Citations:apodict

Noun

 * 1871, James Edmunds, “Kant’s Ethics” (Part III. — Ethico-active Reason.) in The Journal of Speculative Philosophy V, edited by, St. Louis, Missouri: The R.P. Studley Company, page 110:
 * The ground of abstraction, which underlies the simplest generalization as well as the most ultimate apodict, is deep hid in the very nature of the faculty. We cannot ask why reason is reason, but only what reason is.

Adjective

 * 1998,, Homo Mysticus: A Guide to Maimonides’s Guide for the Perplexed, : (1999), ISBN 0815627807 (cloth: alkaline paper), ISBN 0815627815 (paperback: alkaline paper), Part Three: Cosmology, “The Fault with Aristotle”, page 107:
 * The last sentence — that Aristotle had conducted his investigation without the benefit of apodict proof (burhan) — is particularly important.