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Wiktionary英語版での「precipient」の意味 |
precipient
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/08/29 14:41 UTC 版)
語源
From Latin praecipiens. See precept.
形容詞
precipient (comparative more precipient, superlative most precipient)
- Commanding; directing; willing.
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1810 February, “Metaphysical Essays; containing the Pinciples and fundamental Objects of that Science. By Richard Kirwan”, in The Monthly Repertory of English Literature, volume 9, page 328:
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1869, Aspects of Humanity, brokenly mirrored in the Ever-Swelling Currents of Human Speech, page 10:
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Whilst the wholly external thing, or fact is, in the language of metaphysics, pure object, and the precipient or acting soul pure subject, the intervening links—that is, the modification of the organ of sense, or of conscious motion, that of the cerebral centres, and also (it is assumed) that of the precipient or acting soul itself—may be contemplated either as objective or subjective phenomena, according as they are viewed from without, analytically and as separate facts, or from within, in their natural sythesis, as necessary parts of a single whole.
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- Perceiving or perceived; pertaining to or capable of observation or sensation.
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1995, Michael L. Cowdrey, Melinda Drew, Basic Law for the Allied Health Professions, page 242:
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Compensation for a percipient witness in such situations is governed by statute, as with any other nonexpert witness.
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名詞
precipient (plural precipients)
- One who wills or has consciousness.
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1810 February, “Metaphysical Essays; containing the Principles and fundamental Objects of that Science. By Richard Kirwan”, in The Monthly Repertory of English Literature, volume 9, page 324:
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The mind itself, the self-conscious precipient, the only real existence in the constitution of man, is placed beyond the reach of human observation; an those who resolve the thinking principle into a convolution of organic fibres like the brain, might as well suppose the thinking power of the Almighty spirit to consist only in the organizing system of the visible universe.
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1880, Frederick W. Frankland, “On the Doctrine of Mind-Stuff”, in Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, page 214:
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Nor can the elements of the phenomenal world derive any complexity from the interaction of the noumenal elements which they represent with the complex structure of the precipients.
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1981, R. S. Woolhouse, Leibniz: Metaphysics and Philosophy of Science, page 116:
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Both matter and motion are stated to be 'phenomena of percipients' , and to be derived (not by considering abstractly an aspect of a plurality of simple substances, but) from the harmony of precipients with themselves at different times, and with other precipients.
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- One who perceives, especially one who is particularly sensitive.
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1830 August, “Memoir of the Rev. Thomas Lloyd”, in The Christian guardian, page 289:
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We parayed around his bed, and I occasionally addressed to him a few appropriate sentences; but the divine precipient within had withdrawn its notices from all sublunary things: God had graciously interposed a veil between him and this life, for his feelings were not excited (as far as we could discern) by the grief and tears of his surrounding relations; nor did the inner man appear to be terrified or disturbed by any fiery temptations from the spiritual adversary, or by any other mysterious and invisible causes.
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1877, Julius Charles Hare, Edward Hayes Plumptre, The Mission of the Comforter, page 297:
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The difficulties which have often been felt, and which have occasioned interminable controversies, concerning the priority of the outward or the inward act, might be lessened if we were to meditate on the facts presented to us by all the operations of life; hhow in all there is a combination of two coordinate elements; how, for instance, in perception there is a reciprocal action of the object and the precipient, which must be coinstantaneous, admitting of no priority, no exclusive causation, on one side or the other; although even here a like controversy has started up, and one psychological school ascribes all primary causative power to the objects of knowledge, another to the mind that knows.
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