˜yÐÄvlog

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teleological

[ tel-ee-uh-loj-i-kuhl, tee-lee- ]

adjective

Philosophy.
  1. of or relating to teleology, the philosophical doctrine that final causes, design, and purpose exist in nature.


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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • ³Ù±ð±ôe·´Ç·±ô´Ç²µî€ƒi·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
  • ²Ô´Ç²Ôt±ð±ô·±ð·´Ç·±ô´Ç²µî€ƒi·³¦²¹±ô adjective
  • ²Ô´Ç²Ôt±ð±ô·±ð·´Ç·±ô´Ç²µî€ƒi·³¦²¹±ô·ly adverb
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Instead, Harris’s seamless, all-explanatory narrative feels increasingly and weirdly teleological, like a cult belief system.

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In such a way he avoids the teleological danger of making everything in Britain about the war as the country hurtles toward some kind of inevitable abyss.

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Aristotle thus does not think of the natural movement of the elements as movement through space; he sees it in teleological terms as the realization of potential.

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Ross seems to acknowledge that, but he also protests that the “Wagner-to-Hitler†meme suggests a teleological progression that, while perhaps convenient, is dangerously simplistic.

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Journalist Garry Wills saw it differently, as he explained in 1976: “It is unfortunate that McCarthyism was named teleologically, from its most perfect product, rather than genetically — which would give us Trumanism.â€

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