˜yÐÄvlog

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reductionist

[ ri-duhk-shuh-nist ]

adjective

  1. based on or explained by an analysis of the simplest or most basic factors of a complex phenomenon:

    A reductionist experiment is essential to isolating the impact of a single variable on the ecosystem as a whole.

  2. simplistic to the point of minimizing, obscuring, or distorting a complex idea, issue, or condition:

    Both stories describe the same reality, but your reductionist version fails to capture the full truth.



noun

  1. a person who believes that everything can be explained by reducing complex ideas or issues to their simplest component parts:

    To reductionists, all other worldviews are unscientific and sloppy, so they often choose to ignore evidence from observational studies.

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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • °ù±ð·»å³Ü³¦Â·³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô·¾±²õ·³Ù¾±³¦ [ri-duhk-sh, uh, -, nis, -tik], adjective
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Her supervisor and mentor, Professor Louis Leakey, though, saw the value in her technique: “He wanted somebody whose mind wasn't messed up by the reductionist attitude of science to animals,†Dr Goodall explains.

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As this whale of an example suggests, the reductionist framework has profound consequences.

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Most consciousness researchers employ a reductionist view of the universe, where physics is running the show.

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“That can be reductionist and lead to making assumptions or generalizations about behavior that we can’t begin to understand in other animals because of different cultural constructions.â€

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“The story of declining births in NSW is a complex social one, not a reductionist anti-vax fear mongering horror story,†Allen wrote in an email.

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