Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(2)
Exact(3)
Steiner, himself trilingual to the point, he claims, of not knowing which was his first language, German, English or French, is preoccupied with the philosophical impossibility of something he does every day.
For example, the nomic impossibility of something traveling faster than light is a direct consequence of it being a law of nature that that nothing can travel faster than light.
Wittgenstein concludes that the independence of elementary propositions must be abandoned and that terms for real numbers must enter into atomic propositions, so that the impossibility of something's having both exactly one and exactly two degrees of brightness emerges as an irreducibly mathematical impossibility.
Similar(57)
The central part of the Tate's show, covering the 1920s and 1930s, is to a large extent about failure: the impossibility of grafting something hard and empirical on to a national tradition that reverts, inevitably, to lyricism.
That was a great image to play with - the impossibility of wanting something like this, and then the cost of having it".
But what she can do is act out this impossibility: the impossibility of conveying something, behind which the character's experiences lie". It doesn't take long for Nelly to encounter Johnny Ronald Zehrfeldd, Hoss' excellent "Barbara" costar), working as a harried busboy in a club in the American sector called Phoenix.
In 1903, the year of Spencer's death, the moral philosopher G. E. Moore identified what he called "the naturalistic fallacy" — the logical impossibility of inferring that something is good from a proposition about its natural properties.
As for Damian's claim about "this impossibility" (haec... inpossibilitas), which applies to nature but not to God, it is not clear whether he refers to the impossibility of bringing about something that violates the principle of non-contradiction or the impossibility of restoring virginity.
And so, paradoxically, it is by thinking more about the downers in life, such as the inevitability of death, the inescapability of suffering or the impossibility of security, that we achieve something like happiness.
Methodologically, Wolff starts with the psychological impossibility of believing or judging that something both is and is not.
It may simply be that our mind is revolting against the impossibility of a "magic window" showing something so lifelike that is clearly not reality.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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