Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Professions > Philosophy Kant > Re: Did Man's K...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 458 of 526
Post > Topic >>

Re: Did Man's Knowledge Of Weight and Distance Arrive Before Any Sensory Evidence Of Them?

by Immortalist <reanimater_2000@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Aug 15, 2007 at 10:30 PM

<snipped because of bandwidth limits on me account>

>
> Dear Immortalist
> You say
> "I think Kant meant the former sense of logical deduction." Can you
> seperately state the two senses of logical deduction you are reffering
> to, please? Because I don't know what you mean.

I think I was talking about two styles of logical -inference-,
deduction and induction. Kant might say that it is inductive or -
empirical- and hence probable, not necessarily a part of the topic
definition.

http://groups.google.com/group/talk.philosophy.misc/msg/d55108c0ba7d042e
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Re: Did Man's Knowledge Of Weight and Distance Arrive Before Any
Immortalist <reanimate  2007-08-15 22:30:31 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Sat Nov 22 12:01:18 CST 2008.