veridical
adjective psychology formal or specialized uk/vəˈrɪd.ɪ.k.əl/ us/vəˈrɪd.ɪ.k.əl/
真实的,非幻觉的
showing what is true or real
It is always possible that one is subject to an illusion or even a hallucination, so that one's perceptual experience is not veridical. 人总是有可能受到错觉甚至是幻觉的影响,所以人的感性经验并不是真实的。
- More examples
- Symbolic activities are not likely to be exact, veridical reflections of children's real lives.
- If the experience is veridical, the world will be the way the experience represents it as being.
- For a colour experience to be perfectly veridical — for it to be as veridical as it could be — its object would have to have perfect colours.
- The reasonable conclusion is that neither experience is veridical: the apple is neither perfectly red nor perfectly green.