| 释义 | 
		Definition of ontic in English: onticadjective ˈɒntɪkˈän(t)ik Philosophy Relating to entities and the facts about them; relating to real as opposed to phenomenal existence.  Example sentencesExamples -  From the sum total of such particular ontic experiences, Heidegger generalizes a set of constants that govern a broader ‘ontological’ state common to all human beings.
 -  In most Western philosophical systems, ontic truth is universal; it applies to all humankind.
 -  Kant is not saying that objects must conform to empirical knowledge, that entities must conform to ontic knowledge, but that objects must conform to synthetic a priori knowledge, entities to ontological knowledge.
 -  Generally, the line taken is that although there are certain limitations to scientific knowledge, these are noetic rather than ontic.
 -  Spacetime coincidences play this privileged ontic role because they are invariant and, thus, univocally determined.
 
 
 Origin   1940s: from Greek ōn, ont- 'being' + -ic.    Definition of ontic in US English: onticadjectiveˈän(t)ik Philosophy Relating to entities and the facts about them; relating to real as opposed to phenomenal existence.  Example sentencesExamples -  From the sum total of such particular ontic experiences, Heidegger generalizes a set of constants that govern a broader ‘ontological’ state common to all human beings.
 -  Kant is not saying that objects must conform to empirical knowledge, that entities must conform to ontic knowledge, but that objects must conform to synthetic a priori knowledge, entities to ontological knowledge.
 -  Generally, the line taken is that although there are certain limitations to scientific knowledge, these are noetic rather than ontic.
 -  In most Western philosophical systems, ontic truth is universal; it applies to all humankind.
 -  Spacetime coincidences play this privileged ontic role because they are invariant and, thus, univocally determined.
 
 
 Origin   1940s: from Greek ōn, ont- ‘being’ + -ic.     |