Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments

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 W. Sellars - Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments
 
Analogy: an analogy is a formal parallelism. It intends to show that from a similar case, similar conclusions can be drawn.
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Annotation: The above characterizations of concepts are neither definitions nor exhausting presentations of problems related to them. Instead, they are intended to give a short introduction to the contributions below. – Lexicon of Arguments.
 
Author Item    More concepts for author
Cartwright, Nancy Analogies   Cartwright
Duhem, Pierre Analogies   Duhem
Feynman, Richard Analogies   Feynman
Field, Hartry Analogies   Field
Foucault, Michel Analogies   Foucault
Genz, Hennig Analogies   Genz
Gould, Stephen Jay Analogies   Gould
Gribbin, John Analogies   Gribbin
Kant, Immanuel Analogies   Kant
Kauffman, Stuart Analogies   Kauffman
Lévi-Strauss, Claude Analogies   Lévi-Strauss
Meixner, Uwe Analogies   Meixner
Nagel, Thomas Analogies   Nagel
Ricoeur, Paul Analogies   Ricoeur
Sellars, Wilfrid Analogies   Sellars
Sokal, Alan Analogies   Sokal
Speusippus Analogies   Speusippus
Stalnaker, Robert Analogies   Stalnaker
Waismann, Friedrich Analogies   Waismann

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