Top 10 similar words or synonyms for detachability

attachability    0.816688

removability    0.815872

peelability    0.813346

reworkability    0.736086

slidability    0.722894

adherability    0.722064

designability    0.709834

waterproofness    0.704036

openability    0.694421

releasability    0.693079

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for detachability

Article Example
Falstaff's Wedding Though not a major success, the play was very significant in the process of expanding the imaginary world created in Shakespeare's "Henry IV" plays, especially by creating the characters of Eleanor Poins and Mistress Ursula, both of whom are only mentioned in passing in the original. David A. Brewer refers to this as "detachability with a vengeance", in which characters take on a life of their own detached from the original dramatic context. The play represents Falstaff's cronies breaking out of their restricted roles.
Michael Krausz Krausz affirms that the contest between singularism and multiplism is logically detachable from the contest between realism and constructivism. He further shows that the contest between singularism and multiplism is detachable from a range of other ontologies that fall under the reconciliatory heading of “constructive realism.” None of the ontologies in Krausz’s inventory of constructive realisms uniquely entails either singularism or multiplism (and vice versa). Yet Krausz denies that his “detachability thesis” demonstrates that ontology as such is unnecessary for the theory of interpretation. For the question of the countability of objects of interpretation as well as interpretations themselves is ontological. Krausz extends the notion of ideals of interpretation to ideals of life paths or projects, such as self-realization. That is, directional singularism is the view that for a given person there is one admissible life path, and directional multiplism is the view that for a given person there may be more than one admissible life path. He develops the idea of directional multiplism from a non-essentialist or non-foundational view of human nature.