Definición, Significado, Sinónimos & Anagramas | Palabra Inglés FALLIBLE


FALLIBLE

Definiciones de FALLIBLE

  1. Falible

4

1

Número de letras

8

Es palíndromo

No

12
AL
ALL
BL
BLE
FA
FAL
IB
LE
LI
LIB
LL

2

4

9

245
AB
ABE
ABI
AE
AEB
AEF
AEL
AF
AFB
AFE

Ejemplos de uso de FALLIBLE en una oración

  • Thus, whereas sharia is considered immutable and infallible by Muslims, fiqh is considered fallible and changeable.
  • Sometimes, intra-species recognition is fallible: in many species of frog, the males are commonly seen copulating with females of the wrong species or even with inanimate objects.
  • While implicatures are fallible inferences, entailments are enforced by lexical meanings plus the laws of logic.
  • General-purpose languages use monads to reduce boilerplate code needed for common operations (such as dealing with undefined values or fallible functions, or encapsulating bookkeeping code).
  • The southern Mahāsāṃghika schools such as the Caitikas advocated the ideal of the bodhisattva, the bodhisattvayāna, over that of the arhat or śrāvakayāna, and they viewed arhats as being fallible and still subject to ignorance.
  • These critics do point out that other evolutionary paths to consciousness are possible, such as critical evaluation that enhances plasticity by criticizing fallible notions, while pointing out that such a critical consciousness would be quite different from the justificatory type proposed by Nørretranders, differences including that a critical consciousness would make individuals more capable of changing their minds instead of justifying and persuading.
  • Popper suggested that all scientific theories are by nature conjectures and inherently fallible, and that refutation to old theory is the paramount process of scientific discovery.
  • However, he was fallible in patent cases, where he was prone to become overinterested in the technology in question and to be distracted by questioning the litigants as to potential improvements in their devices, even going so far as to suggest his own innovations.
  • In the novel, Golding utilises stream-of-consciousness writing with an omniscient but increasingly fallible narrator to show Jocelin's demise as he chooses to follow his own will as opposed to the will of God.
  • Such policies are often informally enforced and fallible, and when these issues arise they are insidiously difficult to reproduce and debug.
  • Defeasible arguments may still be rationally compelling despite being fallible, so they do not automatically constitute fallacies.
  • In what Keith Lehrer has called "fallible foundationalism", also known as "moderate foundationalism", the division between inferential and non-inferential belief is retained, but the requirement of incorrigibility is dropped.
  • In this light, deduction is the only one of the three types of reasoning that can be made exact, in essence, always deriving true conclusions from true premises, while abduction and induction are unavoidably approximate in their modes of operation, involving elements of fallible judgment in practice and inescapable error in their application.
  • Infallibilism is rejected by most contemporary epistemologists, who generally accept that one can have knowledge based on fallible justification.
  • Audi thinks that foundationalism may be fallible, in the sense that the suprastructure of beliefs may be derived inductively from the basic beliefs, and hence may be fallible.
  • The record of his further adventures all over India, published under the title In the Vision of God in 1935, is filled with characters, some of them occasional fellow-travellers, and prominently a spiritually-inclined but endearingly fallible young man named Madhav who adopted the name 'Ramcharandas' and insisted on joining Swami Ramdas in his travels.
  • As these theories were refined, however, some foundationalists began to admit that even basic beliefs could be fallible, and that derived beliefs could mutually support each other; whereas some coherentists began to admit that experiential beliefs should be weighted so as to reflect realistic degrees of coherence or justification.
  • Thus, while Santayana reveres and deeply respects science (and believes it useful for everyday experiences), he does not deify it in the way many other philosophers of the 20th century have, and he limits it to a fallible approximation of truth.
  • The pudgy and fallible Nelson has often been used by writers for lightheartedness and even comic relief.
  • Warder, the Kāśyapīya school held the doctrine that arhats were fallible and imperfect, similar to the view of the Sarvāstivādins and the various Mahāsāṃghika sects.
  • " Tobias also critiqued the film's portrayal of women, noting that "the men may be fallible, but the women are psychotics, with a roster that includes one split personality, one vengeful stalker, and two suicidal narcissists with the scars on their wrists to prove it.
  • Mahāsāṃghikas, such as the Ekavyāvahārika, Lokottaravāda, Bahuśrutīya, Prajñaptivāda and Caitika schools, advocated the transcendental nature of the buddhas and bodhisattvas and the fallibility of arhats; the Caitikas advocated the ideal of the bodhisattva (bodhisattvayāna) over that of the arhat (śrāvakayāna), and viewed arhats as fallible and still subject to ignorance.
  • In 2017, Fallible, a Delaware-based security firm examined 16,000 Android apps and identified over 300 which contained hard-coded API keys for services like Dropbox, Twitter, and Slack.
  • However, simultaneously In an Antique Land snubs traditional ethnographical traditions by intimately describing the narrator's own fallible nature, such as going into great detail about Ghosh being assisted in cartography by local children, instead of characterising himself as the omniscient third-person narrator that is traditional in ethnographies.
  • She often contrasted properties of painting (as labor-intensive, fallible, human, enduring) and photography (as immediate, indexical, machine-made, ephemeral, cheap).



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