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Two Dogmas of Empiricism
work by Quine
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philosophy of language
- In philosophy of language: Quine
In his seminal paper “Two Dogmas of Empiricism” (1951), Quine rejected, as what he considered the first dogma, the idea that there is a sharp division between logic and empirical science. He argued, in a vein reminiscent of the later Wittgenstein, that there is nothing in the logical structure…
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Quine’s philosophy
- In epistemology: Commonsense philosophy, logical positivism, and naturalized epistemology
In his 1950 essay “Two Dogmas of Empiricism,” Quine launched an attack upon the traditional distinction between analytic statements, which were said to be true by virtue of the meanings of the terms they contain, and synthetic statements, which were supposed to be true (or false) by virtue of…
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