Mind, Volume 68Oxford University Press, 1959 A journal of philosophy covering epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mind. |
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Página 328
... words true or false " would mean different things when used to describe a sentence which did not itself contain either of these words , and when used to describe a sentence which did contain one or other of them . 66 " " 66 " " , > The ...
... words true or false " would mean different things when used to describe a sentence which did not itself contain either of these words , and when used to describe a sentence which did contain one or other of them . 66 " " 66 " " , > The ...
Página 331
... sentence , or a group of words that could stand alone as a sentence , can properly be described as being either true or false , and so since the group of words " The sentence written on this blackboard " could not stand alone as a sentence ...
... sentence , or a group of words that could stand alone as a sentence , can properly be described as being either true or false , and so since the group of words " The sentence written on this blackboard " could not stand alone as a sentence ...
Página 332
... words , the conclusion is " The sentence written on this blackboard is false ' is true " , which just means " The sentence written on this blackboard is false " , which is what was postulated . Similarly with the second part of the ...
... words , the conclusion is " The sentence written on this blackboard is false ' is true " , which just means " The sentence written on this blackboard is false " , which is what was postulated . Similarly with the second part of the ...
Índice
REMNANT P Professor Rynin on the Autonomy of Morals | 128 |
CRITICAL NOTICES | 139 |
AMBROSE A Proof and the Theorem Proved 435 | 193 |
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A. J. Ayer A. N. PRIOR action actually analysis argued argument Aristotle ascriptions asserted behaviour believe blackboard is false Calif causal claim College concept conclusion context contradiction course defeasible Descartes describe determinist discussion distinction dream entails evidence example explanation expression fact feelings follows given H. L. A. Hart imagine implies inference innovation intention interpretation Kant kind knowledge laws linguistic logical behaviourism London means merely mind modal logic moral judgments motive nature necessary proposition object ordinary language Oxford P. F. Strawson paradox particular permanent revolution person Philosophy Department possible predicate premisses probability problem Prof question reason refer relation rules Ryle seems sensations sentence written situation Socrates someone sort statements Strawson Street suggest Suppose syllogism talking tell theory thesis things thought true or false truth unconscious unconscious mind understand University Press utterance Verification Principle Wittgenstein