释义 |
theory noun—论 n (almost always used) ()Examples:bourgeois revolution (in Marx-Leninist theory, a prelude the proletarian revolution)—Alfred Wegener (1880-1930), German meteorologist and geophysicist, the originator of the theory of continental drift—theory of Chakra in Indian yoga and Tibetan Buddhism—collectivization of agriculture (in Marxist theory)—deism, theological theory of God who does not interfere in the Universe—the workers of Socialist theory or of the glorious Chinese past—the theory of Mencius that people are by nature good—pantheism, theological theory equating God with the Universe—reign name of second Ming emperor, reigned 1398-1402, deposed in 1402 (mysterious disappearance is ongoing conspiracy theory)—thirty six initial consonants of Song phonetic theory—the theory that man is an integral part of nature—theory of reflection (in dialectic materialism), i.e. every perception reflects physical reality—panentheism, theological theory of God as equal the Universe while transcending it—Kurt Lewing (1890-1944), German American psychologist of the Gestalt school, the author of Field Theory—(math.) theory of functions of a complex variable—the theory that geological change is caused by catastrophic events such as the Biblical flood—social status (in Marxist theory, esp. using during cultural revolution)—quantum foam (in string theory, and science fiction)—Felix Klein's Erlangen program (1872) on geometry and group theory—the theory that the sun is at the center of the universe—Mao Zedong Thought, Deng Xiaoping Theory & the Three Represents—John Dalton (1766-1844), British scientist who contributed atomic theory—epistemology (in philosophy, the theory of how we know things)—pandeism, theological theory that God created the Universe and became one with it—material progress, ideology and culture (philosophic slogan, adopted inDeng Xiaoping theory from 1978)—Yang Fujia (1936-), nuclear physicist, famous for Yang-Mills gauge theory—catastrophism (theory that geological changes are brought about by catastrophes such as the biblical flood)—Excellent theory, but the practice does not bear it out.—sit and pontificate; to find answers through theory and not through practice [idiom.]— |