Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments

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 A. Tarski - Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments
 
Generalization: a generalization is the extension of a statement (an attribution of properties) that applies to a domain D of objects to an object domain E that is larger than D and contains D. Time points may also belong to the subject domain. A property which fully applies to the objects of an object domain may be partially applicable to the objects of a larger domain. See also validity, general invalidity, general, predication, methods.
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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
Bigelow, John Generalization   Bigelow
Brandom, Robert Generalization   Brandom
Easton, David Generalization   Easton
Field, Hartry Generalization   Field
Fodor, Jerry Generalization   Fodor
Freeden, Michael Generalization   Freeden
Gärdenfors, Peter Generalization   Gärdenfors
Habermas, Jürgen Generalization   Habermas
Mates, Benson Generalization   Mates
Parsons, Talcott Generalization   Parsons
Political Philosophy Generalization   Political Philosophy
Schurz, Gerhard Generalization   Schurz
Tarski, Alfred Generalization   Tarski
Thiel, Christian Generalization   Thiel

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