Conjunction and disjunction signs could then be defined from the negation and conditional signs. |
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Bauer's late critique assimilated Hegel with Spinoza and the metaphysics of substance, understood as the negation of form and subjectivity. |
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In my syntax seminar the other day we were discussing grammaticalisation in French negation. |
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To test the accuracy of our negation tagger, we evaluated our system against a gold-standard, human-annotated corpus of 250 reports. |
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In the classical predicate calculus only conjunction, negation and the universal quantifier are needed. |
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Like all mystically indescribable ideals, glove perfection is best described through negation. |
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What the monologue thus conceives is an experience under negation, never fully bound in the present, another mode of imposture. |
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Its transformation seems more catachresis than irony, more a twisted similarity than an inversion or negation. |
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If used inside brackets, the caret is interpreted as the negation operator. |
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Some kind of voidness, the complete negation of everything-is that Buddhism? |
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This can also lead to a certain fascination with a via negativa, a path of negation that approaches the impossible as religious experience. |
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It is the opposite or negation of the first stage, and hence is known as the antithesis. |
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There was first the bipolar world order, followed by its negation and the emergence of a unipolar world order. |
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It is merely the negation of something else, and therefore an empty formal category. |
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It was not the literature of negation that was proposed, but the negation of literature. |
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What she wants or does not want is subsumed in absolute indifference and the great overarching project of finding the perfect negation of ego. |
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To different degrees MPs tend to stand for positive usage of a value and oppose the negation of these values. |
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An antinomy is the peculiar fallacy which enables us to derive both a proposition and its negation from the same premiss. |
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At this point, the intensifier is not longer a free agent, but has become a sort of contractual associate of the negation. |
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The implicit negation in words like fail and ignore may be especially difficult to untangle. |
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He stressed he was categorically against the total negation of what had been reached in the last four years. |
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For every advance in open and democratic publishing, we must expect a response, a counter-manoeuvre and attempts at subversion and negation. |
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That unformulated coherence is what happens when we move from negation to negativity. |
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Thus, his restatement is paragraph two of the story, not the story's negation. |
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This ostensibly uncomplicated mark, associated with addition as well as cancellation and negation, invokes associations with danger and threat. |
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Violence, by definition, signals the loss, lapse and negation of a spiritual way of being. |
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Non-standard usages, like multiple negation, are sometimes attacked on the same grounds. |
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It demands an approach that is the negation of purely mechanistic materialism. |
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From this standpoint, rural people and their culture represent a negation of everything that is wholesome and pure about nature. |
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By contrast, Bergson offers an authentic conception of difference because his interpretation makes difference, instead of negation, a primitive. |
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Disjunction, implication and the existential quantifier are definable making free use of double negation. |
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Though he loved Levi-Strauss and Saussure, he showed how their relatively rigid theories of culture and language respectively contained the seeds of their own negation. |
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The double is the literary negation of personal identity and the concept of character, just as the repetition of events is the negation of time and plot. |
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It is easy to read the death's head in The Ambassadors purely as an exercise in negation, particularly since the anamorphosis so unsettles one's sense of reality. |
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The state's criminalisation of apostasy is always subject to political manipulation and indicates an absolute negation of individual rights and freedom. |
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Such negation refers to nothing that is sensibly perceptible. |
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Godel showed that in any formal system adequate for number theory there is an undecidable formula, that is, a formula such that neither it nor its negation can be proved. |
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In Literary Theory and the Claims of History, Satya Mohanty posits a hermeneutics of affirmation in contrast to Jacques Derrida's hermeneutics of negation. |
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Go with the to and fro flow through the rhythms of urbanity, through the too-human rhythms of love and loss, through the rhythms of responsible affirmation or negation. |
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Apophasis transcends both affirmation and negation, refuting in both any possible attainment of understanding beyond the limitation of conceptual analysis. |
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As a consequence, it is the guarantor of human dignity and freedom, especially in the gas chambers and gulags which are the total negation of both. |
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What about sentences containing operators like negation and conjunction? |
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The contradictions and negations of life cannot be sublated into a determinate negation because life is not a positive, given fact but is the product of human labor. |
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The most extreme threat to the principles of civility comes, then, not from the direct negation of the truth of its inversion, but rather from its perversion. |
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Any professor who has given a course on elementary real analysis will have discovered how difficult students find the formally defined notion of negation. |
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Of course, more complex formulas than these can easily be constructed, using more than one quantifier and symbols for negation, conjunction, disjunction, and so forth. |
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Australia universally uses the United States keyboard layout, which lacks pound sterling, Euro currency and negation symbols. |
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Apophasis is really the negation of rationality as a tool for approaching divinity and is the choice of the contemplative way of the mystic path. |
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Perfective, imperfective negation, simultaneous and habitual are four aspects markers in Wuvulu language. |
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With negation and abstention, nihilism and invective and derision, DIKO is led to complete untrustworthiness and disrepute. |
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Lack of a prior challenge does not negate future negation based on the national law. |
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So far from warranting any inference to the existence of a God, would, on the contrary, ground even an argument to his negation. |
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The logical negation of I should is I don't ought to or I am not supposed to. |
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The negation of can is the single word cannot, only occasionally written separately as can not. |
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It is, indeed, not too much to say that his conception of Liberalism was the negation of Socialism. |
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Use of genitive for negation is obligatory in Slovene, Polish and Old Church Slavonic. |
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The genitive case is also used in sentences expressing negation, even when no possessive relationship is involved. |
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There are also differences in the default word order and in the construction of negation, questions, relative clauses and subordinate clauses. |
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First, a number of languages do not have a single negation morpheme but have a circumfixal morpheme. |
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Both French and San origins have been suggested for double negation in Afrikaans. |
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Another form of negative narration, praeteritio, professes to omit mention of events in the narrative only to do so under the mark of negation. |
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As in mathematics, negation is used in computer science to construct logical statements. |
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Together with double negation elimination one may infer our originally formulated rule, namely that anything follows from an absurdity. |
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One obtains the rules for intuitionistic negation the same way but by excluding double negation elimination. |
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Moreover, in the propositional case, a sentence is classically provable if its double negation is intuitionistically provable. |
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This marks one important difference between classical and intuitionistic negation. |
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In intuitionistic logic, a proposition implies its double negation but not conversely. |
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The negation of a proposition p is notated in different ways in various contexts of discussion and fields of application. |
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This is probably an indication that negation may be conceptually ineffable, though effable, as will be seen later, in linguistic terms. |
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In classical logic, negation is normally identified with the truth function that takes truth to falsity and vice versa. |
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Tottie first distinguishes between intersentential negation and intrasentential negation. |
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The awkward negative operations were a consequence of the SSEM's lack of hardware to perform any arithmetic operations except subtraction and negation. |
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Beall's approach applies a logic that gives negation a nonextensional interpretation and is weak enough to preserve LEM without validating Explosion. |
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Auxiliary verbs differ from other verbs in that they can be followed by the negation, and in that they can occur as the first constituent in a question sentence. |
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There are a number of equivalent ways to formulate rules for negation. |
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As discussed by Eythorsson, a fourth stage in the negation cycle already appears in some cases in the Poetic Edda, and later became the norm in Old Icelandic. |
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The double negation follows the idea of two different morphemes, one that causes the double negation, and one that is used for the point or the verb. |
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Algebraically, classical negation is called an involution of period two. |
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Algebraically, classical negation corresponds to complementation in a Boolean algebra, and intuitionistic negation to pseudocomplementation in a Heyting algebra. |
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No agreement exists as to the possibility of defining negation, as to its logical status, function, and meaning, as to its field of applicability. |
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