- De
dicto and de re are two
phrases used to mark a
distinction in
intensional statements, ****ociated with the
intensional operators in many such statements...
-
learned clerk.
Instances of
secundum quid are of two kinds:
Accident — a
dicto simpliciter ad
dictum secundum quid (where an
acceptable exception is ignored)...
- The
fallacy of
accident (also
called destroying the
exception or a
dicto simpliciter ad
dictum secundum quid) is an
informal fallacy where a
general rule...
-
Lithuanian grand duke
Jogaila and his
mother at "Albae Russiae,
Poloczk dicto" in 1381. The
first known use of
White Russia to
refer to
Belarus was in...
- illos, adagio, non
minus quam medicinis,
canes adscribit, inde
Melitaeos dictos, Plinio, & nunc
etiam incolis ignotos, tunc
forte nascebantur." 'Maltese...
- The
fallacy of
converse accident is an
informal fallacy that
occurs when a rule that
applies only to an
exceptional case is
wrongly applied to all cases...
-
generally work are de
dicto, otherwise, they are de re. In a de re sense, Lois does
believe that
Clark Kent is strong,
while in a de
dicto sense she does not...
- **** interim. Et ut
adhuc amplius hoc putes,
accipe et in
psalmo duos deos
dictos:
Thronus tuus, deus, in aevum, <virga directionis>
virga regni tui; dilexisti...
-
since at
least 1921. The
oldest one,
Latin term "Albae Russiae,
Poloczk dicto" is
recorded in 1381.
Grand Lithuanian (вялікалітоўская (мова)) – proposed...
- literally, said previously.
dicto simpliciter [from] a maxim,
simply I.e. "from a rule
without exception."
Short for a
dicto simpliciter, the a is often...