noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
Doctor of Philosophy
moral philosophy (= the study of moral principles and rules )
▪
a class in moral philosophy
natural philosophy
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
basic
▪
They cut right across the basic philosophy of rugby football - that is, to go forward and make ground.
▪
It can be very disruptive to the marriage if the two partners are in therapies with different basic philosophies .
▪
His party has now signed up to Mr. MacSharry and his basic philosophy .
▪
There was, of course, another motivating factor: that most basic and powerful philosophy of all, the pursuit of wealth.
▪
In many cases this has involved rewording of Learning Outcomes but little change to the basic philosophy of the module.
different
▪
Yet an overview of practice suggests that different political philosophies mould very different approaches to educational integration.
▪
Now, I have a different philosophy , a philosophy that is fair, but not equal.
▪
Situating herself within the Anglo-Saxon analytic tradition, she looks at different conceptions of philosophy , its content and methods.
▪
It can be very disruptive to the marriage if the two partners are in therapies with different basic philosophies .
▪
They include substantive conclusions about what would be different in philosophy if it were influenced by feminine rather than by masculine assumptions.
▪
Call it better stock selection or different criteria or different philosophy .
▪
Staff have also been able to learn from each other through exposure to different philosophies of teaching and assessment in other disciplines.
▪
Newcomers Tom D'Agosta and Ed Gallo approach their jobs with different philosophies .
educational
▪
The basic ideas dominating the educational philosophy of Highlander are two-fold.
▪
Even more fundamental than these pragmatic constraints, however, is the educational philosophy underlying the two initiatives.
▪
These projects include curriculum development, educational philosophy and goals, teacher upgrading and in-service training.
▪
Within each teacher's subject area there are competing approaches that conflict in educational philosophy as well as in teaching style.
general
▪
It is difficult to argue against this general philosophy , but there is also a need for specialists.
▪
Any verdict we pass on punishment must be soundly based on an acceptable general moral philosophy .
▪
The latter are worth noting as typical of the general philosophy claimed by many schools to underpin their project involvement: 4.
▪
They focus on general directives and priorities, set targets and leave detailed planning and administration to subordinates. General philosophy Similarities.
▪
For a few it is, more significantly, a general philosophy and regime of departmental management.
modern
▪
Unfortunately, our modern philosophy of art does not always recognise the dependence of art on this balance between tradition and change.
▪
Though an opponent of the more rigid scholastics, Weigel sought a reconciliation of modern philosophy with that of Aristotle.
▪
But he would be the alley-fighter who could argue over modern philosophy and quote the poets of the Augustan age.
moral
▪
Kant Kant's moral philosophy is sharply opposed to the moral sense approach of Hutcheson and Hume.
▪
Smith began to teach logic and moral philosophy at the University of Glasgow.
▪
Any verdict we pass on punishment must be soundly based on an acceptable general moral philosophy .
▪
He had just been appointed professor of moral philosophy at the University of Glasgow.
▪
His early research was in moral and religious philosophy , two interests which never left him.
▪
It is plain from all of this how moral philosophy is taken to depend on natural philosophy.
▪
I am surprised that he did not cite as evidence in support of his case the moral philosophy of his own Monklands District Council.
▪
Of course, not everyone is well versed in moral philosophy .
natural
▪
The anti-Aristotelianism and the newly emerging concept of natural philosophy were, then, not private but public developments.
▪
A separation of science from religion has also been seen in a diminished authority for the Bible in matters of natural philosophy .
▪
But it would be misleading to speak of separation given the religious foundations of his natural philosophy .
▪
It is plain from all of this how moral philosophy is taken to depend on natural philosophy.
▪
Aristotle too claims in several places that natural philosophy and medicine go hand in hand and are studied by the same people.
▪
His natural philosophy was dominated by the idea of the permanence of the cosmos.
▪
They were by far outnumbered by recent volumes on chemistry, electricity, galvanism, and natural philosophy .
▪
He inherited wealth and could have lived a leisured life but preferred to pursue his earlier interest in natural philosophy .
new
▪
Art, poetry and the new philosophy flourished not least in Ionia.
▪
He had gotten a new job teaching philosophy at Rutgers.
▪
Casaubon was not alone in his criticisms of the new experimental philosophy for its atheistical tendencies.
▪
The new poets were also interested in the new linguistic philosophies of structuralism and post-structuralism.
▪
They were to be the basis of a new natural philosophy , and were advocated both by practising experimenters and by theoreticians.
▪
I still have a lot of respect for myself, but this team needs a change of direction, a new philosophy .
▪
The members of the two branches felt no need to formulate a new philosophy or design an ideological camera.
▪
We were determined to do this record with a new philosophy .
personal
▪
A personal philosophy is something which all people have nomatterwhat their background, class, or educational attainment.
▪
The women use their personal philosophy and experiences to illustrate fundamental principles of financial planning.
▪
Injunctions are Ingredient X. They are beliefs, buried in people's personal philosophies , about personal worth.
▪
Nevertheless, our personal philosophy and artistic goals must always play their important part in shaping our destiny.
political
▪
These are tasks which confront legal theory and political philosophy together.
▪
No matter our actual ethnic background or political philosophies , we are all Protestant capitalists longing for permission to play.
▪
For him, as for Neruda and others, Communism was less a political philosophy than a metaphysical need.
▪
He was speaking in terms of political philosophy .
▪
Yet an overview of practice suggests that different political philosophies mould very different approaches to educational integration.
▪
Modern political philosophy locates all legitimacy in the modern nation-state.
▪
Locke is anxious to defend his political philosophy against the accusation that it encourages rebellion.
▪
Whatever their differences in generational outlook and political philosophy , Ronald Reagan shared the same youthful encounter with hell.
social
▪
Despite their distinctive lifestyle, Puritans do not appear to have shared any distinctive social philosophy or consistent political outlook.
▪
His pacifism, like his social philosophy , was a slow growth.
▪
This programme does not seem so radical in terms of social philosophies to warrant Lévi-Strauss's optimism for its effects.
■ VERB
based
▪
This was based on an explicit philosophy of preserving the dignity and independence of patients.
▪
The particle approach to writing is based on a philosophy of teaching and learning that has been likened to an assembly line.
develop
▪
It was within this milieu that the thinkers of New Liberalism sought to develop a self-consciously modernist philosophy .
▪
Clements was an influential writer who developed a philosophy of ecology that differed fundamentally from the reductionism of Warming and Cowles.
▪
The specific task which Comte set himself was to develop a positive philosophy .
study
▪
Entered University of Chicago at 15 to study mathematics and philosophy .
▪
This woman of noble birth chose to study philosophy rather than relish in her beauty.
▪
He studied philosophy and religion and by all accounts was quite brilliant.
▪
She had studied philosophy and hated it but believed that she should have liked it.
teach
▪
A plaque revealed Marx had taught in the philosophy faculty there in 1841.
▪
He taught philosophy at a small Catholic college on Staten Island, so he was familiar with most of the students.
▪
He had gotten a new job teaching philosophy at Rutgers.
▪
As a senior research fellow, he has made a second career of writing, lecturing and teaching philosophy .
▪
Smith began to teach logic and moral philosophy at the University of Glasgow.
▪
He began teaching philosophy at Harvard in 1882 and lived out his life as an eastern intellectual.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Eastern religions and philosophies
▪
My philosophy is, I leave work at 5 o'clock and forget all about it till the next day.
▪
the philosophy of Nietzsche
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
In many ways, their philosophy was similar to that which guided Loeb and his successors.
▪
No longer does our political process discuss philosophy and issues.
▪
Our production philosophy requires all operations to be safe, and we apply innovative techniques alongside proven technology.
▪
Piaget moved from biology to philosophy and eventually to psychology early in his life.
▪
They had a different philosophy , one that she really believed in.