«Suspension of disbelief or willing suspension of disbelief is a term coined in 1817 by the poet and aesthetic philosopher Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who suggested that if a writer could infuse a «human interest and a semblance of truth» into a fantastic tale, the reader would
suspend judgment concerning the implausibility of the narrative.»
Although a deductive approach more easily allows one to maintain the unity of Scripture by
suspending judgment concerning supposed difficulties in the text, it has several problems which have caused the majority of evangelicals to opt for an inductive methodology.
Not exact matches
While a proposition entails math or falsity, a
judgment which functions illocutionarily
concerns correctness or incorrectness, belief, disbelief or
suspended belief.
In STC 148/2016 and STC 223/2016, the SCC found that a court had breached the fundamental right to a fair trial of the claimant consumer by
suspending an individual action brought by the consumer pending a final
judgment concerning an ongoing collective action brought by a consumer association, in manifest breach of CJEU case law.