Syllabus
A syllabus (from Latin "summary") is a collection of issues decided by the authority Papal.
Summary |
The most famous of the syllabi, we note that usually a letter, is that of 8 December 1864 that Pius IX accompanied his encyclical Quanta Cura in the context of the annexation of the only remnant of the Papal States - Rome - in rest of the unified Italy. It enumerates eighty condemned propositions related to the ideas of modern times: from liberalism to socialism via Gallicanism and rationalism. The last formula is sentenced as follows:
"The Roman Pontiff can and should reconcile and compromise with progress, liberalism and modern civilization" on the grounds outlined in the speech Jamdudum cernimus 18 March 1861 that the modern or novelty are not criteria of truth. Other meaning The syllabi are also lecture notes provided by faculty and printed by a student or other service for students. The correct nomenclature is "syllabus" in the singular and "syllabus" in the plural, but people often wrongly used the plural "syllabi", the word finds its etymology in Greek, not Latin, for example, the syllabus syllabus of physics and chemistry and physics. Furthermore, the orthographic reform of 1990 resolves the confusion, since users can now follow the plural French foreign names Anglicized. On the other hand, it is worth noting that using the Latin plural "syllabi" has little meaning outside the religious framework, as the first word comes from the Greek "syllabos" should, therefore, if the we persisted in trying to use the plural original to say "syllaboi" (as the plural of the second declension in Greek ). However, this form is not recognized in French, he will be content with a regular plural "syllabus." References
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