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Full Idea
Quine says scientific beliefs follow empirical adequacy, simplicity and conservatism; science and rationality support this view; hence any hypothesis can be abandoned to increase simplicity; so no scientific belief is a priori.
Gist of Idea
Science is empirical, simple and conservative; any belief can hence be abandoned; so no a priori
Source
report of Willard Quine (Two Dogmas of Empiricism [1953]) by Paul Horwich - Stipulation, Meaning and Apriority §10
Book Ref
'New Essays on the A Priori', ed/tr. Boghossian,P /Peacocke,C [OUP 2000], p.166
A Reaction
[Compressed] I just don't accept this claim. If science wants to drop simple arithmetic or the laws of thought, so much the worse for science - they've obviously taken a wrong turning somewhere. We must try to infer God's logic.
24138 | Strongly believed a priori is not certain; it may just be a feature of our existence [Nietzsche] |
23485 | No pictures are true a priori [Wittgenstein] |
9338 | Quine's objections to a priori knowledge only work in the domain of science [Horwich on Quine] |
9337 | Science is empirical, simple and conservative; any belief can hence be abandoned; so no a priori [Quine, by Horwich] |
9340 | Logic, arithmetic and geometry are revisable and a posteriori; quantum logic could be right [Horwich on Quine] |
20961 | What is considered a priori changes as language changes [Habermas, by Bowie] |
18272 | Platonism defines the a priori in a way that makes it unknowable [Coffa] |
9356 | The idea of the a priori is so obscure that it won't explain anything [Devitt] |
19564 | Some knowledge must be empirical; naturalism implies that all knowledge is like that [Devitt] |
13476 | The failure of key assumptions in geometry, mereology and set theory throw doubt on the a priori [Hart,WD] |
9384 | We may have strong a priori beliefs which we pragmatically drop from our best theory [Boghossian] |