not+extrinsic

  • 41Supernatural — Not to be confused with Paranormal or Preternatural. For other uses, see Supernatural (disambiguation). The supernatural or supranatural (Latin: super, supra above + natura nature ) is that which is not subject to the laws of nature, or more …

    Wikipedia

  • 42Protein C — Not to be confused with C peptide, C reactive protein, or protein kinase C. Protein C (inactivator of coagulation factors Va and VIIIa) Tertiary structure of human activated protein C (minus the Gla domain …

    Wikipedia

  • 43Meiosis — Not to be confused with miosis, mitosis, or myositis. For the figure of speech, see meiosis (figure of speech). Events involving meiosis, showing chromosomal crossover Meiosis (pronounced /maɪˈoʊsɨs/&# …

    Wikipedia

  • 44Metal theft — Not to be confused with Medal theft. Metal theft is the theft of metal items on a very large scale. These thefts usually increase when worldwide prices for scrap metal rise. In recent years, prices for metals have risen dramatically due to rapid… …

    Wikipedia

  • 45extrinsically — extrinsic ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not essential or inherent. DERIVATIVES extrinsically adverb. ORIGIN Latin extrinsecus outward …

    English terms dictionary

  • 46Motivation — For other uses, see Motivation (disambiguation). Timeline of theorists about student motivation Motivation is the driving force by which humans achieve their goals. Motivation is said to be intrinsic or extrinsic …

    Wikipedia

  • 47Suárez (and later scholasticism) — Jorge Gracia THE SILVER AGE OF SCHOLASTICISM The golden age of scholasticism covered a period of roughly one hundred years, from around 1250 to 1350. There were important scholastic developments before 1250 and after 1350, but it is generally… …

    History of philosophy

  • 48Thomas Buford — Thomas O. Buford (1932 ) holds the Louis G. Forgione Chair of Philosophy at Furman University and has been an adherent of the Boston Personalism branch of philosophy.Academic careerBuford joined the faculty at Furman University in 1969. After… …

    Wikipedia

  • 49evidence — ev·i·dence 1 / e və dəns, ˌdens/ n [Medieval Latin evidentia, from Latin, that which is obvious, from evident evidens clear, obvious, from e out of, from + videns, present participle of videre to see]: something that furnishes or tends to furnish …

    Law dictionary

  • 50Faith — • In the Old Testament, the Hebrew word means essentially steadfastness. As signifying man s attitude towards God it means trustfulness or fiducia Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Faith     Faith …

    Catholic encyclopedia