 | Hanna Fenichel Pitkin - Philosophy - 1993 - 360 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real 'definition' to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...play with a ball they play a game according to strict rules."53 The kind of ideal calculus we are looking for does exist in mathematics, but "our ordinary... | |
 | ...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real 'definition' to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules. Clearly, they do not. What they do is to negotiate the rules as required. And clearly, this is the... | |
 | Anthony Giddens - Social Science - 1979 - 294 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real "definition" to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...play with a ball they play a game according to strict rules.''4 The point made in the previous paper (p. 43) with regard to ethno-semantics is worth repeating... | |
 | John V. Canfield - Criterion (Theory of knowledge) - 1981 - 230 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real "definition" to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules. [p. 25] Wittgenstein claims in effect that for many expressions in ordinary language, 0 can be appropriately... | |
 | Hubert L. Dreyfus - Computers - 1992 - 354 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real "definition" to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...ball they play a game according to strict rules."* Our ability to use a global context to reduce ambiguity sufficiently without having to formalize (that... | |
 | Lindsay Prior - 1993 - 240 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real 'definition' to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules. The Hospital as a Medical Institution Wittgenstein (1969: 25) The hospital referred to in this study... | |
 | David G. Stern - Philosophy - 1995 - 226 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real "definition" to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules. 44 In the Philosophical Investigations, Wittgenstein implies that his misunderstanding of the analogy... | |
 | Ronald Chrisley - Artificial intelligence - 2000 - 560 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real "definition" to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules [43:25]. 4 A natural language is used by people involved in situations in which they are pursuing certain... | |
 | Stuart Shanker, David Kilfoyle - Philosophy - 2002 - 283 pages
...don't know their real definitions, but because there is no real 'definition' to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules. 'Philosophizing mathematicians' (surely a reference to Frege) do not take account of all the different... | |
 | Philip Smallwood - Literary Criticism - 2003 - 226 pages
...don't know their real definition, but because there is no real "definition" to them. To suppose that there must be would be like supposing that whenever...a ball they play a game according to strict rules. 27 We use the word "criticism" and we know well enough, in Collingwood's terms, what we are "trying... | |
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