6 ideas
20947 | Thoughts are learnt through words, so language shows the limits and shape of our knowledge [Herder] |
10528 | Definitions concern how we should speak, not how things are [Fine,K] |
10529 | If Hume's Principle can define numbers, we needn't worry about its truth [Fine,K] |
10530 | Hume's Principle is either adequate for number but fails to define properly, or vice versa [Fine,K] |
4254 | Externalist accounts of knowledge do not require the traditional sort of justification [Kornblith] |
10527 | An abstraction principle should not 'inflate', producing more abstractions than objects [Fine,K] |