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    A justification based on empirical observation requires t... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The justification for employing philosophical concepts cannot be based on empirical observation.

    A justification based on empirical observation requires that the distinctions in question be empirically verifiable.

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    Philosophical distinctions (such as those between the expedient and the right, m...Philosophical distinctions involve differences in concepts without corresponding...The justification for employing philosophical concepts cannot be based on empiri...

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    An implication of the ubiquitous nature of the overlap of classes is that the justification for the employment of philosophical concepts cannot be based on empirical observation because philosophical distinctions cannot be empirically verified. A geologist’s classification of rocks into sedimentary and crystalline, for example, is based on the observable features of the two types of rocks and is empirically verifiable; by contrast philosophical distinctions such as those between the expedient an

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