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    If the necessity of axioms is grounded in intuition, then... — Carmelics
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    Home/Modality & Possibility
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    Challenges→Kant's thesis that the origins of the necessity of our knowledge of axioms lie in intuition is mistaken.

    If the necessity of axioms is grounded in intuition, then knowledge of mathematics becomes dependent upon experience

    Modality & PossibilityTruth & Knowledge
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    Modality & PossibilityTruth & Knowledge

    Key Terms

    knowledge(Distinguished from mere true belief, which may be the product of indoctrination and need not exercise deliberative capacities.)
    Justified true belief — true belief that has been arrived at through the exercise of deliberative capacities, including comparison of and deliberation among alternatives.

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    Philosophy of Language1 linkedSkepticism1 linked

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    Inductive intuition only leads to concepts and never to propositionsIntuition understood in the Kantian sense is inductiveKant's thesis that the origins of the necessity of our knowledge of axioms lie i...

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    Kant's thesis that the origins of the necessity of our knowledge of ax...84%The basic concepts of arithmetic (number) and geometry (space) have th...80%The axioms must embody the whole empirical material elaborated by geom...79%Some scientific axioms cannot be straightforwardly necessary in the wa...78%

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    In the critical part of his work, Stumpf raises the problem of the origins of the laws and principles of logic and mathematics as follows: if these principles are inductive in nature, as Mill believes them to be, then they do not constitute necessary truths; if, on the contrary, they are necessary truths, then the question arises as to whether they are synthetic a priori judgments as Kant claims or analytic a priori propositions as Stumpf claims. Against Mill, Stumpf argues that the axioms are n

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