|
Definition of Ontological
1. Adjective. Of or relating to ontology. "Ontological speculations"
Definition of Ontological
1. a. Of or pertaining to ontology.
Definition of Ontological
1. Adjective. Of, or relating to, ontology. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Ontological
1. [adj]
Medical Definition of Ontological
1. Of or pertaining to ontology. Origin: Cf. F. Ontologique. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Ontological
Literary usage of Ontological
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ontology Or the Theory of Being: An Introduction to General Metaphysics by Peter Coffey (1914)
"The answer to this difficulty will lead us to a deeper and more fundamental
conception of what ontological truth really is. First, then, we must consider ..."
2. Ontology, Or, The Theory of Being; an Introduction to General Metaphysics by Peter Coffey (1914)
"The answer to this difficulty will lead us to a deeper and more fundamental
conception of what ontological truth really is. First, then, we must consider ..."
3. History of Modern Philosophy by Kuno Fischer (1887)
"In it the two preceding arguments, the ontological and empirical, are united.
We call this proof anthropological, and add the remark, that, without it the ..."
4. A Commentary on Kant's Critick of the Pure Reason: Translated from The by Kuno Fischer, John Pentland Mahaffy (1866)
"He had there shown that the ontological proof of the existence of God was the
only possible one ; he had attempted to construct this proof. ..."
5. The Persistent Problems of Philosophy: An Introduction to Metaphysics by Mary Whiton Calkins (1912)
"1 In the chapters to which reference has just been made it has been pointed out
that the term ' ontological' may be applied, as by Hegel, ..."
6. Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant, John Miller Dow Meiklejohn (1899)
"The first is the physico-theological argument, the second the cosmo- logical,
the third the ontological. More there are not, and more there cannot be. ..."