synthetic proposition

philosophy

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analytic proposition

  • In analytic proposition

    …all bodies are heavy is synthetic, since the notion of weight supposes in addition to the notion of body that of bodies in relation to one another. In the 19th century Bernard Bolzano, a Prague logician and epistemologist, added a third category, the analytically false.

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epistemology

  • optical illusion: refraction of light
    In epistemology: Analytic and synthetic propositions

    A proposition is said to be analytic if the meaning of the predicate term is contained in the meaning of the subject term. Thus, “All husbands are married” is analytic, because part of the meaning of the term husband is “being married.” A…

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  • optical illusion: refraction of light
    In epistemology: Immanuel Kant

    (see above Analytic and synthetic propositions): (1) analytic a priori propositions, such as “All bachelors are unmarried” and “All squares have four sides,” (2) synthetic a posteriori propositions, such as “The cat is on the mat” and “It is raining,” and (3) what he called “synthetic a priori” propositions,…

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Kant and Hume

  • Immanuel Kant
    In Immanuel Kant: Critic of Leibnizian rationalism

    Philosophy cannot, like mathematics, proceed synthetically; it must analyze and clarify. The importance of the moral order, which he had learned from Rousseau, reinforced the conviction received from his study of Newton that a synthetic philosophy is empty and false.

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phenomenology

  • Edmund Husserl
    In phenomenology: Contrasts with related movements

    …bodies have extension”), and the synthetic a posteriori statements, whose subjects do not logically imply the predicate and the truth of which is dependent on experience (e.g., “My shirt is red”), it recognizes knowledge of the synthetic a priori, a proposition whose subject does not logically imply the predicate but…

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