Crossword clues for condition
condition
- A mode of being or form of existence of a person or things
- An assumption on which rests the validity or effect of something else
- (usually plural) a statement of what is required as part of an agreement
- The state of (good) health (especially in the phrases
- Information that should be kept in mind when making a decision
- State
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Condition \Con*di"tion\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Conditioned; p. pr. & vb. n. Conditioning.]
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To make terms; to stipulate.
Pay me back my credit, And I'll condition with ye.
--Beau. & Fl. -
(Metaph.) To impose upon an object those relations or conditions without which knowledge and thought are alleged to be impossible.
To think of a thing is to condition.
--Sir W. Hamilton.
Condition \Con*di"tion\, n. [F., fr. L. conditio (better condicio) agreement, compact, condition; con- + a root signifying to show, point out, akin to dicere to say, dicare to proclaim, dedicate. See Teach, Token.]
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Mode or state of being; state or situation with regard to external circumstances or influences, or to physical or mental integrity, health, strength, etc.; predicament; rank; position, estate.
I am in my condition A prince, Miranda; I do think, a king.
--Shak.And O, what man's condition can be worse Than his whom plenty starves and blessings curse?
--Cowley.The new conditions of life.
--Darwin. -
Essential quality; property; attribute.
It seemed to us a condition and property of divine powers and beings to be hidden and unseen to others.
--Bacon. -
Temperament; disposition; character. [Obs.]
The condition of a saint and the complexion of a devil.
--Shak. -
That which must exist as the occasion or concomitant of something else; that which is requisite in order that something else should take effect; an essential qualification; stipulation; terms specified.
I had as lief take her dowry with this condition, to be whipped at the high cross every morning.
--Shak.Many are apt to believe remission of sins, but they believe it without the condition of repentance.
--Jer. Taylor. -
(Law) A clause in a contract, or agreement, which has for its object to suspend, to defeat, or in some way to modify, the principal obligation; or, in case of a will, to suspend, revoke, or modify a devise or bequest. It is also the case of a future uncertain event, which may or may not happen, and on the occurrence or non-occurrence of which, the accomplishment, recission, or modification of an obligation or testamentary disposition is made to depend.
--Blount. Tomlins. Bouvier. Wharton.Equation of condition. (Math.) See under Equation.
On condition or Upon condition (that), used for if in introducing conditional sentences. ``Upon condition thou wilt swear to pay him tribute . . . thou shalt be placed as viceroy under him.''
--Shak.Conditions of sale, the terms on which it is proposed to sell property by auction; also, the instrument containing or expressing these terms.
Syn: State; situation; circumstances; station; case; mode; plight; predicament; stipulation; qualification; requisite; article; provision; arrangement. See State.
Condition \Con*di"tion\, v. t. [Cf. LL. conditionare. See Condition, n.]
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To invest with, or limit by, conditions; to burden or qualify by a condition; to impose or be imposed as the condition of.
Seas, that daily gain upon the shore, Have ebb and flow conditioning their march.
--Tennyson. -
To contract; to stipulate; to agree.
It was conditioned between Saturn and Titan, that Saturn should put to death all his male children.
--Sir W. Raleigh. (U. S. Colleges) To put under conditions; to require to pass a new examination or to make up a specified study, as a condition of remaining in one's class or in college; as, to condition a student who has failed in some branch of study.
To test or assay, as silk (to ascertain the proportion of moisture it contains).
--McElrath.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 14c., condicioun, from Old French condicion "stipulation, state, behavior, social status" (12c., Modern French condition), from Latin condicionem (nominative condicio) "agreement, situation," from condicere "to speak with, talk together," from com- "together" (see com-) + dicere "to speak" (see diction). Evolution of meaning through "stipulation, condition," to "situation, mode of being."
late 15c., "to make conditions," from condition (n.). Meaning "to bring to a desired condition" is from 1844. Related: Conditioned; conditioning.
Wiktionary
n. 1 A logical clause or phrase that a conditional statement uses. The phrase can either be true or false. 2 A requirement, term(,) or requisite. 3 (context legal English) A clause in a contract or agreement indicating that a certain contingency may modify the principal obligation in some way. 4 The health status of a medical patient. 5 The state or quality. vb. 1 To subject to the process of acclimation. 2 To subject to different conditions, especially as an exercise. 3 (context transitive English) To place conditions or limitations upon. 4 To shape the behaviour of someone to do something. 5 (context transitive English) To treat (the hair) with hair conditioner. 6 (context transitive English) To contract; to stipulate; to agree. 7 (context transitive English) To test or assay, as silk (to ascertain the proportion of moisture it contains). 8 (context US colleges transitive English) To put under conditions; to require to pass a new examination or to make up a specified study, as a condition of remaining in one's class or in college. 9 To impose upon an object those relations or conditions without which knowledge and thought are alleged to be impossible.
WordNet
n. a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations" [syn: status]
a mode of being or form of existence of a person or thing; "the human condition"
an assumption on which rests the validity or effect of something else [syn: precondition, stipulation]
(usually plural) a statement of what is required as part of an agreement; "the contract set out the conditions of the lease"; "the terms of the treaty were generous" [syn: term]
the state of (good) health (especially in the phrases `in condition' or `in shape' or `out of condition' or `out of shape') [syn: shape]
information that should be kept in mind when making a decision; "another consideration is the time it would take" [syn: circumstance, consideration]
the procedure that is varied in order to estimate a variable's effect by comparison with a control condition [syn: experimental condition]
v. establish a conditioned response
train by instruction and practice; especially to teach self-control; "Parents must discipline their children"; "Is this dog trained?" [syn: discipline, train, check]
specify as a condition or requirement in a contract or agreement; make an express demand or provision in an agreement; "The will stipulates that she can live in the house for the rest of her life"; "The contract stipulates the dates of the payments" [syn: stipulate, qualify, specify]
put into a better state; "he conditions old cars"
apply conditioner to in order to make smooth and shiny; "I condition my hair after washing it"
Wikipedia
Condition or conditions may refer to:
A relational database management system uses SQL conditions or expressions in WHERE clauses and in HAVING clauses to [[select (SQL)|SELECT]] subsets of data.
Condition is a 2011 science fiction film, directed by Andrei Severny and produced by Amir Naderi. The film is a meditative psychological drama set in apocalyptic atmosphere. The story is a sensory battle of the two female characters: sound therapist Mary Taggert and her patient, young disturbed woman Alaska. The doctor evacuates with her patient, driving a car away from the city to unspecified northern territory towards the border. Having run out of gas, two women are stranded in mysterious rough and rocky wilderness close to the ocean where it becomes a battle for survival and a struggle with the inner wounds and salvation with sound and nature. The psychologically complex and slow narrative of Condition relies on sequences of abstract images that one could expect to see at a museum or gallery.
Condition features Antonella Lentini (Alaska), Jessica Kaye (Dr. Mary Taggert), Steve Moshier (fisherman). Three excerpts from the sonic compositions by Richard Garet can be heard in the film: Winter, Subtracted and For Shimpei Takeda. No musical instruments were used in any of the sounds heard in Condition.
The film premiered at the 29th Torino Film Festival and was recognized by the Gandhi Glasses award. The film was shot on location in New York City and the northern shoreline of Maine.
Comprehensive treatment of the word "condition" requires emphasizing that it is ambiguous in the sense of having multiple normal meanings and that its meanings are often vague in the sense of admitting borderline cases.
According to the 2007 American Philosophy: an Encyclopedia, in one widely used sense, conditions are or resemble qualities, properties, features, characteristics, or attributes. In these senses, a condition is often denoted by a nominalization of a grammatical predicate: 'being equilateral' is a nominalization of the predicate 'is equilateral'. Being equilateral is a necessary condition for being square. Being equilateral and being equiangular are two necessary conditions for being a square. In order for a polygon to be a square, it is necessary for it to be equilateral—and it is necessary for it to be equiangular. Being a quadrangle that is both equilateral and equiangular is a sufficient condition for being a square. In order for a quadrangle to be a square, it is sufficient for it to be both equilateral and equiangular. Being equilateral and being equiangular are separately necessary and jointly sufficient conditions for a quadrangle to be a square. Every condition is both necessary and sufficient for itself. The relational phrases 'is necessary for' and 'is sufficient for' are often elliptical for 'is a necessary condition for' and 'is a sufficient condition for'. These senses may be called attributive; other senses that may be called instrumental, causal, and situational are discussed below.
Every condition applies to everything that satisfies it. Every individual satisfies every condition that applies to it. The condition of being equilateral applies to every square, and every square satisfies the condition of being equilateral. The satisfaction relation relates individuals to conditions, and the application relation relates conditions to individuals. The satisfaction and application relations are converses of each other. Necessity and sufficiency, the relations expressed by 'is a necessary condition for' and 'is a sufficient condition for', relate conditions to conditions, and they are converses of each other. Every condition necessary for a given condition is one that the given condition is sufficient for, and conversely.
As a result of a chain of developments tracing back to George Boole and Augustus De Morgan, it has become somewhat standard to limit the individuals pertinent to a given discussion. The collection of pertinent individuals is usually called the universe of discourse, an expression coined by Boole in 1854. In discussions of ordinary Euclidean plane geometry, for example, the universe of discourse can be taken to be the class of plane figures. Thus, squares are pertinent [individuals], but conditions, propositions, proofs, and geometers are not. Moreover, the collection of pertinent conditions is automatically limited to those coherently applicable to individuals in the universe of discourse. Thus, triangularity and circularity are pertinent [conditions], but truth, validity, rationality, bravery, and sincerity are not.
Some philosophers posit universal and null conditions. A universal condition applies to or is satisfied by every pertinent individual. A null condition applies to or is satisfied by no pertinent individual. In ordinary Euclidean plane geometry, the condition of being planar is universal and the condition of being both round and square is null. Every figure satisfies the condition of being planar. No figure satisfies the condition of being round and square. Some philosophers posit for each given condition a complementary condition that applies to a pertinent individual if and only if the individual does not satisfy the given condition.
In some of several senses, consequence is a relation between conditions. Being equilateral and being equiangular are two consequences of being square. In the sense used here, given any two conditions, the first is a consequence of the second if and only if the second is a sufficient condition for the first. Equivalently, being a consequence of a given condition is coextensive with being a necessary condition for it. The relational verb 'implies' is frequently used for the converse of the relational verb phrase 'is a consequence of'. Given any two conditions, the first implies the second if and only if the second is a consequence of the first. In the attributive senses under discussion, a consequence of a condition cannot be said to be a result of the condition nor can the condition be said to be a cause of its consequences. It would be incoherent to say that being equilateral is caused by being square.
There are reflexive and non-reflexive senses of 'consequence' applicable to conditions. Both are useful. In the reflexive senses, which are used in this article, every condition is a consequence of itself. In the non-reflexive senses, which are not used in this article, no condition is a consequence of itself.
There are material, intensional, and logical senses of 'consequence' applicable to conditions. All are useful. Because of space limitations, in this article, only material consequence is used although the other two are also described. Given any two conditions, the first is a material consequence of (is materially implied by) the second if and only if every individual that satisfies the second satisfies the first. Being equilateral is a material consequence of being an equiangular triangle, but not of being an equiangular quadrangle. As is evident, material consequence is entirely extensional in the sense that whether one given condition is a material consequence of another is determined by their two extensions, the collections of individuals that satisfy them. Given any two conditions, the first is an intensional consequence of (is intensionally implied by) the second if and only if the proposition that every individual that satisfies the second satisfies the first is analytic or intensionally true. Being equal-sided is an intensional consequence of being an equilateral triangle. Given any two conditions, the first is a logical consequence of (is logically implied by) the second if and only if the proposition that every individual that satisfies the second satisfies the first is tautological or logically true. Being equilateral is a logical consequence of being an equilateral triangle.
Besides the one-place conditions – such as being three-sided or being equilateral – that are satisfied or not by a given individual, there are two-place conditions – such as being equal-to or being part-of – that relate or do not relate one given individual to another. There are three-place conditions such as numerical betweenness as in “two is between one and three”. Given any three numbers, in order for the first to satisfy the betweenness condition with respect to the second and third, it is necessary and sufficient for either the second to precede the first and the third the second or the second to precede the third and the first the second. There are four-place conditions such as numerical proportionality as in “one is to two as three is to six”. Given any four numbers, in order for the first to satisfy the proportionality condition with respect to the second, third, and fourth, it is necessary and sufficient that the first be to the second as the third is to the fourth. Charles Sanders Peirce discussed polyadic or multi-place conditions as early as 1885.
There are many debated philosophical issues concerning conditions and consequences. Traditional philosophers ask ontological and epistemological questions about conditions. What are conditions? Do they change? Do they exist apart from the entities satisfying them? How do we know of them? How are propositions about them known to be true or to be false? In view of modern focus on identity criteria, philosophers now want to ask the questions involving them. One such ontological question asks for an identity criterion for conditions: what is a necessary and sufficient condition for “two” conditions to be identical? The widely accepted identity criterion for extensions of conditions is that given any two conditions, in order for the extension of the first to be [identical to] that of the second, it is necessary and sufficient for the two conditions to be satisfied by the same entities. There are questions concerning the ontological status of conditions. Are conditions mental, material, ideal, linguistic, or social, or do they have some other character? What is the relation of conditions to properties? A given individual satisfies (or fulfills) a given condition if and only if the condition applies to the individual. A given individual has (or possesses) a given property if and only if the property belongs to the individual. Are the last two sentences simply translations of each other?
Philosophical terminology is not uniform. Before any of the above questions can be fully meaningful, it is necessary to interpret them or to locate them in the context of the work of an individual philosopher. We should never ask an abstract question such as what it means to say that something satisfies a condition. Rather we should ask a more specific question such as what Peirce meant by saying that accuracy of speech is an important condition of accurate thinking.
John Dewey's voluminous writings provide a rich source of different senses for the words 'condition' and 'consequence'. Except where explicitly noted, all references to Dewey are by volume number and page in the Southern Illinois UP critical edition. It would be useful to catalogue the various senses Dewey attaches to 'condition' and 'consequence' the way that A.O. Lovejoy famously catalogued senses of 'pragmatism'. In several passages, Dewey links a sense of 'condition' with a corresponding sense of 'consequence' just as senses of these words were linked above. Two corresponding usages occur repeatedly in his writings and, it should be said, in most writings concerned with human activity including government and technology. In one, condition/consequence is somewhat analogous to means/end. In fact, Dewey sometimes uses the words 'condition' and 'means' almost interchangeably as in his famous pronouncement: “Every intelligent act involves selection of certain things as means to other things as their consequences”.
A little later, he adds: “… in all inquiries in which there is an end in view (consequences to be brought into existence) there is a selective ordering of existing conditions as means …”. In the other sense, condition/consequence is similar to cause/effect – although identification is probably not warranted in either case. Dewey studiously avoids sharp distinctions, dualisms, dichotomies, and other artificialities. There are passages where both contrasts are relevant, but as far as I know, Dewey never explicitly notes that 'condition/consequence' was used for both. The means/end sense occurs, for example, in his 1945 Journal of Philosophy article, “Ethical Subject-Matter and Language” (15, 139), where he suggested that the inquiry into “conditions and consequences” should draw upon the whole knowledge of relevant fact. The cause/effect sense occurs on page 543 in his response to critics in the 1939 Library of Living Philosophers volume. Here he wrote: “Correlation between changes that form conditions of desires, etc., and changes that form their consequences when acted upon have the same standing and function … that physical objects have …” There are scattered passages suggesting that Dewey regarded the means/end relation as one kind of cause/effect relation. In fact he regards a causal proposition as one “whose content is a relation of conditions that are means to other conditions that are consequences”.
In some of the senses Dewey uses, conditions are or resemble qualities, properties, features, characteristics, or attributes. These senses were referred to above as attributive. However, in the two of senses in question, the instrumental sense and the causal sense, let us say, conditions are or resemble states or events more than qualities, properties, features, characteristics, or attributes. After all, the attributive condition of being equiangular, which is a consequence of the condition of being an equilateral triangle, could hardly be said to be brought about through use of the latter as means or said to be caused by the latter. Accordingly, an attributive condition is neither earlier nor later than its consequences, whereas an instrumental or causal condition necessarily precedes its consequences. As Dewey himself puts it, “The import of the causal relation as one of means-consequences is thus prospective”.
From a practical point of view, Dewey's causal and instrumental senses of 'condition' and 'consequence' are at least as important as the attributive senses. In the causal sense, fuel, oxygen, and ignition are conditions for combustion as a consequence. In the instrumental sense, understanding, evidence, and judgment are conditions for knowledge as a consequence.
For another important example, the Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy defines 'condition' in an important sense not explained above: a condition is a state of affairs, “way things are” or situation—most commonly referred to by a nominalization of a sentence. The expression 'Snow's being white', which refers to the condition snow's being white, is a nominalization of the sentence 'Snow is white'. 'The truth of the proposition that snow is white' is a nominalization of the sentence 'the proposition that snow is white is true'. Snow's being white is a necessary and sufficient condition for the truth of the proposition that snow is white. Conditions in this sense may be called situational.
Usually, necessity and sufficiency relate conditions of the same kind. Being an animal is a necessary attributive condition for being a dog. Fido's being an animal is a necessary situational condition for Fido's being a dog.
Usage examples of "condition".
Muravieff has performed in achieving a level of quality education for the inmates at Hiland Mountain Correctional Facility, and because he feels she has contributed substantially to the lowest rate of recidivism for a corrections facility in the state and one of the lowest rates in the nation, because Victoria Bannister Muravieff has set a standard for community service under the most difficult of conditions, with a selfless disregard for her own situation and a commitment to the rehabilitation of people the rest of us have given up on long ago, the governor has decided to commute her sentence to time served.
December 2003wrote another aardwolf reporting on the deadly conditions in Iraq, his political allegiances were quickly questioned by the White House, CIA officials later learned.
Conditions were eroding so rapidly that by August, the second CIA station chief was already convinced that he needed to issue his first aardwolf to warn Washington.
Bremer was so concerned by the tone of the aardwolf that he felt compelled to write an accompanying note at the end of the report, in which he downplayed its analysis of the worsening conditions in Iraq.
The tribal mode probably originated in the unstable social conditions that resulted from the protracted decline of the Abbasid Caliphate and the subsequent cycles of invasion and devastation.
Chubb succumbed immediately, sounded a parley, and gave up the fort, on condition that he and his men should be protected from the Indians, sent to Boston, and exchanged for French and Abenaki prisoners.
Each in my world, it seemed, carried about with him a bubble of space, a perimeter, a wall, an invisible shield, an unconsciously acculturated, socially sanctioned remoteness, a barrier decreed by convention and conditioning.
State, as a condition of doing business within its jurisdiction, may exact a license tax from a telegraph company, a large part of whose business is the transmission of messages from one State to another and between the United States and foreign countries, and which is invested with the powers and privileges conferred by the act of Congress passed July 24, 1866, and other acts incorporated in Title LXV of the Revised Statutes?
That, so far as possible, all biologic instruction should be objective was with Agassiz an educational dogma, and upon several notable occasions its validity had been demonstrated under very unfavorable conditions.
You have but emerged from primitive conditions: we have a literature, a priesthood, an agelong history and a polity.
On condition of anonymity, I also spoke with a number of special agents and investigators who are still on active duty.
The doubtful condition of Lucknow, Benares, and Agra comes in the rear of all this to strike a frost into the heart, or would do so, again I say, if any other nation were concerned.
The old slow transports, not designed for such conditions, flew without aids to navigation or arms against Japanese pursuit.
The common stems of all the variants are found in their purest condition in Quichua and Aimara, from which fact Dr.
Yggdrasil spun again, it could be flown or towed under no-g conditions to an airdock in the trunk.