Lexicon of Arguments

Philosophical and Scientific Issues in Dispute
 
[german]


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Table
Concepts
Versus
Sc. Camps
Theses I
Theses II

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II 120
Realism/variant/Field: here: "There are sentences in our language that are true, but for which we shall never have a reason to believe them." - Then you need a truth-term to generalize.
>Infinite conjunction/disjunction.
Anti-Realism/Variant: here would be the opposite position: to identify truth with justifiability in the long run.
Cf. >Truth/Peirce, cf. >Assertibility, >Pragmatism.
>Ideal justification.
Truth-predicate/generalization/truth/Field: For example, the desire to only express true sentences: "I only utter "p" if p."
II 121
E.g. "Not every (of infinitely many) axioms is true" - or, for example, they are contingent: "not every one needed to be true". - N.B.: this is only possible with purely disquotational truth.
>Disquotationalism.
II 205
Partial Denotation/generalization/Field/(s): partial denotation - This is a general case of denotation (not vice versa).
>Denotation/Field.
II 206
This makes a simple denotation (which is a special case) superfluous.
II 207
Partial match: generalization of consistency.
>Consistency.
II 206
Generalization/Field: E.g. partial denotation is a generalization of denotation.
>Generalization.

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