Definitionadj. derived from experiment and observation rather than theory
Last update: August 14, 2015
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Her accounts were based on empirical facts. [Please select]
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Our data is based on empirical evidence collected in numerous studies. [Please select]
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Because there was no empirical link between the suspect and the victim, the prosecutor found it hard to make a provable case. [Please select]
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The non-empirical moralist will not of course admit that duty to the community or to mankind is a final definition of the ethical ideal. [Please select]
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In wall work empirical methods are nearly always followed. [Please select]
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The empirical factor is so emphasised that we lose all grasp of the real world. [Please select]
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'[455] Bentham adheres, that is, to the strictly empirical ground.' [Please select]
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His adherence to the empirical method is too decided. [Please select]
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But it was a purely empirical doctrine, and thus it led to some unfortunate results. [Please select]
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] The criterion of values which is used in this study is an empirical one. [Please select]
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On no other subject has our knowledge remained for centuries so unsatisfactory, fragmentary and empirical. [Please select]
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