Key
|
x |
Title |
Description
|
A
|
Scepticism about the unobserved
|
There is no reason to believe any contingent proposition about the unobserved.
|
B
|
Empiricism
|
Any reason to believe a contingent proposition about the unobserved is a proposition about the observed.
|
C
|
Inductive Scepticism
|
No proposition about the observed is a reason to believe a contingent proposition about the observed.
|
D
|
Impotence of the a priori
|
No necessary truth is a reason to believe any contingent proposition.
|
E
|
Accessibles necessary or observational
|
A proposition is directly accessible to knowledge or reasonable belief if and only if it is either a necessary truth or a proposition about the observed.
|
F
|
Reasons must be accessible
|
If P is a reason or part of a reason to believe Q then P is directly accessible to knowledge or reasonable belief.
|
G
|
Induction is invalid without Resemblance
|
Any inductive argument is invalid, and the validator of it is a Resemblance Thesis.
|
H
|
Resemblance is a contingent feature of the Universe
|
A Resemblance Thesis is a contingent proposition about the unobserved.
|
I
|
Resemblance is not provable a priori
|
A Resemblance Thesis is not deducible from necessary truths.
|
J
|
No contingents provable a priori
|
No contingent proposition is deducible from necessary truths.
|
K
|
Resemblance is not provable a posteriori
|
A Resemblance Thesis is not deducible from propositions about the observed.
|
L
|
Induction to Resemblance is circular if valid
|
A Resemblance Thesis is deducible from propositions about the observed only when to the latter is conjoined a Resemblance Thesis.
|
M
|
The validator of induction not necessary or observational
|
Any inductive argument is invalid, and the validator of it is neither a necessary truth nor a proposition about the observed.
|
M+
|
No validator of induction is necessary or observational
|
Any inductive argument is invalid, and any validator of it is neither a necessary truth nor a proposition about the observed.
|
N
|
Invalidity of induction incurable
|
Any inductive argument is invalid, and any validator of it is not a reason or part of a reason to believe its conclusion.
|
O
|
Deductivism
|
P is a reason to believe Q only if the argument from P to Q is valid, or there is a validator of it which is either a necessary truth or a proposition about the observed.
|