The contradictions and negations of life cannot be sublated into a determinate negation because life is not a positive, given fact but is the product of human labor. |
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I have long thought that Levine's negations and denials were in fact forms of affirmation and acceptance, ways of warding off sentimentality and bad faith. |
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Hume notes that we cannot imagine or conceive of the negations of typical mathematical theorems, but this seems to be a weak hold on the necessity of mathematics. |
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So, once more, when we search below the negations and repudiations of the frontier we come upon a germinal positivism and affirmativism. |
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Neither negations nor questions in early modern English used to require do. |
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The guilt, the crime strikes first, and from it are abstracted the negations unguilt, innocence. |
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By varying the negations of the second premises and conclusion in the original argument, we can easily get all four lines of the table for the tribar. |
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I cannot conceive what atheism, or skepticism, or positivism could do for me now, with their negations, and endless and contradictory perhapses, and perhapses, and perhapses. |
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The structural theory doesn't only focus on the negations, repressions, disavowals, and deadenings of the ego in the face of its encounters within and without. |
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The Treasures of Heaven are not Negations of Passion but Realities of Intellect from which All the Passions Emanate Uncurbed in their Eternal Glory. |
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