inferentially การใช้
- They are sometimes cliches, egregiously sarcastic, inferentially linked to the photographs.
- So the book is pretty much established as an important psychic tool, at least inferentially.
- A moral rationalist who believes that some moral beliefs are justified non-inferentially is a rationalist ethical intuitionist.
- His point was that Bailey had inferentially accused Holifield of dishonorably misrepresenting his presence on the floor when his name was called.
- About _ inferentially _ the school's most celebrated senior, Gina Grant, whose admission to Harvard College was rescinded after Harvard learned she had killed her mother several years before.
- Reformed epistemology is a form of modest foundationalism which takes religious beliefs as basic because they are non-inferentially justified : their justification arises from religious experience, rather than prior beliefs.
- Commander Jeffrey Sinclair first learns about Delenn's title ( and, inferentially, membership of the council ) in the second episode of season 1, " Soul Hunter ".
- Does depicting Jews in photographs of emaciated corpses and, inferentially, through piles of their abandoned belongings, remember them as they would have wanted to be remembered, or as the Nazis would have them remembered?
- They argue that it is a law of nature that cognitive capacities are productive, systematic and inferentially coherent-they have the ability to produce and understand sentences of a certain structure if they can understand one sentence of that structure.
- Davies et al . ( 1995 ) have argued that Cosmides and Tooby's argument in favor of context-sensitive, domain-specific reasoning mechanisms as opposed to general-purpose reasoning mechanisms is theoretically incoherent and inferentially unjustified.
- Stephanopoulos, wearing the new velvet garments of ABC pundit, was not only the first to publicly mention the possibility of impeachment, but he continues to be inferentially critical of his former boss, so soon after departing the embrace of the president.
- The view is at its core a foundationalism about moral knowledge : it is the view that some moral truths can be known non-inferentially ( i . e ., known without one needing to infer them from other truths one believes ).
- A hemolytic state exists whenever the red cell survival time is shortened from the normal average of 120 days . Hemolytic anemia is the hemolytic state in which anemia is present, and bone marrow function is inferentially unable to compensate for the shortened life-span of the red cell.
- After realizing that leaders of all Warsaw Pact nations would attend the funeral, Carter's decision was criticized by Presidential candidate George H . W . Bush as a sign that the United States " inferentially slams Yugoslavs at time that country has pulled away from Soviet Union ".
- If black women became inferentially pushed out of Bruce's community of feminists, the figure of The Black Man, nonetheless, continued his career as the quintessential misogynist _ whether embodied in O . J . Simpson, Snoop Doggy Dogg or Susan Smith's imagined dark spoiler.
- In 1876, he announced the discovery, later confirmed by other archaeologists, of traces of human presence in the Delaware River Valley dating from the first or " Kansan " ice age, and inferentially from the pre-glacial period when humans are believed to have entered upon the North American continent.
- Judge Feudale further wrote that " Spanier, Curley and Schultz are " highly educated " men who had positions of considerable influence at PSU as well as inferentially, knowledge about important events that impact the reputation of the university; and it therefore strains credulity to infer that they were somehow deluded or misrepresented by attorney Baldwin.
- Merrill D . Peterson mentions the review written by Louis Kronenberger in the " New York Times Book Review ", in which Kronenberger made the point that the book " was inferentially about the plight of the Jews in Germany even though the story concerned the Armenians . " Merrill D . Peterson says that after the novel was published in Hebrew in 1934, " it was quickly taken up and recognized by Jewish youth in Europe and Palestine as " a Jewish book "-not because the author was Jewish but because it addressed the condition and the fate of the Jews under the Nazi peril ."
- It is satisfactory, as showing how transient such impressions are, to remember that the greatest discovery ever made by man, namely, the law of the attraction of gravity, was also attacked by Leibnitz, " as subversive of natural, and inferentially of revealed, religion . " A celebrated author and divine has written to me that " he has gradually learnt to see that it is just as noble a conception of the Deity to believe that He created a few original forms capable of self-development into other and needful forms, as to believe that He required a fresh act of creation to supply the voids caused by the action of His laws . " | Charles Darwin | The Origin of Species ( 1859 ) }}