anomalousness

NOUN
  1. deviation from the normal or common order or form or rule
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How To Use anomalousness In A Sentence

  • Nevertheless the anomalousness of aesthetics is worth thinking about in its own right. Aesthetic Judgment
  • Far from emphasizing the distinctiveness of introspection, the Inner Sense model instead seeks to minimize the anomalousness and associated mystery of self-knowledge by construing introspection as fundamentally similar to perception. Self-Knowledge
  • If Beardsley insists on a lawlike connection between his three thick substantive aesthetic properties (unity, intensity and complexity) and aesthetic value, he can only do so at the cost of conceding anomalousness between the three thick substantive aesthetic properties and nonaesthetic properties. Aesthetic Judgment
  • It shows the degree of anomalousness with respect to best fitting class at each location.
  • Secretary's Office, was reputed to be an excellent mathematician, and had high testimonials of his qualification, he applied for the professorship; evidently feeling the anomalousness of his position, and his inability and powerlessness to establish a system of Public School The Story of My Life Being Reminiscences of Sixty Years' Public Service in Canada
  • This kind of anomalousness is one thing, dependence or supervenience another. Aesthetic Judgment
  • ‘To imagine oneself a gypsy,’ she writes, ‘is to escape, in some sense, from conventional femininity; it is also to claim kinship with those who mirror and explain one's anomalousness’.
  • Granting the anomalousness of aesthetic properties, then, we need to explain it. Aesthetic Judgment
  • But they are not agreed on the explanation of anomalousness. Aesthetic Judgment
  • This indicates severe myopia about economists' own anomalousness, and the anomalousness of the market economies that they study--where instrumental rationality in the service of pecuniary self-interest is, indeed, prevalent. Roger Koppl - The Austrian Economists
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