0 present participle of promulgate
1 to spread beliefs or ideas among a lot of people
2 to announce something publicly, especially a new law:
A consensus among physicians that lean was healthy only developed after insurance companies began promulgating ideal body-weight tables (the first appeared in 1912).
But the northern activists would not have seen themselves as promulgating ethnicity, rather as fostering universal human rights and a higher degree of civilization.
It is not clear a priori that it is necessary for the state to take a role in promulgating and enforcing those standards.
Moreover, the rationality of promulgating statutes-provided there are always simplest cases-follows automatically.
Promulgating the second version was extremely risky, for an impotent king is no true king.
The process of arriving at consensus or promulgating it will also be important.
But intentionalism, as we have seen, accounts for epistemic guidance at a price and limits the rationality of promulgating statutory texts.
So social salience theory supports the rationality of the practice of promulgating statutes under more circumstances than do applied semantic realism and intentionalism.