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eximís

Eximís is a neologistic term used in some contemporary philosophical and linguistic writings to signify a mode of reasoning or categorization that foregrounds exceptional cases which depart from general rules. Proponents describe eximís as a heuristic for identifying norms that hold only under ordinary conditions, while allowing for justified departures in specific circumstances. The term remains largely scholarly and is not widely integrated into standard jargon.

Etymology and forms: Eximís appears to be a blended coinage, drawing on the Latin eximius meaning “outstanding”

Usage and scope: The concept has appeared in discussions of ethics, law, and philosophy of science, where

See also: exceptionalism, exemption, normativity, case-based reasoning, exception.

and
a
suffix
reminiscent
of
Greek-derived
abstract
nouns.
In
published
work
it
is
sometimes
encountered
in
the
form
eximis.
There
is
no
single
authoritative
etymology,
and
usage
varies
by
author.
it
is
used
to
denote
exemptions
or
exceptional
considerations
that
may
justify
deviating
from
a
general
rule.
Critics
note
that
without
clear
criteria
eximís
risks
spreading
ambiguity
or
enabling
ad
hoc
reasoning.
Supporters
argue
it
helps
formalize
dialogue
about
exceptions
rather
than
treating
deviation
as
mere
error.