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Definition of Methodic
1. a. Arranged with regard to method; disposed in a suitable manner, or in a manner to illustrate a subject, or to facilitate practical observation; as, the methodical arrangement of arguments; a methodical treatise.
Definition of Methodic
1. Adjective. Variant of methodical. ¹
2. Adjective. (philosophy) Chosen for the sake of its effect, rather than for its own sake; sometimes distinguished from real. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Methodic
1. systematic [adj] - See also: systematic
Lexicographical Neighbors of Methodic
Literary usage of Methodic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Origin of Ideas by Antonio Rosmini (1884)
"It was not a real, but, as it came to be technically called, a methodic doubt,
that is to say, assumed for the purpose of serving the method and order ..."
2. The Origin of Ideas by Antonio Rosmini (1884)
"ON methodic DOUBT AND methodic IGNORANCE. 1477. DCS Cartes began the philosophical
edifice by supposing himself in a state of doubt with regard to all he ..."
3. History of Medicine from the Earliest Ages to the Commencement of the by Robley Dunglison (1872)
"CORNELIUS CELSUS was one of the most distinguished ornaments of the methodic
sect, who brought back, or greatly contributed to bring back, physicians to the ..."
4. The Teaching of Mathematics in the Higher Schools of Prussia by Jacob William Albert Young (1900)
"methodic remarks.—The ministerial rescript adds a few directions under the title "
methodic remarks," among which are the following: The teaching of ..."
5. Medical lexiconby Robley Dunglison by Robley Dunglison (1860)
"Philosophical in its design, methodic»! in ita arrangement, ample and sound in
its practical details, it may m truth be said to leave scarcely anything to ..."
6. The Surgical Diseases of the Genito-urinary Organs Including Syphilis by Edward Lawrence Keyes (1889)
"Treatment ; Method of performing Injection ; Abortive Treatment.—methodic Treatment
of Increasing Stage, including Description of ..."
7. Epistemology; Or, The Theory of Knowledge: An Introduction to General by Peter Coffey (1917)
"If the doubt is methodic it leaves room for certitude and supposes this latter
... And a methodic doubt, as explained, is contrasted with a real doubt and ..."