Logos vs Logological - What's the difference?
logos | logological |
(rhetoric) A form of rhetoric in which the writer or speaker uses logic as the main argument.
Of or pertaining to logology; related to the study of words.
(linguistics) Of or pertaining to conceptual patterns or mental categories of words and their referents.
* 2007 , Rafael Art Javier, The Bilingual Mind: Thinking, feeling and speaking in two languages , page 26
(theology, philosophy, rare) Of or pertaining to the doctrine of logos.
As a noun logos
is a form of rhetoric in which the writer or speaker uses logic as the main argument.As a proper noun Logos
is in Ancient Greek philosophy, the rational principle that governs the cosmos.As an adjective logological is
of or pertaining to logology; related to the study of words.logos
English
(wikipedia logos)Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Noun
(-)Coordinate terms
* (form of rhetoric) ethos, pathosEtymology 2
Noun
(head)Anagrams
* ----logological
English
Adjective
(-)- When the "particular-experiential structures " (infralogical structures) are encoded and organized into kinds (or classes, relations, or propositions), logological structures are said to be in place.