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单词 noetic
释义

Definition of noetic in English:

noetic

adjective nəʊˈɛtɪknoʊˈɛdɪk
formal
  • Relating to mental activity or the intellect.

    智力的;理性的

    the noetic quality of a mystical experience refers to the sense of revelation
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Now foundationalism is best construed, I think, as a thesis about rational noetic structures.
    • He describes knowing as a process of abstracting conceptual images from created beings. Knowing thus involves an ascent from the particular data of sensory experience to the noetic realm of concepts.
    • Generally, the line taken is that although there are certain limitations to scientific knowledge, these are noetic rather than ontic.
    • Moroney examines the views of John Calvin, Abraham Kuyper, and Emil Brunner regarding the noetic effects of sin, the ways in which sin negatively affects and undermines human knowledge.
    • These mental images have no privileged status, such as Plato gave to his noetic Ideas or Forms; they are always true, but in this do not differ from the information provided by the senses.
    • It's the same noetic principle, which is referred to by Vernadsky.
    • Vernadsky spoke about the role of the individual, and the individual's contribution to society, the cognitive contribution, the noetic contribution.
    • The hemispheres of the brain are now generally held to be the seat of those teleorganic processes which are coincident with noetic ideas and the active faculties of the mind.
    • In the words of one of its founders, noetic science is concerned with subjective experience as opposed to materialistic science (which is essentially interested in objective experience).
    • This is the so-called noetic principle, as described by Vernadsky.
    • In order for us to have true beliefs we have to have properly functioning noetic equipment (brain, spinal cord, senses, etc. that operate in accordance with reality).
    • Instead, reliable human access to natural law is a matter of noetic knowledge, of personal spiritual experience with God.
    • The tradition of magical drumming is alive and well, and the effect of rhythm on our consciousness is recognized by more and more students of the noetic sciences.
    • It represented more than a rigid code of behavior; it ‘is not a random collection of laws, but a method, an approach which creates a noetic reality.’
    • They say that one could be rational in accepting a noetic system that has atheism as its foundational presupposition, since there is no good objective evidence for God's existence.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Greek noētikos, from noētos 'intellectual', from noein 'perceive'.

Definition of noetic in US English:

noetic

adjectivenōˈediknoʊˈɛdɪk
formal
  • Relating to mental activity or the intellect.

    智力的;理性的

    the noetic quality of a mystical experience refers to the sense of revelation
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Now foundationalism is best construed, I think, as a thesis about rational noetic structures.
    • This is the so-called noetic principle, as described by Vernadsky.
    • The hemispheres of the brain are now generally held to be the seat of those teleorganic processes which are coincident with noetic ideas and the active faculties of the mind.
    • They say that one could be rational in accepting a noetic system that has atheism as its foundational presupposition, since there is no good objective evidence for God's existence.
    • The tradition of magical drumming is alive and well, and the effect of rhythm on our consciousness is recognized by more and more students of the noetic sciences.
    • It's the same noetic principle, which is referred to by Vernadsky.
    • It represented more than a rigid code of behavior; it ‘is not a random collection of laws, but a method, an approach which creates a noetic reality.’
    • In the words of one of its founders, noetic science is concerned with subjective experience as opposed to materialistic science (which is essentially interested in objective experience).
    • These mental images have no privileged status, such as Plato gave to his noetic Ideas or Forms; they are always true, but in this do not differ from the information provided by the senses.
    • Instead, reliable human access to natural law is a matter of noetic knowledge, of personal spiritual experience with God.
    • Vernadsky spoke about the role of the individual, and the individual's contribution to society, the cognitive contribution, the noetic contribution.
    • Moroney examines the views of John Calvin, Abraham Kuyper, and Emil Brunner regarding the noetic effects of sin, the ways in which sin negatively affects and undermines human knowledge.
    • Generally, the line taken is that although there are certain limitations to scientific knowledge, these are noetic rather than ontic.
    • In order for us to have true beliefs we have to have properly functioning noetic equipment (brain, spinal cord, senses, etc. that operate in accordance with reality).
    • He describes knowing as a process of abstracting conceptual images from created beings. Knowing thus involves an ascent from the particular data of sensory experience to the noetic realm of concepts.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Greek noētikos, from noētos ‘intellectual’, from noein ‘perceive’.

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