Devoid vs Piaget - What's the difference?
devoid | piaget |
empty; having none of; completely without
of French origin.
(Jean Piaget) (1896–1980), Swiss developmental psychologist and philosopher.
* '>citation
As an adjective devoid
is empty; having none of; completely without.As a verb devoid
is (obsolete) to empty out; to remove.As a proper noun piaget is
of french origin.devoid
English
Adjective
(-)- I went searching for a knife, but the kitchen was devoid of anything sharper than a spoon.
Derived terms
* devoidnessAnagrams
*piaget
English
(wikipedia Piaget)Proper noun
(en proper noun)- Piaget'2 has conducted many careful studies on the evolu-
tion of games during childhood, and has suggested that moral
behavior consists in a system of rules, and the essence of all
morality is to be sought for in the respect which the individual
acquires for these rules."3 ' Piaget thus equates morality, or
ethical feeling and conduct, with the individual's attitude
toward and practice of various rules. This perspective provides
a rational basis for the analysis of moral schemes as games,
and of moral behavior as the players' actual conduct.
