GENERIC STATEMENTS AND ANTIREALISM

Panayot BUTCHVAROV

ABSTRACT: The standard arguments for antirealism are densely abstract, often enigmatic, and thus unpersuasive. The ubiquity and irreducibility of what linguists call generic statements provides a clear argument from a specific and readily understandable case. We think and talk about the world as necessarily subject to generalization. But the chief vehicles of generalization are generic statements, typically of the form “Fs are G,” not universal statements, typically of the form “All Fs are G.” Universal statements themselves are usually intended and understood as though they were only generic. Even if there are universal facts, as Russell held, there are no generic facts. There is no genericity in the world as it is “in-itself.” There is genericity in it only as it is “for-us.”

application-pdf Download PDF

Check Also

HOW TO MOORE A GETTIER: NOTES ON THE DARK SIDE OF KNOWLEDGE (pages 133–140)

Rodrigo BORGES ABSTRACT: The Gettier Problem and Moore’s Paradox are related in a way that is …

Sahifa Theme License is not validated, Go to the theme options page to validate the license, You need a single license for each domain name.