|
Definition of Manifoldness
1. n. Multiplicity.
Definition of Manifoldness
1. Noun. (mathematics) multiplicity ¹
2. Noun. (mathematics) A generalized concept of magnitude. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Manifoldness
1. [n -ES]
Medical Definition of Manifoldness
1.
1. Multiplicity.
2.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Manifoldness
Literary usage of Manifoldness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"The number of coordinates required to specify the position of an element in a
manifoldness is thus equal to the order of the manifoldness itself. ..."
2. The Science and Philosophy of the Organism: The Gifford Lectures Delivered by Hans Driesch (1908)
"THE CHARACTERISTICS OF ENTELECHY EXTENSIVE AND INTENSIVE manifoldness Entelechy
either underlies the origin of an organic body, typically built up of ..."
3. The doctrine of sacred scripture, a critical, historical and dogmatic by George Trumbull Ladd (1883)
"These two characteristics may be called the sensuousness and the manifoldness of
this conception. It is largely due to the neglect of these characteristics, ..."
4. Mathematical Papers by William Kingdon Clifford (1882)
"AT THE BASES OF GEOMETRY. then a continuous manifoldness of fewer dimensions ...
Hereby the determination of position in the given manifoldness is reduced ..."
5. An Introduction to the Study of Society by Albion Woodbury Small, George Edgar Vincent (1894)
"CHAPTER III SOCIAL AGGREGATES AND ORGANS—THE manifoldness OF THE INDIVIDUAL § 90.
We have advanced in our examination of social Social aggre- structure from ..."
6. General History of the Christian Religion and Church by August Neander, Joseph Torrey (1851)
"As the manifoldness of the forms of revelation (/wp^oi) in which he presents
himself to the spiritual world, belongs to the essential character of the Logos ..."
7. Darwinism and Human Life: The South African Lectures for 1909 by John Arthur Thomson (1910)
"... have Present-day Organisms come to be as they are T—manifoldness of Darwin's
Services —The Web of Life—The Struggle for Existence—Variability of Living ..."