What's the difference between boundedness and finitude?
Boundedness
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) Results concerning existence and uniqueness of equilibria, stability of the equilibria, and boundedness of solutions suggest that "compensatory" systems might not be compensatory in the literal sense.
(2) For models of three interacting predator-prey populations, a result on the boundedness of solution orbits and a result on ultimate boundedness are presented.
(3) The drawings of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and elderly control subjects were rated on a number of specific performance scales, such as attention to configuration, attention to detail, and stimulus boundedness.
(4) Anxiety in this mode consists of an unspeakable terror of the dissolution of boundedness resulting in feelings of leaking, falling or dissolving into endless, shapeless space.
(5) Given the contextual boundedness of process variables, 3 assumptions implicit in present process research are questioned: Process variables (a) have fixed meanings, (b) discretely contribute to outcomes, and (c) have a decontextualized net worth, evaluated by their correlations with outcomes.
(6) The same model has already been proposed in a previous paper, where conditions for boundedness of the solutions and stability of the equilibria were given.
(7) Conditions for boundedness of the solutions and the existence of non-negative equilibria are given for the integrodifferential equations with distributed time lags.
(8) Sufficient conditions for the boundedness of solutions and for the global asymptotic stability of nontrivial equilibrium solutions are given.
(9) We present conditions that guarantee the boundedness of the solution.
(10) The model is demonstrated on multipoint affinity distributions and initial negative exponential densities, from which conditions for boundedness can be developed.
(11) The autistic-contiguous mode is a sensory-dominated, pre-symbolic mode of generating experience which provides a good measure of the boundedness of human experience and the beginnings of a sense of the place where one's experience occurs.
Finitude
Definition:
(n.) Limitation.
Example Sentences:
(1) Thinking of the end is embedded in a complexity of psychosocial correlates: this is shown to be true for two subgroups of the Bonn Longitudinal Study of Aging, who are discriminated by their contrasting manner of facing finitude.
(2) A long tradition in philosophy and religion associates the meaning of life with the acknowledgement of its finitude and mortality and with the acceptance of death.
(3) Three hypotheses on changes in the time perspective of elderly people and their behavioral consequences are discussed: firstly, Kuhlen's hypothesis of an increasing sensitivity for the passing of time with increasing age, secondly that of a de-differentiation of future time perspective in old age, and finally the thesis that only normative-prescriptive approaches are appropriate in the study of coping with finitude.
(4) Instead of the usual interpretation, members are encouraged to confront the paradoxes in their lives, their humanness, and especially their finitude.
(5) Christian faith refuses to think in terms of scarcity (God has not created a world in which there is not enough for everyone to survive), but insists on finitude (creation does have inherent limits): there is enough for everyone's need, but not for everyone's greed.
(6) Can we ignore the finitude of our medical resources?
(7) Consciousness of the finitude of human life is found to occur in childhood as well as in age and adulthood, but is turning up more intensively in subjects being terminally ill, and is aroused -- as an irritation to be repressed -- in persons who regularly contact patients confronted by death.
(8) Although social scientists have suggested that feelings about life and death may be related, for the most part, theories of social gerontology have developed independently of conceptions of death and finitude.