Recognizing the indemonstrable is a necessary precursor to understanding the nature of a parable. |
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But if it is an indemonstrable principle it is a position, which is divided into supposition without qualification and definition. |
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The existence of some indemonstrable principles within a science is necessary in order to avoid an infinite regress in explanations. |
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They claim the bench of science as judge, yet make indemonstrable statements of faith. |
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You beg the question by merely reasserting that God's existence is indemonstrable. |
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He had divided these indemonstrable principles into axioms, which are common to all sciences, and postulates, which are particular to a specific subject such as geometry. |
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So the real, indemonstrable axioms are identical propositions. |
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Part of the issue rests on the requirement that first principles, which assert primary, indemonstrable attributes of their subjects, be necessary truths. |
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Aristotle's account of knowledge of the indemonstrable first premises of sciences is found in Posterior Analytics II.19, long regarded as a difficult text to interpret. |
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Nonetheless, some scholars continue to regard the relationship as a hypothesis yet to be proved, while yet others believe genetic relationship to be indemonstrable, given the available evidence. |
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