Reductionist vs Reductive - What's the difference?
reductionist | reductive |
Causing the physical reduction or diminution of something.
(chemistry, metallurgy, biology) That reduces a substance etc. to a more simple or basic form.
*1848 , F Knapp, Chemical Technology; Or, Chemistry Applied to the Arts and to Manufactures :
*:On the relative reductive powers of different classes of American coals, as demonstrated by the experiments with oxide of lead.
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*1847 , John Johnson, The theological works of the rev. John Johnson :
*:But then beside the primary and direct sense of the text, the ancients commonly supposed that there was a reductive or anagogical meaning, in which it might be taken.
As adjectives the difference between reductionist and reductive
is that reductionist is of, or relating to reductionism while reductive is pertaining to the reduction of a decree etc.; rescissory.As a noun reductionist
is an advocate of reductionism.reductive
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation, passage=It is likely that the long evolutionary trajectory of Mycoplasma went from a reductive autotroph to oxidative heterotroph to a cell-wall–defective degenerate parasite. This evolutionary trajectory assumes the simplicity to complexity route of biogenesis, a point of view that is not universally accepted.}}
