As explained in the previous chapter, the moderate empiricist position on a priori knowledge holds that while such knowledge genuinely exists and has occasional importance in its own distinctive way, it is nonetheless merely analytic in character - that is, very roughly, merely a product of human concepts, meanings, definitions, or linguistic conventions.
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In Defense of Pure Reason: A Rationalist Account of A Priori Justification (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy)
January 13, 1998, Cambridge University Press
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In defense of pure reason: a rationalist account of a priori justification
1997, Cambridge University Press
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