While this project is in beta mode, to continue your research we suggest you submit a portion of the chosen snippet or its reference to Google.
Once we go "live" full text of the references shown will be available here.
Each sentence is linked to search results using that sentence as the query.
| 1 |
Opposition in logic. |
| 2 |
Kinds of opposition among terms, correlation, contrariety, privation, negation. |
| 3 |
The analysis of contrariety, the kinds of terms which can be contrary, contrariety with and without intermediates between extremes. |
| 4 |
The exclusiveness of opposites as a principle of logical division. |
| 5 |
Dichotomous division, positive and negative terms. |
| 6 |
Division of a genus by differentia, the contrariety of species. |
| 7 |
The opposition of propositions or judgments. |
| 8 |
The square of opposition, contradictories, contraries, subcontraries. |
| 9 |
Modal opposition, the necessary and the contingent. |
| 10 |
Opposition in reasoning and proof, the conflict of dialectical arguments, the antinomies of a transcendental dialectic. |
| 11 |
The metaphysical significance of opposition. |
| 12 |
Opposition as limiting coexistence, noncontradiction as a principle of being, the principle of complementarity. |
| 13 |
Opposites in the realm of being, mind, or spirit, the one and the many, the dialectical triad of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis. |
| 14 |
Nonbeing as the opposite of being. |
| 15 |
The opposition of good and evil in the world and in relation to God. |
| 16 |
The reconciliation of opposites in the divine nature, the synthesis of all contraries in the Absolute. |
| 17 |
Opposition in the realm of physical nature. |
| 18 |
The contraries as principles of change. |
| 19 |
Contrariety of quality in the theory of the elements or humors. |
| 20 |
The opposition of motion and rest, and of contrary motions. |
| 21 |
The opposition of physical forces and its resolution. |
| 22 |
The struggle for existence, the competition of species. |
| 23 |
Opposition or conflict in the psychological and moral order. |
| 24 |
The conflict of reason and the passions. |
| 25 |
Conflicting emotions, humors, instincts, or habits. |
| 26 |
Conflict as the cause of repression and as a factor in neurotic disorders. |
| 27 |
The conflict of loves and loyalties, desires and duties. |
| 28 |
Conflict in human life, opposed types of men and modes of life. |
| 29 |
Conflict in society and history. |
| 30 |
Competition in commerce and the rivalry of factions in politics. |
| 31 |
The class war, the opposition of the rich and the poor, the propertied and the property-less, capital and labor, producers and consumers. |
| 32 |
The inevitability of civil strife and war between states, the means of settling disputes. |
| 33 |
Opposition or strife as a productive principle or source of progress. |
All text from the Outlines is Copyright ©1990 Encyclopedia Britannica Inc.; this electronic edition is Copyright© 2005 by Michael R. Lissack and reproduced by permission.