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analogy and faith
:*... reject that method of judging and interpreting Sacred Scripture which, departing from the tradition of the Church, the analogy of faith, and the norms of the Apostolic See ...
To him chiefly is due the abandonment of the principle of interpretation according to the analogy of faith, which practically subordinated the Bible to the creed.
The rule of faith () or analogy of faith ( analogia fidei ) is a phrase rooted in the Apostle Paul's admonition to the Christians in Rome in the Epistle to the Romans 12: 6, which says, " We have different gifts, according to the grace given us.
The last phrase, " in proportion to his faith " is in Greek ἀναλογίαν τῆς πίστεως (" analogy of faith ").
In conservative Protestantism Romans 12: 6 is viewed as the biblical reference for the term " analogy of the faith " ( i. e., αναλογἰα τῆς πἰστεως ).
The Bible alone is considered the word of God and the only infallible standard for judging faith and practice ; hence, for conservative Protestantism, the analogy of the faith is equivalent to the analogy of scripture – that is, opinions are tested for their consistency with scripture, and scripture is interpreted by the Holy Spirit speaking in scripture ( compare sola scriptura ).
The analogy of faith, which was advanced by St. Augustine, is sometimes contrasted with the analogy of being ( Latin: analogia entis ), which, according to St. Thomas Aquinas, allows one to know God through analogy with his creation.

analogy and ,"
Apart from the commonly cited example of water turning to steam with increased temperature, Gould and Eldredge noted another analogy in information theory, " with its jargon of equilibrium, steady state, and homeostasis maintained by negative feedback ," and " extremely rapid transitions that occur with positive feedback.
The symbolists " stressed the priority of suggestion and evocation over direct description and explicit analogy ," and were especially interested in " the musical properties of language.
Edward Cave, who edited The Gentleman's Magazine under the pen name " Sylvanus Urban ," was the first to use the term " magazine ," on the analogy of a military storehouse of varied materiel, ultimately derived from the Arabic makhazin (" storehouses ") by way of the French language.
* 1893, " A gravitational and electromagnetic analogy ," The Electrician.
Weygand did this without any decree of Marshal Philippe Pétain's, " by analogy ," he said, " to the law about Higher Education ".
The Moline Association of Commerce marketed the Quad-Cities under the motto of " Joined together, as the boroughs of New York City " throughout the 1940s and 1950s, with Moline as the " nucleus ," but few corporations bought into the analogy.
Readers immediately reject a literal interpretation and confidently interpret the words to mean " The ground is dry ," an analogy to the condition that would trigger thirst in an animal.
* The Jewish songwriter Harold Rome wrote, for the musical " Pins and Needles " in 1937, a gospel song, " Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin ," which made the analogy between Belshazzar and Hitler, saying the former " didn't pay no income taxes :/ The big shot of the Babylon-Jerusalem Axis.
He described in graphic terms the greatest of the more superficial changes he underwent ; how he had " carried into logical and ethical problems the maxims and postulates of physical knowledge ," and had moved within the narrow lines drawn by the philosophical instructions of the class-room " interpreting human phenomena by the analogy of external nature "; how he served in willing captivity " the ' empirical ' and ' necessarian ' mode of thought ," even though " shocked " by the dogmatism and acrid humours " of certain distinguished representatives " and how in a period of " second education " at Humboldt University in Berlin, " mainly under the admirable guidance of Professor Trendelenburg ," he experienced " a new intellectual birth " which " was essentially the gift of fresh conceptions, the unsealing of hidden openings of self-consciousness, with unmeasured corridors and sacred halls behind ; and, once gained, was more or less available throughout the history of philosophy, and lifted the darkness from the pages of Kant and even Hegel.
* Irregardless for regardless ( nonstandard usage from analogy with constructions like " irreverent ," " irrespective ," and " irrevocable ," where the negative prefix " in -" changes to " ir -" but becomes redundant because of "- less ")
He was dubbed " Dr. K ," ( by analogy with basketball's " Dr. J ", Julius Erving, and also in reference to the letter " K " being the standard abbreviation for strikeout ), which soon became shortened to " Doc ".
He posits, alternatively, that the role of Guido in the analogy is indeed filled by Prufrock, but that the role of Dante is filled by you, the reader, as in " Let us go then, you and I ," ( 1 ).
The name comes from the French word for " couch ," drawing on the analogy that the garnish sits atop the bread as people do a couch.
Author and political commentator Peter Holding called Hitchens ' analogy " hysterical, unfair and offensive ," adding that " some of the criticism directed towards Moore's film displays the very same characteristics for which Moore's film has been criticised ".
It was apparently Bridgman's innovation to mark the tones with an open circles ( upper register tones ) or an underlined open circle ( lower register tones ) at the four corners of the romanized word in analogy with the traditional Chinese system of marking the tone of a character with a circle ( lower left for " even ," upper left for " rising ," upper right for " going ," and lower right for " entering " tones ).
In a well-known quotation, Barthes draws an analogy between text and textiles, declaring that a " text is a tissue fabric of quotations ," drawn from " innumerable centers of culture ," rather than from one, individual experience.

analogy and rule
Kaisertum might literally be translated as " emperordom " ( on analogy with " kingdom ") or " emperor-ship "; the term denotes specifically " the territory ruled by an emperor ", and is thus somewhat more general than Reich, which in 1804 carried connotations of universal rule.
This foreign dominion offers a striking analogy to the roughly contemporary rule of the Semitic Hyksos in ancient Egypt.
By analogy to the prior and posterior probability terms in Bayes ' theorem, Bayes ' rule can be seen as Bayes ' theorem in odds form.
In this animation, a simple analogy is made using a gear that rotates according to the right-hand rule on a surface's normal vector.
There are some exceptions to this rule, usually considered to be the result of analogy with other words or other inflected forms of the same word, with a different original pattern of reduced vowels.
Critics of this use of minoritarianism argue that the ability to block legislation is substantially different from the ability to enact new legislation against the will of the majority, making the analogy to unpopular " dominant minority rule " examples inappropriate.
The name is in analogy with quadrature meaning Numerical integration where weighted sums are used in methods such Simpson's method or the Trapezium rule.

analogy and interpretation
George Gabriel Stokes became a champion of the entrainment interpretation, developing a model in which the aether might be ( by analogy with pine pitch ) rigid at very high frequencies and fluid at lower speeds.
To use a macroscopic analogy, an interpretation which rejects CFD views measuring the position as akin to asking where in a room a person is standing, while measuring the momentum is akin to asking if the person's lap is empty or has something on it.
An entirely classical derivation and interpretation of Schrödinger's wave equation by analogy with Brownian motion was suggested by Princeton University professor Edward Nelson in 1966.
In its general interpretation, a pseudosphere of radius R is any surface of curvature − 1 / R < sup > 2 </ sup > ( precisely, a complete, simply connected surface of that curvature ), by analogy with the sphere of radius R, which is a surface of curvature 1 / R < sup > 2 </ sup >.
Robinson uses the analogy of a car to explain this second interpretation.
A. C. Graham proposed this interpretation and illustrated it with an analogy.
The dissidents were derisively referred to in polemics as the " Kangaroos " by the Regulars — the analogy being drawn between the dissidents ' free-and-loose interpretation of party legality in the calling and conduct of their reorganizational meetings and the " Kangaroo courts " of the wild west.
Anan's method of interpretation, however, was distinct from its Muslim counterpart in that he primarily built upon analogy of expressions, words ( the rabbinical gezerah shawah ), and single letters.
In a Newsday article issued December 3, 2003, political commentator James Pinkerton offered a more positive interpretation of the crusading analogy.
" However, subsequent verses deal with warnings against adultery, commanding the husband to stay with his wife and not pursue other women, hence the interpretation of this verse as a literary device or analogy.
Yefet reproaches Saadia with being unfaithful to the principles he himself had laid down for the interpretation of the Law, according to which no deductions by analogy are admissible in definite revealed precepts.
The proposed interpretation would find support in its strict analogy with a passage of Terentius's Hecyra ( vv.
While it may seem that the language of Justice Field in ex parte Jackson could be viewed as an analogy to the interpretation of the Fourth Amendment qua wiretapping, Taft believes that the analogy fails.
This interpretation draws strength by analogy from the common words of a conveyance in fee simple, " to N. and his heirs.
Still others give a literary interpretation, in which the process of Creation is described in human terms, using the analogy of the working week.

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