philosophise

[ UK /fɪlˈɒsəfˌa‍ɪz/ ]
VERB
  1. reason philosophically
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How To Use philosophise In A Sentence

  • Plato said that philosophy is a meditation on and a preparation for death; Seneca said that he or she who learns how to die unlearns slavery; and Montaigne said that to philosophize is to learn how to die. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • He philosophized that the body has much in common with a machine, and should function properly if it is sound.
  • Harry philosophizes a bit more: he says that good is following one's own nature, rather than the nature of other people.
  • Cicero observed that "to philosophize is to learn how to die," and Michel de Montaigne had it that "He who should teach men to die would at the same time teach them to live. Undefined
  • In the Western tradition beginning with Plato to 'philosophize' is to learn how to die. NAACHGAANA
  • A master of style often imitated, in his lost work he philosophized that nothing exists; but if something exists, it couldn't be known; and even if it could be known, it couldn't be communicated.
  • I had some teachers with who I could philosophize about arts, design and being an entrepreneur, so within 2 years, I was sold by arts.
  • Most of the time they picnicked at our garden table, read their tabloid newspapers and philosophized. More Chaos « Tales from the Reading Room
  • “And he has never philosophized on life,” I added. Chapter 10
  • By these three virtues we ascend to philosophize in that celestial Athens where Stoics and Peripatetics and Epicureans, by the light of eternal truth, join ranks in a single harmonious will.
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