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Changing the meaning of one word thus changes the content of at least some of the inferences and beliefs that constitute the meaning of other terms in the language, and so a change in the meaning of one term quickly leads to a change in the meaning of the rest.
Moreover, with a small change in our theories or background beliefs, or just in our understanding of the conditions for measurement, we might change the tests on which we rely, but often without changing the meaning of the sentences whose truth we might be trying to test (which, as Putnam 1965 [1975] pointed out, is precisely what practicing scientists regularly do).
A simple reflection in an interview means that the counselor repeats what the patient says without changing the meaning of the sentence e.g. Patient: I have a short time left to live.
Meet the young chefs who are changing the meaning of French food.
Andrea Dworkin, the feminist writer, argued that changing the meaning of "wifebeater" had consequences for how the crime of domestic violence is perceived.
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The terrorists coped with the American ability to intercept conversations worldwide by constantly changing codes — often doing little more than changing the meanings of commonly used phrases.
The terrorists coped with the American ability to intercept conversations worldwide by constantly changing codes often doing little more than changing the meanings of commonly used phrases.
It follows from the above definitions that if L is closed and connected, it cannot be enriched without changing the meanings of the original expressions.
This would be less serious if one had a notion of belief in which one already, in some sense, believed all of the inferential commitments of one's explicit beliefs (Brandom 1994), though it would still have the consequence of an invalid inference changing the meanings of the terms involved because of the new commitments acquired.
Indeed, the electrification of lighting has in many ways defined the modern city, in extending the visibility of its public spaces, inhabitants and itinerants beyond the hours of natural daylight (Martland, 2002; Otter, 2002) and changing the meanings of the night for city dwellers (Schlör, 1998).
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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
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com