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Single Idea 2513

[filed under theme 12. Knowledge Sources / A. A Priori Knowledge / 5. A Priori Synthetic ]

Full Idea

Linguistic meaning is not rich enough to show either that all metaphysical sentences are meaningless or that all alleged synthetic a priori propositions are just analytic a priori propositions.

Gist of Idea

We don't have a clear enough sense of meaning to pronounce some sentences meaningless or just analytic

Source

Jerrold J. Katz (Realistic Rationalism [2000], Int.xx)

Book Ref

Katz,Jerrold J.: 'Realistic Rationalism' [MIT 2000], p.-15


The 9 ideas from Jerrold J. Katz

Traditionally philosophy is an a priori enquiry into general truths about reality [Katz]
We don't have a clear enough sense of meaning to pronounce some sentences meaningless or just analytic [Katz]
Most of philosophy begins where science leaves off [Katz]
Structuralists see meaning behaviouristically, and Chomsky says nothing about it [Katz]
'Real' maths objects have no causal role, no determinate reference, and no abstract/concrete distinction [Katz]
It is generally accepted that sense is defined as the determiner of reference [Katz]
Sense determines meaning and synonymy, not referential properties like denotation and truth [Katz]
Sentences are abstract types (like musical scores), not individual tokens [Katz]
Experience cannot teach us why maths and logic are necessary [Katz]