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THEOREM |
Hypothesis |
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THEORY |
Hypothesis |
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HYPOTHESES |
Of Hypothesis |
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SUPPOSURE |
Supposition; hypothesis; conjecture. |
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HYPOTHETIST |
One who proposes or supports an hypothesis. |
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SUPPOSITIVE |
Including or implying supposition, or hypothesis;
supposed. |
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THESIS |
An affirmation, or distinction from a supposition or
hypothesis. |
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PANGENESIS |
An hypothesis advanced by Darwin in explanation of
heredity. |
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PANSPERMIC |
Of or pertaining to panspermy; as, the panspermic
hypothesis. |
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SUPPOSITION |
That which is supposed; hypothesis; conjecture;
surmise; opinion or belief without sufficient evidence. |
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PHILOSOPHY |
A particular philosophical system or theory; the
hypothesis by which particular phenomena are explained. |
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INOGEN |
A complex nitrogenous substance, which, by Hermann's
hypothesis, is continually decomposed and reproduced in the muscles,
during their life. |
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RATIONALE |
An explanation or exposition of the principles of some
opinion, action, hypothesis, phenomenon, or the like; also, the
principles themselves. |
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HYPOTHESIS |
A tentative theory or supposition provisionally adopted
to explain certain facts, and to guide in the investigation of others;
hence, frequently called a working hypothesis. |
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EMBOITEMENT |
The hypothesis that all living things proceed from
preexisting germs, and that these encase the germs of all future living
things, inclosed one within another. |
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TRANSFORMISM |
The hypothesis, or doctrine, that living beings have
originated by the modification of some other previously existing forms
of living matter; -- opposed to abiogenesis. |
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TELLURISM |
An hypothesis of animal magnetism propounded by Dr.
Keiser, in Germany, in which the phenomena are ascribed to the agency
of a telluric spirit or influence. |
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PHRENOLOGY |
In popular usage, the physiological hypothesis of Gall,
that the mental faculties, and traits of character, are shown on the
surface of the head or skull; craniology. |
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HYPOTHETICAL |
Characterized by, or of the nature of, an hypothesis;
conditional; assumed without proof, for the purpose of reasoning and
deducing proof, or of accounting for some fact or phenomenon. |
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SAY |
To mention or suggest as an estimate, hypothesis, or
approximation; hence, to suppose; -- in the imperative, followed
sometimes by the subjunct... |
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GASTRAEA |
A primeval larval form; a double-walled sac from which,
according to the hypothesis of Haeckel, man and all other animals, that
in the first st... |
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EQUATION |
... taken from, its position as calculated on
the hypothesis of a mean uniform motion, in order to find its true
position as resulting from its act... |
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GEMMULE |
One of the imaginary granules or atoms which, according to
Darwin's hypothesis of pangenesis, are continually being thrown off
from every cell ... |