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Definition of Logically
1. Adverb. According to logical reasoning. "Logically, you should now do the same to him"
2. Adverb. In a logical manner. "He acted logically under the circumstances"
Definition of Logically
1. adv. In a logical manner; as, to argue logically.
Definition of Logically
1. Adverb. In a logical manner, with logic. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Logically
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Logically
Literary usage of Logically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New Realism: Coöperative Studies in Philosophy by Edwin Bissell Holt (1912)
"Epistemology is not logically fundamental.1 2. There are many existential, as
well as non-existential, propositions which are logically prior to ..."
2. The New Realism: Coöperative Studies in Philosophy by Edwin Bissell Holt, Walter Taylor Marvin, William Pepperell Montague, Ralph Barton Perry, Walter B. Pitkin, Edward Gleason Spaulding (1912)
"Epistemology is not logically fundamental.1 2. There are many existential, as
well as non-existential, propositions which are logically prior to ..."
3. Handbook of the Law of Evidence by John Jay McKelvey (1907)
"Only that which it logically relevant is admissible. Stephen defines the
word "relevant" as meaning "that any two facts to which it is applied are so ..."
4. The Science of Jurisprudence: A Treatise in which the Growth of Positive Law by Hannis Taylor (1908)
"A logically convenient arrange- nt. third, whether the object of the contract,
... 1 It is logically convenient to arrange the various kinds of contracts in ..."
5. A Treatise on Human Nature: Being an Attempt to Introduce the Experimental by David Hume, Thomas Hill Green, Thomas Hodge Grose (1882)
"With Hume •body' logically disappears 231. This 'vicious circle' was nothing of
which Locke need have been ashamed, if only he had understood and avowed its ..."
6. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1899)
"Peacock considered algebra, as then taught, to be more of an art than a science ;
a collection of rules rather than a system of logically connected ..."
7. Methods of Teaching: Their Basis and Statement Developed from a Functional by Werrett Wallace Charters (1912)
"logically ORGANIZED SUBJECT-MATTER The Common Plan. ... Moreover, each subject
has been arranged logically, as can be seen in any of the older school ..."