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Synonyms

apodictic

American  
[ap-uh-dik-tik] / ˌæp əˈdɪk tɪk /
Also apodeictic

adjective

  1. incontestable because of having been demonstrated or proved to be demonstrable.

  2. Logic. (of a proposition) necessarily true or logically certain.


Other Word Forms

  • apodeictically adverb
  • apodictically adverb

Etymology

Origin of apodictic

1645–55; < Latin apodīcticus < Greek apodeiktikós proving fully. See apo-, deictic

Explanation

Anything apodictic is certain: it cannot be disputed. The existence of gravity is apodictic. This word comes from a Greek verb meaning to demonstrate, and it applies to things that have been demonstrated beyond a shadow of a doubt. An apodictic statement is absolutely, completely, unquestionably true. Usually, this applies to the logic of a statement or argument that is airtight. Lawyers try to make apodictic arguments: flawless arguments. If something is apodictic, there’s no point in questioning it. “Slavery is wrong” is an apodictic statement.

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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Just another oral presentation of apodictic obiter dicta on the solo stage!

From Time Magazine Archive

Advance in thinking, in the hegelian universe, has, in short, to proceed by the apodictic words must be rather than by those inferior hypothetic words may be, which are all that empiricists can use.

From A Pluralistic Universe Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College on the Present Situation in Philosophy by James, William

He is not interested in the merely schematic character of the thought processes, but in their function as mediators of apodictic truth.

From International Congress of Arts and Science, Volume I Philosophy and Metaphysics by Various

Strange is it not that, oft her Dolour cloaking In hurried Puffs with Nonchalance provoking, No woman reads that apodictic Ode "How to be Happy Even Though You're Smoking?"

From The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam Jr. by Irwin, Wallace

No religion has ever yet owed its prevalence to "apodictic certainty."

From Varieties of Religious Experience, a Study in Human Nature by James, William