But truth, in a myth, means a sterling quality and standard excellence, not a literal or logicaltruth.
2
Exaggeration, therefore, is only that which wounds, not logicaltruth, but sensuous truth, and what pretends to be sensuous truth.
3
Clarke and Woolston base moral distinctions on the rational order of things, and characterize the ethically good action as a logicaltruth translated into practice.
4
Not merely that it deduces logicaltruths, but that when it suddenly becomes illogical, it has found, so to speak, an illogical truth.
1
Unfortunately, the same is not necessarilytrue of films about mass destruction.
2
What is true of the vulture is not necessarilytrue of Mary.
3
I waited for her to tell me this was not necessarilytrue.
4
But even as she spoke the words, Ellie knew they weren't necessarilytrue.
5
Not quite to that degree, and it's not necessarilytrue, either.
6
If the conclusion be true, the premisses are not necessarilytrue.
7
A statement made by a great man is not necessarilytrue.
8
Yes, when he says that, he says what isn't necessarilytrue.
9
Better, not less The common complaint that China invests too much isn't necessarilytrue.
10
All the tales that he told were not necessarilytrue.
11
Granted their truth, all that is necessarilytrue in agnosticism has been arrived at.
12
This is true of adults and necessarilytrue of children.
13
Statements which were true then are not necessarilytrue now.
14
This is as necessarilytrue, as that a whole is greater than its part.
15
S. "-Thoughnot necessarilytrue objectively, that is, absolutely and in itself?"
16
Again, ultimately, this may be true for some, but not necessarilytrue across the board.