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Private law --- Public law. Constitutional law --- Criminal law. Criminal procedure --- Belgium --- Academic collection --- #RBIB:gift.1997.4 --- #A9806A --- Good faith (Law) --- -Legal certainty --- Certainty of law --- Jurisprudence --- Law --- Bona fides (Law) --- Bad faith (Law) --- Ignorance (Law) --- Mistake (Law) --- Interpretation and construction --- Legal certainty
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Comment penser le rapport entre la valeur et la vérité ?Si la valeur est vraie, comment échapper à la religion ? Si elle ne l'est pas, comme échapper au nihilisme ? Si la vérité commande, comment échapper au dogmatisme ? Si elle obéit, comment échapper à la sophistique ? Il s'agit ici - à la suite de Diogène et Machiavel, mais aussi de Montaigne, Pascal ou Spinoza - de trouver une autre voie. Le cynique, en ce sens philosophique, c'est celui qui disjoint les ordres : il ne se fait d'illusions ni sur la vérité (qui est sans valeur intrinsèque) ni sur la valeur (qui est sans vérité objective) : mais il ne renonce pourtant ni à l'une ni à l'autre. La vérité ne vaut que pour qui l'aime ; la valeur n'est vraie que pour autant qu'on s'y soumet. C'est où se croient la connaissance et le désir : c'est où l'amour rencontre, parfois, la vérité qui le contient. De là une morale, et davantage. Les cyniques, disait Montaigne, donnent " extrême prix à la vertu " : le cynisme est une philosophie sans foi ni loi, mais non sans fidélité ni courage.
Cynicism --- Truth --- Ethics --- Values --- Cynisme --- Vérité --- Morale --- Valeurs (Philosophie) --- Cynicism. --- Values. --- Social ethics --- Social ethics. --- Truth. --- Axiology --- Worth --- Aesthetics --- Knowledge, Theory of --- Metaphysics --- Psychology --- Conviction --- Belief and doubt --- Philosophy --- Skepticism --- Certainty --- Necessity (Philosophy) --- Pragmatism --- Social problems --- Sociology --- Pessimism --- VIE POLITIQUE --- COMPORTEMENTS POLITIQUES --- SYSTEMES DE VALEURS --- MORALITE
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This book contains important technical innovations, including comparative measures for the testable content, depth, and unity of scientific theories.Originally published in 1984.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Science --- Skepticism --- Rationalism --- Knowledge, Theory of --- Philosophy --- -Skepticism --- Scepticism --- Unbelief --- Agnosticism --- Belief and doubt --- Free thought --- Natural science --- Science of science --- Sciences --- Religion --- Deism --- Realism --- Epistemology --- Theory of knowledge --- Psychology --- Knowledge, Theory of. --- Rationalism. --- Skepticism. --- Philosophy. --- Normal science --- Philosophy of science --- wetenschap --- filosofie --- maatschappijkritiek --- Science - Philosophy --- A priori and a posteriori. --- A priori probability. --- Ad hoc. --- Ad hominem. --- Agnosticism. --- Almost surely. --- Analytic–synthetic distinction. --- Anti-realism. --- Antireductionism. --- Asymmetry. --- Atomism. --- Axiom. --- Bayesian probability. --- Bayesian statistics. --- Bayesian. --- Begging the question. --- Certainty. --- Circular reasoning. --- Classical logic. --- Classical physics. --- Contradiction. --- David Hume. --- Deductive reasoning. --- Deductive-nomological model. --- Determinism. --- Dialectician. --- Edmund Husserl. --- Explanation. --- Explanatory power. --- Extrapolation. --- Fair coin. --- Fallibilism. --- Falsifiability. --- Falsity. --- Fideism. --- First principle. --- Form of life (philosophy). --- Free parameter. --- Good and evil. --- Hilary Putnam. --- Holism. --- Hypothesis. --- Idealism. --- Impenetrability. --- Inductive reasoning. --- Inductivism. --- Inference. --- Infinite regress. --- Instance (computer science). --- Is–ought problem. --- J. L. Austin. --- Logical reasoning. --- Lottery paradox. --- Magical thinking. --- Materialism. --- Michael Polanyi. --- Modern physics. --- Modus tollens. --- Mutual exclusivity. --- Neutral monism. --- Occam's razor. --- Ontology. --- Ordinary language philosophy. --- Ought implies can. --- Paradox. --- Persuasive definition. --- Phenomenalism. --- Philosopher. --- Phrenology. --- Possible world. --- Posterior probability. --- Pre-established harmony. --- Prediction. --- Predictive power. --- Premise. --- Probabilism. --- Probability. --- Problem of induction. --- Pseudoscience. --- Pyrrhonism. --- Rationality. --- Reality. --- Reason. --- Received view. --- Reductionism. --- Relativism. --- Requirement. --- Richard Jeffrey. --- Scientific realism. --- Scientific theory. --- Sensationalism. --- Suggestion. --- Tautology (rhetoric). --- Testability. --- Theory. --- Transcendental arguments. --- Truism. --- Verisimilitude. --- Wrong direction.
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