Sentence examples for be true in practical from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

However, this may not be true in practical instances of real-time occurrences.

Unlike holding beliefs to be true, taking them to be true in practical reasoning, Bishop argues, is subject to direct voluntary control and an appropriate subject for moral evaluation.

A doxastic venture model of theistic faith thus reconciles faith as gift with faith as an action: the action is taking a faith-proposition to be true in practical reasoning; the gift provides the motivational resources for so doing, namely a firm belief in the truth of the faith-proposition, despite its recognised lack of adequate evidential grounding.

James is thus able to explain the psychological possibility of doxastic venture: one already has a 'passionally' caused belief, which one then takes to be true in practical reasoning while recognising its lack of adequate evidential grounding (compare Creel 1994, who takes 'faith' to connote a 'non-evidential doxastic passion').

It is one thing to be in the mental state of holding that p is true; it is another to take p to be true in one's practical reasoning (although these typically go together, since to hold that p is true is to be disposed to take p to be true in practical reasoning when the question whether p becomes salient).

Similar(55)

However, this assumption may not be true in most practical situations.

In the Euler method, the parameters are regarded constant, which may not be true in the practical case.

There is no principled reason why the same would not be true in complex practical deliberation about moral issues (Allman and Woodward 2008).

One difference between these two contemporary versions of fideism is that Evans focuses primarily on what is permissible in an epistemic sense, whereas Bishop begins with the ethics of fideistic belief, by considering the justifiability in moral terms of taking religious beliefs to be true in one's practical reasoning.

Doxastic venture is thus not a matter of willing oneself to believe without adequate evidential support; rather it is a matter of taking an already held belief to be true in one's practical reasoning while recognising that its truth lacks such support.

The same may be true in the context of practical demonstrations.

Show more...

Ludwig, your English writing platform

Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.

Student

Used by millions of students, scientific researchers, professional translators and editors from all over the world!

MitStanfordHarvardAustralian Nationa UniversityNanyangOxford

Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak quote

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak

CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com

Get started for free

Unlock your writing potential with Ludwig

Letters

Most frequent sentences: