Ceteris Paribus

Do you know what this means without looking it up?


  • Total voters
    52
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Norm

Guest
"all other things being equal"?
 

BrumJim

Forum Stalwart (won't take the hint and leave...)
Remember it from my economics A-level. Which isn't bad for a 40-year-old.

Bascially economics models the world in a way that is totally unrealistic in order to understand why people (and therefore prices and production) react in a certain way. Unfortunately no one has managed to stop the world long enough to try out the theories in a controlled manner.
 
OP
OP
iLB

iLB

Hello there
Location
LONDON
In what field (of expertise, not paddock) are you giving this dissertation?

I know what it means, but will your audience?
palaeo glaciology, I would guess my professor would know what it means, and it does make sense in the context.
 

ushills

Veteran
In what field (of expertise, not paddock) are you giving this dissertation?

I know what it means, but will your audience?

Agree, okay in legal / economic dissertation where the audiance will be aware of it's meaning or expected to be aware. Not sure about other fields?
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
I'm under pressure to remove this phrase from my dissertation, but I kindof like it.
Phrases like that are fine in a dissertation if they improve it i.e. your audience knows what it means and it is much shorter and neater in the original. Neither is true of 'ceteris paribus', so I would put it in English.
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
It sounds nicer than "Holding all other factors to be equal"
It does - but less wooden translations are available. ;)
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
It's a perfect term for almost all the situations in which I've used it - unlike "everything else being equal", which is clunky. It's also a nice example of how Latin can use the ablative absolute without a participle.
 
Location
Midlands
No - I read a lot of geological papers - the good and great dont use language of that sort - clarity is the most importent criteria
 

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
it works best if you use mutatis mutandis in the same sentence

(now which box should I tick?)
 
OP
OP
iLB

iLB

Hello there
Location
LONDON
No - I read a lot of geological papers - the good and great dont use language of that sort - clarity is the most importent criteria

i do have clarity scribbled on just about every sheet of notes, the weight of evidence in one direction is irrefutable- i think it will have to go.
 
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