verificationism
0 sources
verificationism
Summary
verificationism is a philosophical schools and traditions[1]. verificationism draws 207 Wikipedia views per month (philosophical_schools_and_traditions category, ranking #17 of 63).[2]
Key Facts
- verificationism was influenced by analytic philosophy[3].
- verificationism's instance of is recorded as philosophical schools and traditions[4].
- verificationism's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh95001796[5].
- verificationism's facet of is recorded as verification[6].
- verificationism's facet of is recorded as logical positivism[7].
- verificationism's described by source is recorded as Language, Truth, and Logic[8].
- verificationism's described by source is recorded as Two Dogmas of Empiricism[9].
- verificationism's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/verificationism[10].
- verificationism's contributing factor of is recorded as postpositivism[11].
- verificationism's different from is recorded as verification[12].
- verificationism's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/122pklss[13].
- verificationism's PhilPapers topic is recorded as verificationist-theories-of-meaning[14].
- verificationism's PhilPapers topic is recorded as verificationism[15].
- verificationism's significant person is recorded as A. J. Ayer[16].
- verificationism's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as verificationism[17].
- verificationism's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2780190543[18].
- verificationism's Oxford Reference overview ID is recorded as 20110803115510607[19].
- verificationism's Yale LUX ID is recorded as concept/29787250-fed5-4a7a-a7c7-ca1ca563dfbf[20].
Why It Matters
verificationism draws 207 Wikipedia views per month (philosophical_schools_and_traditions category, ranking #17 of 63).[2] verificationism has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] verificationism is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]