Paper Details  
 
   

Has Bibliography
4 Pages
1100 Words

 
   
   
    Filter Topics  
 
     
   
 

Synthetic APriori Proposition

Are There Synthetic A-Priori Propositions? From a logical point of view, the propositions that express human knowledge can be divided according to two distinctions. First is the distinction between propositions that are a priori, in the sense that they are knowable prior to experience, and those that are a posteriori, in the sense that they are knowable only after experience. Second is the distinction between propositions that are analytic, that is, those in which the predicate is included in the subject, and those that are synthetic, that is, those in which the predicate is not included in the subject. Putting the terms of these two distinctions together gives us a ‘fourfold classification’ of propositions. Analytic a-priori propositions include such statements as: ‘All bachelors are unmarried’ and ‘All squares have four sides.’ Analytic a-posteriori propositions do not exist, according to Kant, because, if the predicate is conceptually included in the subject, the need for experience is irrelevant and unnecessary. Also, “the negation of an analytic proposition is a contradiction; but, because any experience is contingent, its opposite is logically possible and hence not contradictory.” Synthetic a-priori propositions include such statements as: ‘Every event has a cause’ and ‘7 + 5 = 12.’ Although it is not part of the concept of an event that it be a cause, it is universally true and necessary that every event has a cause. And, because 12 is a different concept from seven, five, and plus, it does not include any of them singly or jointly as a part of it. Finally, synthetic a-posteriori propositions include such statements as: ‘The cat is on the mat’ and ‘It is raining.’ They are straightforwardly and uncontroversially empirical propositions that are not necessary and are discoverable through observation (perceptions by the senses).Kan...

Page 1 of 4 Next >

    More on Synthetic APriori Proposition...

    Loading...
 
Copyright © 1999 - 2024 CollegeTermPapers.com. All Rights Reserved. DMCA