Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The removal of order

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

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Examples

  • You have apparently managed to rationalise this to yourself in terms of a pseudo-Stoic teleological sophistry in which every passion has a "final cause" -- an essential purpose -- such that action at odds with these essential purposes represents an immoral "disordering" of the appetites, an unacceptable misdirection from their natural/mandatory objects.

    Archive 2009-08-01 Hal Duncan 2009

  • You have apparently managed to rationalise this to yourself in terms of a pseudo-Stoic teleological sophistry in which every passion has a "final cause" -- an essential purpose -- such that action at odds with these essential purposes represents an immoral "disordering" of the appetites, an unacceptable misdirection from their natural/mandatory objects.

    An Open Letter to John C. Wright Hal Duncan 2009

  • Note the epithet translated 'disordering'; we shall meet the word ταραχη

    The Legacy of Greece Essays By: Gilbert Murray, W. R. Inge, J. Burnet, Sir T. L. Heath, D'arcy W. Thompson, Charles Singer, R. W. Livingston, A. Toynbee, A. E. Zimmern, Percy Gardner, Sir Reginald Blomfield Various

  • When Peter attempts to walk on the water in Matthew, is the reader really wondering if gravity or the "disordering" action of wind and wave caused him to fail?

    Conservapedia - Recent changes [en] CirceCook 2010

  • When Peter attempts to walk on the water in Matthew, is the reader really wondering if gravity or the "disordering" action of wind and wave caused him to fail?

    Conservapedia - Recent changes [en] 2009

  • When Peter attempts to walk on the water in Matthew, is the reader really wondering if gravity or the "disordering" action of wind and wave caused him to fail?

    Conservapedia - Recent changes [en] 2009

  • When Peter attempts to walk on the water in Matthew, is the reader really wondering if gravity or the "disordering" action of wind and wave caused him to fail?

    Conservapedia - Recent changes [en] 2009

  • When Peter attempts to walk on the water in Matthew, is the reader really wondering if gravity or the "disordering" action of wind and wave caused him to fail?

    Conservapedia - Recent changes [en] 2009

  • Anyone who's dealing with one or other form of colour-blindness could be dealing with all manner of disordering in that system.

    Creative Control - Part 5 Hal Duncan 2009

  • Anyone who's dealing with one or other form of colour-blindness could be dealing with all manner of disordering in that system.

    Archive 2009-02-01 Hal Duncan 2009

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