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concomitance

[kon-kom-i-tuhns, kuhn-] / kɒnˈkɒm ɪ təns, kən- /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

That is, the relation of stimulus and response is either reduced to plain cause and effect or else is rejected altogether and supplanted by a bare concomitance of the physical and mental series.

From Creative Intelligence Essays in the Pragmatic Attitude by Bode, Boyd H.

The two sorts of concomitance are alike only in the one point.

From An Introduction to Philosophy by Fullerton, George Stuart

Evil itself comes only from privation; the positive enters therein only by concomitance, as the active enters by concomitance into cold.

From Theodicy Essays on the Goodness of God, the Freedom of Man and the Origin of Evil by Huggard, E.M.

Why cannot we accept the simple fact of concomitance in this case also?

From A Review of the Systems of Ethics Founded on the Theory of Evolution by Williams, C. M.

Permanence expresses in general time, as the persisting correlate of all existence of phenomena, of all change, and of all concomitance....

From Kant's Theory of Knowledge by Prichard, Harold Arthur




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