Taxonomy vs Promarket - What's the difference?
taxonomy | promarket |
The science or the technique used to make a classification.
A classification; especially , a classification in a hierarchical system.
(taxonomy, uncountable) The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms.
In favor of the free market, of capitalism.
* 2006 , Michael Courville and Raj Patel, "The Resurgence of Agrarian Reform in the Twenty-first Century", introduction to Promised land: competing visions of agrarian reform , Food First Books, ISBN 978-0-935028-28-7, pages 18–19:
As a noun taxonomy
is the science or the technique used to make a classification.As an adjective promarket is
in favor of the free market, of capitalism.taxonomy
English
(wikipedia taxonomy)Noun
(taxonomies)Synonyms
* alpha taxonomyDerived terms
* folk taxonomy * scientific taxonomySee also
* classification * rank * taxon * domain * kingdom * subkingdom * superphylum * phylum * subphylum * class * subclass * infraclass * superorder * order * suborder * infraorder * parvorder * superfamily * family * subfamily * genus * species * subspecies * superregnum * regnum * subregnum * superphylum * phylum * subphylum * classis * subclassis * infraclassis * superordo * ordo * subordo * infraordo * taxon * superfamilia * familia * subfamilia * ontologypromarket
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- The promarket argument fails to acknowledge not only the noncommodity nature of food production, but also the falsity of the assumption that rising GDP inevitably leads to decreased poverty for rural dwellers. Conceptualizing agriculture as a commodity-oriented system of production, the World Bank's MALR [market-assisted land reform] models and the neoliberal economic models that spawned it avoid any direct consideration of the relationship between the land and the majority of the world's poor.