释义 |
‖ judicatum Philos. rare.|dʒuːdɪˈkeɪtəm, -ɑːtəm| Pl. -ata. [L. jūdicātum judgement, pa.pple. of jūdicāre to judge.] (See quots.)
1913Mind XXII. 15 As I use the term, the proposition is what the logicians call the import of the judgment or proposition. It is the propositum or judicatum. I do not use it as equivalent either to the act of judging or the verbal sentence. 1935Mind XLIV. 365 A judgement to the effect that A is B seems to be just a judgement (act of judging) whose object or judicatum is that A is B. 1936H. H. Price Truth & Corrigibility 17 The relation is between judicata or judicabilia, or—as some call them—‘propositions’. |