[
US
/kəmˈpɫitnəs/
]
[ UK /kəmplˈiːtnəs/ ]
[ UK /kəmplˈiːtnəs/ ]
NOUN
- (logic) an attribute of a logical system that is so constituted that a contradiction arises if any proposition is introduced that cannot be derived from the axioms of the system
- the state of being complete and entire; having everything that is needed
How To Use completeness In A Sentence
- Secondly, the other direction, that is, the completeness part, is proved by what is really known as the Lindenbaum-Tarski method. Propositional Consequence Relations and Algebraic Logic
- The related axiomatic study of epistemic notions has benefited from application of techniques used for proving incompleteness and indefinability results since the early sixties. Paradoxes and Contemporary Logic
- The completeness of the 1989-90 material is more difficult to evaluate because the drugs in this period were available over the counter.
- The descriptive passages when she has tea with friends, or tends her garden, or shops for blouses to fit her ample bosom are a pleasure and add a completeness to the character.
- For registry staff to monitor effectively the accuracy and completeness of this operation requires detailed record-keeping and effortless access to data.
- These include considerations of the completeness of the system's coverage and the delay in making the data available.
- But what fascinated and drew me in was the incompleteness.
- Here and elsewhere in the book, we shall use the term highest tantra to refer both to anuttarayoga in the Gelug, Kagyu, and Sakya systems and to the unit formed by mahayoga, anuyoga, and atiyoga (dzogchen, rdzogs-chen; the great completeness) in the Nyingma tradition. Relating to a Spiritual Teacher: Building a Healthy Relationship ��� 2 The Traditional Meaning of a Spiritual Teacher
- The following list makes no pretence to completeness; ‘martext’, ‘carrytale’, ‘pleaseman’, English Past and Present
- Species are diagnosed on the basis of carinal height and the nature (height, symmetry, completeness) and number (zero, one, or two) of flanking rows or parapets.