单词 | judicatum |
释义 | judicatumn. Philosophy. Now rare. That which is asserted or declared by an act of judgement. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > logic > logical classification > [noun] > apprehending a relation between two concepts > object of an act of judging subject1551 judicatum1913 1913 S. Alexander in Mind 22 15 As I use the term, the proposition is what the logicians call the import of the judgment or proposition. It is the propositum or judicatum. I do not use it as equivalent either to the act of judging or the verbal sentence. 1935 Mind 44 365 A judgement to the effect that A is B seems to be just a judgement (act of judging) whose object or judicatum is that A is B. 1936 H. H. Price Truth & Corrigibility 17 The relation is between judicata or judicabilia, or—as some call them—‘propositions’. 1970 tr. M. Foucault Order of Things iv. 96 They function, on either side of this ‘judicator’ as the thing to be judged—the judicandum—and the thing judged—the judicatum. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1913 |
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