Sentence examples for mature conception of from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

Popper despised, as did Russell, Wittgenstein's mature conception of philosophy.

However, Feigl's mature conception of a synthesis of scientific realism and logical empiricism is to be found in his 1950 article "Existential Hypotheses" (published in Philosophy of Science).

While the Idealist and New Liberal assault on individualism is one important element of the intellectual background to Dewey's political philosophy, this should also be located against the background of his own mature conception of inquiry.

From such a liberalized Lockean basis, not wholly experiential but not arrived at without experience, a child may, with further experience and learning, progress to a more mature conception of good and thence to the common adult conception of pleasure as feeling that is good.

American critic Samuel Rogers, however, notes that "without the training they gave Balzac, as he groped his way to his mature conception of the novel, and without the habit he formed as a young man of writing under pressure, one can hardly imagine his producing La Comédie Humaine".

Similar(55)

From the beginning of the album, you can recognize his mature conception, even while you hear Coleman and Cherry chafing at the more conventional forms imposed by the pianist and bassist that the label brought in.

While a mature conception will distinguish behavioral expression from its inward cause (as Walther does, in lines 28-29, quoted in note 8), the very young child may possess a less differentiated conception in which the salient contrasts between smiling or laughing and crying (Walther, line 29), and generally between the external expressions of the positive and negative affects, are prominent.

Thus, by the time of "Meaning and Verification", he had moved well beyond his 'Form and Content' stage, modulating the virulent Positivism of his earlier thinking, to arrive at a more mature and balanced conception of the issues at the focus of his philosophical concerns (Oberdan 1996, Sec. 5).

The impetus for this type of interpretation arises out of commitments to a conception of mature science that presumes theories are abstract systems with a small set of laws or core principles (see the entry on the structure of scientific theories).

Indeed, as their conception of neoconservatism matures in the years ahead, it is likely to become increasingly Chinese, rather than simply an adapted version of what we recognize in America.

Does the existence of revolutions in mature sciences support a postmodern or "post-critical" (Polanyi) rather than a modern, neo-Enlightenment conception of science in relation to other human enterprises?

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