
law-fit
(n. & v.) - REFUNCTION
Law-fit identifies the need or needs a law ostensibly exists to serve, and how the application of such law impacts such need. Anankelogy recognizes the inflexibility of needs and the relative flexibility of laws, so prioritizes such needs over laws, in a prosocial responsive process to unwind the unhealthy attachments to what is called toxic legalism.
A more thorough examination of the role of law with needs is addressed by the more detailed process of citationization.
leadback
(n.) Insufficient responsiveness to another’s vulnerable need due to other’s insufficient responses to own vulnerable needs (i.e., wellness is psychosocial). See coerced poor options dependence (AKA CoPOD).
leadback denial
(n.) Insisting consequential decisions from limited options result mainly or only from personal irresponsibility, and not from externalities.
leadback exaggeration
(n.) Insisting consequential decisions from limited options result mainly or only from externalities, devoid of personal agency or responsibility.
legalism
(n.) - DEFUNCTION
The shorter name for the defunction of civic legalism (i.e., nomoscentricity). Corrected by the refunction of law-fit (AKA citationization).
legitimacy
(n.) Trustworthiness to affect the exposed needs of others, especially the public. Anankelogy distinquishes between status quo "ascribed legitimacy" and need-responsive "earned legitimacy".
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