释义 |
ontologyon‧tol‧o‧gy /ɒnˈtɒlədʒi $ ɑːnˈtɑː-/ noun [uncountable] ontologyOrigin: 1700-1800 Modern Latin ontologia, from Greek ont- ‘being’, from einai ‘to be’ - As sure as I have tusks, this is ontology on the hoof.
- But as we can see, he does not just blame Hegel here, for according to Levinas ontology itself is the problem.
- But Puddephat goes on about hermeneutics and ontology, and the master pretends he understands.
- But this is not a comment on ontology.
- Faith and credulity, vision and delusion can only be distinguished provided that in case-studies the issue of ontology is kept alive.
- However, if functionally one is considered an unequal, ontology soon becomes irrelevant.
- In a more limited sense, Piaget, like Hegel, is attempting to transform Kantian ontology into a dialectical movement.
- They have returned, in more technical terms, to a serious concern with ontology.
► Philosophycausation, nouncosmogony, noundeconstruction, noundeterminism, noundialectic, nounexistentialism, nounfree will, nounhumanism, nounhypothesis, nounidealism, nouninduction, nouninductive, adjectivelateral thinking, nounMarxism, nounmaterialism, nounmetaphysical, adjectivemetaphysics, nounnihilism, nounontology, nounphilosopher, nounphilosophical, adjectivephilosophize, verbpositivism, nounpostulate, nounprecept, nounsolipsism, nounsyllogism, nounTao, nounTaoism, nounthinker, nounthought, nountranscendentalism, nounutilitarian, adjectiveutilitarianism, nounyang, nounyin, nounyin and yang, noun a subject of study in philosophy that is concerned with the nature of existence—ontological /ˌɒntəˈlɒdʒɪkəl◂ $ ˌɑːntəˈlɑː-/ adjective |