-
1 противоречивое решение
Русско-английский политический словарь > противоречивое решение
-
2 противоречивое решение
Русско-английский словарь по патентам и товарным знакам > противоречивое решение
-
3 Urteil
Urteil n GRUND, RECHT judgment, court decision • ein Urteil anfechten RECHT appeal against a judgment • entgegen jmds. Urteil RECHT against sb’s judgment • im Urteil der Märkte FIN, GEN perceived by the markets • Urteil erlassen RECHT pass judgment* * *n <Grund, Recht> judgment, court decision ■ ein Urteil anfechten < Recht> appeal against a judgment ■ entgegen jmds. Urteil n < Recht> against sb's judgment ■ im Urteil der Märkte <Finanz, Geschäft> perceived by the markets ■ Urteil erlassen < Recht> pass judgment* * *Urteil
(Beschluss) judicial decision, decree, (Meinung) judgment, (Schiedsspruch) award, arbitration;
• nach dem übereinstimmenden Urteil der Sachverständigen according to the unanimous judgment (concurrent view) of the experts;
• wie aus dem Urteil hervorgeht as appears from the judgment of the court;
• von der ständigen Rechtssprechung abweichendes Urteil irregular judgment;
• abweisendes Urteil judgment of dismissal;
• anfechtbares Urteil voidable judgment;
• aus Rechtsgründen aufgehobenes Urteil judgment quashed on a point of law;
• bedingtes Urteil conditional judgment;
• endgültiges Urteil definitive judgment;
• in einem Einzelstaat erlassenes Urteil domestic judgment (US);
• im Versäumnisverfahren falsches Urteil error in judgment;
• inländisches Urteil domestic judgment (US);
• klageabweisendes Urteil involuntary nonsuit;
• letztinstanzliches Urteil final judgment;
• nichtiges Urteil void judgment;
• obsiegendes Urteil favo(u)rable judgment (decision);
• rechtskräftiges Urteil final judgment, final decree, judgment at law (of recovery, US);
• noch nicht rechtskräftiges (rechtsmittelfähiges) Urteil judgment subject to appeal;
• streitiges Urteil contradictory judgment;
• dem Vollstreckungsaufschub unterliegendes Urteil judgment liable to stay off execution;
• vollstreckbares Urteil enforceable judgment;
• noch nicht vollstrecktes Urteil unsatisfied judgment;
• sofort vollstreckbares Urteil self-executing judgment;
• vorläufig vollstreckbares Urteil judgment [provisionally] enforceable;
• Urteil zugunsten des Beklagten verdict for the defendant;
• Urteil dem Grunde nach decision on merits;
• Urteil zugunsten des Klägers judgment given for the plaintiff;
• Urteil im abgekürztem Verfahren summary judgment;
• Urteil anfechten to appeal against a judgment;
• Urteil annehmen to acquiesce in a judgment;
• Urteil aufheben to set aside (US) (quash, vacate, reverse) a judgment;
• Urteil in der Berufungsinstanz aufheben to vacate a judgment on appeal;
• Urteil in der zweiten Instanz aufheben to uphold a decision on appeal;
• Vollstreckung eines Urteils aussetzen to stay (suspend) a judgment;
• Aussetzung eines Urteils beantragen to move an arrest of judgment;
• sich aus einem Urteil befriedigen to satisfy a judgment;
• Urteil begründen to set forth the reasons for a judgment;
• Urteil bestätigen to affirm (confirm) a judgment, to approve a decision;
• Berufung (Rechtsmittel) gegen ein Urteil einlegen to appeal against a judgment;
• Urteil für nichtig erklären to rescind (invalidate) a judgment;
• Urteil zugunsten des Klägers erlassen to pass a judgment for the plaintiff in a suit;
• Urteil gegen einen Schuldner erwirken to obtain judgment against a debtor;
• Urteil fällen to judge, to deliver (enter a, pass) judgment, to adjudicate;
• Urteil zu jds. Gunsten fällen to give the case for s. o. against s. o.;
• Urteil vollstrecken lassen to enforce a judgment by execution;
• einem Urteil nachkommen to satisfy a judgment;
• Urteil der öffentlichen Meinung überlassen to leave it to the country to judge;
• Urteil der Vorinstanz überprüfen to review a judgment on appeal;
• Urteil öffentlich verkünden to pronounce judgment in open court;
• Urteil vollstrecken to execute (carry out, enforce) a judgment;
• jem. ein Urteil zustellen to notify s. o. of a decision. -
4 решение по существу спора
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > решение по существу спора
-
5 противоречивое решение
1) Computers: contradictory judgement2) Economy: contradictory judgmentУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > противоречивое решение
-
6 состязательное решение
leg.N.P. contradictory judgmentУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > состязательное решение
-
7 streitiges Urteil
streitiges Urteil
contradictory judgment -
8 Science
It is a common notion, or at least it is implied in many common modes of speech, that the thoughts, feelings, and actions of sentient beings are not a subject of science.... This notion seems to involve some confusion of ideas, which it is necessary to begin by clearing up. Any facts are fitted, in themselves, to be a subject of science, which follow one another according to constant laws; although those laws may not have been discovered, nor even to be discoverable by our existing resources. (Mill, 1900, B. VI, Chap. 3, Sec. 1)One class of natural philosophers has always a tendency to combine the phenomena and to discover their analogies; another class, on the contrary, employs all its efforts in showing the disparities of things. Both tendencies are necessary for the perfection of science, the one for its progress, the other for its correctness. The philosophers of the first of these classes are guided by the sense of unity throughout nature; the philosophers of the second have their minds more directed towards the certainty of our knowledge. The one are absorbed in search of principles, and neglect often the peculiarities, and not seldom the strictness of demonstration; the other consider the science only as the investigation of facts, but in their laudable zeal they often lose sight of the harmony of the whole, which is the character of truth. Those who look for the stamp of divinity on every thing around them, consider the opposite pursuits as ignoble and even as irreligious; while those who are engaged in the search after truth, look upon the other as unphilosophical enthusiasts, and perhaps as phantastical contemners of truth.... This conflict of opinions keeps science alive, and promotes it by an oscillatory progress. (Oersted, 1920, p. 352)Most of the fundamental ideas of science are essentially simple, and may, as a rule, be expressed in a language comprehensible to everyone. (Einstein & Infeld, 1938, p. 27)A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it. (Planck, 1949, pp. 33-34)[Original quotation: "Eine neue wissenschaftliche Wahrheit pflegt sich nicht in der Weise durchzusetzen, dass ihre Gegner ueberzeugt werden und sich as belehrt erklaeren, sondern vielmehr dadurch, dass die Gegner allmaehlich aussterben und dass die heranwachsende Generation von vornherein mit der Wahrheit vertraut gemacht ist." (Planck, 1990, p. 15)]I had always looked upon the search for the absolute as the noblest and most worth while task of science. (Planck, 1949, p. 46)If you cannot-in the long run-tell everyone what you have been doing, your doing has been worthless. (SchroЁdinger, 1951, pp. 7-8)Even for the physicist the description in plain language will be a criterion of the degree of understanding that has been reached. (Heisenberg, 1958, p. 168)The old scientific ideal of episteґmeґ-of absolutely certain, demonstrable knowledge-has proved to be an idol. The demand for scientific objectivity makes it inevitable that every scientific statement must remain tentative forever. It may indeed be corroborated, but every corroboration is relative to other statements which, again, are tentative. Only in our subjective experiences of conviction, in our subjective faith, can we be "absolutely certain." (Popper, 1959, p. 280)The layman, taught to revere scientists for their absolute respect for the observed facts, and for the judiciously detached and purely provisional manner in which they hold scientific theories (always ready to abandon a theory at the sight of any contradictory evidence) might well have thought that, at Miller's announcement of this overwhelming evidence of a "positive effect" [indicating that the speed of light is not independent from the motion of the observer, as Einstein's theory of relativity demands] in his presidential address to the American Physical Society on December 29th, 1925, his audience would have instantly abandoned the theory of relativity. Or, at the very least, that scientists-wont to look down from the pinnacle of their intellectual humility upon the rest of dogmatic mankind-might suspend judgment in this matter until Miller's results could be accounted for without impairing the theory of relativity. But no: by that time they had so well closed their minds to any suggestion which threatened the new rationality achieved by Einstein's world-picture, that it was almost impossible for them to think again in different terms. Little attention was paid to the experiments, the evidence being set aside in the hope that it would one day turn out to be wrong. (Polanyi, 1958, pp. 12-13)The practice of normal science depends on the ability, acquired from examplars, to group objects and situations into similarity sets which are primitive in the sense that the grouping is done without an answer to the question, "Similar with respect to what?" (Kuhn, 1970, p. 200)Science in general... does not consist in collecting what we already know and arranging it in this or that kind of pattern. It consists in fastening upon something we do not know, and trying to discover it. (Collingwood, 1972, p. 9)Scientific fields emerge as the concerns of scientists congeal around various phenomena. Sciences are not defined, they are recognized. (Newell, 1973a, p. 1)This is often the way it is in physics-our mistake is not that we take our theories too seriously, but that we do not take them seriously enough. I do not think it is possible really to understand the successes of science without understanding how hard it is-how easy it is to be led astray, how difficult it is to know at any time what is the next thing to be done. (Weinberg, 1977, p. 49)Science is wonderful at destroying metaphysical answers, but incapable of providing substitute ones. Science takes away foundations without providing a replacement. Whether we want to be there or not, science has put us in a position of having to live without foundations. It was shocking when Nietzsche said this, but today it is commonplace; our historical position-and no end to it is in sight-is that of having to philosophize without "foundations." (Putnam, 1987, p. 29)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Science
См. также в других словарях:
judgment — A sense of knowledge sufficient to comprehend nature of transaction. Thomas v. Young, 57 App. D.C. 282, 22 F.2d 588, 590. An opinion or estimate. McClung Const. Co. v. Muncy, Tex.Civ.App., 65 S.W.2d 786, 790. The formation of an opinion or notion … Black's law dictionary
judgment — A sense of knowledge sufficient to comprehend nature of transaction. Thomas v. Young, 57 App. D.C. 282, 22 F.2d 588, 590. An opinion or estimate. McClung Const. Co. v. Muncy, Tex.Civ.App., 65 S.W.2d 786, 790. The formation of an opinion or notion … Black's law dictionary
Lis alibi pendens — The principle of lis alibi pendens (literally, dispute elsewhere pending ) applies both in municipal, public international law, and private international law to address the problem of potentially contradictory judgments. If two courts were to… … Wikipedia
epistemology — epistemological /i pis teuh meuh loj i keuhl/, adj. epistemologically, adv. epistemologist, n. /i pis teuh mol euh jee/, n. a branch of philosophy that investigates the origin, nature, methods, and limits of human knowledge. [1855 60; < Gk… … Universalium
KABBALAH — This entry is arranged according to the following outline: introduction general notes terms used for kabbalah the historical development of the kabbalah the early beginnings of mysticism and esotericism apocalyptic esotericism and merkabah… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
logic, history of — Introduction the history of the discipline from its origins among the ancient Greeks to the present time. Origins of logic in the West Precursors of ancient logic There was a medieval tradition according to which the Greek philosopher … Universalium
Christianity — /kris chee an i tee/, n., pl. Christianities. 1. the Christian religion, including the Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern Orthodox churches. 2. Christian beliefs or practices; Christian quality or character: Christianity mixed with pagan elements; … Universalium
Confirmation bias — (also called confirmatory bias or myside bias) is a tendency for people to favor information that confirms their preconceptions or hypotheses regardless of whether the information is true.[Note 1][1] As a result, people gather evidence and recall … Wikipedia
literature — /lit euhr euh cheuhr, choor , li treuh /, n. 1. writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. 2.… … Universalium
Certitude — • The word indicates both a state of mind and a quality of a proposition, according as we say, I am certain , or, It is certain Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Certitude Certitude … Catholic encyclopedia
Historical Criticism — • The art of distinguishing the true from the false concerning facts of the past Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Historical Criticism Historical Criticism … Catholic encyclopedia