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单词 antinomy
释义

Definition of antinomy in English:

antinomy

nounPlural antinomiesanˈtɪnəmiænˈtɪnəmi
  • A contradiction between two beliefs or conclusions that are in themselves reasonable; a paradox.

    there are not many short novels capable of accommodating bewildering antinomies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In light of the examples of occult texts offered above, occult discourse is the result of a rhetorical antinomy between a belief and an action.
    • Furthermore, he thought that the antinomies which led to the foundational crisis, could be solved without the notion that existence is equivalent to formal constructability.
    • Kant intended that the existence of antinomies would indicate the limits of reason, or what it was possible for people to know.
    • Although the result is a non-standard account of geometry as an inexact science, Hume thinks that he thereby preserves reason from otherwise irresolvable antinomies.
    • According to Kant, antinomies are not genuine contradictions, since both of the propositions that constitute them are false, being based on a false assumption.
    • Bauer argued that while the Critique of Judgement attempted to bridge thought and being, and thus opened the way to Hegel, it reproduced the antinomies characteristic of the first two critiques.
    • The second moment of our antinomy introduces the notion of a concept.
    • What they knew—and modern Christians often miss—is that whenever our language shifts into the vocabulary of antinomy and contradiction, the words themselves no longer communicate.
    • No other examples survive, although it is conceivable that the paradoxes of motion originally took the form of antinomies.
    • Thus, Frege himself concluded that the antinomy was due to unclarities in the symbolism Russell used to formulate the paradox.
    • From Engels to Geras, a persistent antinomy emerges in which naturalism and social constructionism battle it out, each de-emphasising those aspects of Marx's work highlighted by the other.
    • This faith in the indubitable certainty of mathematical proofs was sadly shaken around 1900 by the discovery of the antinomies or paradoxes of set theory.
    • Recognizing the contradiction of aims as an antinomy would also point to one of the missing links in Habermas's theory.
    • The antinomy is comprised of a seemingly contradictory stance among occultists and mystics that, on the one hand, regards spiritual truths as ineffable, but on the other, assumes that there is much to say about ineffability.
    • Each contains an antinomy, a seeming contradiction, resolvable only by moving above the either/or into a third position that creates a broader frame.
    • This antinomy, perceived by reason and resolved by faith, is the standard paradox of Renaissance humanism, and we have met it in many shapes.
    • Such an interpretation would avoid the antinomy between the terms since both would refer to a physical object.
    • The antinomy we are considering arises from considering one side of the truth in a false abstraction from the other.
    • A constructional model may deal with some of these issues otherwise and arrive at different conclusions, which do not always imply the antinomy, in some cases.
    • Godel made an analogy between optical illusions in the physical world and antinomies like Russell's paradox in the mathematical realm.
    Synonyms
    contradiction, contradiction in terms, self-contradiction, inconsistency, incongruity, anomaly, conflict

Origin

Late 16th century (in the sense 'a conflict between two laws'): from Latin antinomia, from Greek, from anti 'against' + nomos 'law'.

 
 

Definition of antinomy in US English:

antinomy

nounænˈtɪnəmianˈtinəmē
  • A contradiction between two beliefs or conclusions that are in themselves reasonable; a paradox.

    there are not many short novels capable of accommodating bewildering antinomies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • From Engels to Geras, a persistent antinomy emerges in which naturalism and social constructionism battle it out, each de-emphasising those aspects of Marx's work highlighted by the other.
    • Kant intended that the existence of antinomies would indicate the limits of reason, or what it was possible for people to know.
    • This faith in the indubitable certainty of mathematical proofs was sadly shaken around 1900 by the discovery of the antinomies or paradoxes of set theory.
    • Such an interpretation would avoid the antinomy between the terms since both would refer to a physical object.
    • Recognizing the contradiction of aims as an antinomy would also point to one of the missing links in Habermas's theory.
    • Although the result is a non-standard account of geometry as an inexact science, Hume thinks that he thereby preserves reason from otherwise irresolvable antinomies.
    • A constructional model may deal with some of these issues otherwise and arrive at different conclusions, which do not always imply the antinomy, in some cases.
    • The second moment of our antinomy introduces the notion of a concept.
    • The antinomy we are considering arises from considering one side of the truth in a false abstraction from the other.
    • Godel made an analogy between optical illusions in the physical world and antinomies like Russell's paradox in the mathematical realm.
    • The antinomy is comprised of a seemingly contradictory stance among occultists and mystics that, on the one hand, regards spiritual truths as ineffable, but on the other, assumes that there is much to say about ineffability.
    • Bauer argued that while the Critique of Judgement attempted to bridge thought and being, and thus opened the way to Hegel, it reproduced the antinomies characteristic of the first two critiques.
    • In light of the examples of occult texts offered above, occult discourse is the result of a rhetorical antinomy between a belief and an action.
    • This antinomy, perceived by reason and resolved by faith, is the standard paradox of Renaissance humanism, and we have met it in many shapes.
    • Furthermore, he thought that the antinomies which led to the foundational crisis, could be solved without the notion that existence is equivalent to formal constructability.
    • Each contains an antinomy, a seeming contradiction, resolvable only by moving above the either/or into a third position that creates a broader frame.
    • What they knew—and modern Christians often miss—is that whenever our language shifts into the vocabulary of antinomy and contradiction, the words themselves no longer communicate.
    • According to Kant, antinomies are not genuine contradictions, since both of the propositions that constitute them are false, being based on a false assumption.
    • No other examples survive, although it is conceivable that the paradoxes of motion originally took the form of antinomies.
    • Thus, Frege himself concluded that the antinomy was due to unclarities in the symbolism Russell used to formulate the paradox.
    Synonyms
    contradiction, contradiction in terms, self-contradiction, inconsistency, incongruity, anomaly, conflict

Origin

Late 16th century (in the sense ‘a conflict between two laws’): from Latin antinomia, from Greek, from anti ‘against’ + nomos ‘law’.

 
 
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