Mechanistic
of or relating to the theory of or to .
of or relating to mechanics.
.
historical examples
aristotle expressly states that a sufficient development of mechanistic technology would abrogate slavery.
the transformation of early christianity from an eschatological to a socialized movement lyford paterson edwards
this explains, in some measure, the mechanistic tendencies of physiology.
creative evolution henri bergson
he took over the mechanistic principle and handled it as never a man had done before; he became the mechanizer of the world.
the new society walther rathenau
as in the mechanistic hypothesis, here again it is supposed that all is given.
creative evolution henri bergson
moreover, the mechanistic view, where all is “given,” is quite inadequate to explain the facts.
bergson and his philosophy j. alexander gunn
they had only the mechanistic world of their ships—which were vehicles, not a land.
and then the town took off richard wilson
hence the schools of thought called vitalistic and mechanistic.
science and morals and other essays bertram coghill alan windle
the facts in their isolation, taken as complete in themselves, are not mechanistic.
essays in experimental logic john dewey
in fact, the reversed film of the cinematograph may be regarded as the reductio ad absurdum of the mechanistic hypothesis.
major prophets of to-day edwin e. slosson
perhaps it is not clear what i mean by “the mechanistic outlook.”
the problem of china bertrand russell
adjective
(philosophy) of or relating to the theory of mechanism
(maths) of or relating to mechanics
mechanistic mech·a·nis·tic (měk’ə-nĭs’tĭk)
adj.
mechanically determined.
of or relating to the philosophy of mechanism, especially one that tends to explain phenomena only by reference to physical or biological causes.
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