14778 | Facts are hard unmoved things, unaffected by what people may think of them [Peirce] |
6111 | As propositions can be put in subject-predicate form, we wrongly infer that facts have substance-quality form [Russell] |
6434 | Facts are everything, except simples; they are either relations or qualities [Russell] |
21709 | You can't name all the facts, so they are not real, but are what propositions assert [Russell] |
23473 | Do his existent facts constitute the world, or determine the world? [Morris,M on Wittgenstein] |
7610 | A fact is simply what it is rational to accept [Putnam] |
18488 | We normally explain natural events by citing further facts [McFetridge] |
8386 | Events are picked out by descriptions, and facts by whole sentences [Crane] |
17287 | Facts, such as redness and roundness of a ball, can be 'fused' into one fact [Fine,K] |
8314 | Are facts wholly abstract, or can they contain some concrete constituents? [Lowe] |
8316 | Facts cannot be wholly abstract if they enter into causal relations [Lowe] |
8318 | The problem with the structured complex view of facts is what binds the constituents [Lowe] |
8323 | It is whimsical to try to count facts - how many facts did I learn before breakfast? [Lowe] |
15137 | If 'fact' is a noun, can we name the fact that dogs bark 'Mary'? [Williamson] |
14095 | Facts are structures of worldly items, rather like sentences, individuated by their ingredients [Rosen] |
4698 | What counts as a fact partly depends on the availability of human concepts to describe them [O'Grady] |
5736 | No sort of plain language or levels of logic can express modal facts properly [Melia] |
5735 | Maybe names and predicates can capture any fact [Melia] |
21661 | There are probably ineffable facts, systematically hidden from us [Hofweber] |
18916 | Facts are not in the world - they are properties of the world [Engelbretsen] |
17267 | The identity of two facts may depend on how 'fine-grained' we think facts are [Correia/Schnieder] |