释义 |
objectivity|ɒbdʒɪkˈtɪvɪtɪ| [mod. f. med.L. objectīv-us: see -ity. Cf. F. objectivité (1878 in Dict. Acad.).] The quality or character of being objective; external reality; objectiveness.
1803Edin. Rev. I. 258 In both these views it [philosophy] has relation only to their objectivity. [1812Southey Omniana I. 220 A confusion of (what the Schoolmen would have called) Objectivety and Subjectivety.] 1848J. H. Newman Loss & Gain iii. vi. (1858) 311, I am not denying..the objectivity of revelation. 1851Carlyle Sterling ii. ii. (1872) 96 The principle of this difference..seems to be that well-known one of the predominant objectivity of the Pagan mind. 1884F. Temple Relat. Relig. & Sc. i. (1885) 16 Kant appears to have no escape from assigning this objectivity of space to delusion. 1950W. H. Barber tr. Jolivet's Introd. Kierkegaard iii. ii. 98 ‘Objectivity’, whose idolatrous worship has been propagated by the modern nationalists, might equally well be defined as ‘positivity’. 1957R. May et al. Existence i. 25 He [sc. Kierkegaard] was convinced not only that the goal of ‘pure objectivity’ is impossible but that even if it were possible it would be undesirable. 1966K. Hartmann Sartre's Ontology i. 7 Thus, the phenomena would cease to be moments of myself and would take on ‘objectivity’. 1969R. Strachan tr. Malet's Thought R. Bultmann i. 19 In its objectivity the other is only an extension of myself. |