A Posteriori
WordNet

adjective


(1)   Involving reasoning from facts or particulars to general principals or from effects to causes
"A posteriori demonstration"
(2)   Requiring evidence for validation or support

adverb


(3)   Derived from observed facts
WiktionaryText

Quotations

  • 1988, What Locke calls "knowledge" they have called "a priori knowledge"; what he calls "opinion" or "belief" they have called "a posteriori" or "empirical knowledge". — The empiricists, Woolhouse, R. S., Oxford University Press.

Quotations

  • 1991, FALLACIES of the modern worldview have to do with the conception of the world as substance or machinery, mistaking abstractions for reality, confusing origins and truth, failing to attribute feeling to things that feel, recognising ethics as exclusively anthropocentric, thinking a posteriori, objectifying facts as separated from values, reducing the complex to the simple and dividing knowledge into distinct disciplines that produce experts who are often wrong. — New Scientist, IPC Magazines Ltd.

Synonyms

  • (involving deduction of theories from facts): empirisch
  • (involving a time frame): im Nachhinein
 
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