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The Need for Ontology: Some Choices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2009
Extract
The aim of this paper is to set out some of the ontologies amongst which some forms of anti-realism must select. This provides the appropriate setting for presenting an alternative realist ontology. The argument is that the choice between the varieties of anti-realism and realism is inevitably a choice between ontologies.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1993
References
1 Davidson, Donald, ‘A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge’ in Kant oder Hegel? Henrich, Dieter (ed.), (Stuttgart, Germany: Klett-Cotta, 1983), 425.Google Scholar Davidson's more recent qualified agreements with some of Rorty's views, do not seem to me to dilute Davidson's realism.
2 Ibid., 425.
3 Davidson, Donald, ‘On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme’, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Association in Atlanta (12 1973), 20.Google Scholar
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5 Ibid., 424.
6 Ibid., 424.
7 Ibid., 423.
8 Ibid., 431.
9 Ibid., 437.
10 Ibid., 424.
11 Ibid., 423.
12 Putnam, Hilary, Realism and Reason (Cambridge University Press, 1983), 44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13 Ibid., 218.
14 Ibid., 44–45.
15 Ibid., 226.
16 Ibid., 1–25 and 295–296.
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