boundedness

IPA: bˈaʊndʌdnʌs

noun

  • The state or quality of being bounded.
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Examples of "boundedness" in Sentences

  • It need not be a whole room, perhaps, but it must have some kind of definition and boundedness.
  • What I think underlies these ideas is not display, representation or interface but rather boundedness.
  • J.J. C. Smart (1963) emphasized the earth-boundedness of the biological sciences (in conflict with the universality of natural laws).
  • I begin by setting out from myself, as you say—precisely, because by beginning I get beyond the boundedness of "self" into something more.
  • The boundedness reflects the fact that beyond a certain point money ceases being useful at all, as the size of any economy at any point in time is itself bounded.
  • Were this to happen the capitalist model that grew to love militarism would be forced to find another way to keep the system going in the face of the constricted boundedness of a planetary economy.
  • If you get past his annoying gallic pomposity, which comes through even in translation, and a certain obvious boundedness within the worldview of the early 20th century, there are interesting thoughts to unravel.
  • If nation-states are almost always defined by some notion of boundedness, what happens when certain parts of the nation-state are not territorially contiguous with what is considered the political center of that nation-state?
  • While contemporary "literary fiction" generally deals with the exploration of some facet or another of the human condition, this novel manages to explore a vast palette of humanity, despite its slimness and boundedness in relatively confined enclaves of space and time.

Related Links

synonyms for boundednessdescribing words for boundedness
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