We shall ignore 'logical' words and phrases, such as not, there is, etc. For the present, we shall only consider what it might say about 'object' words, standing for observable objects and events, and the observable qualities and relations which they have. Such words as 'cat', 'dog' and 'dogs' stand for 'observable' objects and events.
We shall ignore 'logical' words and phrases, such as not, there is, etc. For the present, we shall only consider what it might say about 'object' words, standing for observable objects and events, and the observable qualities and relations which they have. Such words as 'cat', 'dog' and 'dogs' stand for 'observable' objects and events.
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We shall ignore 'logical' words and phrases, such as not, there is, etc. For the present, we shall only consider what it might say about 'object' words, standing for observable objects and events, and the observable qualities and relations which they have. Such words as 'cat', 'dog' and 'dogs' stand for 'observable' objects and events.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Let us see whether the Inductive -Sign Theory of language can
make any reply to this objection. To begin with, we shall ignore
‘logical' words and phrases, such as not, there is, etc. For the present, we shall only consider what it might say about ‘object' words, standing for observable objects and events, and the observable qualities and relations which they have: such words as ‘cat', ‘red',