Definitionn. total certainty or greater certainty than circumstances warrant
Last update: June 14, 2015
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Does Wittgenstein bring certitude that philosophy leaves the word as it is? [noun]
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And yet the evidence points, with increasing certitude, to bankruptcy. [noun]
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The gun-brig bore down on them at a great pace, feeling happy certitude that she had got a prize--not a very big one, but still worth catching. [noun]
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According to Fries, the understanding is purely the faculty of proof; it is in itself void; immediate certitude is the only source of knowledge. [Please select]
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In the lucid darkness he knew that with a terrible certitude. [Please select]
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No, even the certitude of your contempt, some day, is powerless to halt me now. [Please select]
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Upon all our party there seemed to sit an air of content and certitude. [Please select]
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"Moral certitude was the platform from which he would survey the universe." [Please select]
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The prince and princess were realities, his future greatness a magnificent certitude. [Please select]
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There had been a certitude that the battle would join about these fords. [Please select]
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And still the bull-dog, with grim certitude, toiled after him. [Please select]
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