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Apodicticity: Revision history


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  • curprev 04:3904:39, 1 July 2020Bmeacham talk contribs 2,744 bytes −8 changed "the case" to "true" because "the case" applies to states of affairs, and truth and falsity apply to propositions about states of affairs. The link to dictionary.com supports my assertion. undo

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  • curprev 22:1122:11, 10 October 2019208.107.84.166 talk 2,765 bytes +10 Corrected an example of an apodictic statement. The validity of “Two plus two equals four” is based upon a set of mathematical rules predicated in some small part on a foundation of hypothetical theory. The problem of induction, not to mention the deconstructive consequences of Spinoza’s connective reasoning (I.e. all things are one thing merely displaying a set of attributes) both call into question the very existence of a real number beyond 1. Therefore, it can safely be said that nearly ev... undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit

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  • curprev 23:5523:55, 19 September 2016220.233.74.50 talk 3,235 bytes −187 Brentano does not say this in The True and the Evident (1966) , the Routledge Translation of Wahreit und Evidenz (1930). "assertoric or apodictic" only appears on pp.~113 in note 3 to I ON THE SO-CALLED “IMMANENT OR INTENTIONAL OBJECT” To Anton Marty undo

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