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    These philosophical concepts are necessarily instantiated... — Carmelics
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    Supports→There exist philosophical propositions that are both necessary and existential, constituting a third kind of proposition distinct from empirical and merely hypothetical propositions.

    These philosophical concepts are necessarily instantiated in the judgements employed by practitioners of a given science.

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    Modality & PossibilityTruth & Knowledge

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    Consciousness & Mind
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    A concept like 'mind' is embedded in the kind of judgement or inference that it ...Because the instantiation of these concepts is necessary (not contingent), the p...Propositions such as 'Mind exists' or 'Matter exists' assert the existence of ph...There exist philosophical propositions that are both necessary and existential, ...

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    Philosophical concepts, for Collingwood, are necessarily instantiated ...83%Philosophical concepts are necessarily instantiated in the forms of ju...80%The justification for employing philosophical concepts cannot be based...80%Physical science concepts are defined in purely physical terms in rele...77%

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    Collingwood’s discussion of the ontological argument in An Essay on Philosophical Method gave rise to a lively epistolary exchange with Ryle (the exchange is published in the 2005 edition of An Essay on Philosophical Method). The correspondence was triggered by the publication of an article in Mind by Ryle (1935) which attacked Collingwood’s sympathetic appraisal of the ontological proof on the grounds that there are no such things as propositions which are both necessary and existential, i.e.,

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