Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
To effect a change of ownership with the candid concomitance of a brass band.
Neohumanism considers the individual and the society to be an inalienable concomitance.
Cause and effect, he will say, are if anything less likely ("a priori") than concomitance or casuality.
In this conclusion therefore we would like to present the case for greater integration, coherence and concomitance across teacher education courses in three specific areas:
In fact, I think the concomitance of these two bans is the only really effective way of stimulating the development of alternative methods of experimentation.
In Dignāga's method of syllogistic logic, agreeing and different examples are needed to establish concomitance of the middle term.
Their analysis centered on the definition of necessary logical entailment, "vyapti", also known as invariable concomitance or pervasion.
The Doctrine of Concomitance has been used to justify communion under one kind of species, saying that the Christ is fully present in each species alone.
It signifies the relation of invariable concomitance between "hetu" and "sadhya" and is of two kinds.
In concomitance with his historical ideas, Geyl actively supported the Flemish movement, even not favouring Dutch-Flemish irredentism.
However, Buddhists refuted this view by proposing that Invariable Concomitance was easily cognizable from the relation between cause and effect or from the establishment of identity.
Inference is "anvayi" and depends upon the agreement in presence between the probans and the probandum and is founded on their positive concomitance.
What especially dignifies anumana is step three, the illustration (udaharana); it requires what is called an invariable concomitance (vyapti, literally "pervasion").
They may perhaps think consciously in words now and again, but such thought will be intermittent, and the main part of the fighting will be done without any internal concomitance of articulated phrases.
The Indian anumana strives for what is called a sufficient ground; the illustration requires an actual-not assumed-observation at all times, holding that no concomitance can be assumed which fails to be exemplified).
Cārvāka held the view that Invariable Concomitance (vyapti), a theory of Indian logic which refers to the relation between middle term and major term freed from all conditions, could not be ascertained.
It is often associated with or in constant concomitance with the philosopher David Hume who used the phrase with great regularity in his discussion of the limits of empiricism to provide an explanation for our ideas of causation and inference.
Had we no sense but sight, and that sense no object but white, they would have tended to escape our notice and everything would have merged for us into an indistinguishable identity because of the concomitance of colour and magnitude.
There has also been debate on the extent to which Clifford's doctrine of 'concomitance' or 'psychophysical parallelism' influenced John Hughlings Jackson's model of the nervous system and through him the work of Janet, Freud, Ribot, and Ey.
As an article, "Single Room Occupancy, Community of the Alone," written by Joan Shapiro, a sociologist, for the journal Social Work, said in 1965, "Many cluster in single-room-occupancy buildings where untreated illness, hunger, loneliness and sporadic violence are an unrelieved concomitance of existence."
Commenting on (167a) and (167b), he observes that only oblige can be followed by a "resultative structure", whereas make "supposes a concomitance between causation and the actualization of the effect being caused, which forces the latter to refer to the operation itself rather than to the state which results from it".
(2) That of the concomitance of the objects concomitant with the sensible qualities comes next: in this case certainly we may be deceived; for while the perception that there is white before us cannot be false, the perception that what is white is this or that may be false.
They consider induction ("tarka") to be the knowledge of the invariable concomitance (vyapti) of the middle term with the major term in the three periods of time, arising from the observation of their co-presence and co-absence, and vyapti to be of two kinds, "anvayavyapti" and "vyatirekavyapti".
Although the term has recently become very fashionable in psychiatry, its use to indicate the concomitance of two or more psychiatric diagnoses is said to be incorrect because in most cases it is unclear whether the concomitant diagnoses actually reflect the presence of distinct clinical entities or refer to multiple manifestations of a single clinical entity.
They hold the view that the universal concomitance of the middle term with the major term can never be known since their agreement in presence and agreement in absence can never be known as also their invariable concomitance because there are no class-characters and universals.