For the purpose of this utopian object lies at all times with the "communicability" of our judgment of it. From Wordnik.com. [The Voice of Critique: Aesthetic Cognition After Kant,] Reference
And they say that the disease, the TB that he has at this stage of the game, is of low communicability, meaning it's difficult to spread. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript May 31, 2007] Reference
So again, from a communicability standpoint, it's extremely low. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jun 1, 2007] Reference
A term, incidentally, which is about communicability, not lethality. From Wordnik.com. [William Bradley: Obama's Crisis Management: Of Flu and AfPak] Reference
So he is of low communicability at this point in time by our records that we have received. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript May 31, 2007] Reference
The requirement of communicability and clear decision procedures can also be suspended by God's fiat. From Wordnik.com. [Søren Kierkegaard] Reference
With a 99.4% communicability and fatality rate, the epidemic soon spreads throughout Texas and beyond. From Wordnik.com. [Comic Break: The Stand Captain Trips #2 (Marvel)] Reference
In fact, they say that he has shown very low signs of communicability, that he's not very contagious, essentially. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jun 1, 2007] Reference
For the former distinction is drawn in terms of communicability and the latter distinction makes no reference whatsoever to communicability. From Wordnik.com. [Reasons for Action: Agent-Neutral vs. Agent-Relative] Reference
In the revolution of the Information Age, openness, communicability, transparency, have become slogans as inspiring as Kant's "Dare to know" used to be. From Wordnik.com. [Literary Warrant [30]] Reference
She says, "It was created before SARS took off, but it's still applicable in the way it rethinks the mask and deals with the idea of communicability, both viral and verbal.". From Wordnik.com. [Boing Boing: June 1, 2003 - June 7, 2003 Archives] Reference
Or his famous precept, in The Critique of Judgment, on a "regard to universal communicability," which he describes as an original social contract "dictated by humanity itself.". From Wordnik.com. [Literary Warrant [30]] Reference
This blend of embodied response and universal import closely resembles Kant's own procedure, for he too insists both on the uniqueness and the communicability of aesthetic judgment. From Wordnik.com. [Rhyming Sensation in 'Mont Blanc'] Reference
The criterion for judgment, then, is communicability, and the standard for deciding whether our judgments are indeed communicable is to see whether they could fit with the sensus communis of others. From Wordnik.com. [Hannah Arendt] Reference
But this is not a measure of lethality, only communicability, and pandemics are not limited to the deadliest diseases. From Wordnik.com. [MercatorNet] Reference
It was doctors in Canada who diagnosed him and cautioned him -- to no point as it turned out -- about the communicability of his disease. From Wordnik.com. Reference
For any infectious organism, its virulence - the damage it can do to its host - exists in an inverse relationship to its communicability. From Wordnik.com. [SEEDMAGAZINE.COM] Reference
Isolation would last for the period of communicability of the illness, which varies by disease and the availability of specific treatment. From Wordnik.com. [AGORAVOX - The Citizen Media] Reference
"The findings of this study are preliminary, but the far greater communicability of the pandemic virus serves as a clearly blinking warning light.". From Wordnik.com. [Medlogs - Recent stories] Reference
Some autonomous agents may also have the properties of communicability (with other agents); adaptability (based on previous experience); unscripted flexibility. From Wordnik.com. [Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]] Reference
Field seems to have excerpted this incautiously from the Schoolmen, who on this premiss could justify the communicability of adoration, as in the case of the saints. From Wordnik.com. [The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge] Reference
It contains nodes for telling, unspeakable, communicability and other words that suggest Roysdon's thoughtfulness but fail to connect - to one another or to the viewer. From Wordnik.com. [The Pitch | Complete Issue] Reference
It must be based in some measure upon an instinctive familiarity of association, upon a quick communicability of sympathy, upon the easy and effortless sense of companionship. From Wordnik.com. [The Promise of American Life] Reference
She is charismatic dfine us "extreme charm and a 'magnetic' quality of personality along with innate and powerfully sophisticated personal communicability and persuasiveness.". From Wordnik.com. [Cafferty File] Reference
P.S. -- Throughout the foregoing letter, I have used the words contagion and infection as precisely synonymous terms, meaning communicability of disease from one person to another. From Wordnik.com. [Letters on the Cholera Morbus. Containing ample evidence that this disease, under whatever name known, cannot be transmitted from the persons of those labouring under it to other individuals, by contact—through the medium of inanimate substances—or through the medium of the atmosphere; and that all restrictions, by cordons and quarantine regulations, are, as far as regards this disease, not merely useless, but highly injurious to the community.] Reference
By the same principle of communicability, if Xabi Alonso is determined to be unfit for the match against Valencia, the script seems to be set for Fernando Gago to make a return to the team. From Wordnik.com. [Yahoo! Sports - Top News] Reference
"Although it is likely that routine blood and fluid precautions will protect against such future events, strict adherence to protective protocols is mandatory even if communicability is deemed unlikely.". From Wordnik.com. [Medlogs - Recent stories] Reference
But, the LA Times points out that it’s still unclear how all of this translates into communicability. From Wordnik.com. [Medpundit] Reference
“based on” a feeling of pleasure, and as claiming that everyone ought to share the subject's feeling of pleasure, or, as he puts it, as claiming the “universal communicability” of the pleasure. From Wordnik.com. [Kant's Aesthetics and Teleology] Reference
The communicability of a sensation. From Wordnik.com. [The Critique of Judgement] Reference
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