With this agrees, that subsequently to 'neti neti' Scripture itself enunciates further qualifications of Brahman.
In the conspectus of contents we have had occasion to direct attention to the important Sûtra II, 1, 22, which distinctly enunciates that the Lord is adhika, i.
Science enunciates her conclusions in the indicative mood, whereas "the imperative is the characteristic of Art, as distinguished from Science.
Every art has one first principle, or general major premise, not borrowed from science, that which enunciates the object aimed at, and affirms it to be a desirable object.
Bolyai, he enunciates the important theorem that, in hyperbolic Geometry, there is a maximum to the area of a triangle.
He then enunciates the four axioms which he considers essential to Geometry, as follows: (1) As regards continuity and dimensions.
Miss Prism too enunciates the aphorism that "Memory is the diary we all carry about with us," and Cecily naively informs us that "I keep a diary to enter the wonderful secrets of my life.
During the sitting that follows, Lord Henry enunciates his views of life, and his words leave a deep impression on his youthful auditor.
Aristotle here enunciates this as universally true, whereas if we turn to Categor.
Your task in refuting an alleged definition will be the easiest in those cases where it conforms to neither of the above conditions; that is, when it enunciates neither what is notius natura nor what is notius nobis.
This cannot be accepted, because it enunciates the conclusion of the syllogism as if it were one of the premisses.
A fourth locus is, where the definiend admits both of a better and a worse construction, and where the definition enunciates only the worse.
You will take notice whether the definition given thereof enunciates the correlate as only an apparent mode of good: if it does not, you have a locus for attacking it.
He enunciates the general principle: That which appears to all, that we affirm to be.
That which the definer enunciates as a definition may not be true at all, even as a predicate of the definiend or subject to be defined; or at least not true of everything that bears the name of the subject.
The rules of the Syllogism being thus the rules for such conditional affirmation, the Principle or Axiom thereof enunciates in the most general terms what is implied in all those rules, as essential to their validity.
The unhuman is the real, the extant on all hands, and by the proof that it is "not human" the critic only enunciatesplainly the tautological sentence that it is the unhuman.
Criticism, issuing the summons to man to be "human," enunciates the necessary condition of sociability; for only as a man among men is one companionable.
If, on the contrary, all the propositions it enunciates can be deduced one from another by the rules of formal logic, why is not mathematics reduced to an immense tautology?
In sum, all the scientist creates in a fact is the language in which he enunciates it.
Cyril of Jerusalem in his catechises 5^1 enunciates the same idea of [Greek: metabole] or transformation.
Like all other pure sciences, whatever it enunciates, and whatever it concludes, it enunciates and concludes absolutely.
Victor Cousin, in the last of his celebrated lectures on Locke, enunciates the maxim in the following unqualified terms.
Every art has one first principle, or general major premise, not borrowed from science; that which enunciates the object aimed at, and affirms it to be a desirable object.
Now the Protagorean formula neither allows nor disallows any one of these proposed objective criteria: but it enunciates the appeal to which all of them must be submitted--the subjective condition of satisfying the judgment of each hearer.
In like manner the Platonic Parmenides enunciates his contradictory demonstrations as real logical problems, which must exercise the sagacity and hold back the forward impulse of an eager philosophical aspirant.
He first states briefly the difficulty (which we know to have been largely insisted on by Diodorus Kronus and other Megarics) of logically explaining the fact of change--and then enunciates this doctrine as the solution.
Then he enunciates what he calls the four truths[332] about evil or suffering and the way to make an end of it.
Then he enunciates the four truths of the nature of suffering, its origin, its cessation, and the method of bringing about that cessation.
It is in the Republic, of course, that Plato enunciates his capital objections to poetry.
What Sokrates thus enunciates generally, is exemplified in detail throughout the life of Cyrus.
He does not feel the depth and difficulty of the Sokratic problems, even while he himself enunciates them.
However this may be, it is from the conversation of Sokrates that the Platonic Dialogues of Search take their rise, and we must read them under those same fundamental postulates which Sokrates enunciates to the Dikasts.
Since the foregoing paragraph was originally published, in 1858, the proposition it enunciates as a corollary from the Nebular Hypothesis, has been in great part verified.
Murchison's conclusions tacitly assume this doctrine of universal distribution, but he distinctly enunciates it.
The definition of a word being the proposition which enunciatesits meaning, words which have no meaning are unsusceptible of definition.
It is sufficient for the latest mankind: let the latter have that expounded to her, as oracular sayings, which he like the Delphic god "neither enunciates nor conceals.
The life of a northern man who is true to his country and the spirit and genius of its institutions, and franklyenunciates his principles, is not secure where there is not a military force to protect him.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "enunciates" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.