fbpx
Wikipedia

Fact

A fact is a datum about one or more aspects of a circumstance, which, if accepted as true and proven true, allows a logical conclusion to be reached on a true–false evaluation. Standard reference works are often used to check facts. Scientific facts are verified by repeatable careful observation or measurement by experiments or other means.

Non-fiction books at a Danish library, shelves displaying the word Fakta, Danish for "Facts"

For example, "This sentence contains words." accurately describes a linguistic fact, and "The sun is a star" accurately describes an astronomical fact. Further, "Abraham Lincoln was the 16th President of the United States" and "Abraham Lincoln was assassinated" both accurately describe historical facts. Generally speaking, facts are independent of belief and of knowledge and opinion.

Facts are different from theories, values, and objects.[1]

Etymology and usage

The word fact derives from the Latin factum. It was first used in English with the same meaning: "a thing done or performed" – a meaning now obsolete.[2] The common usage of "something that has really occurred or is the case" dates from the mid-16th century.[2]

Barbara J. Shapiro wrote in her book A Culture of Fact how the concept of a fact evolved, starting within the English legal tradition of the 16th century.[3]

In 1870, Charles Sanders Peirce described in his book "The Fixation of Belief" four methods which people use to decide what they should believe: tenacity, method of authority, a priori and scientific method.[4]

The term fact also indicates a matter under discussion deemed to be true or correct, such as to emphasize a point or prove a disputed issue; (e.g., "... the fact of the matter is ...").[5][6]

Alternatively, fact may also indicate an allegation or stipulation of something that may or may not be a true fact,[7] (e.g., "the author's facts are not trustworthy"). This alternate usage, although contested by some, has a long history in standard English according to the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language.[8] The Oxford English Dictionary dates this use to 1729.[citation needed]

Fact may also indicate findings derived through a process of evaluation, including review of testimony, direct observation, or otherwise; as distinguishable from matters of inference or speculation.[9] This use is reflected in the terms "fact-find" and "fact-finder" (e.g., "set up a fact-finding commission").[10]

Facts may be checked by reason, experiment, personal experience, or may be argued from authority. Roger Bacon wrote "If in other sciences we should arrive at certainty without doubt and truth without error, it behooves us to place the foundations of knowledge in mathematics."[11]

In philosophy

In philosophy, the concept fact is considered in the branch of philosophy concerned with knowledge, called epistemology and ontology, which studies concepts such as existence, being, becoming, and reality. Questions of objectivity and truth are closely associated with questions of fact. A fact can be defined as something that is the case, in other words, a state of affairs.[12][13]

Facts may be understood as information, which makes a true sentence true: "A fact is, traditionally, the worldly correlate of a true proposition, a state of affairs whose obtaining makes that proposition true."[14] Facts may also be understood as those things to which a true sentence refers. The statement "Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system" is about the fact that Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system.[15]

Correspondence and the slingshot argument

Pascal Engel's version of the correspondence theory of truth explains that what makes a sentence true is that it corresponds to a fact.[16] This theory presupposes the existence of an objective world.

The Slingshot argument claims to show that all true statements stand for the same thing, the truth value true. If this argument holds, and facts are taken to be what true statements stand for, then one arrives at the counter-intuitive conclusion that there is only one fact: the truth.[17]

Compound facts

Any non-trivial true statement about reality is necessarily an abstraction composed of a complex of objects and properties or relations."Facts possess internal structure, being complexes of objects and properties or relations" [14] For example, the fact described by the true statement "Paris is the capital city of France" implies that there is such a place as Paris, there is such a place as France, there are such things as capital cities, as well as that France has a government, that the government of France has the power to define its capital city, and that the French government has chosen Paris to be the capital, that there is such a thing as a place or a government, and so on. The verifiable accuracy of all of these assertions, if facts themselves, may coincide to create the fact, that Paris is the capital of France.

Difficulties arise, however, in attempting to identify the constituent parts of negative, modal, disjunctive, or moral facts.[18]

Fact–value distinction

Moral philosophers since David Hume have debated whether values are objective, and thus factual. In A Treatise of Human Nature Hume pointed out there is no obvious way for a series of statements about what ought to be the case to be derived from a series of statements of what is the case. This is called the is–ought distinction. Those who insist there is a logical gulf between facts and values, such that it is fallacious to attempt to derive values (e.g., "it is good to give food to hungry people") from facts (e.g., "people will die if they can't eat"), include G. E. Moore, who called attempting to do so the naturalistic fallacy.

Factual–counterfactual distinction

Factuality—what has occurred—can also be contrasted with counterfactuality: what might have occurred, but did not. A counterfactual conditional or subjunctive conditional is a conditional (or "if–then") statement indicating what would be the case if events had been other than they were. For example, "If Alexander had lived, his empire would have been greater than Rome." This contrasts with an indicative conditional, which indicates what is (in fact) the case if its antecedent is (in fact) true—for example, "If you drink this, it will make you well." Such sentences are important to modal logic, especially since the development of possible world semantics.[citation needed]

In mathematics

In mathematics, a fact is a statement (called a theorem) that can be proven by logical argument from certain axioms and definitions.[citation needed]

In science

The definition of a scientific fact is different from the definition of fact, as it implies knowledge. A scientific fact is the result of a repeatable careful observation or measurement by experimentation or other means, also called empirical evidence. These are central to building scientific theories. Various forms of observation and measurement lead to fundamental questions about the scientific method, and the scope and validity of scientific reasoning.

In the most basic sense, a scientific fact is an objective and verifiable observation, in contrast with a hypothesis or theory, which is intended to explain or interpret facts.[19]

Various scholars have offered significant refinements to this basic formulation. Philosophers and scientists are careful to distinguish between: 1) states of affairs in the external world and 2) assertions of fact that may be considered relevant in scientific analysis. The term is used in both senses in the philosophy of science.[20]

Scholars and clinical researchers in both the social and natural sciences have written about numerous questions and theories that arise in the attempt to clarify the fundamental nature of scientific fact.[19] Pertinent issues raised by this inquiry include:

  • the process by which "established fact" becomes recognized and accepted as such;[20]: 182 fn. 1 
  • whether and to what extent "fact" and "theoretic explanation" can be considered truly independent and separable from one another;[20]: 185 [19]: 138 
  • to what extent "facts" are influenced by the mere act of observation;[19]: 138  and
  • to what extent factual conclusions are influenced by history and consensus, rather than a strictly systematic methodology.[19]: 7 

Consistent with the idea of confirmation holism, some scholars assert "fact" to be necessarily "theory-laden" to some degree. Thomas Kuhn points out that knowing what facts to measure, and how to measure them, requires the use of other theories. For example, the age of fossils is based on radiometric dating, which is justified by reasoning that radioactive decay follows a Poisson process rather than a Bernoulli process. Similarly, Percy Williams Bridgman is credited with the methodological position known as operationalism, which asserts that all observations are not only influenced, but necessarily defined, by the means and assumptions used to measure them.[citation needed]

The scientific method

Apart from the fundamental inquiry into the nature of scientific fact, there remain the practical and social considerations of how fact is investigated, established, and substantiated through the proper application of the scientific method.[20]: 181 ff  Scientific facts are generally believed independent of the observer: no matter who performs a scientific experiment, all observers agree on the outcome.[21] In addition to these considerations, there are the social and institutional measures, such as peer review and accreditation, that are intended to promote factual accuracy among other interests in scientific study.[20]

In history

A common rhetorical cliché states, "History is written by the winners." This phrase suggests but does not examine the use of facts in the writing of history.[citation needed]

E. H. Carr in his 1961 volume What is History? argues that the inherent biases from the gathering of facts makes the objective truth of any historical perspective idealistic and impossible. Facts are, "like fish in the Ocean," of which we may only happen to catch a few, only an indication of what is below the surface. Even a dragnet cannot tell us for certain what it would be like to live below the Ocean's surface. Even if we do not discard any facts (or fish) presented, we will always miss the majority; the site of our fishing, the methods undertaken, the weather and even luck play a vital role in what we will catch. Additionally, the composition of history is inevitably made up by the compilation of many different biases of fact finding – all compounded over time. He concludes that for a historian to attempt a more objective method, one must accept that history can only aspire to a conversation of the present with the past – and that one's methods of fact gathering should be openly examined. The set of highlighted historical facts, and their interpretations, therefore changes over time, and reflect present consensuses.[citation needed]

In law

This section of the article emphasizes common law jurisprudence as primarily represented in Anglo-American–based legal tradition. Nevertheless, the principles described herein have analogous treatment in other legal systems such as civil law systems as well.

In most common law jurisdictions, the general concept and analysis of fact reflects fundamental principles of jurisprudence, and is supported by several well-established standards.[22][23] Matters of fact have various formal definitions under common law jurisdictions.

These include:

  • the determinations of the finder of fact after evaluating admissible evidence produced in a trial or hearing;[26]
  • a potential ground of reversible error forwarded on appeal in an appellate court;[27] and
  • any of various matters subject to investigation by official authority to establish whether a crime has been perpetrated, and to establish culpability.[28]

Legal pleadings

A party (e.g., plaintiff) to a civil suit generally must clearly state the relevant allegations of fact that form the basis of a claim. The requisite level of precision and particularity of these allegations varies, depending on the rules of civil procedure and jurisdiction. Parties who face uncertainties regarding facts and circumstances attendant to their side in a dispute may sometimes invoke alternative pleading.[29] In this situation, a party may plead separate sets of facts that when considered together may be contradictory or mutually exclusive. This seemingly logically-inconsistent presentation of facts may be necessary as a safeguard against contingencies such as res judicata that would otherwise preclude presenting a claim or defense that depends on a particular interpretation of the underlying facts and ruling of the court.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ Mulligan, Kevin; Correia, Fabrice (2021), "Facts", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2021 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 18 November 2022, Facts, philosophers like to say, are opposed to theories and to values (cf. Rundle 1993) and are to be distinguished from things, in particular from complex objects, complexes and wholes, and from relations.
  2. ^ a b "Fact" (1a). Oxford English Dictionary_2d_Ed_1989 Joye Exp. Dan. xi. Z vij b, Let emprours and kinges know this godly kynges fact. 1545(but note the conventional uses: after the fact and before the fact)
  3. ^ Shapiro, Barbara J. (2000). A culture of fact : England, 1550-1720. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-3686-9. OCLC 41606276.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  4. ^ Charles Sanders Peirce. The Fixation of Belief Paperback – July 26, 2017 ISBN 1973922991, 38 pp
  5. ^ "Fact" (6c). Oxford English Dictionary_2d_Ed_1989
  6. ^ (See also "Matter" (2,6). Compact_Oxford English Dictionary)
  7. ^ "Fact" (5). Oxford English Dictionary_2d_Ed_1989
  8. ^ American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language_4th_Ed.
  9. ^ "Fact" (6a). Oxford English Dictionary_2d_Ed_1989
  10. ^ "Fact" (8). Oxford English Dictionary_2d_Ed_1989
  11. ^ Roger Bacon, translated by Robert Burke Opus Majus, Book I, Chapter 2.
  12. ^ "A fact, it might be said, is a state of affairs that is the case or obtains." – Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy. States of Affairs
  13. ^ Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, Proposition 2: What is the case—a fact—is the existence of states of affairs.
  14. ^ a b Oxford Companion to Philosophy
  15. ^ Alex Oliver, Fact, in Craig, Edward (2005). Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge, Oxford. ISBN 0-415-32495-5.
  16. ^ Engel, Pascal (2002). Truth. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. ISBN 0-7735-2462-2.
  17. ^ The argument is presented in many places, but see for example Davidson, Truth and Meaning, in Davidson, Donald (1984). Truth and Interpretation. Clarendon Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-824617-X.
  18. ^ Fact, in The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, Ted Honderich, editor. (Oxford, 1995) ISBN 0-19-866132-0
  19. ^ a b c d e Gower, Barry (1997). Scientific Method: A Historical and Philosophical Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-12282-1.
  20. ^ a b c d e Ravetz, Jerome Raymond (1996). Scientific Knowledge and Its Social Problems. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1-56000-851-2.
  21. ^ Cassell, Eric J. The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine Oxford University Press. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
  22. ^ Estrich, Willis Albert (1952). American Jurisprudence: A Comprehensive Text Statement of American Case Law. Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company.
  23. ^ Elkouri, Frank (2003). How Arbitration Works. BNA Books. p. 305. ISBN 1-57018-335-X.
  24. ^ Bishin, William R. (1972). Law Language and Ethics: An Introduction to Law and Legal Method. Foundation Press. p. 277. ISBN 9780882773797. Original from the University of Michigan Digitized 2006.
  25. ^ The Yale Law Journal: Volume 7. Yale Law Journal Co. 1898.
  26. ^ Per Lord Shaw of Dunfermline, Clarke v. Edinburgh and District Tramways Co, 1919 S.C.(H.L.) 35, at p 36.
  27. ^ Merrill, John Houston (1895). The American and English Encyclopedia of Law. E. Thompson. Original from Harvard University Digitized 2007.
  28. ^ Bennett, Wayne W. (2003). Criminal Investigation. Thomson Wadsworth. ISBN 0-534-61524-4.
  29. ^ Roy W. McDonald, "Alternative Pleading in the United States". Columbia Law Review, Vol. 52, No. 4 (Apr. 1952), pp. 443–478
  30. ^ McDonald 1952

External links

fact, other, uses, disambiguation, fact, datum, about, more, aspects, circumstance, which, accepted, true, proven, true, allows, logical, conclusion, reached, true, false, evaluation, standard, reference, works, often, used, check, facts, scientific, facts, ve. For other uses see Fact disambiguation A fact is a datum about one or more aspects of a circumstance which if accepted as true and proven true allows a logical conclusion to be reached on a true false evaluation Standard reference works are often used to check facts Scientific facts are verified by repeatable careful observation or measurement by experiments or other means Non fiction books at a Danish library shelves displaying the word Fakta Danish for Facts For example This sentence contains words accurately describes a linguistic fact and The sun is a star accurately describes an astronomical fact Further Abraham Lincoln was the 16th President of the United States and Abraham Lincoln was assassinated both accurately describe historical facts Generally speaking facts are independent of belief and of knowledge and opinion Facts are different from theories values and objects 1 Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 In philosophy 2 1 Correspondence and the slingshot argument 2 2 Compound facts 2 3 Fact value distinction 2 4 Factual counterfactual distinction 3 In mathematics 4 In science 4 1 The scientific method 5 In history 6 In law 6 1 Legal pleadings 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEtymology and usageThe word fact derives from the Latin factum It was first used in English with the same meaning a thing done or performed a meaning now obsolete 2 The common usage of something that has really occurred or is the case dates from the mid 16th century 2 Barbara J Shapiro wrote in her book A Culture of Fact how the concept of a fact evolved starting within the English legal tradition of the 16th century 3 In 1870 Charles Sanders Peirce described in his book The Fixation of Belief four methods which people use to decide what they should believe tenacity method of authority a priori and scientific method 4 The term fact also indicates a matter under discussion deemed to be true or correct such as to emphasize a point or prove a disputed issue e g the fact of the matter is 5 6 Alternatively fact may also indicate an allegation or stipulation of something that may or may not be a true fact 7 e g the author s facts are not trustworthy This alternate usage although contested by some has a long history in standard English according to the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 8 The Oxford English Dictionary dates this use to 1729 citation needed Fact may also indicate findings derived through a process of evaluation including review of testimony direct observation or otherwise as distinguishable from matters of inference or speculation 9 This use is reflected in the terms fact find and fact finder e g set up a fact finding commission 10 Facts may be checked by reason experiment personal experience or may be argued from authority Roger Bacon wrote If in other sciences we should arrive at certainty without doubt and truth without error it behooves us to place the foundations of knowledge in mathematics 11 In philosophyIn philosophy the concept fact is considered in the branch of philosophy concerned with knowledge called epistemology and ontology which studies concepts such as existence being becoming and reality Questions of objectivity and truth are closely associated with questions of fact A fact can be defined as something that is the case in other words a state of affairs 12 13 Facts may be understood as information which makes a true sentence true A fact is traditionally the worldly correlate of a true proposition a state of affairs whose obtaining makes that proposition true 14 Facts may also be understood as those things to which a true sentence refers The statement Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system is about the fact that Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system 15 Correspondence and the slingshot argument Pascal Engel s version of the correspondence theory of truth explains that what makes a sentence true is that it corresponds to a fact 16 This theory presupposes the existence of an objective world The Slingshot argument claims to show that all true statements stand for the same thing the truth value true If this argument holds and facts are taken to be what true statements stand for then one arrives at the counter intuitive conclusion that there is only one fact the truth 17 Compound facts Any non trivial true statement about reality is necessarily an abstraction composed of a complex of objects and properties or relations Facts possess internal structure being complexes of objects and properties or relations 14 For example the fact described by the true statement Paris is the capital city of France implies that there is such a place as Paris there is such a place as France there are such things as capital cities as well as that France has a government that the government of France has the power to define its capital city and that the French government has chosen Paris to be the capital that there is such a thing as a place or a government and so on The verifiable accuracy of all of these assertions if facts themselves may coincide to create the fact that Paris is the capital of France Difficulties arise however in attempting to identify the constituent parts of negative modal disjunctive or moral facts 18 Fact value distinction Main article Fact value distinction Moral philosophers since David Hume have debated whether values are objective and thus factual In A Treatise of Human Nature Hume pointed out there is no obvious way for a series of statements about what ought to be the case to be derived from a series of statements of what is the case This is called the is ought distinction Those who insist there is a logical gulf between facts and values such that it is fallacious to attempt to derive values e g it is good to give food to hungry people from facts e g people will die if they can t eat include G E Moore who called attempting to do so the naturalistic fallacy Factual counterfactual distinction Main article Counterfactual conditional Factuality what has occurred can also be contrasted with counterfactuality what might have occurred but did not A counterfactual conditional or subjunctive conditional is a conditional or if then statement indicating what would be the case if events had been other than they were For example If Alexander had lived his empire would have been greater than Rome This contrasts with an indicative conditional which indicates what is in fact the case if its antecedent is in fact true for example If you drink this it will make you well Such sentences are important to modal logic especially since the development of possible world semantics citation needed In mathematicsIn mathematics a fact is a statement called a theorem that can be proven by logical argument from certain axioms and definitions citation needed In scienceFurther information Scientific method and Philosophy of science The definition of a scientific fact is different from the definition of fact as it implies knowledge A scientific fact is the result of a repeatable careful observation or measurement by experimentation or other means also called empirical evidence These are central to building scientific theories Various forms of observation and measurement lead to fundamental questions about the scientific method and the scope and validity of scientific reasoning In the most basic sense a scientific fact is an objective and verifiable observation in contrast with a hypothesis or theory which is intended to explain or interpret facts 19 Various scholars have offered significant refinements to this basic formulation Philosophers and scientists are careful to distinguish between 1 states of affairs in the external world and 2 assertions of fact that may be considered relevant in scientific analysis The term is used in both senses in the philosophy of science 20 Scholars and clinical researchers in both the social and natural sciences have written about numerous questions and theories that arise in the attempt to clarify the fundamental nature of scientific fact 19 Pertinent issues raised by this inquiry include the process by which established fact becomes recognized and accepted as such 20 182 fn 1 whether and to what extent fact and theoretic explanation can be considered truly independent and separable from one another 20 185 19 138 to what extent facts are influenced by the mere act of observation 19 138 and to what extent factual conclusions are influenced by history and consensus rather than a strictly systematic methodology 19 7 Consistent with the idea of confirmation holism some scholars assert fact to be necessarily theory laden to some degree Thomas Kuhn points out that knowing what facts to measure and how to measure them requires the use of other theories For example the age of fossils is based on radiometric dating which is justified by reasoning that radioactive decay follows a Poisson process rather than a Bernoulli process Similarly Percy Williams Bridgman is credited with the methodological position known as operationalism which asserts that all observations are not only influenced but necessarily defined by the means and assumptions used to measure them citation needed The scientific method Apart from the fundamental inquiry into the nature of scientific fact there remain the practical and social considerations of how fact is investigated established and substantiated through the proper application of the scientific method 20 181 ff Scientific facts are generally believed independent of the observer no matter who performs a scientific experiment all observers agree on the outcome 21 In addition to these considerations there are the social and institutional measures such as peer review and accreditation that are intended to promote factual accuracy among other interests in scientific study 20 In historyFurther information Historiography A common rhetorical cliche states History is written by the winners This phrase suggests but does not examine the use of facts in the writing of history citation needed E H Carr in his 1961 volume What is History argues that the inherent biases from the gathering of facts makes the objective truth of any historical perspective idealistic and impossible Facts are like fish in the Ocean of which we may only happen to catch a few only an indication of what is below the surface Even a dragnet cannot tell us for certain what it would be like to live below the Ocean s surface Even if we do not discard any facts or fish presented we will always miss the majority the site of our fishing the methods undertaken the weather and even luck play a vital role in what we will catch Additionally the composition of history is inevitably made up by the compilation of many different biases of fact finding all compounded over time He concludes that for a historian to attempt a more objective method one must accept that history can only aspire to a conversation of the present with the past and that one s methods of fact gathering should be openly examined The set of highlighted historical facts and their interpretations therefore changes over time and reflect present consensuses citation needed In lawFurther information Evidence law and Trier of fact This section of the article emphasizes common law jurisprudence as primarily represented in Anglo American based legal tradition Nevertheless the principles described herein have analogous treatment in other legal systems such as civil law systems as well In most common law jurisdictions the general concept and analysis of fact reflects fundamental principles of jurisprudence and is supported by several well established standards 22 23 Matters of fact have various formal definitions under common law jurisdictions These include an element required in legal pleadings to demonstrate a cause of action 24 25 the determinations of the finder of fact after evaluating admissible evidence produced in a trial or hearing 26 a potential ground of reversible error forwarded on appeal in an appellate court 27 and any of various matters subject to investigation by official authority to establish whether a crime has been perpetrated and to establish culpability 28 Legal pleadings Main article Pleading A party e g plaintiff to a civil suit generally must clearly state the relevant allegations of fact that form the basis of a claim The requisite level of precision and particularity of these allegations varies depending on the rules of civil procedure and jurisdiction Parties who face uncertainties regarding facts and circumstances attendant to their side in a dispute may sometimes invoke alternative pleading 29 In this situation a party may plead separate sets of facts that when considered together may be contradictory or mutually exclusive This seemingly logically inconsistent presentation of facts may be necessary as a safeguard against contingencies such as res judicata that would otherwise preclude presenting a claim or defense that depends on a particular interpretation of the underlying facts and ruling of the court 30 See alsoBrute fact Common misconceptions Consensus reality Counterfactual history De facto Factoid Fiction LieReferences Mulligan Kevin Correia Fabrice 2021 Facts in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2021 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 18 November 2022 Facts philosophers like to say are opposed to theories and to values cf Rundle 1993 and are to be distinguished from things in particular from complex objects complexes and wholes and from relations a b Fact 1a Oxford English Dictionary 2d Ed 1989 Joye Exp Dan xi Z vij b Let emprours and kinges know this godly kynges fact 1545 but note the conventional uses after the fact and before the fact Shapiro Barbara J 2000 A culture of fact England 1550 1720 Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 3686 9 OCLC 41606276 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Charles Sanders Peirce The Fixation of Belief Paperback July 26 2017 ISBN 1973922991 38 pp Fact 6c Oxford English Dictionary 2d Ed 1989 See also Matter 2 6 Compact Oxford English Dictionary Fact 5 Oxford English Dictionary 2d Ed 1989 American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 4th Ed Fact 6a Oxford English Dictionary 2d Ed 1989 Fact 8 Oxford English Dictionary 2d Ed 1989 Roger Bacon translated by Robert Burke Opus Majus Book I Chapter 2 A fact it might be said is a state of affairs that is the case or obtains Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy States of Affairs Wittgenstein Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Proposition 2 What is the case a fact is the existence of states of affairs a b Oxford Companion to Philosophy Alex Oliver Fact in Craig Edward 2005 Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge Oxford ISBN 0 415 32495 5 Engel Pascal 2002 Truth McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 0 7735 2462 2 The argument is presented in many places but see for example Davidson Truth and Meaning in Davidson Donald 1984 Truth and Interpretation Clarendon Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 824617 X Fact in The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Ted Honderich editor Oxford 1995 ISBN 0 19 866132 0 a b c d e Gower Barry 1997 Scientific Method A Historical and Philosophical Introduction Routledge ISBN 0 415 12282 1 a b c d e Ravetz Jerome Raymond 1996 Scientific Knowledge and Its Social Problems Transaction Publishers ISBN 1 56000 851 2 Cassell Eric J The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine Oxford University Press Retrieved 16 May 2007 Estrich Willis Albert 1952 American Jurisprudence A Comprehensive Text Statement of American Case Law Lawyers Co operative Publishing Company Elkouri Frank 2003 How Arbitration Works BNA Books p 305 ISBN 1 57018 335 X Bishin William R 1972 Law Language and Ethics An Introduction to Law and Legal Method Foundation Press p 277 ISBN 9780882773797 Original from the University of Michigan Digitized 2006 The Yale Law Journal Volume 7 Yale Law Journal Co 1898 Per Lord Shaw of Dunfermline Clarke v Edinburgh and District Tramways Co 1919 S C H L 35 at p 36 Merrill John Houston 1895 The American and English Encyclopedia of Law E Thompson Original from Harvard University Digitized 2007 Bennett Wayne W 2003 Criminal Investigation Thomson Wadsworth ISBN 0 534 61524 4 Roy W McDonald Alternative Pleading in the United States Columbia Law Review Vol 52 No 4 Apr 1952 pp 443 478 McDonald 1952External links Wikiversity has learning resources about Facing Facts Wikiquote has quotations related to Fact Facts entry in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Portal Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fact amp oldid 1123155348, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.