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    If a judgment agrees with an object, then all judgments a... — Carmelics
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    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Supports→Objective validity of a judgment of experience is equivalent to its necessary universal validity.

    If a judgment agrees with an object, then all judgments about the same object must agree with one another.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    A judgment intended to be valid at all times and for everyone relates to an obje...Objective validity of a judgment of experience is equivalent to its necessary un...

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    Any judgment related to an object is intended to be valid at all times...85%A judgment intended to be valid at all times and for everyone relates ...84%There must be a certain way in which each of a subject's representatio...83%A judgment is a multiple relation of the mind or mental factors to man...81%

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    SEP: kant-hume-causality
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    Empirical judgments, in so far as they have objective validity, are judgments of experience; they, however, in so far as they are only subjectively valid, I call mere judgments of perception. … All of our judgments are at first mere judgments of perception: they are valid merely for us, i.e., for our subject, and only afterwards do we give them a new relation, namely to an object, and we intend that [the judgment] is supposed to be also valid for us at all times and precisely so for everyone els

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