19 ideas
19066 | Philosophy aims to understand the world, through ordinary experience and science [Dummett] |
6950 | You can be rational with undetected or minor inconsistencies [Harman] |
6954 | A coherent conceptual scheme contains best explanations of most of your beliefs [Harman] |
19067 | A successful proof requires recognition of truth at every step [Dummett] |
19060 | Truth-tables are dubious in some cases, and may be a bad way to explain connective meaning [Dummett] |
11066 | Deduction is justified by the semantics of its metalanguage [Dummett, by Hanna] |
19058 | Syntactic consequence is positive, for validity; semantic version is negative, with counterexamples [Dummett] |
19063 | Beth trees show semantics for intuitionistic logic, in terms of how truth has been established [Dummett] |
19059 | In standard views you could replace 'true' and 'false' with mere 0 and 1 [Dummett] |
19062 | Classical two-valued semantics implies that meaning is grasped through truth-conditions [Dummett] |
19065 | Soundness and completeness proofs test the theory of meaning, rather than the logic theory [Dummett] |
22363 | You have only begun to do real science when you can express it in numbers [Kelvin] |
6955 | Enumerative induction is inference to the best explanation [Harman] |
6952 | Induction is 'defeasible', since additional information can invalidate it [Harman] |
6953 | All reasoning is inductive, and deduction only concerns implication [Harman] |
19061 | An explanation is often a deduction, but that may well beg the question [Dummett] |
6951 | Ordinary rationality is conservative, starting from where your beliefs currently are [Harman] |
19064 | Holism is not a theory of meaning; it is the denial that a theory of meaning is possible [Dummett] |
20644 | Energy has progressed from a mere formula, to a principle pervading all nature [Kelvin] |