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On 2025-04-22 18:33:18 +0000, olcott said:Willard Van Orman Quine: The Analytic/Synthetic Distinction
On 4/22/2025 4:07 AM, Mikko wrote:Where?On 2025-04-21 20:44:03 +0000, olcott said:>
>On 4/21/2025 4:48 AM, Mikko wrote:>On 2025-04-20 17:53:43 +0000, olcott said:>
>On 4/20/2025 11:29 AM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 4/20/25 tic 1:33 AM, olcott wrote:>No counter-example to the above statement exists for all>
computation and all human reasoning that can be expressed
in language.
But can all Human reasoning be actually expressed in language?
>
For instance, how do you express the smell of a rose in a finite string so you can do reasoning with it?
>
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/analytic-synthetic/
>
all human reasoning that can be expressed in language
<is> the {analytic} side of the analytic/synthetic distinction
that humanity has totally screwed up since
>
Two Dogmas of Empiricism
Willard Van Orman Quine
https://www.ditext.com/quine/quine.html
>
Couldn't even understand that the term Bachelor
as stipulated to have the semantic meaning of
Bachelor(x) ≡ ~Married(x) ∧ Male(x) ∧ Adult(x) ∧ Human(x)
You mean that if Quine says something that proves that he does not know
that thing?
When Quine says that there is no such thing as expressions
of language that are true entirely on their semantic
meaning expressed in language Quine is stupidly wrong.
Where did Quine say that?
When he disagrees that analytic truth can be separately
demarcated.
All expressions of language that can be proven true entirelyI uniquely made his mistake more clear.No, you didn't. You only made a more clear mistake but about another
topic.
Willard Van Orman Quine: The Analytic/Synthetic DistinctionHe disagrees that there are any expressions that areWhere does he say that?
proven completely true entirely on the basis of their
meaning.
That is what he totally gets wrong when he rejects theHERE IS HOW HE IS WRONGWhere does he say that truth is a necessary consequence of applying
Truth is a necessary consequence of applying the truth
preserving operation of semantic entailment to the set
of basic facts (cannot be derived from other facts)
expressed in language.
the truth preserving operation of semantic entailment to the set of
basic facts (cannot be derived from other facts) expressed in
language?
The set of basic (indivisible) facts are the axioms forTruth expressed in language <is> analytic truth.No, not always. An empirical truth expressed in a language is an
empirical truth. But which is a truth that is inferred from two
premises, one analytic and one empirical?
"I saw a cat walk across my living room floor."Truth expressed by physical sensations <is> empirical truth.I don't think a set of physical sensations can express a truth.
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