SANDIPAN1988 wrote:
Hi I am not clear with the question number 18, can anyone please help me to simplfy the question ?
The question is asking:
In classical empiricism, a new contradictory observation to a specific generalization would invalidate that generalization, whereas in Quine's empiricism, the new contradictory observation would be integrated into our entire web of knowledge, and this might require alteration of some statements in the web of knowledge or even the observation itself to achieve a system free of contradictions.
If so, which of the following examples would be true.
Clearly the answer is D, which paraphrases the above.
D) The observation or some part of our web of statements would need to be adjusted to resolve the contradiction.
We can observe the overlap:
In classical empiricism, a new contradictory observation to a specific generalization would invalidate that generalization, whereas in Quine's empiricism, the new contradictory observation would be integrated into our entire web of knowledge,
and this might require alteration of some statements in the web of knowledge or even the observation itself to achieve a system free of contradictions.D)
The observation or some part of our web of statements would need to be adjusted to resolve the contradiction.