name for someone who lived near a mill, Middle English mille, milne (Old English myl(e)n, from Latin molina, a derivative of molere ‘to grind’). It was usually in effect an occupational name for a worker at a mill or for the miller himself. The mill, whether powered by water, wind, or (occasionally) animals, was an important center in every medieval settlement; it was normally operated by an agent of the local landowner, and individual peasants were compelled to come to him to have their grain ground into flour, a proportion of the ground grain being kept by the miller by way of payment.English : from a short form of a personal name, probably female, as for example Millicent.

    Mill

  • Parliament
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Parliament

    English : presumably a nickname, or an occupational name for someone in the service of parliament, the British deliberative assembly. The name is recorded in northeast England in the 17th and 18th centuries, but appears to have died out there in the early 19th century. It is not found in the 1881 British census.

    Parliament

  • Messer
  • Surname or Lastname

    German and Jewish (Ashkenazic)

    Messer

    German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : metonymic occupational name for a cutler, from Middle High German mezzer ‘knife’, from Old High German mezzirahs, mezzisahs, a compound of maz ‘food’, ‘meat’ + sahs ‘knife’, ‘sword’. The Jewish name is from German Messer ‘knife’ or Yiddish meser.German : occupational name for an official in charge of measuring the dues paid in kind by tenants, from an agent derivative of Middle High German mezzen ‘to measure’.English and Scottish : occupational name for someone who kept watch over harvested crops, Middle English, Older Scots mess(i)er, from Old French messier (see Messier).

    Messer

  • Ledger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ledger

    English : from a Norman personal name, Leodegar, Old French Legier, of Germanic origin, composed of the elements liut ‘people’, ‘tribe’ + gār, gēr ‘spear’. The name was borne by a 7th-century bishop of Autun, whose fame contributed to the popularity of the name in France. (In Germany the name was connected with a different saint, an 8th-century bishop of Münster.)English : variant of Letcher, in part a deliberate alteration to avoid the association with Middle English lecheor ‘lecher’.

    Ledger

  • Mellas
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish

    Mellas

    English and Scottish : unexplained. Perhaps a variant spelling of Mallis.Greek : occupational name for a seller of honey, from meli ‘honey’ + the agent noun suffix -as.

    Mellas

  • Matter
  • Surname or Lastname

    German

    Matter

    German : topographic name for someone who lived by a meadow, from Matte 1 + -er, suffix denoting an inhabitant.English and Dutch : occupational name for a maker of mats, from an agent derivative of Middle English matte, Middle Dutch mat ‘mat’.

    Matter

  • Miller
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish

    Miller

    English and Scottish : occupational name for a miller. The standard modern vocabulary word represents the northern Middle English term, an agent derivative of mille ‘mill’, reinforced by Old Norse mylnari (see Milner). In southern, western, and central England Millward (literally, ‘mill keeper’) was the usual term.Southwestern and Swiss German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant of Müller (see Mueller).

    Miller

  • Marker
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Marker

    English : topographic name for someone who lived by a boundary (see Mark 2). It is notable that early examples of the surname tend to occur near borders, for example on the Kent-Sussex boundary.English : possibly an occupational name from an agent derivative of Middle English mark(en) ‘to put a mark on’, although it is not clear what the exact nature of the work of such a ‘marker’ would be.English : relatively late development of Mercer. There is one family in Clitheroe, Lancashire, who spelled their name Mercer or Marcer in the 16th century, but Marker in the 17th.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name from Yiddish marker ‘servant’.German : status name for someone who lived on an area of land that was marked off from the village land or woodland, Middle High German merkære.Danish : from a short form of the Germanic personal name Markward.

    Marker

  • Messinger
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Messinger

    English : variant spelling of Messenger.German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name for a brazier, from an agent derivative of Middle High German messinc ‘brass’, German Messing, from Greek mossynoikos (khalkos) ‘Mossynoecan bronze’, named after the people of northeastern Asia Minor who first produced the alloy.German : habitational name from Mössingen in Baden-Württemberg (Messingen in the local dialect), which is recorded as Masginga in 789, probably from the personal name Masco + ingen, suffix of relationship.

    Messinger

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Online names & meanings

  • Romney
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Romney

    English : habitational name from a place in Kent, so called from an obscure first element, rumen, + Old English ēa ‘river’ (see Rye).

  • Dhaakir
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim

    Dhaakir

    One who Constantly Praises and Remembers Allah

  • Palfreyman
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Palfreyman

    English : occupational name for a man responsible for the maintenance and provision of saddle-horses (see Palfrey).

  • Yashbir
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Yashbir

    Glorious Brave

  • Aashik
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Aashik

    Lover; Romantic; Sharp; Adorer

  • Calk
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Calk

    English : possibly a habitational name from Calke in Derbyshire ‘(place on) the chalk or limestone’, from Old English (Anglian) calc.Americanized spelling of German Kalk.

  • Mekonah
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical

    Mekonah

    A foot of a pillar, provision.

  • Gazer
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical

    Gazer

    A dividing, a sentence.

  • Mack
  • Boy/Male

    Celtic Scottish American

    Mack

    Son of.

  • FRANCE
  • Male

    English

    FRANCE

    Short form of English Francis, FRANCE means "French."

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Other words and meanings similar to

DELIBERATIVE AGENT

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing DELIBERATIVE AGENT

DELIBERATIVE AGENT

  • Council
  • n.

    Act of deliberating; deliberation; consultation.

  • Debatement
  • n.

    Controversy; deliberation; debate.

  • Deliberative
  • n.

    A discourse in which a question is discussed, or weighed and examined.

  • Premeditate
  • a.

    Premeditated; deliberate.

  • Propendency
  • n.

    Attentive deliberation.

  • Deliberate
  • a.

    Weighing facts and arguments with a view to a choice or decision; carefully considering the probable consequences of a step; circumspect; slow in determining; -- applied to persons; as, a deliberate judge or counselor.

  • Desiderative
  • a.

    Denoting desire; as, desiderative verbs.

  • Deliberation
  • n.

    The act of deliberating, or of weighing and examining the reasons for and against a choice or measure; careful consideration; mature reflection.

  • Deliver
  • v. t.

    To deliberate.

  • Deliberative
  • a.

    Pertaining to deliberation; proceeding or acting by deliberation, or by discussion and examination; deliberating; as, a deliberative body.

  • Deliber
  • v. t. & i.

    To deliberate.

  • Avisement
  • n.

    Advisement; observation; deliberation.

  • Deliberate
  • a.

    Formed with deliberation; well-advised; carefully considered; not sudden or rash; as, a deliberate opinion; a deliberate measure or result.

  • Deliberated
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Deliberate

  • Pondering
  • a.

    Deliberating.

  • Deliberate
  • v. t.

    To weigh in the mind; to consider the reasons for and against; to consider maturely; to reflect upon; to ponder; as, to deliberate a question.

  • Predeliberation
  • n.

    Previous deliberation.

  • Deliberating
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Deliberate

  • Deliberative
  • n.

    A kind of rhetoric employed in proving a thing and convincing others of its truth, in order to persuade them to adopt it.

  • Deliberatively
  • adv.

    In a deliberative manner; circumspectly; considerately.