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    An account that saves the appearances is not necessarily ... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Ptolemy's astronomical account saves the appearances but may not be true, since the phenomena could be saved in some other way

    An account that saves the appearances is not necessarily the only possible account of those phenomena

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    Mathematical evidence from Ptolemy conflicts with Aristotle's astronomyPtolemy's astronomical account saves the appearances but may not be true, since ...Saving the appearances does not guarantee the truth of the account

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    Ptolemy's astronomical account saves the appearances but may not be tr...87%Saving the appearances does not guarantee the truth of the account74%Therefore appearance has a form of existence that prevents it from bei...73%Hume's regularity account is not undermined by the possibility of perc...72%

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    In the Latin West during the 12th and 13th centuries the goal of commentary was to explain the author’s intention. However, until the end of the 13th century, commentators worked on the assumption that the author intended to express the truth; thus every effort was made to bring an author’s text into harmony with the truth as the author understands it from what he takes to be authoritative sources. This attitude toward texts is generally thought to emerge from the tradition of biblical exegesis,

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