Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
But this is all that can univocally be said about it.
Each file can be univocally located by its path.
Deleuze adapts the doctrine of univocity to claim that being is, univocally, difference.
The warm participated in a fiercely fragmented, multiparty democracy; the cold univocally worshiped the Emperor.
Harclay's argument for the univocal concept of being seeks to answer two questions: "whether there is anything univocally common between God and his creatures.
The aim of phytosociology is to achieve a sufficient empirical model of vegetation using plant taxa combinations that characterize univocally vegetation units.
Witold Korczyński: an univocally positive hero; Witold symbolises young people who draw conclusions from the past and believe in the rebirth of the nation.
A movement towards the agapeic cannot be done dialectically or univocally because both narrow and define, nor equivocally since transcending requires movement in the between, not mere equivocity.
According to Richard Jeffrey, "Before the middle of the seventeenth century, the term 'probable' (Latin probabilis) meant approvable, and was applied in that sense, univocally, to opinion and to action.
That is, God only differs from us in degree, and properties such as goodness, power, reason, and so forth are univocally applied, regardless of whether one is talking about God, a person, or a flea.
The ministerials, as they were called, were now univocally against, because they had seen the formation of the peasants' friends as a threat to what they deemed to be the ideal, the totally independent representative.
Iterative descent clustering methods, such as the SOM and K-means clustering circumvent some of the shortcomings of Hierarchical clustering by providing for univocally defined clusters and cluster boundaries.
The origin is the "original givenness that frees beings into their freedom" and must be understood as an agapeic gift which is overdetermined and thus cannot be aptly described or determined univocally or dialectically.
Unlike Joyce, however, Mr. Green is totally without humor and univocally solemn in his mode of presentation of, for instance, Ted, a young American sailor whose "pale gold, tousled hair lent him a sort of glory."
In other words, if you think you're entitled to be simply and univocally happy, any deviation from planned perfection may result in grievous complaints; those who never had much hope for anything may express contentment with a seemingly bad lot.
In a single sentence, parallel to Aristotle's statement asserting that being is substance, St. Thomas pushes away from the Aristotelian doctrine: "Being is not a genus, since it is not predicated univocally but only analogically."
Pointing out that predicables are predicated univocally of substances; that is, they refer to "the same thing" found in each instance, St. Thomas argued that whatever can be said about being is not univocal, because all beings are unique, each actuated by a unique existence.
The Lutheran scholar Robert Jenson chastises Christian feminists for being so foolish as to think that the term 'Father' is being used univocally (having the same connotations) when used of human fathers and of God; as though to imply that there is sexuality in God.
Quine's holistic argument against the neo-positivists set out to demolish the assumption that every sentence of a language is bound univocally to its own set of potential verifiers and falsifiers and the result was that the epistemological value of every sentence must depend on the entire language.
In his study of Machiavelli, examining the relationship between prudence and moderation, rhetorical scholar Eugene Garver holds that there is a middle ground between "an ethics of principles, in which those principles univocally dictate action" and "an ethics of consequences, in which the successful result is all."