- The
definist fallacy (sometimes
called the
Socratic fallacy,
after Socrates) is a
logical fallacy,
identified by
William Frankena in 1939, that involves...
-
Definist fallacy may
refer to:
Definist fallacy,
involves the
definition of one
property in
terms of
another Persuasive definition,
misrepresenting an...
- In
argumentation the use of a
persuasive definition is
sometimes called definist fallacy. (The
latter sometimes more
broadly refers to a
fallacy of a definition...
-
These requirements may also be
mutually exclusive.[citation needed] The
definist fallacy is a
logical fallacy,
coined by
William Frankena in 1939, that...
- any set of non-moral features. This
makes ethical non-naturalism a non-
definist form of
moral realism,
which is in turn a form of cognitivism. Ethical...
- perceived, or, if they did bear any conformity, it
could never be known.
Definist /
Socratic fallacy This
article incorporates text from a
publication now...
- in an
attempt to
distinguish between naturalistic and
nonnaturalistic definist theories, that such a
concept is needed." R. M. Hare also
criticised ethical...
- org/web/20180506035555/https://orsonwelles.indiana.edu/wowza4/welles/_
definist_/mp4:122.high.mp4/122.high.m3u8 https://archive.org/details/otr_campbellplayhouse...
-
become normative".
Appeal to
nature Appeal to
novelty Appeal to
tradition Definist fallacy Moralistic fallacy Evidence-based
medicine Evolution of morality...
-
Western philosophy School Analytic philosophy Institutions University of
Michigan Main
interests Ethics Notable ideas Definist fallacy Naturalistic fallacy...