I don't really understand why Kant made this distinction, was it important for something? — Hallucinogen
Thank you for taking the time to write that fascinating reply. I see that the a priori / a posteriori distinction is based on the justification of the terms now, - it is an epistemological, not ontological distinction. — Hallucinogen
I can't see how natural scientific statements or mathematical statements fall exlusively into synthetic or analytic statements. In order to make scientific explanations, causation has to be involved, ways of referring to time and space, or movement. An example would be "the sun is warming this rock". I don't think synthetic statements are able to do this, they're purely associative right? All they can do is refer to how sets of objects overlap. — Hallucinogen
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