释义 |
Definition of sublate in English: sublateverb səˈbleɪtsəˈblāt [with object]Philosophy Assimilate (a smaller entity) into a larger one. fragmented aspects of the self the subject is unable to sublate Example sentencesExamples - In short, capital is the subject of production, producing above all itself, while labour is negatively posited as its sublated foundation.
- It affirmed what Stanley calls ‘the ontology of objective nature’ at the expense of a worldview sublating nature to Spirit.
- For if Geras was not to sublate the realm of the social entirely to nature, he had to leave room for a nominally separate society which was underpinned by both external and human nature.
- The overt sexual content has not been sublated by form or symbolism.
- In Middle Passage slavery can be thought of as an ontic wound, and all moral judgment is sublated because of a general deconstruction of values in the face of the universal condition of man.
Derivatives noun Philosophy What is strikingly interesting and appropriate is that Marx's surpassing of Hegel on this matter is a simultaneous retention and is, therefore, a true sublation. Example sentencesExamples - Bloechl's criticism focuses upon the Hegelian sublation he finds in Gibbs' effort to reconcile the dialectical opposition between philosophy and Judaism.
- Bourdieu's analysis is the sublation of Flaubert's novel: what it keeps is the book's true hidden nature, and all that it sloughs off is chaff.
- For Fuller, Kuhn's sublation of the classical conservative argument has had deep and worrying consequences for our political view of science.
- Fine argues that this idea is a sublation of previous divisions and so carries with it the violence which has attended them.
Origin Mid 16th century (in the sense 'to remove, take away'): from Latin sublat- 'taken away', from sub- 'from below' + lat- (from the stem of tollere 'take away'). Definition of sublate in US English: sublateverbsəˈblāt [with object]Philosophy Assimilate (a smaller entity) into a larger one. fragmented aspects of the self the subject is unable to sublate Example sentencesExamples - In short, capital is the subject of production, producing above all itself, while labour is negatively posited as its sublated foundation.
- In Middle Passage slavery can be thought of as an ontic wound, and all moral judgment is sublated because of a general deconstruction of values in the face of the universal condition of man.
- For if Geras was not to sublate the realm of the social entirely to nature, he had to leave room for a nominally separate society which was underpinned by both external and human nature.
- The overt sexual content has not been sublated by form or symbolism.
- It affirmed what Stanley calls ‘the ontology of objective nature’ at the expense of a worldview sublating nature to Spirit.
Origin Mid 16th century (in the sense ‘to remove, take away’): from Latin sublat- ‘taken away’, from sub- ‘from below’ + lat- (from the stem of tollere ‘take away’). |