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The contingent a priori and the publicity of a priori knowledge
Philosophical Studies, 2009Kripke maintains that one who stipulatively introduces the term 'one meter' as a rigid designator for the length of a certain stick s at time t is in a position to know a priori that if s exists at t then the length of s at t is one meter. Some (e.g., Soames 2003) have objected to this alleged instance of the contingent a priori on the grounds that the
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1991
This Chapter 6 and the next Chapter 7 are devoted to the proof of Theorem 1.2. In this chapter we study the operator Ap, and prove a priori estimates for the operator Ap − λI (Theorem 6.3) which will play a fundamental role in the next chapter. In the proof we make good use of Agmon’s method (Proposition 6.4). This is a technique of treating a spectral
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This Chapter 6 and the next Chapter 7 are devoted to the proof of Theorem 1.2. In this chapter we study the operator Ap, and prove a priori estimates for the operator Ap − λI (Theorem 6.3) which will play a fundamental role in the next chapter. In the proof we make good use of Agmon’s method (Proposition 6.4). This is a technique of treating a spectral
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The College and Priory of Hastings,and the Priory of Warbleton
2021Sussex Archaeological Collections, 13, 131 ...
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2002
Abstract Prior to the eighteenth century, the pair of terms ‘a priori’/’a posteriori’ (Latin for ‘from what is earlier’/’for what comes after’) was used to distinguish between modes of reasoning: ‘The mind can discover and understand the truth … by demonstration. When the mind reasons from causes to effects, the demonstration is called a
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Abstract Prior to the eighteenth century, the pair of terms ‘a priori’/’a posteriori’ (Latin for ‘from what is earlier’/’for what comes after’) was used to distinguish between modes of reasoning: ‘The mind can discover and understand the truth … by demonstration. When the mind reasons from causes to effects, the demonstration is called a
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A priori, a posteriori, and back again
Neurology, 2018Cryptogenic stroke (CS) is common, as is patent foramen ovale (PFO). By chance, they overlap frequently. However, if the relationship was just chance, then PFO prevalence in patients with CS would match the general population (approximately 25%). But PFOs are overrepresented in the CS population (approximately 50%).
David E, Thaler +1 more
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2018
An important term in epistemology since the seventeenth century, ‘a priori’ typically connotes a kind of knowledge or justification that does not depend on evidence, or warrant, from sensory experience. Talk of a priori truth is ordinarily shorthand for talk of truth knowable or justifiable independently of evidence from sensory experience; and talk of
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An important term in epistemology since the seventeenth century, ‘a priori’ typically connotes a kind of knowledge or justification that does not depend on evidence, or warrant, from sensory experience. Talk of a priori truth is ordinarily shorthand for talk of truth knowable or justifiable independently of evidence from sensory experience; and talk of
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