Most statements don’t hold in some contexts. Particularly, if you’re advocating an implausible or subtly incorrect claim, it’s easy to find a statement that holds most of the time but not for the claim in question, thus lending it connotational support of the reference class where the statement holds.
Most statements don’t hold in some contexts. Particularly, if you’re advocating an implausible or subtly incorrect claim, it’s easy to find a statement that holds most of the time but not for the claim in question, thus lending it connotational support of the reference class where the statement holds.
I think I agree with what you are saying. As a side note statements that include “Never. Never ever never for ever” need to do better than to ‘hold in some contexts’. Because that is a lot of ‘never’.
Most statements don’t hold in some contexts. Particularly, if you’re advocating an implausible or subtly incorrect claim, it’s easy to find a statement that holds most of the time but not for the claim in question, thus lending it connotational support of the reference class where the statement holds.
I think I agree with what you are saying. As a side note statements that include “Never. Never ever never for ever” need to do better than to ‘hold in some contexts’. Because that is a lot of ‘never’.