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prismatic spectrum binâb-e manšuri Fr.: spectre prismatique The spectrum formed by a dispersing prism or a dispersing prism system. |
Protestantism pâxosângerâyi, pâxosânbâvari Fr.: protestantisme The religion of → Protestants. → protestant; → -ism. |
racism nežâdparasti (#) Fr.: racisme 1) A belief or doctrine that inherent differences among the various
human races determine cultural or individual achievement, usually
involving the idea that one's own race is superior and has the right
to rule others. |
rationalism râyan-bâvari, xerad-bâvari Fr.: rationalisme A philosophical doctrine that holds that → reason alone, unaided by experience, can arrive at basic truth regarding the world. From → rational + -ism a Gk. suffix used in the formation of nouns denoting action or practice, state or condition, principles, doctrines, and so forth. Râyan, → reason; xerad, → rational; bâvari, from bâvar "belief" (Mid.Pers. wâbar "beleif;" Proto-Iranian *uar- "to choose; to convince; to believe;" cf. Av. var- "to choose; to convince" varəna-, varana- "conviction, faith;" O.Pers. v(a)r- "to choose; to convince;" Skt. vr- "to choose," vara- "choosing"). |
realism hasyâgerâyi; hasyâbâvari Fr.: réalisme 1) An inclination or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from
the abstract or speculative. |
refracting prism manšur-e šekastgar (#) Fr.: prisme réfractant A prism that is used as a dispersing element in a spectrograph. → refracting; → prism. |
relativism bâzâni-bâvari Fr.: relativisme The belief that truth is relative and may vary from individual to individual, from group to group, or from time to time, having no objective standard. From → relative + -ism a suffix used in the formation of nouns denoting action or practice, state or condition, principles, doctrines, etc. Bâzâni-bâvari, from bâzâni, → relative, + bâvari, from bâvar "belief" (Mid.Pers. wâbar "beleif;" Proto-Iranian *uar- "to choose; to convince; to believe;" cf. Av. var- "to choose; to convince" varəna-, varana- "conviction, faith;" O.Pers. v(a)r- "to choose; to convince;" Skt. vr- "to choose," vara- "choosing"). |
secularism giyânbâvari Fr.: laïcité The view that religious considerations should be excluded from civil affairs or public education. → secular. |
seismic larze-yi (#) Fr.: sismique Of, subject to, or caused by → vibrations of the → Earth. → seismic wave. |
seismic wave mowj-e laez-yi (#) Fr.: onde sismique An → elastic wave generated in the → Earth by an → impulse such as an → earthquake or an → explosion. Seismic waves may travel either along or near the Earth's surface or through the Earth's interior. |
seismo- larzé- (#) Fr.: sismo- A combining form meaning "earthquake;" → seismology, → seismograph, etc. From Gk. seismo- combining form of seismos "shock, earthquake," from seiein "to shake." Larzé-, from larzé "shaking, trembling," from larzidan "to tremble, shiver;" Mid.Pers. larzidan "to shake, tremble;" Manichean Mid.Pers. rarz- "to shiver with fever;" Proto-Iranian *rarz- "to shake, tremble." |
seismograph larzenegâr (#) Fr.: sismographe, séismographe An instrument that detects, magnifies, and records → seismic waves, especially those caused by → earthquakes or → explosions. |
seismology larzešenâsi (#) Fr.: sismologie, séismologie The branch of geophysics that is concerned with the study of earthquakes and measurement of the mechanical properties of the Earth. |
skepticism šakâvari Fr.: scepticisme 1) A doubting or questioning attitude or state of mind. |
supernaturalism abar-zâstâr-gerâyi, abar-zâstâr-bâvari Fr.: supernaturalisme Belief in the doctrine of supernatural or divine agency as manifested in the world, in human events, religious revelation, etc. (Dictionary.com). → super-; → naturalism. |
syllogism bâhamšomâri (#) Fr.: syllogisme A kind of → deductive reasoning
whereby from two initial → propositions
(two → premises) a third related
proposition (→ conclusion) is derived. The typical
form of a → categorical syllogism is "A is B;"
"C is A;" "Therefore, C is B." For example,
"All humans are mortal."
"John is human."
"Therefore, John is mortal."
"Mortal" (B) is called the
→ major term; it occurs in the first premise and
is the → predicate of the conclusion.
"John" (C), the subject of the conclusion, is called the
→ minor term. "Human," which is common to
both premises and is excluded from the conclusion, is called the
→ middle term.
See also → Aristotelian forms.
Syllogism is purely formal. It does not enrich knowledge, but gives a new presentation to what
is already known. It is also possible to have a logically valid syllogism based on
→ absurd premises. For example, "All cats are mammals."
"All cats are animals."
"Therefore, all animals are mammals."
Syllogism, representing the earliest branch of → formal logic,
was developed in its original form by Aristotle in his Organon (Prior Analytics) about
350 BC. M.E. silogisme, from O.Fr. silogisme, from L. syllogismus, from Gk. syllogismos "a syllogism," originally "inference, conclusion; computation, calculation," from syllogizesthai "bring together before the mind, compute, conclude," from assimilated form of → syn- "together" + logizesthai "to reason, to count," from logos "a reckoning, reason," → logic. Bâhamšomârik, literally "reckoning together," from bâham "together," from bâ "with," → hypo-, + ham, → syn-, + šomâr present stem of šomârdan "to reckon, calculate, enumerate, account for," → count, + suffix -i. |
theism yazdân-bâvari (#) Fr.: théisme The belief in one God as the creator and ruler of the universe, without rejection of
revelation (distinguished from → deism). From the- variant of theo- before a vowel, from Gk. theos "god," from PIE root *dhes-, root of words applied to various religious concepts, such as L. feriae "holidays," festus "festive," fanum "temple." Yzadân-bâvari, from yazdân "god," from Mid.Pers. yazetân "gods," ultimately from Proto-Ir. *iaz- "to sacrifice, worship, venerate," → deity. |
totalitarianism hamâkigerâyi Fr.: totalitarisme 1) The practices and principles of a totalitarian regime. → totalitarian; → -ism. |
trichroism sefâmi Fr.: trichroïsme The property of some crystals of exhibiting three different colors when viewed from three different directions under white lights. → dichroism. From Gk. tri- "three" + chroic, from chroma "color" + -ism. Sefâmi, from se, → three, + fâm "color," + -i noun suffix. |
uniformitarianism yekdisvârbâvari Fr.: uniformitarisme The doctrine whereby geologic processes (→ erosion, → deposition, → compaction, and → uplift) observed at Earth's surface now are the same that have shaped Earth's landscape over long periods of time in the past. The term uniformitarianism was first used in 1832 by William Whewell, to present an alternative explanation for the origin of the Earth. The prevailing view at that time was that the Earth was created through supernatural means and had been affected by a series of catastrophic events such as the biblical Flood. This theory is called → catastrophism. The ideas behind uniformitarianism originated with the work of Scottish geologist James Hutton. In 1785, Hutton presented at the meetings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh that the Earth had a long history and that this history could be interpreted in terms of processes currently observed. For example, he suggested that deep soil profiles were formed by the weathering of bedrock over thousands of years. He also suggested that supernatural theories were not needed to explain the geologic history of the Earth (PhysicalGeography.net). → uniformitarian; → -ism. |
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