Apriorism vs Apriority - What's the difference?
apriorism | apriority | Related terms |
(philosophy) The idea that some knowledge of the physical world can be derived logically from general principles.
*1982 , Dan I Slobin, in Eric Wanner & Lila Gleitman, Language Acquisition , p. 128:
*:The linguistic apriorism of Chomsky has stimulated some psychologists to search for nonlinguistic roots of language development.
*2006 , (Philip Ball), The Devil's Doctor , Arrow 2007, p. 51:
*:What was needed for modern science to take shape was a renunciation of their bookish a priorism , with its Aristotelian notion that all things can be deduced by logical, abstract argument from (ultimately arbitrary) first principles.
(philosophy) The quality or state of being known a priori
* {{quote-journal, 2008, date=April 5, Ásta Sveinsdóttir, Essentiality conferred, Philosophical Studies, url=, doi=10.1007/s11098-008-9230-4, volume=140, issue=1, pages=
, passage=The apriority is, however, not to be merely as a result of the fixing of the meaning of the term, such as when I dub my cat ‘Cat’ and then claim to know a priori that my cat is called ‘Cat’. }}
