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  2. Antireductionism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antireductionism

    An example of antireductionism in psychology is Donald Davidson's proposed ontology of what he calls 'events' and its use "to provide an antireductionist answer to the mind/matter debate ...[and to show that]...the impossibility of intertranslating the two idioms by means of psychophysical laws blocks any analytically reductive relation between...the mental and the physical".

  3. Evidentiality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidentiality

    The speaker reports an event on the basis of someone else's report (quotative, i.e. hearsay evidence), of a dream (revelative evidence), of a guess (presumptive evidence) or of his own previous experience (memory evidence)." Jakobson also was the first to clearly separate evidentiality from grammatical mood.

  4. Unpaired word - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unpaired_word

    The corresponding Latin antonym, ars, is the source of English art, which is not an antonym of inert. Inflammable Flammable Synonym. From Latin flammare meaning "to catch fire". Inflammable is from Latin inflammare meaning "to cause to catch fire". Antonym is nonflammable. [4] Innocent Nocent Rare. Means "harmful". Innocuous Nocuous Uncommon [5 ...

  5. Concise Oxford English Dictionary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concise_Oxford_English...

    Mobisystems pages: Concise Oxford English Dictionary and Thesaurus, Concise Oxford English Dictionary with Audio, Concise Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary, Concise Oxford-Paravia Italian Dictionary, Concise Oxford American Dictionary, Concise Oxford American Thesaurus, Concise Oxford American Dictionary and Thesaurus; Amazon USA information

  6. Contronym - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contronym

    Some English examples result from nouns being verbed in the patterns of "add <noun> to" and "remove <noun> from"; e.g. dust, seed, stone. Denotations and connotations can drift or branch over centuries.

  7. Empirical evidence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empirical_evidence

    A thing is evidence for a proposition if it epistemically supports this proposition or indicates that the supported proposition is true. Evidence is empirical if it is constituted by or accessible to sensory experience. There are various competing theories about the exact definition of the terms evidence and empirical. Different fields, like ...

  8. A priori and a posteriori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_priori_and_a_posteriori

    For example, the proposition that water is H 2 O (if it is true): According to Kripke, this statement is both necessarily true, because water and H 2 O are the same thing, they are identical in every possible world, and truths of identity are logically necessary; and a posteriori, because it is known only through empirical investigation.

  9. Evidence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence

    [5] [3] [6] In a more modern usage, the plural form is also used. In academic discourse, evidence plays a central role in epistemology and in the philosophy of science. Reference to evidence is made in many different fields, like in science, in the legal system, in history, in journalism and in everyday discourse.