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Definition of Antipodal opposition
1. Noun. The relation of opposition along a diameter.
Generic synonyms: Opposition
Derivative terms: Antipodal
Lexicographical Neighbors of Antipodal Opposition
Literary usage of Antipodal opposition
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Popular Science Monthly (1889)
"It would be discourteous to do more than hint the antipodal opposition of this
pleasant dream of theirs to facts. The clerics and their lay allies commonly ..."
2. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1889)
"It would be discourteous to do more than hint the antipodal opposition of this
pleasant dream of theirs to facts. The clerics and their lay allies commonly ..."
3. History of Ancient Philosophy by Wilhelm Windelband (1899)
"... that it referred all motions of individual objects to the ideologically
determined motion of the whole. It thus was in antipodal opposition to Atomism, ..."
4. History of Ancient Philosophy by Wilhelm Windelband (1921)
"It thus was in antipodal opposition to Atomism, which considered motion to be an
independent function of single atoms. It is remarkable that the ..."
5. The Nineteenth Century (1889)
"It would be discourteous to do more than hint the antipodal opposition of this
pleasant dream of theirs to facts. The clerics and their lay allies commonly ..."
6. Essays Upon Some Controverted Questions by Thomas Henry Huxley (1892)
"It would be discourteous to do more than hint the antipodal opposition of this
pleasant dream of theirs to facts. The clerics and their lay allies commonly ..."
7. Science and Christian Tradition: Essays by Thomas Henry Huxley (1896)
"It would be discourteous to do niore than hint the antipodal opposition of this
pleasant dream of theirs to facts. The clerics and their lay allies commonly ..."
8. Collected Essays by Thomas Henry Huxley (1898)
"It would be discourteous to do moie than hint the antipodal opposition of this
pleasant, dream of theirs to facts. Tho clerics and thoir lay allies commonly ..."