apodictic उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The Apodictic laws ( a type of law characterized by absolute or general commands or prohibitions, as in the Ten Commandments ) The Covenant Code, like other biblical codes, differs from these by including among the laws dealing with criminal and civil matters various regulations concerning worship.
- His sentences are complex and nuanced, even though balanced and sinuous, and the unfamiliar words he regularly employs would fill a substantial portion of this column : rescension, instauration, apodictic, stochastic, rebarbative, kerygmatic, scission, pericope, optative, maieutic, autochthanous, to list but a portion of them.
- I am amazed that, in the very short report on Manfred Eigen's career in Manfred Eigen, almost 25 % of the whole text are spent to report on a decision of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany about an habilitation examination where Eigen was an ( apparently critical ) member of the examination commission, trying to blame him as being " apodictic ".
- I always interpreted it that apodictic way : " X is the best, and I will tolerate no dissent ! " or " X is the best, and I dare you to disagree ! " Two puns I remember from an old graffiti collection are " Maggie rules UK " and " Dyslexia lures KO " .---talk 04 : 37, 10 May 2014 ( UTC)
- Twenty-eight poems make up " The Making of Collateral Beauty " beginning with the introductory A Note on the Notes where promises are made that none of this is necessary in order to be entertained, instructed, or mauled by the apodictic poems in Mr . Yakich s [ previous ] book . . . unless you are a native speaker of German . Yakich next compares German to French in its beauty, and further makes the claim that the most beautiful word in German is actually Austrian : Zwetschkenkn�del.
- All knowledge for Coleridge rests on the " coadunation " of subject and object, of the representation in the mind ( thought ) of a sense experience with the object itself, which can only occur where there is a connection between subject and object ('a reciprocal concurrence of both') beyond pure sense-experience, such that the thought that arises out of'the mind's self-experience in the act of thinking'produces not a representation but a phenomenon ( in the Hediggerian sense ) that is the re-enactment in the mind of reality ( such as for Collingwood in his " Idea of History " ) and as such is knowledge that is apodictic, heuristic and hermeneutic all at the same time.