Disambiguation evidence for chapter "On Our Knowledge of General Principles" via surface form

"On Our Knowledge of General Principles"


As subject (49)

Triples where this entity appears as subject under the label "On Our Knowledge of General Principles".

Predicate Object
aimsTo distinguish different kinds of knowledge
aimsTo explain how we justify belief in general principles
argues that certain general principles are known a priori
argues that some knowledge is independent of particular sense-data
author Bertrand Russell
contrasts knowledge of general principles with knowledge of particular facts
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
examines how we know logical truths
examines how we know mathematical truths
examines the nature of general principles
genre philosophy
hasAuthorialIntention to clarify the status of logical and mathematical knowledge
hasMainExample basic principles of arithmetic
hasMainExample logical laws such as the law of non-contradiction
includedIn early 20th-century analytic philosophy canon
influencedBy British empiricism
influencedBy Gottlob Frege
influencedBy Immanuel Kant
influencedBy logicism
instanceOf book chapter
instanceOf philosophical text
language English
partOf The Problems of Philosophy
philosophicalIssue certainty of logical and mathematical truths
philosophicalIssue relation between experience and a priori knowledge
philosophicalIssue source of necessity in general principles
philosophicalTradition analytic philosophy
positionInWork later chapter
publicationYear 1912
publishedIn 1912
publisherOfContainingWork Williams and Norgate
subgenre epistemology
topic a priori knowledge
topic analytic truths
topic contingent truths
topic empiricism
topic epistemic justification
topic foundational truths
topic induction
topic knowledge of abstract truths
topic logical principles
topic mathematical principles
topic necessary truths
topic principles of logic
topic principles of mathematics
topic rationalism
topic self-evidence
topic synthetic truths
workContainedIn The Problems of Philosophy