Facts and Empirical Truth

Canadian Journal of Philosophy 3 (2):197 - 212 (1973)
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Abstract

Recently a number of philosophers have maintained that the meanings of terms in a scientific language are “theory-laden” or determined by the theory in which they occur, and thus that if the same term occurs in different theories, it will take on different meanings in the different theories; so the theories are incommensurable. An often-stated corollary to this doctrine is the claim that possessors of different theories cannot express or possess the same facts since they attach different meanings to the terms used to give expression to the facts. Various attacks against this extreme doctrine on the relativity of facts have been mounted. Some of them consist in showing defective the argument advanced in support of this doctrine; but such criticisms at best show that the defenses offered for the doctrine are defective, not that the doctrine itself is defective.

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Citations of this work

Credentialing scientific claims.Frederick Suppe - 1993 - Perspectives on Science 1 (2):153-203.
Set theoretic representations of empirical phenomena.Ryszard Wójcicki - 1974 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 3 (3):337 - 343.

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The structure of scientific revolutions.Dudley Shapere - 1964 - Philosophical Review 73 (3):383-394.
Reference and Generality.Peter Geach - 1962 - Studia Logica 15:301-303.
Identity and Spatio-Temporal Continuity.David Wiggins - 1967 - Philosophy 43 (165):298-299.
Science and Subjectivity.Israel Scheffler - 1968 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 19 (2):176-177.

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