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The rule is what indicates how to proceed with respect to a certain matter or matter. Given the enormous diversity of issues in which human activity is involved, it is to be expected that there are many, many rules. However, most of them fit into one of the four main categories of standards which are:
- Legal norms
- Ethical standards
- Religious norms
- Social norms
These are the ones that govern everyday human behavior. Additionally, technical standards regulate aspects more focused on issues related to the world of work.
The norms in a society
The norms of a society demonstrate its attachment and respect for human virtues and make peaceful coexistence possible. The set of norms is called normative, and this acts as a foundation that governs the whole of a certain matter.
For example, legal regulations regulates what has to do with the functioning of justice; the regulations of a language regulate the correct expression of ideas materialized through the word.
Differences between norms and rules
The words norm and rule are often used interchangeably, although there is a certain difference:
- In the rules the notion of duty or ought to be predominant, based on ethical or moral issues, that is, they point to the depths of human behavior.
- In the rules what the standards support is specified in precise and unequivocal terms. Rules often regulate more trivial activities, such as a board game or sport, and the set of rules is called a regulation.
The regulations must always materialize by written, since all the people involved must know it in order to respect it. In hotels, for example, the hotel regulation is almost always posted somewhere in the room (often behind the front door).
Thus, every passenger can know in advance issues that make the behavior expected by passengers (entry and exit times, breakfast, charges for extra consumption, care of valuables, etc.), which tends to avoid possible misunderstandings.
It can serve you:
- Examples of social, moral, legal and religious norms
Examples of standards
- Legal norms
- Moral standards
- Religious norms
- Social norms (uses and customs)
- Technical standards
- Analysis standards
- Norms of a language (normative)
- House Rules
- Rules of etiquette
- Traffic rules
- Quality standards
- Conventional standards
- Rules of courtesy
- Equal treatment standards