Falsity

  • 111material — ma·te·ri·al 1 /mə tir ē əl/ adj 1: of, relating to, or consisting of physical matter 2: being of real importance or consequence 3: being an essential component the material terms of the contract 4: being relevant to a subject under considerati …

    Law dictionary

  • 112manqué — adjective /ˈmɒŋkeɪ,mɑŋˈkeɪ/ <ref name= COED etymdate p·pos /> Unfulfilled due to some inherent flaw or an often uncertain constitutional lacking of some kind. The four possible combinations of values can be named Truth and Falsity (with… …

    Wiktionary

  • 113fallacy fallacy — noun A fallacious judgment from the falsity of a proof to the falsity of a statement to be proved …

    Wiktionary

  • 114Charles Sanders Peirce —  B …

    Wikipedia

  • 115Inferno (Dante) — Dante s Inferno redirects here. For other uses, see Dante s Inferno (disambiguation). Gustave Doré s engravings illustrated the Divine Comedy (1861–1868); here Dante is lost in Canto 1 of the Inferno …

    Wikipedia

  • 116Gustavus Myers — Gustavus Myers, Datum unbekannt Gustavus Myers (* 20. März 1872 in Trenton, New Jersey; † 7. Dezember 1942 in Bronx, New York City) war ein amerikanischer Journalist und Historiker , der einige einflussreiche Studien über Kapitalbildung… …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 117logocentrism — Term used in postmodernist writing to criticize what is perceived as an excessive faith in the stability of meanings, or excessive concern with distinctions, or with the validity of inferences, or the careful use of reason, or with other… …

    Philosophy dictionary

  • 118proposition — That which is proposed or stated; the content of a declarative sentence, capable of truth and falsity. To grasp a proposition is to understand what is said, supposed, suggested, and so on. The same proposition is expressed by any two sentences,… …

    Philosophy dictionary

  • 119positive evidence — Direct proof of the fact or point in issue, as distinguished from circumstantial proof; proof that if believed, establishes the truth or falsity of a fact in issue and does not arise from a presumption. Dictionary from West s Encyclopedia of… …

    Law dictionary

  • 120Suárez (and later scholasticism) — Jorge Gracia THE SILVER AGE OF SCHOLASTICISM The golden age of scholasticism covered a period of roughly one hundred years, from around 1250 to 1350. There were important scholastic developments before 1250 and after 1350, but it is generally… …

    History of philosophy