释义 |
pheˈnomenalize, v. [f. as prec. + -ize.] trans. To render phenomenal; to conceive or represent as phenomenal. Hence pheˌnomenaliˈzation, the action of phenomenalizing.
1870J. C. Simon in Contemp. Rev. XIII. 405 This doctrine [of Hegel] that the Whole of Being is phenomenal—consisting of the process which we commonly call Thought or Thinking, and which..we may call Phenomenalization. 1878S. H. Hodgson Philos. of Reflection I. 213 What was the Thing-in-itself has been phenomenalised and relegated to this possible world. 1881Fraser Berkeley 73 Phenomenalisation not being possible in the absence of sense-conscious spirits, the world, it is argued, could not have existed before man.., if its reality is only phenomenal. Ibid. 112 Berkeley phenomenalises finite things, but not finite persons. 1921Hannay & Collingwood tr. G. de Ruggiero's Mod. Philos. iii. ii. 274 Bradley..fails to see that the true absolute is..appearance itself, in so far as it is the absolute process of appearing, the phenomenalization of the absolute. |