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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
phi·los·o·phy
/fəˈlɑs(ə)fi/
哲學,人生觀,原理
From:
Network Terminology
philosophy
哲理
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Phi·los·o·phy
n.
;
pl
.
Philosophies
1.
Literally
,
the
love
of
,
inducing
the
search
after
,
wisdom
;
in
actual
usage
,
the
knowledge
of
phenomena
as
explained
by
,
and
resolved
into
,
causes
and
reasons
,
powers
and
laws
.
Note:
☞
When
applied
to
any
particular
department
of
knowledge
,
philosophy
denotes
the
general
laws
or
principles
under
which
all
the
subordinate
phenomena
or
facts
relating
to
that
subject
are
comprehended
.
Thus
philosophy
,
when
applied
to
God
and
the
divine
government
,
is
called
theology
;
when
applied
to
material
objects
,
it
is
called
physics
;
when
it
treats
of
man
,
it
is
called
anthropology
and
psychology
,
with
which
are
connected
logic
and
ethics
;
when
it
treats
of
the
necessary
conceptions
and
relations
by
which
philosophy
is
possible
,
it
is
called
metaphysics
.
Note:
☞
“
Philosophy
has
been
defined
: --
the
science
of
things
divine
and
human
,
and
the
causes
in
which
they
are
contained
; --
the
science
of
effects
by
their
causes
; --
the
science
of
sufficient
reasons
; --
the
science
of
things
possible
,
inasmuch
as
they
are
possible
; --
the
science
of
things
evidently
deduced
from
first
principles
; --
the
science
of
truths
sensible
and
abstract
; --
the
application
of
reason
to
its
legitimate
objects
; --
the
science
of
the
relations
of
all
knowledge
to
the
necessary
ends
of
human
reason
; --
the
science
of
the
original
form
of
the
ego
,
or
mental
self
; --
the
science
of
science
; --
the
science
of
the
absolute
; --
the
science
of
the
absolute
indifference
of
the
ideal
and
real.”
2.
A
particular
philosophical
system
or
theory
;
the
hypothesis
by
which
particular
phenomena
are
explained
.
[Books]
of
Aristotle
and
his
philosophie
.
--
Chaucer
.
We
shall
in
vain
interpret
their
words
by
the
notions
of
our
philosophy
and
the
doctrines
in
our
school
.
--
Locke
.
3.
Practical
wisdom
;
calmness
of
temper
and
judgment
;
equanimity
;
fortitude
;
stoicism
;
as
,
to
meet
misfortune
with
philosophy
.
Then
had
he
spent
all
his
philosophy
.
--
Chaucer
.
4.
Reasoning
;
argumentation
.
Of
good
and
evil
much
they
argued
then
, . . .
Vain
wisdom
all
,
and
false
philosophy
. --
Milton
.
5.
The
course
of
sciences
read
in
the
schools
.
6.
A
treatise
on
philosophy
.
Philosophy of the Academy
,
that
of
Plato
,
who
taught
his
disciples
in
a
grove
in
Athens
called
the
Academy
.
Philosophy of the Garden
,
that
of
Epicurus
,
who
taught
in
a
garden
in
Athens
.
Philosophy of the Lyceum
,
that
of
Aristotle
,
the
founder
of
the
Peripatetic
school
,
who
delivered
his
lectures
in
the
Lyceum
at
Athens
.
Philosophy of the Porch
,
that
of
Zeno
and
the
Stoics
; --
so
called
because
Zeno
of
Citium
and
his
successors
taught
in
the
porch
of
the
Poicile
,
a
great
hall
in
Athens
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
philosophy
n
1:
a
belief
(
or
system
of
beliefs
)
accepted
as
authoritative
by
some
group
or
school
[
syn
:
doctrine
, {
philosophical
system
,
school of thought
,
ism
]
2:
the
rational
investigation
of
questions
about
existence
and
knowledge
and
ethics
3:
any
personal
belief
about
how
to
live
or
how
to
deal
with
a
situation
; "
self-indulgence
was
his
only
philosophy
"; "
my
father's
philosophy
of
child-rearing
was
to
let
mother
do
it
"
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