- Apodicticity
"Apodictic" or "apodeictic" ( _gr. "αποδεικτικος," "capable of demonstration") is an adjectival expression from Aristotelean logic that refers to
proposition s that are demonstrable, that are necessarily orself-evident ly the case or that, conversely, are impossible. [ [http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/apodictic Dictionary definitions of apodictic] , from dictionary.com, including material from theRandom House Unabridged Dictionary , © Random House, Inc (2006),The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language , Fourth Edition, Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company, andWordNet 3.0, ©Princeton University 2006.] Apodicticity is the correspondingabstract noun , referring to logical certainty.Apodictic propositions contrast with
assertoric propositions, which merely assert that something is (or is not) the case, and with problematic propositions, which assert only the possibility of something being true. For instance, "Two plus two equals four" is apodictic. "Chicago is larger than Omaha" is assertoric. "A corporation could be wealthier than a country" is problematic. InAristotelian logic, "apodictic" is opposed to "dialectic ," asscientific proof is opposed to probablereasoning .Kant contrasts "apodictic" with "problematic" and "assertoric " in the "Critique of Pure Reason ", page A70/B95.Economist
Ludwig von Mises of theAustrian school asserted the apodictic truth of theories arrived at through praxeological reasoning.The expression "apodictic" is also sometimes applied to a style of argumentation in which a person presents his reasoning as being categorically true, even if it is not necessarily so. An example of such a usage might be: "Demonstrate less apodicticity! You haven't considered several facets of the question."
References
* Flew, Anthony. "A Dictionary of Philosophy - Revised Second Edition" St. Martin's Press, NY, 1979
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