Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for apriorism. Search instead for arborise.
Definitions

apriorism

[ey-prahy-awr-iz-uhm, -ohr-, ey-pree-, ah-pree-] / ˌeɪ praɪˈɔr ɪz əm, -ˈoʊr-, ˌeɪ pri-, ˌɑ pri- /






Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Because Review tries to avoid what Buckley calls "extreme apriorism," it has parted company with some dogmatic conservatives.

From Time Magazine Archive

Moreover, apriorism has not escaped from the empirical doubt about the future.

From Pragmatism by Murray, D. L.

A postulate thus fully meets the demands of apriorism.

From Pragmatism by Murray, D. L.

He combats the apriorism of Kant in ethics as elsewhere.

From History of Modern Philosophy From Nicolas of Cusa to the Present Time by Falckenberg, Richard

Nor are the biologists quite satisfied with Spencer's reconciliation, between empiricism and apriorism, for, in the form he gave it, there is the tacit assumption that results of experience are as such transmissible.

From Herbert Spencer by Thomson, J. Arthur (John Arthur)