Wrong thermostat? Wrong installation procedure?
They may appear to be the wrong way round when we look at a diagram of the heart, but think about it - they are the right way round relative to their location in the body. If you look down at your own heart, the left ventricle will be on the left-hand side; the right ventricle will be on your right-hand side.
When it comes to Democrats and Republicans, it's not Right versus left, it's Right versus wrong...
Nothing is wrong with shopping at Wal-Mart, if you want me to be completely unbiased. If bias is okay, then i think they do not treat their employees right and they overprice things.
Absolute time identifies the actual date of an event.
Sophists
herodotus
herodotus
herodotus
yesNoAnswer:There no absolute standards for right or wrong, as a consequence this cannot be answered
The belief that there is no absolute moral orientation, and no absolute right or wrong, is called Moral Relativism. Among the most prominent contemporary philosophical defenders of moral relativism are Gilbert Harmann and David B. Wong. Notable historical philosophers and those of similar profession that proposed and described forms of moral relativism include the Greek historian Herodotus and sophist Protagoras, and the Chinese Daoist philosopher Zhuangzhi.
No. There is no "right way" and "wrong way" of writing pseudo code, let alone qualifying with "absolute". However, a pseudo code is "wrong" if it cannot be understood, or it is incorrect in semantic (what the code tries to describe, solve, etc)
that sophists thought that knowledge was a way to improve ur life and Socrates thought that there was an absolute right or wrong
he was just smart enough to know what was right or wrong
Sophists were a category of teachers who specialised in using the techniques of philosophy and rhetoric for the purpose of teaching.
Ethical relativists such as Protagoras and Friedrich Nietzsche believed that moral principles are subjective and vary based on individual perspectives or cultural norms. They argued that there is no universal standard of right or wrong that applies to all situations or societies.
Sparta