>In philosophy, incorrigibility is a property of a philosophical proposition, which implies that it is necessarily true simply by virtue of being believed. A common example of such a proposition is René Descartes' "cogito ergo sum" ("I think, therefore I am").
>In law, incorrigibility concerns patterns of repeated or habitual disobedience of minors with respect to their guardians.
That's what wiki gives as a definition. It seems out of place compared to the others.
>In philosophy, incorrigibility is a property of a philosophical proposition, which implies that it is necessarily true simply by virtue of being believed. A common example of such a proposition is René Descartes' "cogito ergo sum" ("I think, therefore I am").
>In law, incorrigibility concerns patterns of repeated or habitual disobedience of minors with respect to their guardians.
That's what wiki gives as a definition. It seems out of place compared to the others.