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The easy examination paradox
pp. 151-159
Abstrakt
Surprise examinations in a specified period are possible, moreover it need be no surprise that they are a surprise. That much almost everyone has found obvious. Call it "the strong intuition". In this paper I defend the strong intuition against an only too familiar argument discussed in an only too familiar literature. This defence requires that I solve a version of the examination paradox. But we will see that it is, unfortunately, only an easy version of that paradox which I solve. My solution will draw on points made by W.V. Quine,1 and by Crispin Wright and Aidan Sudbury.2 I think that Wright and Sudbury got the ingredients of the solution to the easy paradox pretty well right, but not the recipe.
Publication details
Published in:
Lal Shaw Jaysankar (1985) Analytical philosophy in comparative perspective: exploratory essays in current theories and classical Indian theories of meaning and reference. Dordrecht, Springer.
Seiten: 151-159
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-6499-0_6
Referenz:
Jackson Frank (1985) „The easy examination paradox“, In: J. Lal Shaw (ed.), Analytical philosophy in comparative perspective, Dordrecht, Springer, 151–159.