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词汇 sublate
释义

Definition of sublate in English:

sublate

verb səˈbleɪtsəˈblāt
[with object]Philosophy
  • Assimilate (a smaller entity) into a larger one.

    〔哲〕扬弃

    fragmented aspects of the self the subject is unable to sublate

    主体不能扬弃自我的破碎方面。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In short, capital is the subject of production, producing above all itself, while labour is negatively posited as its sublated foundation.
    • It affirmed what Stanley calls ‘the ontology of objective nature’ at the expense of a worldview sublating nature to Spirit.
    • For if Geras was not to sublate the realm of the social entirely to nature, he had to leave room for a nominally separate society which was underpinned by both external and human nature.
    • The overt sexual content has not been sublated by form or symbolism.
    • In Middle Passage slavery can be thought of as an ontic wound, and all moral judgment is sublated because of a general deconstruction of values in the face of the universal condition of man.

Derivatives

  • sublation

  • noun
    Philosophy
    • What is strikingly interesting and appropriate is that Marx's surpassing of Hegel on this matter is a simultaneous retention and is, therefore, a true sublation.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Bloechl's criticism focuses upon the Hegelian sublation he finds in Gibbs' effort to reconcile the dialectical opposition between philosophy and Judaism.
      • Bourdieu's analysis is the sublation of Flaubert's novel: what it keeps is the book's true hidden nature, and all that it sloughs off is chaff.
      • For Fuller, Kuhn's sublation of the classical conservative argument has had deep and worrying consequences for our political view of science.
      • Fine argues that this idea is a sublation of previous divisions and so carries with it the violence which has attended them.

Origin

Mid 16th century (in the sense 'to remove, take away'): from Latin sublat- 'taken away', from sub- 'from below' + lat- (from the stem of tollere 'take away').

Definition of sublate in US English:

sublate

verbsəˈblāt
[with object]Philosophy
  • Assimilate (a smaller entity) into a larger one.

    〔哲〕扬弃

    fragmented aspects of the self the subject is unable to sublate

    主体不能扬弃自我的破碎方面。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In short, capital is the subject of production, producing above all itself, while labour is negatively posited as its sublated foundation.
    • In Middle Passage slavery can be thought of as an ontic wound, and all moral judgment is sublated because of a general deconstruction of values in the face of the universal condition of man.
    • For if Geras was not to sublate the realm of the social entirely to nature, he had to leave room for a nominally separate society which was underpinned by both external and human nature.
    • The overt sexual content has not been sublated by form or symbolism.
    • It affirmed what Stanley calls ‘the ontology of objective nature’ at the expense of a worldview sublating nature to Spirit.

Origin

Mid 16th century (in the sense ‘to remove, take away’): from Latin sublat- ‘taken away’, from sub- ‘from below’ + lat- (from the stem of tollere ‘take away’).

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