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noetics

[ noh-et-iks ]

noun

, (used with a singular verb)
  1. the science of the intellect or of pure thought; reasoning.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of noetics1

First recorded in 1870–75; noetic, -ics
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Example Sentences

His father's idea was that he should read for the bar, and he kept a few terms at Lincoln's Inn; but in the end Oxford, which had, about the year of his birth, experienced a rebirth of ideas, thanks to the widening impulse of the French Revolution, held him, and Oriel College—the centre of the "Noetics," as old Oxford called the Liberal set in contempt—made him a fellow.

The opinions of the Noetics in Oriel College, Oxford, now seem distinctly mild.

It is the same scientific spirit of the time, which in the fifties led many who were weary of the idealistic speculations over to materialism, that now secures such wide dissemination and so widespread favor for the endeavors of the neo-Kantians and the positivists or neo-Baconians, who desire to see metaphysics stricken from the list of the sciences and replaced by noëtics, and the theory of the world relegated to faith.

Geulincx's services to noëtics have been duly recognized by Ed.

The unconscious or minute ideas, which in noëtics had served to break the force of Locke's objections against the innateness of the principles of reason, are in ethics brought into the field against indeterminism.

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noeticNo Exit