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"contrariety" Definitions
  1. the quality or state of being contrary
  2. something contrary

15 Sentences With "contrariety"

How to use contrariety in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "contrariety" and check conjugation/comparative form for "contrariety". Mastering all the usages of "contrariety" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But this very contrariety is mutually enriching: Guillot's weirdness helps to bring out the latent weirdness in Gold, and Gold's classicism points to Guillot's easily overlooked use of longstanding sculptural conventions.
Corroboration had, in some way, already been established by the time the earliest Institutional Writers had begun to illustrate Scots criminal law. MacKenzie described the ‘singularity’ of witnesses, and their ‘contrariety’, as insufficient proof – subsequently repeated by Hume, ‘...no one shall in any case be convicted on the testimony of a single witness’.BD Hume, ii p.385 (241) A similar statement appears in Alison.
Inspired by an analogy with genetic biology, Florian arrives at the conclusion that experience is characterised by an invariant, the relation of recessivity that holds between two concepts. This relation is neither a relation of opposition, like the contrariety, nor one of concordance, like the subordination. It is a special relation which exhibits features of both types of inter-notional relation acknowledged by logic.
" Dr Johnson in his work A Journey to the Western Isles, said, "This is truly patriarchal life. This is what we came to find". The lexicographer found life in Raasay most agreeable. "Such a seat of hospitality amids the winds and waters fills the mind with a delightful contrariety of images with the rough ocean and howling storm without; within is plenty and elegance, beauty and gaiety, the song and the dance.
Square of opposition In the Venn diagrams, black areas are empty and red areas are nonempty. The faded arrows and faded red areas apply in traditional logic. Depiction from the 15th century In term logic (a branch of philosophical logic), the square of opposition is a diagram representing the relations between the four basic categorical propositions. The origin of the square can be traced back to Aristotle making the distinction between two oppositions: contradiction and contrariety.
Rather than starting with experience, Aristotle begins a priori with the law of non-contradiction as the fundamental axiom of an analytic philosophical system.Similarly, Kant remarked that Newton "by no means dared to prove this law a priori, and therefore appealed rather to experience" (Metaphysical Foundations, 4:449) This axiom then necessitates the fixed, realist model. Now, he starts with much stronger logical foundations than Plato's non-contrariety of action in reaction to conflicting demands from the three parts of the soul.
An experienced trial judge was unable > to find proper description of crime in any of the ten counts of the > indictment. The Court of Appeals, with a judge of long service dissenting, > ruled that every count was sufficient. This Court, being divided, now > declares eight of the counts bad, but holds that two are sufficient. Surely, > such contrariety of opinion concerning allegations of the indictment > indicates plainly enough that no man should be required to go to trial under > it.
He moved to New Orleans, where he lived until his death. Livermore authored two treatises on the law, A Treatise on the Law of Principal and Agent, and of Sales by Auction (Boston, 1811; republished in 2 vols., Baltimore, 1818), and Dissertations on the Questions which arise from the Contrariety of the Positive Laws of Different States and Nations (New Orleans, 1828), the latter work on conflict of laws. Livermore's works continue to be cited in court decisions, most recently by the U.S. Supreme Court in Domino's Pizza, Inc. v.
Journal of the History of Ideas, 502–508. Damaris Cudworth Masham did make parallels to her father's ideas on free will (contained in his third manuscript), which appear in her publication Occasional Thoughts, > "without a capacity in the Creature to act contrary to the Will of the > Creator there could be no desert, or self-excellency in any Created Being; > contrariety to the Will of God is therefore permitted in the Universe as a > necessary result of Creaturely imperfection, under the greatest endowment > that a Created Being is capable of having, viz. That of Freedom or Liberty > of Action."Lady Damaris Masham.
As I > quoted Shaw in the book's preface, if you cannot believe in the greatness of > your own age and inheritance, you will fall into confusion of mind and > contrariety of spirit. The book was a rescuing anatomy of such belief, the > construction of a credendum—articles of faith, or at least > appreciation.Richard Howard, The Art of Poetry No. 86, The Paris Review, > interview by J. D. McClatchy, Spring 2004 He was awarded the PEN Translation Prize in 1976 for his translation of E. M. Cioran's A Short History of Decay and the National Book Award "National Book Awards – 1983". National Book Foundation.
The entire beach is backed by a coastal reserve, which incorporates coastal dunes behind the central and eastern part of the beach. The now vegetated dunes have transgressed up to 300 m inland rising to more than 20 m, with dense vegetation behind, then the shallow southern shores of circular Pipe Clay Lagoon. The beach is bordered by 54 m high Cape Deslacs in the east and 50 m high rocky cliffs in the west that run south for 3.5 km rising to 100 m high at Cape Contrariety. The beach is 2.1 km long and faces south-southeast into Storm Bay exposing it to all southerly swell.
Robert Magliola explains that most theologians have taken relationis oppositio in the "Thomist" sense, namely, the "opposition of relationship" [in English we would say "oppositional relationship"] is one of contrariety rather than contradiction. The only "functions" that are applied uniquely to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit respectively in Scripture are the following: "Paternity" to the Father, "Filiation" (Sonship) to the Son, and "Passive Spiration" or that which is "breathed out," to the Holy Spirit. Magliola goes on to explain: > Because such is the case (among other reasons), Karl Rahner rejects the > "psychological" theories of Trinity which define the Father as Knower, for > example, and the Son as the Known (i.e., Truth).
Here Hume finds three "natural relations" guiding the imagination: resemblance, contiguity, and causation. But the imagination remains free to compare ideas along any of seven "philosophical relations": resemblance, identity, space/time, quantity/number, quality/degree, contrariety, and causation. Hume finishes this discussion of complex ideas with a skeptical account of our ideas of substances and modes: though both are nothing more than collections of simple ideas associated together by the imagination, the idea of a substance also involves attributing either a fabricated "unknown something, in which [the particular qualities] are supposed to inhere" or else some relations of contiguity or causation binding the qualities together and fitting them to receive new qualities should any be discovered. Hume finishes Part 1 by arguing (following Berkeley) that so-called 'abstract ideas' are in fact only particular ideas used in a general way.
The result was a gothic church interior, with an ordered liturgy – sung matins and evensong supported by a robed choir, and frequent communion services, with an offertory of sacramental alms and a surpliced preacher. Bishop Broughton wrote of the worship at Christ Church: “I have heard objections stated to some of the arrangements in the celebration of divine service, as savouring of novelty and innovation; but I am bound to say that there is no contrariety in any part of the practice to the most approved usages of the Church of England, with which I have been familiar from my earliest years; and everything is marked by such a degree of order and solemnity, that I could wish the observances of this church to be taken, if it were possible, as a model for the imitation of every church in my diocese.”W G Broughton, A Journal of Visitation by the Lord Bishop of Australia in 1845 (SPCK, 1846) p 32.
Robert Blanché quoted a passage of Bochenski’s Formale Logik in Structure intellectuelles (1966, 39): "Hindu logic knows of three logical propositions and not the four of western logic. For it Some S are P does not signify Some S at least are P but Some S are P but not all." This passage shows that Indian tradition explicitly speaks of the existence of partial quantity, the third quantity to be considered along with totality apprehended by A the universal affirmative of the square, and zero quantity apprehended by E the universal negative of the square. To the two universals A and E entertaining a relationship of contrariety, one should add the third contrary constituted by the double negation of the first two. As the subcontrary I contradicts E and the subcontrary O contradicts A, the logical proposition apprehending partial quantity can be represented by the conjunction of I and O : I & O. In Blanché’s logical hexagon this conjunction is symbolized by the letter Y. Many scholars think that the logical square of opposition, representing four values, should be replaced by the logical hexagon, which has the power to express more relations of opposition.

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