unphilosophical
Then you will soon observe whether a man is just and gentle, or rude and unsociable; these are the signs which distinguish even in youth the philosophical nature from the unphilosophical.
They will think those who are quite sure it is false unphilosophical through lack of doubt.
Speaking in popular and unphilosophical terms, we may say that the content of a thought is supposed to be something in your head when you think the thought, while the object is usually something in the outer world.
Even to Bert's unphilosophical mind the contrast of city below and fleet above pointed an opposition, the opposition of the adventurous American's tradition and character with German order and discipline.
The complexion of that case had somehow forced upon him the general idea of the absurdity of things human, which in the abstract is sufficiently annoying to an unphilosophical temperament, and in concrete instances becomes exasperating beyond endurance.
The dogma of Aristotle, and the practice of the world, is the most unphilosophical, the most inhuman ' and cruel that can be conceived.
Indeed, he suggests the contrary: "It would be unphilosophical to try to show that a form of the concept exists universally in nature in the determinacy in which it is as an abstraction." (128) Though Hegel makes a remarkable allowance for the intelligibility of nature, the whole thrust of his thought tends toward understanding spiritual or cultural reality (Geist), especially as the product of history.
In characteristic, unphilosophical fashion, by developing the public utility concept in the late nineteenth century, we acknowledged the heightened social value of organization as a social resource and declared that we would by law hold accountable for the public interest those who stood at strategic points in the organizational network.
Either all our talk about knowledge of the whole and so on is a smokescreen for something else, something unphilosophical, or else however much it removes us from common sense, so long as it does not become completely unconnected to matters of political relevance, and it is hard to imagine what that would entail--we are engaged in a philosophically serious inquiry.