Приклади вживання Quine Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
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Willard Quine.
Quine Donald Davidson.
Willard Quine.
Quine and his Place in History.
The Duhem- Quine.
A quine is a program that prints out its own source code.
Willard Van Orman Quine.
In his conclusion, Quine rejects that logical truths are necessary truths.
He was replaced by Richard Quine.
Quine, though, stood by his claim that logic is in principle not immune to revision.
Truth table Karnaugh table Quine- McClusky.
The Duhem- Quine thesis argues that no scientific hypothesis is by itself capable of making predictions.
There is something that is revealed in the process of reference, but Quine considered the reference incomprehensible.
Quine is also famous for inventing the term"gavagai" as part of his theory of the indeterminacy of translation.
Some time after the spoiled multi-billionaire Oliver Quine becomes a victim of a shipwreck and is missing, he is officially declared dead.
Quine also notes that deviant logics usually lack the simplicity of classic logic, and are not so fruitful.
However, others, such as Dennett, Paul Churchland, W.V.O. Quine, and so on, have fundamentally different views from Chalmers about the nature and scope of philosophical analysis.
Quine did not at first seriously pursue this argument, providing no sustained argument for the claim in that paper.
From the top of the tower, space planes will launch in a single stage to orbit,returning to the top of the tower for refueling and reflight,” Brendan Quine, the inventor, said in a statement.
Quine, on the other hand, in"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", presents a much stronger version of underdetermination in science.
While the expressive power of combinatory logic typically exceeds that of first-order logic, the expressive power of predicate functor logicis identical to that of first order logic(Quine 1960, 1966, 1976).
Willard Quine, the patriarch of American analytical philosophy, came to three actual conclusions about ontological problems.
The American philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine, in his Two Dogmas of Empiricism, famously challenged the distinction, arguing that the two have a blurry boundary.
Quine even believed that logic and mathematics can also be revised in light of experience, and presented quantum logic as evidence for this.
In the early 17th century the modern version of the Duhem- Quine thesis had not been formulated, but commonsense objections to such elaborate and ad hoc implicit auxiliary assumptions certainly could be urged.
Quine, whom he often credits as his mentor, he began to gradually turn toward the more formal methods and precise problems characteristic of analytic philosophy.
Quine, while not a logical positivist, shared their view that philosophy should stand shoulder to shoulder with science in its pursuit of intellectual clarity and understanding of the world.