English language

How to pronounce dialectics in English?

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Type Words
Type of principle, rationale

Examples of dialectics

dialectics
I am sorry to say that your understanding of Hegel and dialectics is rather poor.
From the guardian.co.uk
Engels specially, initiated the conscious use of dialectics in natural science.
From the guardian.co.uk
For dialectics there can be no matter without motion and no motion without matter.
From the guardian.co.uk
The struggle in this sense, illustrates the essence of relational dialectics.
From the en.wikipedia.org
This ever shifting balance is why dialectics is at the core of the treatment.
From the blogs.psychcentral.com
The Institute also attempted to reformulate dialectics as a concrete method.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The reader has an uneasy sensation of being caught in a brambly thicket of dialectics.
From the time.com
In practice, Marxist dialectics was frequently used as a tool of eristic and propaganda.
From the en.wikipedia.org
We need good quality philosophy of science, but this is not going to come from dialectics.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • A rationale for dialectical materialism based on change through the conflict of opposing forces
  • (dialectic) any formal system of reasoning that arrives at the truth by the exchange of logical arguments
  • (dialectic) a contradiction of ideas that serves as the determining factor in their interaction; "this situation created the inner dialectic of American history"
  • (dialectically) in a dialectic manner; "his religiousness is dialectically related to his sinfulness"
  • A systematic method of argument that attempts to resolve the contradictions in opposing views or ideas
  • (dialectic) In Hegel's philosophy, change occurs through the tension between an initial thesis and its contradiction, or antithesis. Reconciliation of this contradiction leads to synthesis, a higher conception that involves but transcends both thesis and antithesis. ...
  • (19. dialectic) a form of thinking or description of thinking in which one term is always defined against its opposite. That oppositional pair operates interactively to creative meaning, eventually forming a third, middle term, which has its own counterpart. ...
  • (1. Dialectic) The presence of contradictory realities where the contradiction is overcome by including elements from each of the contradictory elements in a synthesis that is more than the combination of each member of the contradiction. ...
  • (DIALECTIC) In Socrates and Plato's day it meant the art of seeking truth through conversation. For Aristotle, it meant the "process of criticism wherein lies the path to the principles of all inquiries." In Hegel, it meant the essence of the process of reality.