ppl. a. [f. L. sublātus (see prec.) + -ED1.]

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  † 1.  Exalted, excited. Obs.

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1647.  Lilly, Chr. Astrol., xliv. 277. Their disease shall proceed from … high and sublated Pulses, keeping no order.

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  2.  Hegelian Philos. (See SUBLATE v. 3.)

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1868.  J. H. Stirling, trans. Schwegler’s Hist. Philos., 264. The non-ego has position only in the ego, in consciousness: the ego, consequently, is not sublated by the non-ego; after all the sublated ego is not sublated.

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