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    Kantian intuition is inductive and only yields concepts, ... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The very idea of synthetic a priori judgments is a contradiction in terms.

    Kantian intuition is inductive and only yields concepts, never propositions

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Axioms and propositions are analytic judgments constructed deductively from conc...The very idea of synthetic a priori judgments is a contradiction in terms.

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    Inductive intuition only leads to concepts and never to propositions92%Justifying [P1] via intuition or as the best explanation of particular...84%Linguistic intuitions are judgments about linguist-invented example se...84%Rational intuition is a candidate for a basic source of evidence, subj...83%

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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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