Adjective : fallible information. From Dictionary.com.
/One didn't consider the Central Prime as fallibly human. From Wordnik.com. [The Rowan]
Is the determination of the above made fallibly or infallibly?. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2007-10-01] Reference
What I like is that everyone is portrayed as horribly and fallibly human. From Wordnik.com. [mad men too real] Reference
Invariably the historian deals with facts, descriptions, and most fallibly with opinions . From Wordnik.com. [Art's End] Reference
Thus, losing weight is very hard, not because we are lazy or bad, but because we are successful and very fallibly human. From Wordnik.com. [The tempting marketplace.] Reference
What judgment would she pass on them, wondered Kincaid, now that they had revealed themselves as all too fallibly human, and flawed?. From Wordnik.com. [Leave the Grave Green] Reference
It's one thing to ask how a fallible human fallibly but sufficiently understands an inerrant text and quite another when the text has problems. From Wordnik.com. [Quote of the Day (Denis Diderot)] Reference
Poets are as fallibly human as anyone else, and surely Cordle did not assume that writing poetry afforded some kind of exemption from this truth. From Wordnik.com. [Writing and Publishing] Reference
Moreover, they have confidence that, just as they are fallible human beings who nonetheless have something important to share, so too the earliest Christians may have written fallibly and yet still have something important to share. From Wordnik.com. [A Parable and a Testimony] Reference
If Montaigne marks the beginning of modernity, it is because he tells us exactly what he is like; how he sees the world, fallibly and yet honestly; and because there was no book in the world like it before, and we are still writing books rather like it today. From Wordnik.com. [Addle-pated modernist] Reference
And this access we have, at least in principle, if fitness is a matter of differences in the solution of identifiable design-problems, that is, if there is such a thing as ecological fitness and it is (fallibly) measured by probabilistic propensities to leave offspring. From Wordnik.com. [Fitness] Reference
It is to assert several independent things: first, that there is the possibility of (fallibly) objective knowledge of social facts; second, that there are “social facts” to be known – that is, there are some mind- or interpretation-independent things that happen and can be the subject of knowledge; and third (questionably), that there are categories of higher-level social entities that “really” exist in the way that some philosophers say that natural kinds exist. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2008-11-01] Reference
A person can believe in the gospel partially and grasp justification fallibly. From Wordnik.com. [Euangelion] Reference
By considering the sad and fatal doom that will in fallibly attend the neglect of it, 266. From Wordnik.com. [Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. V.] Reference
Even though the dream seemed fallibly remote, it still presaged an absolute horrendous certainty. From Wordnik.com. [[Help] Most Recent Posts] Reference
They were human, fallibly human, and like us; they took pleasure and delight in the trivial joys of fashion. From Wordnik.com. [The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com] Reference
There's no need to quote fallibly from memory when, in the age of the internet, a printed edition is always at hand. From Wordnik.com. [Disillusioned Lefty] Reference
Whatever beaft happeneth to feed, where this ve - nomous worm hath crept (fome fay if he do but tread there) is certainly poifoned, yet may be in - fallibly cured, if timely remedy be applied. From Wordnik.com. [Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicis] Reference
Elliot seems to be a cross between Follett, Vonnegut, and Pynchon but with an uncanny ability to capture the disparate characters playing in the big picture of a world stage while simultaneously being so fallibly human. From Wordnik.com. [RVABlogs] Reference
Guided by this principle, we also discover ” fallibly, to be sure ” that various rules of inference are more effective than others in generating acceptable causal beliefs. From Wordnik.com. [John Stuart Mill] Reference
I know this is not always the present effect of these courses, but at long run it will in fallibly be so; and time and luxury together will as certainly change the inside, as it does the outside of the best heads whatsoever; and much more of such heads as are strong for nothing but to bear drink: concerning which, it ever was, and is, and will be a sure observation, that such as are ablest at the barrel, are generally weakest at the book. From Wordnik.com. [Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. II.] Reference
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