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The verification principle?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.1
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10.1.18 cards
The verification principle?
A sentence is literally meaningful only if it is analytic (true by definition) or verifiable (checkable by experience).
Analytic statement?
True just from the meanings of its words (e.g. 'all bachelors are unmarried'); says nothing new about the world.
Verifiable statement?
Meaningful because some possible experience could confirm it or count against it — you could, in principle, check it.
Meaningful vs true — Ayer's order?
First ask if a sentence is meaningful (says anything at all); only then can it be true or false.
Why 'meaningless' not 'false'?
A sentence that passes neither door makes no real claim, so there's nothing there to be true or false.
Logical positivism?
The view that real knowledge comes only from logic/definition or from testing against experience — nothing else.
The weak version of the test (Go further)?
A claim is meaningful if some experience makes it more or less likely — not only if it can be conclusively proved.
Ayer's roots?
Hume's split (relations of ideas vs matters of fact) → Vienna Circle → Ayer's single analytic-OR-verifiable test.
10.1.28 cards
What is metaphysics (Ayer's target)?
Claims about a reality beyond all possible experience — God, the soul, an ultimate reality behind the world.
Why is 'God exists' meaningless for Ayer?
It's not true by definition and no possible experience could confirm or count against it — so it fits neither door.
Meaningless, not false — why the difference?
A metaphysical sentence makes no checkable claim, so there's nothing there to be true or false in the first place.
Is Ayer an atheist?
No — if 'God exists' is meaningless, so is 'God does not exist'; he's neither believer nor atheist.
Noncognitivism about religion?
Religious sentences state no facts, so they are neither true nor false — the factual debate is empty.
How does the test hit metaphysics?
Neither analytic nor verifiable → literally meaningless. The same reasoning applies to every claim about a hidden reality.
Ayer dissolves debates (Go further)?
He doesn't answer questions like the problem of evil — he says they never get started, because 'God exists' is empty.
Does eliminating metaphysics remove all religion?
It removes the factual CLAIMS; feelings and attitudes may remain, but they state no facts on either side.
10.1.38 cards
Emotivism?
The view that moral sentences don't state facts — they express the speaker's feelings and try to influence others.
What does 'stealing is wrong' really do?
Expresses disapproval ('stealing — boo!') and nudges the listener to feel the same; it adds no factual content.
Do moral claims have a truth-value?
No — they state no fact, so there's nothing there to be true or false.
Express vs report a feeling?
Emotivism says a moral sentence EXPRESSES a feeling (like a wince), not REPORTS it ('I dislike stealing' would be a checkable fact).
How does emotivism follow from the test?
Once the facts of an act are listed, no 'wrongness' fact remains to check — so moral talk can't be factual.
Does emotivism make morality unimportant?
No — our attitudes drive how we live; Ayer's narrower claim is only that moral talk has no factual content.
Noncognitivism (Go further)?
The wider view that value-talk isn't in the business of stating knowable facts; emotivism is one version.
The disagreement problem (Go further)?
If I say 'boo!' and you 'hooray!', do we even disagree, or just feel differently? Emotivism struggles to keep moral 'mistakes'.
10.1.48 cards
What does 'evaluate' (Paper 2 part b) ask for?
Test the reasoning of a claim — weigh reasons for and against — and reach a reasoned judgement.
The self-refutation objection?
The verification principle is itself neither analytic nor verifiable, so by its own rule it comes out meaningless.
The 'it's just a definition' reply?
Treat the principle as a chosen definition of 'meaningful' — this dodges self-refutation but drains its force to condemn religion or ethics.
Strong vs weak verification?
Strong (conclusive proof) rejects science too; weak (some experience makes it likelier) leaks and lets metaphysics back in.
Which parts of Ayer survive best?
The demand that factual claims be testable and the analytic/verifiable distinction largely hold; the sweeping 'meaningless' verdicts wobble.
How is Paper 2 examined?
Open-book, one hour: a two-part question on your text — (a) Explain a concept [10] + (b) Evaluate a claim [15].
Open-book exam tip?
Don't copy long quotes — use the text to SUPPORT understanding and argument; do the right job in each part.
The shape of a top part (b)?
Explain the claim, argue for it, raise the objection, weigh them, and conclude with a reason tied to the text.
Topic 10.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Language, Truth and Logic — Ayer
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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