Pragmatism is an idea which places the highest significance on things which have practical application. In teaching, pragmatism would entail that one teach that which is the most helpful to students in a practical sense.
You have to struggle to bring justice into being and that requires pragmatism.
prudent is the root
It is a kind of pragmatism, since it views thematic knowledge as an instrumental function of experience aimed for transformation.
a prudent decision adjectives and their opposites
Prudent is an adjective.
Pragmatism is being realistic. Pragmatic people have a healthy attitude because they do not expect anything more than what is realistic. They do not worry as much about what might happen. Pragmatism is a sensible attitude.
Kristen Case has written: 'American pragmatism and poetic practice' -- subject(s): Pragmatism in literature, History and criticism, Poetics, Philosophy, Pragmatism, Literature, American poetry, History
The root word is the word itself, "prudent".
R. W. Sleeper has written: 'The necessity of pragmatism' -- subject(s): Pragmatism
Prudent means careful; circumspect; acting with forethought.
It would not be prudent to answer this question.