Mind, Volume 80Oxford University Press, 1971 A journal of philosophy covering epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mind. |
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Página 267
... appear ' the wine appear sour to me ) , but that it does not follow from this that ( in another sense of ' appear ' ) the wine appears sour to me - that is , it does not follow that I judge , guardedly or unguardedly , that it is sour ...
... appear ' the wine appear sour to me ) , but that it does not follow from this that ( in another sense of ' appear ' ) the wine appears sour to me - that is , it does not follow that I judge , guardedly or unguardedly , that it is sour ...
Página 438
... appears to be three- dimensional . And , while a painting can appear three - dimensional yet actually be flat , a sense - datum cannot appear three - dimensional and not be . Thus , if we are to hold that depth is a sensed property like ...
... appears to be three- dimensional . And , while a painting can appear three - dimensional yet actually be flat , a sense - datum cannot appear three - dimensional and not be . Thus , if we are to hold that depth is a sensed property like ...
Página 439
... appear solid or elliptical any more than they appear to be capable of buying certain goods in a store . This theory , which was advocated by Berkeley , 1 avoids the inconsistency , but only at the expense of the immediate perception of ...
... appear solid or elliptical any more than they appear to be capable of buying certain goods in a store . This theory , which was advocated by Berkeley , 1 avoids the inconsistency , but only at the expense of the immediate perception of ...
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accept action alternative antecedent apply argue argument assertion Austin avowed reason behaviour believe bound variables Cartesian dualism Cartesian mind Cartesian theorist causal chess claim concept condition consequent consider correct custom definition deny Descartes distinction doctrine dream entails ethics example exist experiences explain expression fact false gavagai given grammar Humean Husserl identity illative implication illocutionary illocutionary act illocutionary force inference interpretation involved justified kind knowledge linguistic logical logical behaviourism London material implication meaning meaningful Mind Association moral Natural Deduction necessary notion object ontology pain particular person phatic philosophers physical pleasure polio possible predicate predicate logic premiss presupposes principle problem proposition question rational refer relation rules of language Ryle seems sense sense-data sentence someone sort speak speaker statement Strawson suggest suppose theory thesis things true truth truth table truth-functional truth-value unity University utterance word