| 释义 | 
		Definition of pragmatically in English: pragmaticallyadverb praɡˈmatɪk(ə)lipræɡˈmædək(ə)li 1In a sensible and realistic way that is based on practical rather than theoretical considerations.  they acted pragmatically in response to circumstances  Example sentencesExamples -  "It didn't occur to me to worry that they were looking at it," she says pragmatically.
 -  The response has been to think pragmatically about high-density and very high-rise housing.
 -  Our goal is to help them acquire the background they need in how buildings go together pragmatically.
 -  Far from being a relaxed, social occasion, the bazaar is pragmatically designed for making money.
 -  She preferred not to carry a heavy backpack, and at times she pragmatically let men haul it for her.
 -  Community leaders are often business people, so we approach them pragmatically.
 -  Looking for alternatives to current models of online education, he rather pragmatically suggests five points on how we should proceed.
 -  The gallery director is eyeing the Winter Olympics pragmatically.
 -  The noted garden historian disparages landscape architects for pragmatically lacking a theoretical basis for design.
 -  She moved to Raleigh, she remarried, and she had breast cancer—but she is pragmatically Zen about all of it.
 
 - 1.1 In terms of philosophical or political pragmatism.
 the acceptance of an empirical belief might be pragmatically justified  Example sentencesExamples -  She asks feminist and other readers of Foucault to pragmatically judge his work on what it does—that is, on the transformative impact that it has on their lives.
 -  Epistemological realism is misguided theoretically and pragmatically.
 -  The propriety of adopting the intentional stance towards a system is settled pragmatically in terms of the utility of its application in interacting with the system.
 -  He claims he is not a Stoic while prescribing a pragmatically Stoic remedy.
 -  The 'correct' standard to set for claims to knowledge is to be decided pragmatically, on grounds of practical convenience.
 -  Such 'pragmatically self-verifying' propositions seem too specialized to serve as models for foundational judgements generally.
 -  According to a pragmatically inspired democratic experimentalism, attempts at democratisation and reform need not wait for publics to emerge.
 -  He takes the causal field to be a set of assumed conditions pragmatically superimposed on a preselective notion of connection.
 -  It is causation that provides the real basis for the pragmatically selected natural kinds we attend to.
 -  Is it pragmatically better to believe in God than not, insofar as theists, taken across all possible worlds, are on average better off than atheists?
 
  
    Definition of pragmatically in US English: pragmaticallyadverbpræɡˈmædək(ə)lipraɡˈmadək(ə)lē 1In a sensible and realistic way that is based on practical rather than theoretical considerations.  they acted pragmatically in response to circumstances  Example sentencesExamples -  The gallery director is eyeing the Winter Olympics pragmatically.
 -  She moved to Raleigh, she remarried, and she had breast cancer—but she is pragmatically Zen about all of it.
 -  Far from being a relaxed, social occasion, the bazaar is pragmatically designed for making money.
 -  Our goal is to help them acquire the background they need in how buildings go together pragmatically.
 -  The response has been to think pragmatically about high-density and very high-rise housing.
 -  Looking for alternatives to current models of online education, he rather pragmatically suggests five points on how we should proceed.
 -  The noted garden historian disparages landscape architects for pragmatically lacking a theoretical basis for design.
 -  She preferred not to carry a heavy backpack, and at times she pragmatically let men haul it for her.
 -  "It didn't occur to me to worry that they were looking at it," she says pragmatically.
 -  Community leaders are often business people, so we approach them pragmatically.
 
 - 1.1 In terms of philosophical or political pragmatism.
 the acceptance of an empirical belief might be pragmatically justified  Example sentencesExamples -  The propriety of adopting the intentional stance towards a system is settled pragmatically in terms of the utility of its application in interacting with the system.
 -  The 'correct' standard to set for claims to knowledge is to be decided pragmatically, on grounds of practical convenience.
 -  It is causation that provides the real basis for the pragmatically selected natural kinds we attend to.
 -  Epistemological realism is misguided theoretically and pragmatically.
 -  She asks feminist and other readers of Foucault to pragmatically judge his work on what it does—that is, on the transformative impact that it has on their lives.
 -  According to a pragmatically inspired democratic experimentalism, attempts at democratisation and reform need not wait for publics to emerge.
 -  He claims he is not a Stoic while prescribing a pragmatically Stoic remedy.
 -  He takes the causal field to be a set of assumed conditions pragmatically superimposed on a preselective notion of connection.
 -  Is it pragmatically better to believe in God than not, insofar as theists, taken across all possible worlds, are on average better off than atheists?
 -  Such 'pragmatically self-verifying' propositions seem too specialized to serve as models for foundational judgements generally.
 
  
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